*® AHKJV ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS ft APT - Five AAT SUt» CDlvOTsXy ROTC e»W* havt be«n
awarded all-expense Army ROTC scholarships for the current school term. From left to right are
Ronald J, Tate, Morgantown: Victor J, Russell, Reidsville; Frederick Locfcey, Raleigh; Robert
G. Sinclair, Fayetteville, and James A. Cannady, Rocky Point. The cadets will also receive
$50.00 per maoth.
Four Year Esso Vet Get Promoted
PHILADELPHIA - Clifton R.
Brooks has been promoted from
fuel oil salesman to dealer sales
representative by Humble Oil
& Refining Company’s Eastern
marketing region.
His new assignment is in the
company’s Philadelphia Dis
trict, where he will have the
miif —
CLIFTON BROOKS
H. A. Goodson Construction Co.
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A PUBLIC SERVICE
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S«« Appi»*#ce* In Our Showroom
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primary responsibility for aid
ing and advising Esso dealers
in his sales territory on their
merchandising and financial
procedures, problems and op
portunities.
Like other members ofHum -
ble’s service station marketing
staff, Mr. Brooks will counsel
others in company management
on the recruitment and selection
of dealers in his North Phila
delphia territory, the upkeep
and improvement of existing
service station facilities there,
and the business potential of
sites for new stations,
A 4-year veteran in Esso oil
heat and equipment marketing,
Mr. Brooks was freed of those
duties early this year for a
series of training assignments
preliminary to taking over his
new post. He will, be Esso
management’s principal contact
with the independent business
men who operate about 30Hum
ble stations.
Now 37, Mr. Brooks joined
Humble six years ago. He stu
died accounting at Temple In
Philadelphia, his native city,
and holds a certificate in ac
counting from that university.
At age 20, he joined the gov
ernment civilian staff assigned
to the inspection of Navy mater
ials in the Philadelphia area.
His assignments were chiefly in
the budget and administrative
branches.
He moved to Humble, chief
United States affiliate of Stand
ard Oil Company (New Jersey)
directly, from his government
post, joining the oil company
early In 1961 as an. accounting
assistant.
Assigned initially to the com
pany’s dati-processing opera
tions at its Pennsylvania mar
keting headquarters, he was
promoted to the Philadelphia
District fuel oil sales staff 21
months later - in the Fall of
1962- and remained a mem
ber of the Esso oil heat and
equipment marketing organiza
tion in Philadelphia until he was
detached to begin the period of
several months training In
preparation for his new appoint -
ment as dealer sales represen
tative.
Mr. Brocks is the son of Mrs.
George Brooks of Philadelphia
and the late Mr. Brooks. He
Is married and has two daugh
ters Patricia, 16, and Ce
cilia, 14-—and an 11-year-old
son, Clifton, Jr. His wife is
the former Miss Belle Winston
of Gordonsville, Va. They live
in Philadelphia at 5442 Gainor
Rd.
Active in Boy Scout and YMCA
work, Mr. Brooks is also an ac
tive members of the National
Association of Market Develop
ers, a professional organization
composed chiefly of sales and
public relations executives and
management people.
Masons’ 1967
Class Elects
President
WASHINGTON - Dr. John W.
Davis has been elected presi
dent of the class of 1967, 33d
Degree, United Supreme Coun
cil, A.A.S.R.F.M., Scuthernju
risdietion, USA (Prince Hall
Masonic affiliation).
The 86 class members were
elevated to the 33d degree dur
ing the organization's 27th
triennial session, held at the
Shoreham hotel.
Also elected were Aubrey E.
Ballard, Washington, vice
pregfdeet and Dr. Joseph H,
FASmm FA at EH3KMBSL.es - A mbmlUm to fe®sd»d for
Ratoigto, a .shocker that wfll toe tbs t*lk~af~tlse~town for a
long tlrnn. B®a a Fashion Rebellion *O7, this- year’s Ebony
Fashion Fair featuring soma of the* world 51 * most gorgeous
erections. The traveling Fashion Fair, one o# the largest
mil roost expensive in the nation and featuring high-fashioned
model® —two of Which are shown above will be present
ed in Raleigh by the Raleigh Alumni Chapter of Hampton In
stitute os’* Oct. 28, ki the Ligon High School Auditorium.
I THE COLLEGE STUDENT I
j SPEAKS j
BY DORIS BROWN *
Negro Press International
Uncle Sam is righting an old
wrong In sending hundreds of
Negro students to college. But
he’s doing them no “favor.”
A little more than a hundred
years after most Negro educa
tion was prohibited across the
country by law, the nation is,
at last, doing its duty to its
non-white youngsters by giving
them a chance to go to college.
Among the beneficiaries of
America’s largesse are 1,100
low-income students enrolled in
a new two-year curriculum at
13 Negro col
leges and universities.
The Office of Econom'c Op
portunity is paying the cost of
their room and board. Coordi
nating the project is the Insti
tute for Services to Education
Washington, D. C., which re
ceived an $850,003 020 grant
to send the young men and wo
men to school.
Dr. Samuel D. Proctor, ISE
president, is project director.
He is former president of North
Carolina A&T College and Vir
ginia Union university.
The students will be going to
Jackson State College, Jackson
Miss.; Talladega College, Tal
ladega, Ala.; Southern Univer
sity A&M, Baton Rouge, La,;
Norfolk State, Norfolk, Va.;
Bennett College, Greensboro.
Also, Voorhees College, Den
mark, S. C.; Lincoln Universi
ty, Oxford, Pa.; Bishop Col
lege, Dallas, Tex.; Clark col
lege, Atlanta, Florida A&M
State university, Tallahassee.
Fla.; Alabama A&M College,
Normal, Ala.; Tennessee A&I
State University, Nashville,
Tenn.; and North Carolina A&T
State University, Greensboro.
While the 1,100 students are
being sent to college courtesy
of the War on Poverty, a young
resident of Prichard, Ala., was
getting her college education,
thanks to the intervention of
President Johnson.
Miss Joyce Turner, 18, wrote
twice to the President, telling
him she had no money to get
a higher education, yet wanted
one.
A high school honor graduate,
she noted that the country was
aiding underdeveloped nations
and “might as well help me.”
After being directed to Sam
uel Johnson, an educational con
sultant, Miss Turner was given
a plan ticket to Atlanta, where
she made it to Morris Brown
College just in time to register
for the fall term.
Why did she write directly
to the President to get a higher
education? “I needed help and
just decided to take a chance,”
said Miss Turner, who said
she was happy <n her new life
.Earl, Sr., Washington, D. C.,
treasurer; Robert Lee Mar
shall, Tuskegee, Ala. secre
tary; and O. B, Johnson, Shreve
port, La., director of public
relations.
During the session, Dr. John
G. Lewis, Jr., of Baton Rouge,
La., the organization's sover
eign grand commander,-hailed
Black Power’s role in estab
lishing a free society.
“When all the fog has been
cleared and all the hysteria re
duced, Black Power will be rec
ognized for what it is, only
another phase in the age-old,
time-honored quest for a socie
ty in which liberty, equality,
aixi fraternity come closer to
being a reality than a mere
dr®a®, M said.
as a college student.
* * *
DURHAM - North Cardie*
College students have bean #e*
eused of betraying their buck
brothers in the “ghetto.”
Making the charge was How
ard Fuller, community organis
er for the North Carolina Ftsnd,
who led demonstrations this
summer in Durham.
“You began (betraying your
black brothers) when somebody'
asked you, 'W here you are from,
baby?’ and you said, 'New York*
or 'Washington, D. C.’and you
know you’re from Craven coun
ty, or Bertie,” Fuller said, to
the sounds of laughter and
cheers.
“The brother in the ghetto
feels the black middle-class
doesn’t care about him, and it’s
true, not only of the students
at NCC but of many of the fa
culty also. They’ve become a
part of the ‘black separatist’
movement -- to separate them
selves from their black
brothers and sisters.
“But the white man isn’t go
ing to let you do it. Wherev
er you go, he’s going to build
a ghetto around your black
head.”
Fuller, a part-time lectn er
in social work at the Univer
sity of North Carolina, chastis
ed the NCC students because
they are outnumbered at dem
onstrations and in tutorial pro
jects by “white Duke Universi
ty students.”
He told the students they can
begin making their stand for
black at NCC.
“You can demand as much
money as the students in the
white schools get.
“You can demand as many
books and as good a library;
above all, you can demand 100
per cent of your professors.
You can state by asking ques
tions, so that if they don’t
know, they go somewhere to find
out.”
UNCFExpands
Members To 36
NEW YORK - The United Ne
gro College Fund expanded its
membership from 33 to 36pre
dominatly Negro colleges and
universities, it was announced
by Dr. Stephen J. Wright, the
Fund’s president.
The three new affiliates, to
become participating members
of the Fund on January 1, are:
Claflin College, Orangeburg, S.
C o Wilber force Uni ve r sity,
Wilberforce, Ohio, and Florida
Memorial College, located in
St. Augustine, Fla., but In the
process of moving to Miami,
Fla.
The three institutions edu
cate 2,503 Negro students and
bring the combined total en
rolled at the Fund’s member
colleges to more than 37,000
Negro youth. The Fund now tn-
We Appreciate Your Business
CROWN APPLE-GRAPE
JELLY 18 oz. jar 29c
GRADE A MEDIUM
EGGS 3 doz. SI.OO
WHITE LEAF
PURE LARD 3 lbs. 49c
FRESH FRYERS—WhoIe lb. 29c
RIB STEW BEEF or BOLOGNA lb. 39c
ARMOUR'S DANNER
OLEO—Solids lb. 19c
Fresh SPARE RIBS lb. 45c or 3 lbs. $1.29
FAT BACK or NECK BONES . lb. 19c
PIG FEET or BACK BONES ... lb. 15c
PORK CHOPS or PORK STEAK lb. 59c
SMOKED
SAUSAGE lb. 39c or 3 lbs. 99c
PEACOCK PURE
PORK SAUSAGE 3 lbs. $1.15
ELLIOTT’S KING
BACON lb. 55c
WE WILL CUT AND WRAP TOUR MEAT OR OURS
FOR FREEZERS, WE GRIND SAUSAGE,
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9
Horton’s Cosh Store
1415-17 SO. SAUNDERS ST. RALEIGH. N. C.
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faire -
BUSINESS HEADS ATTEND ST, AUG. SEMINAR - These persons are am ;irty . "UctfMatc.
representing business men and women of various areas who are attending the Administrative
Management Seminar being held on The St. Augustine’s College Campus Oct. 10, through Nov 7
vs, LVf„ : Forre t st Dunn ('speaker- representative of Small Business Administration): Miss
v an Irving, secretary, Irving Swain Press; John Ingle; representative of the John Hancock
Insurance Company; Dr. S. P. Purl, director of the SB.\ Seminar; and Mrs. Julia W. Taylor, assis
tant cashier, Mechanics and Farmers Bank.
YOUR GOOD HEALTH
BY SAMUEL L. ANDTLMA.N
M. D., M. P. H.
CHICAGO COMMISSIONER
OF HEALTH
MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
Many persons who live close
to sea level suffer from moun
tain sickness when they travel
to altitudes of 6,030 feet or
more. The main symptom s
which reach their height by the
second day include head
ache, is omnia shortness of
breath, palpitation, and easy fa
tigability. In the most severe
cases, vomiting may occur.
Merely riding in an airplane
in a cabin pressurized to sim
ulate an altitude of not over
8,000 feet may cause symp
toms in a few persons; but
this is unusual because in a
plane a minimum of activity is
required. The effort of walk
ing, climbing steps, carrying
packages and the like greatly
aggravate the symptoms.
The cause of this ailment is
the body’s need to adjust to
breathing air in which the per
cent of oxygen is greatly re
duced. This oxygen deficiency
affects all the cells of the body.
Some per scats adjust to the
eludes -- wdth one exception
—every regionally accredited,
private Negro college and uni
versity in the United States.
The United Negro College
Fund Is a federation of inde
pendent, accredited senior col
leges and universities orga
nized to seek financial support
through an annual nationwide
appeal During the past two de
cades, the organization has dis
tributed more than $95 mil
lion privately contributed funds
to assist its predominantly Ne
gro member institutions. -
change more easily than others,
but those who plan to spend much
time at a high altitude and are
subject to mountain sickness
will require oxygen inhalation
and drugs to bolster the heart
for a few days. They may
also requtre aspirin and a mild
sedative at bedtime.
Complete bedrest is not rec
ommended, but mile activity
with gradually increased effort
every day and avoidance of
overfatigue usually result in ac
climatization within a few days.
For a very few victims, com -
plete adjustment does not oc
cur and in such cases the best
procedures is to return to a
lower altitude.
Persons who must move to a
higher climate to live may find
that they can adapt better if
they spend a few days at 4,033
feet until they have adjusted to
that level before proceeding to
a higher level.
Smoking and drinking alcoho
lic beverages should be avoid
* * *
The’ cash value of Series E
and H U.S. Savings Bonds out
standing is now' more than ssl
billion.
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11