Youth Os Today Called Followers, Not Thinkers, By Dr. Z. George Job Corps Center Head At College DURHAM - 1 . 7- : •'A ar son George to ; ui. College not* of thinkers, ■ • - The Cie'el job Corps c- s- id **T h e kin i o f wants, w ich -e kind of sock; s about to co " - • it yonth ca ? society t;• ac • . . - leaders* i? Come »■; !<•:'- Dt. vreorg- ~ - ' ly a men • • . gaticm • also told -• • ' think '‘At ' people mate:. world.” The xc : - . H speaker of t e !".:' ■i : scientific revolution tion, a;. She descr; - • -■ revel ut :■ ‘‘alter e" mon sense.” - --. moved f: Issac X* of Albert The said, i- • “mergim • • Into a wo: “Life is : • and pro i. - ” anonyrr.Oi - sive,” The seed. 1 “unive: s : tion of the n ■ funda • modern on the . Dr. C : : ■ crucial i meanings for our li• Feu ; who asset t t usual tab •. The dangei that so man. ha - -- • -i' -: suapectinp it INSURANCE RENTALS SALES TEKRAC! REALTY £i i t 'S i 'i t < U.' v ii . I 434 HU I '1 Hi : i’. Hi DIAL 833-1102 ISP 3 ?* Comm unity Florist *r \ CORSAGES—"' GERAL DESIGNS—POTTED PLANTS—FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS, ETC. 325 N. Tarboro St TTCtu ai *i Transfer ( .>rrv ny # Grocery Store LIGHT *.M) \' ” H iTsi'uM Or HAULING [! GROCERIES LOCAL AN;. LONG jj # DISTANCE l ! Courteous - P. :apt I! your Peonage • jj Appreciated MAR*» A. LMSTEAD, Manager 602 3D ■ . el T r> & Martin Streets DIAL 7E 2-9478' TE 2-9212 ■» winuiiinmmuiT tin WeAppreciate Yourßusiness! BOOK M AT( Iff S Box of 50’s 10c BEEF or PORK RO \ST IK 49c FAT BACK or RIG TAILS . lb, 19c LUZIA NNE R 1 ( OFFEE lb. 59c PORK ( HOPS or PORK STEAK lb. 59c STREAK OT FAN MEAT )b. 39c RIB STEW BEEF lb. 39c FRESH PORK SPARE RIBS lb. 39c FRESH GROUND BEEF ib» 49c or 3 lbs. ARMOUR s CRESCEM BAC ON ib. 49c GOLD St- 41 FLOUR 5 lb. bag 49c FRESH PORK NECK BONES 5 lbs. 89c ROBESON . STRING BE ANS No. 303 can 5 for 75c GOLD MEDAL PURE BEACH PEPPER 1 oz. can 27c OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P. M. | Horton's Cosh Store 141?-1 South Sr; undent 5* Raleigh. N. C. j ' LBLIC RELATIONS INSTITUTE DELEGATES - Charlotte: Public : development officers from •r. iitionally Negro colleges y '.r.e nation gathered on the campus of Johnson C. Smtih Uni : .s' week tor a two day session on the topic "Public Relations * Capital Funds Campaign.” The conference was co-sponsored by S:nith University ml the America*' College Public Relations As ( VCPRA). Included in the group photo are (second from left : a i V '.-tv 1.. Burney, director of levelopment at Bethune-Cook id’i m. (front center) Moses S. Belton, the institute’s director, • V! right front row) Micheal Ra.lock. presi lent ACPRA, and (third >n from right) Dr. Granville Sa.wyer, president of Texas South :versity. (Photo by Curt Peters) Black Power Movement Ho Passing Fad/ Psychiatrist Tells Magazine . ’ :.:ck Power movement • ■ -* .• passing fad, de . ; - w Negro psy • current issue . it bears •’he '.•if!-. Powei or black ss or self- reali separatism or black - is Beautiful?) or :' hi identity and a •oday’s attitude o-Americans is tie writer as a evolutionary psv : ns i t io n for a - author, .-.l'. F. Fous saint, M. r>„ Asst. Professor of Psychiatry at the Tufts Uni versity School of Medicine, says that In just a few months after the "Black Power” slogan ex ploded Into headlines in June, 1966, the civil rights struggle shifted from an integration oriented movement to a cul tural and political revolution of black consciousness, seif development, and self-determi nation. His incisive anal;.sis is no more distant observation of a professor, drawing upon i is psychological expertise and writing from an ivory tower. For psychiatrist Poussaint worked as a physician in the famous Mississippi Summe: Project when ir, 1904-6" swarms of v. ite volunteers--mostly Northern collegians--descend ed upon the South and joined "The Movement’* fox Negro voter registration and other civil x ights. In the August, 1967, Ebony, Poussaint tolc what • appe: edin an article titled "Hov. the ‘tv hit e Problem ’ Spa nned ‘Black Power.’” It was a wond erful time at first, he said, when 1 lack and white young sters walked t h e dirt roads arm in arm, clasped hands in churches ("it was beautiful to hold that white and”) anti sang "Black and white togethe:, we shall overcome.” But then t! e white kids returned North to their studies and left t» ei: new black comrades at the same old stand-- and at the tende: mercies of ‘‘outraged” South ern whites. However, it was far more than this inevitable transience of theii erstwhile white cohorts that left a bitter after-taste with Southern blacks. It was also, Dr. Poussaint found, the white liberal volunteers’ real ly racist llliberality, their feel ing of superiority, patronizing attitude, grasping of leadership positions, their messianic mis sionary mentality, and their blaunting in the faces of South ern whites the liberties they took with interracial living. In his current Ebony article, Poussaint says that the tlx rust of the black movement now is no longer just one of "gain ing more rights” to: the N' ; - gro but a revolutionary cul tural concept demanding a re -Ut Our E**™ j ® T " ,IiS K«p Your Cor ! /ys\ Yep Shiipet $ washing / « LUBRICATION ® J OFFICIAL Licensed 4 Inspection W 7 Station - Credit Cards Honored ~ DUNN’S esso " SERVTCEKI tR See Us For Complete Car Care! DIAL fi examination of the very core of the value system and social behavior of white America and a concept requiring a new sense of Ila ' awareness and pride in Afro- American heritage. Thus, a convulsive a id often painful change is taking place in the attitudes of black people, particularly among those who have achieved what is con ventionally viewed as "suc cess*' by white standards. Al thoug' recognizing that con spicuous consumption -- big cars, fine clothes, good liquor -- is a status symbol among ot: er ethnic groups, Pous saint says that it is especial ly important for blacks t o a chieve "prestige” in this way in order to overcome the stigma of being a Negro. However, he warns, the inherent cruelty of this act of communicating to others of one’s group, ‘‘Look what I have that you don’t have” and "Look, I’m a better per son than you.,” hurts the cause ot the mass ot black Americans hot!; individually and collec tively. As a result, he says, many successful middle - class Ne groes are coming to have guil ty feelings about ’heir strivings for status and advertising their "prestige” by material osten tat lon. Their guilty feeling exists because, in Poussaint’s words, "when black status - seeking is directed toward be co: ing part of a predominant p white setting, then part of the striving may have have obvious white racist aspects.” And he points out that much of the passion by some Afro-A mericans to be “integrated” represents only a thinly dis guised form of racial self hatred. Yes, We All Talk BY MARCUS H. BOULWARE, PH. D. ROBERT AS CHAIRMAN Within the last three months, ] have been asked, "Since Henry M. Robert’s Rules of Order is used widely, where may we read about him?”. I suggest that you secure a copy of Readings on Parlia mentary Procedure, edited by- Haig A. Bosmajian, published by Harper and Row, New York, Dr. Jenkins Is Invited To Il’Viois LAWRENCEYILI £, Va.-Dr. Clara Elaines Jenkins, a mem - be: of thefacult;. of Saint Paul's College in I. awrenceville, Va., is the recipient of a personal invitation from the Board of Trustees of the Marquis Bio graphical Library Society of Chicago, Illinois, to become an advisory member of the So ciety. Among the opportunities given her t rough membership is the privilege to nominate to Who’s Who In America and other Marquis publications, in dividuals of merit whose posi tions indicate achievement and who deserve recognition. She has also the privilege of depositing with the Marquis Biographical Library any per sonal or familial archieves or expressions of opinion on issues and p: oblem s of our times which may be of interest to qualified researehers. The Marquis Biographical Library Society is a non-pro fit organization, incorporated in 1961, and dedicated to en riching scholarship through the delineation and understanding of the lives of individuals who have advanced our nation. It was organized by the distin guished historian and bio grapher, Allan Nevins. Dr. Jenkins is a present Mar quis biograph.ee with: biographi cal datum appearing in Who’s Who In The South And South west and Who’s Who Os Ameri can Women. She is listed in numerous other national and in ternational publications. Riot, Control Os Fire Heard By Safety Board Talks on riot and fire con trol were featured subjects at the 24th spring meeting of the Safer. Advisory Board of the Nort! Carolina Department of Labor. The meeting was held here Marc: 20-21 in separate ses sions at the Department of Labor and the Sheraton- Sir Walter Hotel. State Labor Commissioner F rank Crane presided. Harvey W. white of Char lotte, special accounts execu tive of Kemper Insurance Com pany addressed the safety group’s business session Fri day morning on the subject, “Riots - Potential and Prepar edness.” Glen G. Fleming, cor porate director sci safety and plant protection for Celanese Corporation, was the group’s Friday luncheon speaker. Fleming, also from Charlotte, talked on “The Safety Director and Fire Safety.” H. E. Williams, Safety Board member from Eden, presented for open discussion a report on the Labor Depart rr, e n t’s planned “Bulletin on Industrial Fire Safety,” on which a special committee has been working for some time. New York, 1968. This book has considerable information about Major Roberts, the majority principle, the legal side of parllmentary procedure, the evolution of parliamentary procedure, and the precedence in proposing, and motions. READERS: For my Parlia mentary Motions Chart, send 30 cents to M. H. Boulware, Florida AAM University, Box 310-A. Tallahassee, Flor ida-- ft no m 32307. jt i s someuhere over 30. H Qj&lBoone 86 PROOF KENTUCKY HflBR STRft,GKT BOURBON mlWjfi l WHISKEY t OM I \Saett . , * $n 50 $| oo Sjj* KENTUCICy # jut j ersuitiHT «eu6!*9» PINT Sr 4, 5 QUART OLJ? BOOHSJ®<«TIUJC*V CO I_> CHARCOAL FILTERED IfijkV. MW* tw lA»® W «•«•*•* . I ®ipw»WW ™ E OLD BOONE DISTILLERY Meacbwiawn, Kentucky OFFERED NO RESISTANCE - Anguilla: Anguilla residents watch as British marines occupy airport March & shortly after troops landed to foi ce the island’s return to the British Commonwealth. Anguillans one red no resistance .is the British task force took over the iM ■ . i and restored Anthony Lee as colonial governor. (UPI). GOOD SAMARITAN STRICKEN - Washington: Dr. Donald Gatch, who has devoted his medi cal career to helping hungry and worm-in fested Negroes in rural South Carolina, is shown in Freedom’s Hospital here March 18 where he is suffering from malnutrition, ex haustion and worms. Gatch, 38, of BJuffton, S. C.. was instrumental in drawing the at tention of congressional hunger investigators to the plight of Soutl Carolina Negroes. (CPI), Rev Shuttlesworth Now Holds High Court Record WASHINGTON, D. i . - The Rev. Fred. L. Shuttlesworth, president of the Southern Con ference Educational Fund (SCEF), now holds some sor? of record In the U. S. Supreme Court. He recently won his sixth appeal from criminal convic tions growing out of his civil rights activity. He has lost one such case, for which he served 5 days in jail. The latest victory resulted from his appeal of a 90-day sentence for parading without a permit. The parade was a demonstration in Birmingham, Ala., on Good Friday in 1963, Shuttlesworth and the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., fail ed to get a permit for the march, wi ich they led. The Supreme Court held the demonstrators were wit. in their rights in parading without a permit because it was likely that the city would not have granted them a permit. The ruling affects 1,500 black people arrested during the historic struggles in Birmingham. In addition to being president of SCEF. Shuttlesworth is the secretary of the Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence (SCLC), of which L>r. King was president. He is alsopresi dent of the Alabama Christian' Movement of Human Rights (A CMHR). Shuttlesworth has been ar rested so many times so: civil - rights activities that he- has lost track of the number, but THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH N C, SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1969 He organized the ACMHR in 1976 and helped to found the SCLC in 1977. He has been president of SCEF since 1963. gBMWSMBB«weWBBWW^^ 1 fife i j V y SERVICES | IS INTEREST g M® Os ON | ONfYS% ncto" j j LOANS ] \ AUTOMOBILE LOANS f I Keep the cost of a new car down by using a bank finance plan. You pay only reasonable bank* loan rates and | improve your credit standing in the | community. | I! Say My Friendly Bank. That means | the same as our signature below. Let | us he your bank for all your banking | needs .. .in a ‘SouUFashion’ way. I MECHANICS AND I ! fAßams BANK I $ Large enough to serve you . . . 3 Small enough to know you % RALEIGH—-DURHAM—CHARLOTTE j* Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Biology Prof A t A&T Given Final Rites DURHAM - A funeral se; vice for Noah B. Brown, ,J: 50, instructor of biology .u A&T State University, was held March 17 In the St. Phillips Episcopal Church, witktheßev. Father E. N. Porterofflciatim Burial was in Beechwood Cerne try with full military rites. A native of Greenville, Bro\ . died las? Friday in Llncol: Hospital after a n ort Illness. He was a graduate of Nor Carolina College, where he re ceived the B. S. and M. S. de grees. He also st- riled at ti •• University of North Carolii... at Chapel Hill. Brown formerly tauj. t Hillside High School, Durbar Rarber-Scotia College, Living stone College, and St. Paul' College. He also worked fe the Durham Heal?!: Depart ment. Brown joined the staff Os a&T in 1960. He is survived by hiwifi , Mrs. Ella Walker Brov.n, a i d daughter, Mrs. Jacquelyn Brown Hall of Dayton, Ohio. * * * Education is not to r cc>i fused wit! going to college not these day s. 13

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