Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Oct. 23, 1965, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 1 THE CAHOLINIJIN RALEIGH, N. C.. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 23. 1965 n\Aiui\j ii\ ka i Liini —i>i;gro civil rights demonsu aiui s tuieci m prayer on tne steps oi tne county courthouse In Natchez, MU.-;., last week after more than 1,000 marched through the down town streets In a protest demM st tioi They marched under the protection of a federal court injunction, and there were no incident.-, or nests. (UPI PHOTO). p|, ; " . PERSONNEL OF KARAMU CONCERT ENSEMBLE include, Charles W. Tomlin, First Tenor, has studied voice at the ( T> -i d In* til ;t.e of Music, and for several years has been a member of Cleveland’s Trlnit. C.rd ■ dral C’ ■ i ; the direction of the celebrated organist choir di rector Edwin A Kraft; J E<i...,! ■- Cooper, Second Tenor, was a member of the quartets of Schofield Normal School -urn Kiiwv.il!, College, and did extensive vocal work with Stanley Mc chaume of Philadelphia; b- Baritone, is a former member of the Prestonians Choral Group of Cleveland avd " a . :--nt if the Cleveland Institute of Music; Glenn H. Settle, Bass, was a member of the •d■ i: ■ Over Jordan Singers. His father, Rev. Settle, was the originator of same; and J. Hv hi To ■ . Wt anger and Accompanist, holds the A. B. degree in music from Fisk Univcm ii. Mi,me A. Music Composition from the Conservatory of Kansas City and the A. M. de. <■ in ’ .si* •.on. Indiana University. Mr. Brown served as Director of Music*at Florida A&M '■ adversity, and Cleveland’s Karamu House. He is also arranger and accompanist f. . . - . (Sec story, page 1). Legal Fund <cnvTi v t'rn i kom page i> tion “should be a ->y >; "■ the country.” “Tokenism and evasio school desegregation ir« ’( Items on the agenda o; 'tv gro community,” lie sai i. “If school boards and the ; partment of Health, Fduc.dior and Welfare, which tnus; p prove their plans, acquiesce in paper compliance, the Nef.ro man in the street is gain to protest loudly and vigot ousl and the courts are im to protect him and hack ! 1:; up In that portest.” “The only way to conch li the school desegregation •>!>- lem is to conclude it ytitl, and conclude it right,” Mr. Goldberg added, Stephens Institute, the ■, ty’s only white school, uns closed prior to the school rather than desegregate. . hit pupils had been buss'd to schools in two adjolnii; un ties. The Court's ruling alb , 87 Negro children who aj>ph*.i for transfer to Stephens before they learned of Its closing. Atty. Howard Mow . J ~j Atlanta, one of the I egib iense Fund lawyers . he • the case before the trll n ■ : said the state board's alter ; ' th’es will be to allow tie. .■<- gro children to be bussed !, other counties as are the white or to reopen Stephens Instlt t The court gave the state board until Oct. 25 to report what course it will take. The court also granted a L,.. gal Defense Fund motion to enjoin prosecution of several Negro and white civil rights activities who were a, rested during recent protesl demon strations in Cravfordville. Bishop Shaw (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) being able to map a blueprint that could very easily chart the course for Methodists, throughout the world in mapping the future on the faith founded by John Wesley. Bishop Shaw, upon arrival back here, was not optimistic about the kind of image that is being projected by the Christian church, as it relates to brotherhood in A merica and communist the world over. Wake 4-H’ers (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Rt. 7, Raleigh. The 4-H activity Is super vised by Wake Extension Agents W. C. Davenport, Mrs. M. B. Graham, Mrs. N. P. Wimber ly and M. W. Askew. The public is invited. Basic Adult (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) es. There are eleven classes in Wake County, one in Frank lin and twelve in the city of Raleigh. < , uacners told of . .yet i.-ucfcs, and an area mj .!. r v.:, - also hoard. T: at • approximately 25,- ;-..s In Ralelga with less ..a , t grade education, eii! oiled in literacy cl a- Mu!, volunteers are i to .-h more potential student s. 1 is no age limit after a per- »n d: ops out of school. verai of •. e students are 65 years of age and older. “Blue Revue” KOMiMi.il FROM PAGE 1) oh i,. , • \ot delight the mu si a v r ; , said Baslleus Sor rell. ■; is ; .mi ”as organized L y. ;i, aid has continued to ,!, inshit; . standard of musical per: >rtr anco through out the years. ..f t. , ;v. - pots in their , ~ , svit at ion from !~. C! b dto A/twork to give •i I, oadcasts. The •: ..a,;:'. : -.si Me broadcast CK \ via 1 over tb.e CBS . ; ( vk ■ ,:r tears, 1931 to ; 3: , tie- led through the ;■ -iih. -■ !-,*•. est and Middle west for tw years and won un tht \rti ■ v Godfrey Talent .t T . In January of 1954, 1 ' Kar mu ! nsemble has . ~-n j< mired on conventional mis or organizations such .'s the National I awyers’Guild, the National Association of Set tlement Houses, the National Federation of Republication A timer's Clubs, the Triennial Conventhm of YMCA Secretar ies of the U. S. A. and Canada, and the Baptist World Alliance. Oberlin College, and man; other colleges, high schools, and social and fraternal organi zations have presented two or more concerts by the Karamu Concert Ensemble. In fact, se-oral organizations include iii their schedule each year an appearance of the Ensemble. Court Blocks m UNTINI" !) FROM PAGE 1) Other parents had left chil dren with relatives in Missis sippi which has the lowest per capita income in the nation, while they sought work in other states. Attorneys said they expect the restraining order to be con tinued until a three-judge fed eral court hears evidence and rules on the constitutionality of the law . A date for the hearing has not been set, but a Legal Defense Fund attorney said he expect ed the three-judge panel to meet sometime in early November. Fair Killing fCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) three of the men fled into the crowd, but Nelson collapsed af ter running about 50 yards and fell to the ground. Nelson’s girlfriend, wear ing a blue coat, was seen cry ing near the scene of the shoot ing, but when .she was sought for questioning, she, too, had disappeared, Officers took positions at all gates leading to and from the Fair after the shooting in an effort to apprehend the killer, wearing a red, checked shirt. Several men were questioned, but all were released, accord ing to deputies. Deputies J. W. Anthony and W. D. Chalk were in Durham Monday night questioning per sons believed to have witnessed tlie shooting. They were picked up by Durham police. Shaw Students (CONTINUED FROM PAGE V) what their plans aie. Cheek stated the .on . men were on probation, one ha ing been placed in thi -o. -carious position last spring and the other early this. \ ear. Both students, according to witnesses, were standing inline Sunday to enter the dining hull, main subject oi us>- protests last Friday, when the dean of students, Thomas E. Koe,hand ed them individual letters, both containing the • i: dismissal notice, Botl -.on rep-.ob-dlv given two hours to be off the campus. The notices . "re handed to them at approximate ly 4:30 p. rn. “The onlv reason we toleipiqd these students,” -aid Dr. Cheek, “was because of their family backgrounds.” A special assembly , at which all students were alleged!; re quired to attend, was held in Spaulding Gymnasium on the campus Monday, October 18, .it 11:30 a. m. The unlverslt; head also In timated that the students could be re-instated at Shaw at any time, this being left to the dis cretion of the Discipline Com mittee. He was quick to point out the differences between dis missal, suspension and expul sion, saying that when a stu dent is suspended, he usually Is away from the university for a period of one or two years, but when expelled, he can never enter the Institution again. “However,” said Dr, Cheek, “in light of thier serious vio lation of the school’s policy, their re-admission would have to come through the Discipline Committee.” He said it was possible for a dismissed student to be re admitted the following day, if he applied. Reports state that several hundred students did not eat in the school’s cafeteria last Friday, protesting the condl tlons'of the facility. Some of the other grievances cited, (not necessarily as they appeared on the petition given the administration), were;. Your Good Health BY SAMUEL L. ANDELMAN, M. D. P INWORMS Plnworms are annoying, but they are no disgrace. Most people have them at some time in their lives. Plnworms eggs are micro scopic and can be swallowed without your knowing it. They hatch in the digestive tract and reach the adult stage with alarming speed. b hen the female pinworm Is full of eggs, she works ner way out of the anus of the hu man host--usually at night. This causes itching in this region and the host may scratch with out waking up. A few of the newly laid pin worm eggs may thus lodge un der his fingernails; others will remain on the bedclothes. Making the bed will send them flying through the air to all parts of the room. Many of them will be taken up by the hands and eventually transferred to food which, when eaten, com pletes the cycle. Pinworm infestation is an annoyance rather than a serious disease but once found, most people are frantic until they jet rid of it. Contrary to popu lar belief, plnworms are not carried in the water supply >r on the vegetables and fruits irought in from the store. Nei her are they carried by house told pets. In order to get rid of them, 11 members of the family must ie treated at the same time. T ou must see your doctor for n effective remedy but there s more to It than that. All members of the fantilv a ust keep their fingernails hort until the problem Is lick id. Each member should also take a shower in the morning and thoroughly clean the anal region. The hands must be washed after each trip to the toilet and before meals. A child who has plnworms should wear a closed sleeping garment and mittens at night. Sheets, underwear, pajamas, towels and wash rags should be soaked for one hour in am | s -A . ] ifliiij. z; In The C’.u A long automobile trip or a short shopping excursion can bring some problems to dog owners. Naturally there are many dogs that find the excite ment of riding in a ear a pleas ure. But other dogs just don’t like it, and others get car sick. Both conditions may be caused by static electricity and a static belt hung from the axle and' touching the pavement has cured many dogs of car sickness. If your dog suffers from mo tion sickness, consult your vet erinarian. There are now now drugs that can calm oxciteable dogs and prevent motion sick ness for as much r s eight hours. The dog experts at the Purina Pet Care Center in St. Louis emphasize that you should not permit your dog to hang his head out of the window Bits of grit may be driven into his eyes. In any case, the dog may get nasal and eye passage inflammation just from the wind. Make Rover keep his place in the car or else just close tlie window most of the way No books available, although the unlverslt; lias been opened about three weeks; longet li brary hours requested; over crowdedness in some dormi tories; definition of the term ‘undesirable’ as it relates to students; unsanitary conditions In dorms; longer social hours requested for women students, and others. Nab Forgers (CONTINUED FROM PAC.F. 1) peeled early this week. The gang is thought to be operat ing out of Baltimore. Captain Godwin said Duvell la an escapee from the Mary land State Prison. Local merchants had been plagued with the loss of much .money recently through the me dium of fraudulent checks, causing local officers to re double their efforts lr. seeking the culprits. When the checks began ap pearing in Tarryton stores, the alarm was spread and the po lice dragnet of uniformed and plaln-clothesmen and SBI men got busy. Godwin said, “It was just like flushing a covey of quail” as the three arrests were made and others were seen a hurrying for hldling places in the stores and across busy highway U. S. 301 into a woods. Other arrests were expected police indicated Saturday night. Police report the gang had an elaborate system of forged checks from printed stock simi lar to the comp-ny’s genuine checks and used a ialse rub ber stamp with an exact re production of the signature of the company offical who is au thorized to sign company pay roll checks, | The group, reportedly, has been posing as company work ers, making small purchases and taking the most of the checks in cash, as they piled their trade here, Godwin said the arrested men admitted to being addicted to drugs and that a needle was found on one of them. monia (1 cupful to five gal lons of cold water). Vacuum clean the rugs daily. The floor of the bathroom and bedroom and the toilet seat should be wiped with a mild antiseptic daily. With these precautions your chances of getting rid of the pesky things are good. UN Official To Speak At N. C. College DURHAM - Jonathan Dean, deputy director of the Office of United Nations Political Af fairs, will be the Forum assem ble sneakei at North Carolina College Monday, October 25, at 10 a. m. in the college’s •B. N. Duke Auditorium. He will speak on the occasion of the institution’s United Na tion Week observance, spon sored by the Department of Political Science. Dean, who attended Columbia College and the Columbia Uni versity Inst it ute of International Affairs, is also a graduate of the National Wa; College. He has served in a variety of posts i:. post-war Germany, starting with an assignment as local re presentative of the United States High Commission in a rural area in Hesse in the cen tral part of the Federal Repub lic. Follow im' this, he served In Bonn as liaison officer be tween the American Embassy and the German Parliament. Dean also served in Germany in the Office of German Af fairs and the Office of Soviet Afi.ilrs and has held assign ments in Prague, Czechoslo vakia, and in Flizabothville, Ka tanga, Republic of the Congo. li-/' T SOO FORBIDPEN ?ABH !OM$ ■'/i' L ’ } , ' In the past there were numerous §. | : ->/ t L AWS REGULATING WOMEN’S CLOTH ** »J 3wr/ : n&. The motive behind most of them 1 §§g \\ 1 1,0 \ WAS TO PREVENT THE "LOWER /.Mil'/ »\ / ’ey classes" from pressing like /* I//. \/[\\ THEIR &0-CALLEP-SUPERIOR6" t !>' uflß -7 -lbJi f UNDER The LAWS OF SOLON. I : P GREEK WOMEN WERE FOR 'jl « : ' 1 BiPPEN TO WEAR MORE THAN I 'j' ' ' &AP ■ '\'l ■ i ill • A'ERTHEREWVS Ida idjliA > , \*s v s. I i / ONE I SHE OWNED lAO'.Wpf*! vy /. yft li j MORE THAN 6,000 §f',V'j! I /■/j.L-U PRESSES).- WAS a>Q mffc-MAC K T'YF'Tf AUTOCRATIC REGARD- H- \ 'Mt'ißtM- ill f j INS THE PRESS OF xfp 4* “—'l HER SUBJECTS. yVJjI &| AMONG OTHER THINGS, j M ; SHE RESTRICTED THE Vvlv X'VV'G» ? j EOF ORE AT Ruffs, AdA One OF THE REASONS BEHIND ThE TYPICAL x If J-AB DRESS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS COLONIAL jjgkC ;!j| H vrw.AN ; WHOSE SOUTHERN COUNTERPART WAS Skl'vV H'l 9 -Wav PRESSED IN THE LATEST FASHION) WAS A IKiLrA' ) [lfl In RESTRICTION A6AINST*EXTRAVA6ANCE m ON THE yp t *«*-■'*• GROUNDS THAT EXCESS OF APPAREL WAS ‘ UNBECOMING TO A WILDERNESS COAtMUNITY. iPv:' TODAY WHEN BUYING It/'- . '”\ WOMEN'S OR CHILDRENS ) Wi \ APPAREL LOOK FOR THIS J.HSIi I/'- - " \ .ABEL- t hE SYMBOL OF Wjgffiy §gf J- DECENCY, FAIR LABOR g V”»£< M.' ' J S T ANUAILrS AND the AMERICA i Y/AVOF LIFE Much i." 1 til tin about ' '. i: i !i. . ni i K'll t'Oll ’,.l. !■ ■<!< i:i I ku'. ••Hl it;i- • ! ,vi i,: cj i ■; the ■i , cushion • i ,Mi academic, i'. Iv . in.- i- i . .pmiMblc j,, ■ j in.l ,■ .mi Ici launc h ,i i . ; i c ! ' -in 111 ■! Mupidily utt c:if• 'iiu. tan caucrats. ■f * * However. tin nation is this Minimi i and tail witnessing the ureal lengths m>- that luH ran ? ~ • rats veil! v,o \ t in an attempt ; to a< hieve *- f, some va#ui‘- W~ J ;; <■ l\ stated aim |tf s' |U! blicatioa CW. Harder lie Hank nf Amciiea. which is hea\ ily engaged in financing California hod growing and pi ueesS.ng in addition hi be ing Ilie v. nr Id . biggest bank, expressed ■ i;•; •:: ovei the fu ture if California '■ tomatoes, the b.iCkbou, that slate's canning industry. % * * Due to an arrogant, unin formed position taken by I.abor Secretary Willard Wirtz, the tomato plantings were short to begin with. Now, at the last estimate, due to lack of labor to fdek the limited acreage planted, over 60 million pounds ol tomatoes have rotted. * * * Recently the Flint. Michigan Journal discussed the situa lion with that state's pickling cuccumbei crop * * * Pickles, it is claimed, will lie in short supply, and a lot highet in price. The newspaper pointed out that iin cumbers are rotting on the vine in the DRIVE SAFELY ”* '‘Tm *f» **«' I j/**** I " Mt v t.N iED FROM BOARDING A BUS - A Crawfordvllle, Ga. boy is prevented from boarding a school bus last week by a state highway patrolman as he sits on the youth. About ten Negroes made a dash for the bus, but were rounded up. None were arrested. (UP! PHOTO), Day You Graduate From College You Are Obsolete:” St. Aug. Orator “The day you graduate from college you are obsolete.’’“The job you are intent upon when you enter college as a fresh man may be extinct when you finish iour senior year.” Mar vin C. Josephson, director, A merican Church Institute, told Saint Augustine’s faculty, stu dents, and distinguished guests Tuesday on the occasion of the College’s 99th Formal Opening. “The world has changed, stat ed the speaker, more rapidly from 1900 to 1965 than the pace of change that went on in the world from the birth of Jesus Christ to the beginning of the twentieth century.” We have Saginaw valley. But that Is not all tlic problem, * * * These tool cuccumbei x never know when to stop growing .".Insi pickles have to be made ironi cuccumbei s of a length •■I six inches or less. Growing cuccumbei -. just do not under stand this mattei with the re sult unless picked they grow to a foot or longer They are no longer pickling size * * * Now Wirtz, although he holds a doetorstc degree, must have skipped classes in plain or dinary arithmetic. According to the data printed by the Flint Journal, in 1964, there were 115,000 native migrant farm workers. Os this number, only about 73,600 worked from state to stale as crops required. * * * Thus, in 1964, to handle the crops some 209.200 foreign farm workers came into the country, largely from Mexico. Thus, beginning with the 1965 growing season Wirtz took the position that the 73.600 native workers could be supplemented by additional domestic work ers. largely from the ranks of the unemployed, hence 209.200 foreigners would not be needed. Recruiting a domestic farm labor force three times the existing one, is quite a mathe matical challenge. * ♦ * But over and beyond this, the domestic unemployed just will not do farm work. They would rather demonstrate. It is for tunate for the nation that the average American housewile does not believe in setting fire to buildings, then shooting at the liremen. Because If they did. the higher food prices they are going to pay because of tiie VVirtzkreig could create quite a humdinger of a riot. had population explosions, ur banization explosions, and we now have another familiar term, “the explosion of knowledge.” “We have become used to dealing out information seria tim, noted the speaker, but in our present generation, infor mation comes in such massive doses that it is impossible to handle It within the present classifications Information must relate to all of the phy sical and social sciences. This calls for a revolution in the standards of learning.” Os the social changes affect ing higher education the speak- • er noted: “We must look re alistically at the social changes affecting higher education and decide what to do about them. We must build into our col lege curriculum the expertise to meet the pressures of demo graphic and technological, change. We need specialized programs which will educate the student in a new perspec tive of the world, taking into account the implications of cul tural change, the speed of trans portation and the increase and cybernation and urbanization.” Regarding student and facul ty exchange he said: “Student and faculty exchanges can now be conducted between universi ties and colleges thousands of miles apart.” We must de velop “system concepts” to educate people who can func tion in a complex social order.” ‘Tn recent months many of our schools and colleges have been the arenas for unrest and agitation for retorm.” Many observers place the blame on the tendency toward deperson alization of the college popu lation and the revolt of the stu dent against the power struc ture. Some of this alarm is cre ated by this turn of events,” noted the speaker. “1 remember all too well teaching at a large university back in the the complacency of the students* of that time who seemed dis interested in the events taking place in the world around them and whose value system were snccess at any price and con formity in place of Intellect ual adventure.” I would much rather face the student who is motivated by the forces around him to act on civil rights, free dom and even the issues of war or peace, than face the vacant stares of the unconcerned of a previous generation.” “Now a word to the faculty. Times have indeed changed for the professional educator,” he said. if lt was not so long ago when education was one ot tne least desirable or profes sions.” “Salaries were low, teaching conditions poor, and unlike his European counter part, the American college pro fessor had little status.” “With BLUE SPLATE STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 18-oz. glass 39c BOOK MATCHES box of 50’s 10c SOME GROWN TURNIP GREENS lb. 10c PORK NECK BONES or BACK BONES lb. 19c GOOD WEINERS or BOLOGNA lb. 39c RIB STEW BEEF lb. 35c ARMOUR’S CRESCENT BACON .lb. 49c FRESH GROUND BEEF lb. 39c OR 3-LBS, $1.14 PORK CHOPS Ib. 59c .JACK FROST PORK SAUSAGE lb. 43c sotrraimN RIO COFFEE lb, 59c SMOKED SAUSAGE lb. 39c OR 3-LBS. OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 Horton’s Cosh Store 1413-17 SO. SAUNDERS ST. RALEIGH* N. C. the coming of the scientific age, the atomic age, and cy bernation, there has been add ed in recent years an Increas ing sense of importance.” “The college professor Is in a sel lar’s market; his skill and knowledge are very much In de mand, and universities hid high nrices for Ids services,” * * * IMPORTANCE Is penalized, but in this brief span of life it feels good to feel important. *** TALKING SENSE at a modern dinner party is as bad as lift ing food with a knife. IMPORTED RARE SCOTCH I * I II mm If | 0m jl mym! ijfouse : GMHHIKLA3® |! 11 RARE \hcorc//wm \lk BLEND u/superfy d /7j mWwl o/u L6L‘/uMJ AtHunMt r to Scof//j/t,L . * 430 *ZL4 6 QT Hit mimi stilts visit dcw nasi iMiiiD n wii must oumifis, no Mini
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 23, 1965, edition 1
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