Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 5, 1966, edition 1 / Page 8
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tbk ssu&oimim mAMMM, IK. &, SATOBBA*. MA&GK %, If*# 8 SWEETHEART OF DBC CROWNED— Miss Joyce Finney of Roanoke, Virginia became Durham Business College’s sweetheart at the annual Sweethearts Ball held iccently at the college. Miss Finney won the title of “Miss Sweetheart.” over four other campus queens. She was crowned by Ma.-ion Reddln president of the Student Government, shown on her left. Other students are, from left to right: ’Goodrich Morton, Nelson, Virginia; Nelson Graves. Staunton; Earl Brown, Wilm ington, To the right of Reddln are Misses Mary Watkins, Roanoke, va., Caiolyn Stuait, Rich mond, Virginia; Edith Fernanders, Gaffney, S. C. y . v , I ifjpp pm GETS AIR FORCE COMMISSION Robert Jeffries, Fay etteville, who last week graduated from A&T College, was also commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the U. S, Air Force under the a&T ROTC Program, Jeffries, a varisty football players for the past three y ears, is a Distinguish ed Military Graduate, and has been nominated for service in the regular Air Force. He has his bars pinned on by his mother, Mrs. Ora Jeffries, of Fayetteville, and Miss Jarr.e sona Brown, right, oi Portsmouth, Virginia, a student at Bennett College. DEAR SALLY BY SALLY SHAW DEAR SAI 1V: A little over a ye.ti ago, a certain couple, ■ i ry good fri> :i is of ours, came to see . t told us they w'ere in a very tichi spot and asked if v.v possible coaid loan them .<3OO. The.. , ' omised to pay us back at tl.i . ate of $25 every month plus interest. We loan ed them the money, but refused to a. cept any interest. Well, for f • first five months the .'25 ecks a! \ ived by mail in our home, and then the pay mom stopped, and it has now ■ -n seven months since we either received any money or ven heard from these people. Nov it looks like we’re out :$!7" plus tv.o Mends. Have you .m.. comments on this?TAKEN. Pi- aR TAKE N: I think you’ve already said it very well -- you';; “out $155 plus two friends” -a very expensive lesson, and hope you have learn ed it well! * * * PEAR SALLY: Recently when our daughter was married, we had on display at the reception some of the prettier and more valuable gifts she received. Then, surely enough, one of our neighbor - whose gift was noton display asked me about this, and I had to go into a lengthy ex ph nation about the lackofroom to display all the gifts received and that we had to leave some of them in their boxes. She gave me the impression that she was very much hurt about this, and I’m afraid that relations be tween us are now very much on the strained side. What do you think about this? C, B. DFAR C. B.: When wedding gifts are being displayed, it is only common courtesy and con sideration of the feelings of all the people who were kind enough and thoughtful enough to send gifts, to display ALL the gifts -- not just a chosen few. * * * DEAR SALLY; I was some what shocked recently at a social affair when our hostess introduced two women to us. The one woman she Introduced with a show of pride as “My sister,’’ and the other woman with a show of reluctance or apology as “My HALF-sister. We have the same mother, but different fath C V ' ' , ■ ' mwtm. he6t with Natural GAS Fast * Clean • Safe —k ~— Qm ———— —~ ikmmmm SEE DIFFERENT TYPE HEATING APPLIANCES IN ®W SHOW ROOM 318 Hillsboro St 833-4641 Swppffirt ?h# United fund BgRISW'-.v -M-f er >. ” Stressing the difference between these two women as she did seemed to me a very entde and ill-bred thing to do. Do you agree with me? JUST WONDERING, LEAR JUST WONDERING: Indeed I do agree. Information such as your hostess gave does not belong In a social intro duction. It is very tactless to point out distinctions in family blood relationships when people are meeting for the first time. Suet information as this can com-,.- ut later in casual con versation when the persons in volved know one another better. * * * DEAR >ALLY: My husband rnd I have been invited to a churct vx doing. The Pride is our niece, and the wedding will take place In the evening with a reception following, I’m a little uncertain as to the ap propriafe kind of apparel for me. Would a Tress be more suitable than a suit, and should I wear a hat and gloves? MRS. X. DEAR MRS. X: For an evening wedding, you should weai a dress, along with hat and gloves. These latter two items can be removed later for the reception, * * * DEAR SALLY: Our daughter is 15 years old, and a very pretty girl with a beautiful, clear, and satiny complexion. Yet she makes a habit of covering this enviable complexion of hers thickly with foundation makeup and completely camouflaging her face with a pasty, artificial look. Most of her girl friends do this, too -- but some of them have blemished skins which gives them a practical reason for doing this. So, why should the young girls who are blessed with faultless complexions like that of my daughter want to mask them with such heavy makeup? MOM. DEAR MOM: Girls who do this are over-eager to appear grownup and glamorous. They should be told that their natural, youthful beauty Is exactly what their feminine elders are try ing so hard to achieve with their makeup l * * * Don't Do A Dropout! It Pays To Advertise I NATUR-TENDER, BONELESS CHUCK I I I ROASTS . lb- 69c oysters I I ROASTsTV H^ E BUI II I LcMONUL STOJ I,mi ■ I ---- - NATI KIIM>KR, ?' Cl T »sth & 6th KIKM Y' I DA|| CV '% : DOUBLE ‘ m ROASTS !b. 69c I I A 1 your ' M I *asm save a ; MONEY • DOSAGE lb. 59c p LEAN i§W AMB J \ BACK ; BOLOGNA lb. 39c 1 MEATY 1 SOARAiTEE » ui.-ai.itv (S SALADS i , ON ALL COLONIAL ; FRANKS lb. 59c I fill •COIF SI \Vt 11 » ** r « Ml-AT 1 ' <* r ' * > * >C > OSCAR MAVFR AM NtFATOR Ul |IF> F I: 1 ®IsP,: sliced bologna ... r 3§c I Kg SAVE UP TO 20c ON SHORTENING £§ BRAND - SAVE !4c l MORTON’S EROitN I MAYONNAISE 391 I POT PIES & 3 ~ 49* m»«e| ■ . DOLOKI&L’S OWN 3-D ESiSB MIIIHELL NtltF SAVE ® li lofATOES 3SStSI.M * KSLF 6SLION BLEACH [JfPffll ,-T ■*’.L <- .. OS 8R«NB 1 • 20-07, SIZF SPRAY STARCH WSF* f||P® a- | " * 22-07. SIZE I.OTION OETERCEM |/ JRSS 1* KU WbSM C 0 ? T I ti ok*, ida ftiozes mj SbH , * "" p BIER TOTS 29c CHOICE! EACH 2B C W* ■ yy BISCUITS" GARNER’S GRXPEJLM. gg “NO KEY" 1-LB. ■I r; <iiFit FRt+H 1 .. . r „, m ... , . Rr . ””1 W,N A COLLEGE limit ioe '« M E-RF..SH. t.KUii a i \Ki.i kdccaiion LOR PBBar a!8IES8 vot r (Hoin wm From nrarhr S < . PK K-OL-THE-NEST >1)1 K CHILD! Wi I EGGS j MAXWE.IX. HlirSE; ‘iWPIVvJ H SAVE ON PILLS BURY I CAKE ! 1 I Blc CAKE "» - e-j AO MIXES I I MZE » MIXES |4,^ > l ag || n MRS. Fil .BL RT'S—SA\L 6c mmi»ililn NHWliimMIHi ■in r«i< *» <;ood thri «at — march VIM* SUSUREArt Aero Dynamic H tl % il.E* mw »««■.;„ ■ juicy, sweet, red winesap if , ■■ I iqb;pc 8 MO WEB m 1 '«’» m.,- ALL-PURPOSE, WHITE | JH* | • F.NGINF—3 h.j> Bng fc -. A Slrattuc. 4 cycit nifh m « n C M |S Wind-up tmpitlw barter fc '‘ Wbt S I • 81-ADlv—Full 22" wide II I I 4 *"'SBgP' I IBS. I It SHRIMP mmm sm Wm void after m arch s. ms RL ® |||| 1 rmi Hnn'rorriic f*“so gj MILUmil biunb I (111 BOND STAMPS « I GOLD BOND STRIPS § § SOIB BOND STRUM J | GOLD BOND STAMPS % B tbs WIW ThU Coupon »n<l Vour Putchatp of S 5; Wish This l >upop and Your Hurchair of @j iB Wllk Ttlla Co»ipon anfl Your Purrhaae or - fcl , . , ... WBffl 'Si fc> Se iS , n <-e',r *„*-» rn/.c-Tv W vv,, ' h ThU ' c-upen anil Your rtirchase of -,5 II AF COLGATE TOOTHBRUSH ? | V-OZ. DOW OS EN CLEANER » g 1 °“° s f ‘r « I t-« R. GROUND ROUND « M £ lh«t t is* V 0,6 AFTER MARCH Cl | 0 VOII, AETCR MARCH I S ;| M vom AfT *R MAR,‘'H V El AE'TKK MARCH ~ §^ll 2CS, • !B *- m 5 -' b-i I K ‘ J( ’ s '' bi ite «•»» )1 U> RSO M m | 1 | COLO BOMB STAMPS | i| GOl9 BOMB STAMPS | I SOLD BOMB STAMPS | 1 6SIB BOMB STAMPS 1 i GOLD BOMDSTAMPS 1 I With TMk t oooon «r.a Your l*urrHair of h) triUi ThU Coupon *»4 Your Purrh**' ol jjtij H'lUi Thu. ( uupon mo Uni rurdMit of 3 WHh Thl* Coupon *r.d Your Purchase of 3 HlU> ThU Coupon enrf Your Pu'chur ut ®!rM Ms Bt I PT. SIMONI/.E VINYL WAX Ife 58-C NT. STANBACK PO’VDLR £ -K SIX 6‘j.OZ. CAI.O TET FOODS K S 20-OX. PICG JIFFY !» 2-1.8. SWIFTS PREMIUM K void «ns SKHCH 1 nil p§| |So von, Airr*» march 5 ■»«• jT» Ib PI vpio ArTr* imarch j in, JT*} a jft BEEFSTEAKS !g; BONEI.ESS 'IURKEA ROAST Hit |K ;a ni „ | .-OIDAm. «A»r«i, mi lg VOI6 A»r«B M.KCH V l.li p-1 Ip iKjj&mtirmzt'mmmtmmm'?:. ;4jJ fetnrs2c-^M'^i£K3®W'sp^|y| Gains Os Race Women Are Cited WASHINGTON, D. C, - Gains made by Negro women work ers in the past 25 years are one of the indications that the Negro is advancing along with his fellow Americans as this country moves ahead economi cally, culturally and politically, Mrs, Esther Peterson, Assis tant Secretary of Labor and Spe cial Assistant to the President for Consumer Affairs, said to day in a speech at the Fourth Annual Harriet Tubman Mem orial 1 uncheon of the Phyllis Wheatley YWCA, at the Occi dental Restaurant, Washington, D. C. The percentage of nonwhite women in private - household work is about half what it was in 1940, while the percentage in clerical work has risen, over some period, from 1 per cent to 11 percent, she report ed. In the professional fields such as nursing, accounting, law, library science, and diete tics, the proportion of nonwhite women has doubled since 1940. Taking into account ih o *r% , xt -gjjs -vSiNsf CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS Dr. Fred Young, assistant superintendent, Burlington City Schools, chats with two North Carolina College representatives during the Third Annual Con ference for Student Teachers, Cooperating Teachers, and Prin cipals held on the college’s campus Feb. 19. In the center is V. illiam Jones, chairman of the Interim Committee in charge of administrative affairs, and on the right, Dr. Floyd L. Bass, director of student teaching. changing purchasing power of th; dollar, the average earn ings of nomvhite women work ing full time, year round, have more than tripled since 1939, Mrs. Peterson said. She point ed out'that while these women earn only 69 per cent as much as white women, the gap is closing. “It is an uncoiling ing trend,” she said, “and we must see that it continues.” “We can expect an accelera tion of improvements in the status of the Negro in Ameri ca now that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 has paved the way toward fuller participation by- Negroes in every phase of na tional progress,” she said. UNC Promotes 16 Members Os Its Janitorial Staff CHAPEL HILL - Sixteen members of the janitorial staff at the University of North Car olina have been promoted to area foreman as part of a new program to increase operation al efficiency. According to Fred B. Haskell of the UNC personnel office, the promotions were made from the 204 janitors serving the university community. Each of the foreman will be responsible for supervising a number of the janitors and will work with them. The new program, which has already gone into effect, will also offer the maintenance men Dr. L W. Morris Bongiitf Spookor GREENS BORO--That man is made up of virtues and vices and that the problem of the Christian is to learn how to master the mixture, was the thesis of the vesper address by Dr. Louis W. Norris, presi dent of Albion (Mich.) College, at Bennett College on Sunday. incentive as it provides an op portunity for advancement. Selected as area foremen were: Rufus Minor, Julius Toomer, James Spinks, Rufus Burnette, John H, Thompson, James P, Thompson, James Long, Vineenl Lee, Detroy Purefoy, James Richardson, Josh Holloman, Jr., Bobby Holt David McCauley, John Webb, Charlie Watson and Clyde Whit ted. CauV ! 828-9317 {Btk 1 tor (ksso) ) HEATING OIL || 4 • burnt HOT Mj £ 0 burnt CLEAN f Capital Fuel Oil, Ice & Coal Co. 600 W. HARGETT ST.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 5, 1966, edition 1
8
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