Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 10, 1967, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 wtAuaem. KjC.. BATOWDAIT. JUKI WW means tmmatm®, 9s*ss i*s® SI Wasfeiagtoa aaeetlag by S, E. Deecasa of SsMary, NCTA past pnssfeSwrti «wi Jones erf Fayetiev&te, KCTA presMet*. Otters to tte deiegaSScetodsd ed Mr. Dawson; Seiefi Wells of Asheville, NCEA Vice - presi dent; sad three North Cardte s. state directors Siw.iisd.tog Bert I shoe of Fayetteville; John R. Lucas d Durham; and Mrs. Anna Neese cf Lexiagtce. NEA’s February directive had called as dual associations to the South which would sot be merged by Jl®e 1* 1° submit “jointly developed and jointly approved*’ arrangements for producing merger which could be evaluated by the Executive committee at the special WAsh lngtcc, D. C., sessions MayzC -22. I)r. Applegate stressed Im portance o t the June 12 target date for receipt of the clarify ing information from North Carolina affiliates. Failure to provide the information would mean that further steps, includ ing possible censure, suspen sion, or institution of disaffi liation procedures, would have to be taker, by the Executive Comm'Hee at its June 29 meet ing in Minneapolis, Minn., prior to the NEA Convention there. “The primary purpose of the meetings just concluded,’ she said, “was to determ toe wheth er these six southern states, including North Carolina, are is compliance with the intent of NEA Resolution 12-1966 which called on all NEA dual affiliates to merge,'’ The NEA president expressed coisfidence that in view of the “good faith and progress” al ready evidenced by North Car olina educational leaders they would be able to satisfy the Exe cutive Committee on questions raised regarding the merger plan. She added: “In the future as in the past, the NEA Executive Committee will work closely with North Carolina affiliates to help them more ahead or implementation of the merger plan to line with NEA policy directives.’ Dr. Applegate noted that since July 1. 1966, dual affiliates to Florida, South Carolina, Ten nessee, Texas, and Virginia, have merged, and that ail affi liates have new removed racial restrictions of membership from their Constitutions. DROPOUT (CMaanrat SS?®® Wage 9J There were 63 graduates in elementary education and 75 In the secondary education fields as follows; Biology (3); Bu siness Education 03); English 03); History 00); Mathematics 04); Physical Education 02); and Sociology 00). Two candi dates of the two year secre tarial science diploma are also listed. Top honor graduates included Mrs. Geraldine Henderson of Fayetteville, (History and Po litical . Science) who was the valedictorian and rnagna sum laude; Arletha Williams Mc- Lean of AutryviUe, (English) cum laude and salutatorian; and Lather Miller, Jr. of Winston- Salem, graduating with a B» S. degree and cum laude. Key speaker of commence ment is Dr. Benjamin Quar les, Professor of History, Mor gan State College. “Education is the master key for entrance into the main stream of life,” Dr. Benjamin Quarles, chairman of the de partment of history at Morgan State College, told the 1967 graduating class at Fayetteville State College Sunday. B. S. and R, A. degrees were awarded to 138 candidates at the 90th annual commence ment in Seaferook Auditorium by Dr. Rudolf* Jones, college pre sident. Dean Ms Ivin £. Moore, Jr, and John H. Cook, chair man of Hie board of trustees. Dr. Quarles stressed the val ue of higher education by not ing that “cybernation and auto mation have virtually eliminat ed the demand for unskilled la bor.” Dr. Quarles said graduates „ should see Frederick Douglass, the “father of the civil rights movement” who died to 1895, as their model. Constant learning and ser vice to all mankind” were goals cited toy Dr, Quarles. BBgWW or whether she made any outcry, Mrs, Fleming is employed at IBM and wtesn interviewed talk ed gtMy» tout whs® confront ed with ipesstfms relative to the feidtetst, sa/M, mtarata/’ and Mt «te gfee®@, Ste was *- way from tte phone for some time and inter tt man’® voice safes, “I a®, sorry l affi have to hang Aw to the fact A4BI tew* net vnm to talk any more,” Mr. Iww, is waS-kncws to VtUMgst nmtk Ms not «&y bee© •wttw §® «m tomtoms w»?rld, tosk Isa® tees pnM to poll tic* «d efric wort. Be lives Ms««% at m tost? or. He te «ptss m£ toe to tte M@aJ.y SteMt SMted Gm'tSk <sf eferisi, wmmm mm <&m U Bcsrsfe repretHsetn ttees. l tew «*fssit mr pmtmfrpg&t will do” to tm m i»sl. Be l mss. to IM m* wtei ißMafe' WNMK Wst* &» i»*S #e» If tkmm to stey poasMSiy Ssa. , tsay go oe to Cairo te as effort to ease tte Mideast crisis. Sm. Brooks said Massacfes setts rabbis and protesters from Massachusetts Technology ted urged him logo to both Israel and Egypt. He said the State Department teew he might go to Cairo, but that he had not talked with Administration officials about tte dispute between Israel and the Arab countries. Dunn Youth rCesStera#* fete Jtase €sa©l assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill charge. Po lice said they arrested him an hour and a half after the al leged shooting. The girl, Lasts Massey, who police said was sitting to the front room of her home at the time, was hit twice to the heav by the shots. Police said Leak told them be had an argument with the girl’s brother. DUKE CCeatiawe* toe Stage ©a*2 limitations placed on her social life by the fact that the Uni versity’s total undergraduate Negro population was three girls arsd two men, Bui, she remembers, she came to Duke to study, not primarily for tte social life here. “I have met some fine people at Duke and made friendships that 1 hope will continue through tte years,” Mimi says. White, who has been on tte dean's list for each of the last two semesters, has received a research asslstantship from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He will begin stud ies there this fall toward a Ph. D. to statistics. At Duke, he has worked as a part-time consultant to an undergraduate computer programming course in mathematics. Mrs. Harris went through elementary, junior and senior high schools, as well as the uni versity, in many of the same classes with White. Soon after her sophomore year at Duke, she married Mi chael William Harris of Ra leigh, & North Carolina College graduate who now works with the North Carolina Fund. Her pa rents are Mr, and Airs. Willie Lee Mitchell erf Durham. She had always dreamed of attending Duke and when the time came to decide on & col lege, Duke was her first - and only - choice. Mary found that being one of the university’s first Negro stu dents was occasionally con venient. ‘ ‘At least everyone knows who you are,” she says. SEVEN {CMtttK&MI tens Sfeto* &BK) the car in which he was rid ing about 1 o'clock Sunday morn ing, came upon a T intersection on RPR 1143, II miles south of Smithfield. It was reported that the car crossed the road, throw ing Nixon out and crashed into a tree. Two cither persons in the car were injured. A Sunday morning' wreck, a~ bout 11*15, as a party was leav iasr_home to attend church, kil led Junious James Carraway, 88, 0.9 mOes west of Wades boro, or U. S. 74. It was re ported that the car in which the victim was riding was wait ing to make a left turn and another car hit his ear and knocked it into the third car. Carraway was said to have been killed instantly. His wife was injured and taken to the hospital and treated for shock, without knowing that ter hus band had been fatally injured. Ollie Sam Price, 26, died Friday, after having been hit by a car on RPR 1503, 3 miles north erf Asheboro at 11:50 a.m., Memorial Day, Pries' Is said to have been riding a bicycle on the wrong side of the high way and when the car swerved, to avoid hitting him, he swer ved into the path of the car. ÜBllAMim tew® toss® and empowered to do under Ar ticle 8, Chapter 160 of the Gen eral Statutes of North Car olina, This library will be gov erned by a Board of six trus tees appointed by you. (2) Preceding under the authority of the generalsta tuies, we then request that you, upon your own motion; call fora special election to consider tte quest ic« erf whether a special tax shall be levied for the sup port of tte newly created li brary, We propose that in or dsr to support sm adequate coun trywide publte literary program, this to meat be approved to an amount erf 7? per sl9© of ao pr®is©d valaatias, and we pro- P°®«* ooosiderable study, ***** the date fer tola to vote be set. tot Tuesday, October % im. (S) And, ftasliy, the Oli via 'Ramy tm&pors&m, tfK® pr&ml erf fe.lstoq»atlm‘byto.e voters of Wste €«m£y, and satisfied tost a w«foywMe li brary aysteto sSssll be ly @s®f>«ried, mmima assd malafeteed 't%- Ws;teCw*tf, wffi, prumsti «jpen year mt&mt as fellows: (s) It. w®. eaSsvey and delte «r all of tte assets of tte ©or pwatfesi Smflka, hot rnmrnmm smmfax? ■ba it* sam*ftiiag of fte tewly mmm naaotrytoWto M btmrf m toe «ss»itte t&M tte #£&*•£%»& Mteary shall tiw rsttne Olivia aad that the branch oft New Bern Ave. continue toe name Richard B, Harrison. (b) We would enter into a fair and equtt&Me atgreewtenrf with the Board of Trustees'of the new couritywtde library to provide for the employment of all qualified personnel oi the Olivia Raney Corjwatton at comparable salaries, working hours arsd conditions now in ef fect. Thereafter, the Olivia Raney Corporation would per form the essential and con tinuing function of supporting the Wake County Library sys tem through monetary contribu tions of its own and the active campaign for library gifts and endowments. MEHODIST cCvufcfemea tnmt page : statement was said to have had tte endorsement of tte Board of Bishops of the denomination. Bishop W. J. Walls, senior prelate, and accepted in church circles as “Mr AME Zion Church” vehemently disagreed with Bishop Tucker and de clared that neither the AME Zion Church, nor its Board of Bishoes had taken any action, unanimously or unilaterally with reference to the exec; it ion to Vietnam or “evasion cf the draft.” He stated that “while one has the right to determine wheth er he wi\l serve to combat or in some other capacity with the armed forces, the draft law is a universal symbol, of pa triotism for which we have no question.” As a member of tte National Council of Church es, the denomination adheresto the position of the National Council with regards to the war to Vietnam. The Bishop stated that it is “regrettable” that there was an indiscriminate criticism of Dr. King, winner of tte Nobel Peace Prize, attributing in flamatory statements to him and accusing him oi actions “near treason,” As a personal friend of Dr. King, and a supporter of the Non-Violent Movement (the Southern Christian Lead ership Conference), he endors es tte spirit and nor,-violent tactic to tte straggle for hu man rights and world peace. Bishop Tucker’s attitude a bout the matter is said to have been expressed in Indianapolis, ,ind., last week, when he ad dressed th Indiana Conference of the denomination, over which he presides. It is further al leged that the statement was given out to Salisbury as the personal feeling of Bishop Tucker, Bishop Tucker, who report edly read in his message a let ter addressed in President Johnson raising the questkxi as to how long “the govern ment will permit Dr. King and Stately Carmichael to roam this country and to commit what I consider near treason.” Bishop Raymond L, Jones, a resident of Salisbury, re cently gave an episcopal mess age, in which he discussed a recent appraisal ors five Negro Civil Rights Leaders, to the May 15, issue of Newsweek. He spoke of the apparent “dis unity” among them and praised them as “a force for good to helping to push the cause ors minority groups to America.” “Certainly, he declared, “I do not agree with all to each one’s program, but there is e nottgh they say and enough they do to claim my attention and support to time and in money.” T* »« IM Delegates of the North Car olina Teachers Association who will attend the National Educa tion Association’s Conference will meet for orientation on June 10, at 10 a. m. in Green leaf Auditorium of Shaw Uni versity, and at Ip. m, at the North Carolina Education Head quarters. A Saucy Sauced Steak Ah. Pnath Inw* long Imr fumou, w tot* iuhqo. wav sh«-\ use sauces to enhance familiar cuts of meat. With the‘added advantage cf convenience products, you can quickly turn a pan fried steak into something special. The secret is in a bottle of Open Pit Barbecue Sauce—piquant and flavorful, it blends with sour cream and onions to top this steak. Served with tender fresh asparagus, your favorite rolls, and potatoes, It’s a dish glamorous enough to star at a company meal. For more wonderful recipes using barbecue sauce, send vour .name and address including ZIP code to: Open Pit Recipes, Box 1128, Ka'sfcniwe, Illinois 60901. Sauced §*es& 1 pound sirloin steak, 2 tablespoons butter cut in 4 pieces 1/S cup all-purpose D 4 cup unsifted barbecue sauce all-purpose flour i/8 cup water 1--I/2 teaspoons salt i/8 cup sour cream 1 medium onion, sliced . wbesak thoroughly with edge of plate or dull edge of knife., Combine flour and - 1 teaspoon salt. Dredge steaks In'flour mixture. Set aaide. Cook onion in tetter until wilted. Add ter- Mm* sauce, water, and lit teaspoon salt. Simmer about TO min «*f»- M*»«whfle, hrewti stmfes fa hot 'lightly gwenaed Heavy sskmei, Bemnve to warm platter. Stir sour dream Into hot bar sauce mhrinte. Pawn over steaks and serve itmmdiatoiv, M»S«* 4 itaMpftfti liras F®§t Hmm At St. Aw y. Dr. P. R. Robinson, presi dent of St. Augustine’s Col lege conferred degrees on 117 students at tte Centennial Com mencement or May 28. Graduating with honors were Patricia GUI and Cecelia Smith Jackson, cum laude and Frank E. Godfrey, sumroa cum laude. North Carolinians; Cecil Eu gene Alston, Jr., Florence Thorpe Arnold, Frances Baker, Mary Ann Barbour, Alcester Bryant, Naomi Rosaline P. Col - den, Marion Lucille Davis, Bet- J. Debnam, KenaethD. Dun n, Lucinda Marie Fagan, ' ...»tthew Fisher, Clarence Tho mas Ford, Melvin Glenn, Jr,, Rosa M. Goodson, Margery E. Graham, Carol Hagans. Dor sey E. Hairston, Lewyn Mc- Cauley Hayes, Alice Marie Hol ley, Agnes E, Holmes, Susie Ann W, Hunter, Portia Ann Jamison, Settle Jean Johnson, Alice Faye Jones, Louis Jor dan, Shirley Lyle Liggett, Al bert E, Love, Lula Mae Da vis Mitchell, Edith Ann Murrell, Joseph S. ©rmond, Vernon L, Perry, Bessie Delores Peter kin, Barbara S. Robinson, Au drey C. Sessoms, Phyllis E. Sharpe. Shelton Steward, Bar bara J. Swann, Billy Evans 150 D®§rt*s tmkmi At 14 Stef® WINSTON -SALEM - Degrees were awarded to 150 Winston- Salem State College Students Tuesday at tte college's 74th annual commencement exer cises to Fries Auditorium, Dr. Harold W. Tribble, pres ident of the Wake Forest Col lege, was the commencement speaker He emphasized the status of college graduates as educators to their communities and to tte world. “Now that you are assumed to be educat ed, you must become educa tors,” he said. As graduates you must frac tion as potential and vital fac tors in making Winston-Salem State College a more impor tant factor to higher education,” the speaker said. “Use your political influence and your poc ketbook to support this college. No matter how much that state gives this college, this school needs you,” he said. “Negro Colleges must not be lost to integration You must improve them and integrate them, too. These schools are of major importance. We can not afford to lose them p.or let them lose strength,” he added, A second function outlined for the graduates was to “function as educators in the church and in society.” “College grad uates must help provide leader ship to the church and must be involved in the solution of prob lems of this society,” he said. Finally, Dr. Tribble told the graduates that they must influ ence individuals, especially young people to stay In school, to do their best and to go on to do better thines. Dr. Kenneth R. Williams, president of the college, con ferred the degrees said Attor ney Winfield Blacknell, chair man of the college board of trustees, Introduced Dr. Trib ble and presented the diplomas to the graduates. Prizes, awards and scholar ships totalling more than $7,000 were announced on the com mencement program. Rev. Henry S. Lewis, college chaplain, gave the invocation and benediction and music was furnished by tte college choir under the direction of Dr. James A. Dillard. Sykes, Annie Glendora Thomas, Gwendolyn A. Thompson, Hoyie E. Utley, William Henry T. Vandergriff, Roosevelt J. Warner, Lynn E. Williams, Robert E. Williams, Jr., Pal tricia'A. Williamson, Joan F, Creecy, Roy Clinton Evans, Alma Ree Ford, Barbara A. Mc- Coy Fryar, Shepherd Scott, Jacqueline M. Burton, Vivian Grimes, Valjean Myers, La- Verne Solomon Thomas and An nette Bowers. Dr. J. M. tfgfcrff To Rtain Honorary Dofroo NEW YORK - Dr. James M. Nabrit, Jr., president of How ard University, will receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Yeshiva University at its 36th annual commencement exercises on Monday, June 12, it was an nounced Tuesday by Dr. Samu el Belkin, president. Dr. Nabrit will be among ten distinguished leaders to the arts, sciences, religion and public life who will be honor ed at the exercises, which will get under way at 10;30 a. m. on the University’s Danciger Campus, 183th St. and Amster dam Ave., New York City. Dr, Nabrit, 66, was elected president of Howard University on July l, 1960. He has serv ed the University, which is cur rently celebr; ting its Centen nial year, since 1936. Posi tions he has held include pro fessor and later dean at the School of Law, director of pub lic relations, administrative assistant to the president and secretary of the University. An authority on law, he par ticipated from 1943 to 1960 in virtually every major civil rights esse. As a mernbei of the School of Law faculty, he organized in 1938 the first formal course to Civil Krgnts Law to be taught in an Ameri can law School. In 22 years as teacher of the course, he developed a syllabus and col lected more than 2,000 civil rights cases. Many of the legal theories used in civil rights cases before the Supreme Court were developed in Dr. Nabrit’s course. Dr. Nabrit who also has serv ed the nation to diplomatic ca pacities in the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and Geneva, Swit zerland as well as to tte Unit ed States, was nominated by President Johnson in August, 1965, as U. S. Deputy Repre sentative to the Security Count- B1 d©es tlie light ge off ? Take our word for it. It really does, Evers if you lei it burn ail night, it would cost less than a penny’s worth of electricity. That’s indicative Os the value of today's electric service. Actually, it's one of the very few items that have come down In N tniwfUtif-owwerf. UMjwrwrf puUu: mM/mqr Sees More Support For Negro Institutions DURHAM - Watts Hill Jr., chairman of the North Carolina State Board 0# Higher Educa tion, Sunday predicted that the gap between predominantly Ne gro and white college ; will be closed with Increased appro priations to Negro colleges from the State Legislature, Speaking at North Carolina College’s 56th commencement exercise, Hill said, “l believe this legislature will begin a na tional breakthrough by making money available to the tradi tionally Negro colleges to enable them to catch up with their white counterparts.* “The new policy is to pro vide not just equal opportuni ty but... we will do what is necessary to eliminate the causes of future Inequality,” Bill said. “This means a recog nition of tte consequences of discrimination. Can this be anything but real progress?” He predicted that colleges will one day lose their identi fications as Negro or white and become “equal partners in a color-blind system of higher education.” The speaker urged restraint on the students, to prevent tte upsetting of what he called the “delicate balance” shown by the speake r ban controversy and the 1964 and 1966 elections." “This is no time for an in stitution to te embarrased by the same rudeness which characterized students at Har vard and Amherst who walked out on the Secretaries of State and the Vice President,” Hill said. “I am suggesting that this is a time for the greatest ex ercise of responsibility and judgment on the part of stu dents, I am suggesting that this is a time for administra tors to listen - and to under stand what they hear.” Hill stated there are good reasons for the special prob lems of the Negro college, stemming from the pattern of segregation in the past. Presi dents and deans, he said, were caught between the needs of their colleges and society, de pendent on churches and legis latures for funds, and the pres ident was unable to be anything but “as conservative as they told him to be.” Administrators, he said, can no longer afford to be auto crats. “Students have learned this power. The lessons learn ed in the social revolution of the past 10 years are not forgotten when they return to the camp us. But above all (and it is this fact which today too many administrators fail to realize) cil of the United Nations, a position he field while on leave from the University. unit price during the past decade. On the average, our customers pay 14 percent less for a kilowatt hour of electricity today than they did in 1957. Your Increased use oi elec tricity ha© helped make this pos sible, So have our constantly im proving methods of producing [,C &Ci\Vh'&\& the students often know better what is going on la today’s world than do many administra tors. “K I were an administrator at North Carolina College to day, ! would read with great care the bulletins of the Stu dent Government Association - both past and future bulletins - for among some misunder standings of fact and occasion al intemperate language, there is many a truth to be found,” he declared. The speaker, reminded tte faculty that the president-elect of the college, Dr. Albert N. Whiting, has promised them “a central role in determining edu cational policies and practices” and urged them to accept the responsibilities involved He urged students who were graduating - 452 of them - to remain involved in the col lege’s affairs. “The quickest way to bring the future into the immediate present is for us all to stop talking about what might have been -about who is at fault - and spend our ener gies productively to meeting the new challenges, the new oppor tunities,” he added. In addition to conferring 452 undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees and cer tificates, the college awarded four honorary degrees. The undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees and re mi- ts lSOOi>i THSYIL FIND OUT lift ONLY YOUR HUSBAND/ * certificates included 313 bache lor's degrees, ill graduate de grees, 12 Master of Library Science degrees, six Bachelor f" of Laws degrees, and four Sixth Year Certificates. Hill, tte speaker, was a warded the honorary Doctor of Laws degree, as were Louis £» Austin, publisher of Tte Car olina Times, a Durham weekly newspaper, and W illiam Jones, vice president for financial af fairs at NCC and chairman erf the interim committee now ad ministering the college, John R. Larkins, consultant to the North Carolina Depart ment ol Public Welfare and a member of the college’s Board of Trustees, was awarded the honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree. library Grant NEW YORK, N. Y. - The United Negro College Fund will receive SIO,OOO from the Jes sie Smith Noyes Foundation to help strengthen the library * staffs of the Fund’s member V colleges and universities, Fri- * day. * The Foundation grant, which supplement.! a similar award made last year, will ward scholarships to 15 practic ing librarians who are working toward first professional de grees or tow-ard Masters’ de grees in Library Science, electric power and delivering it to you. The light in your refrigerator is Just one of the countless ways electricity rs put to work for you and your family. And the people J| of CP&.L are working right now to make sure there'll always fee #■ plenty of electricity in your future, '
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 10, 1967, edition 1
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