IT CABNA jE’S DOORS BANQUET ■ Hie Rev. Dr. Charles a A'. > I
minister, First Baptist Church, 101 S. Wilmington Street, is pictured
in top photo as he delivered the feature address to honor students, their
parents at the Fred J. Carnage Junior High School last Thursday night.
In bottom picture, honorees and others are shown enjoying the banquet.
(See story).
SOPHISTICATES CHOOSE OFFICERS - The Sophisticates Social and
Civic Club recently met at the home of Mrs. Annie Hooker. New officers
were elected for 1970-’7l. They are as follow, President, Rebecca Golds
ton; \ ice president, Earnie Winston; secretary, Helen Walton; treasurer,
Yvonne Lindsey; parlimentarian, Pearl Moore; reporters, Helen Cameron
and Mat res Pridgeon. A delicious dinner was served and enjoyed by all.
Pictured from left to right seated are: Mesdames Yvonne Lindsey, Martes
i-Pridgeon Pearl Moore. Standing, from left to right: Mesdames Earnie
Winston, Helen Walton, Annie Hooker, Helen Cameron, Mae Rene Sanders.
Postal Academy Training School
Opened In New Jersey
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. -
The Postal Academy Training
Institute, field headquarters for
the Post Office Department’s
new academy training program,
opened here Monday.
Located in the New Bruns
Bariev
offptsin"
ffILJSr A Harry SalUman Production
Harry Andrews Michael Came Trevor Howard Curl Jurgens lan McShane Kenneth More
Laurence Oliver togel Patrick Christopher Plummer Michael Redgrave Ralph Richardson
Robert Shaw Patrick Wymark Susannah York ...Harry 1 Saltzman«S.Beniamin Fisz
I. . . here's a beautiful |
fixture |
to qM the warmth 'JL
of wood * |p&.
to your home |3| # j
SLACK FORGED IRON WOOD j I
F»u» fight*. 20"W.«17"(«. I '**" * t . y. -V^
LIGHTING, inc. |
580 W. Fmc. St. 825-0351
wick Plaza, the facility will
serve as the nerve center for
all field training operations of
the innovative program aimed
at motivating, educating and
training school dropouts, aged
1C to 21 as well as postal em-
ployees who have been unable
to qualify for advancement with
in the Post Office Department.
In May of this year, pilot
programs will begin In Newark
and five other cities; Wash
ington, D. C.; Atlanta, Georgia;
Chicago, Illinois; San Francis
co California, and Detroit
Michigan.
The New Brunswick facility
is the clearing house for re
cruiting, selecting, training and
evaluating all program person
nel. Local volunteer postal em
ployees familiar with inner
city conditions in each program
location, will staff the store
front academies on a full-time
basis.
Presently, 70 candidates for
program assignments are In
training. All volunteers attend
a preliminary course designed
to cultivate basic skills for
understanding and expanding the
limited backgrounds of potential
academy trainees.
* * *
MODEL CITIES PROJECTS
Sixty communities complet
ed the required phase of the
Modal Cities process during
1969 and were awarded a total
of more than $3lB million in
supplemental grants, reports
the U. S. Department of Hous
ing and Urban Development,
One hundred fifty communities
throughout the country are par
ticipating in the Model Cities
Program.
'Bold, Mew Adventure For
University With Future’
Attorney Romallus O. Mur
phy, vleepresident for Develop
ment and University Relations,
acting for Dr. King V. Cheek,
Jr,, president of Shaw Univer
sity, revealed plans during a
press conference last week of
Shaw University’s Board of
Trustees to launch its nation
wide Development Program on
March 9, to raise $230 million
during the decade 1970-’79 for
Shaw’s total development.
The program will be launch
ed with a series of dinners, the
first of which will be held in
Raleigh, North Carolina at the
Raleigh Memorial Auditorium
at 7;30 p.m.
The Honorable Terry San
ford, president-elect of Duke
University, a member of Shaw
University’s Board of Trustees,
and former Governor of North
Carolina will deliver the Key
note address at the North Caro
lina dinner.
The "Decade of the 70’s”
Program which has been in the
planning stages for the past five
and a half years, will seek funds
totaling the above amount for
three specific operations:
1) the continued development
of the campus located in down
town Raleigh which will be the
center of programs in urban
sciences, communications, Hu
manities and the Arts and pro
fessional teacher education; 2)
the creation of a Shaw Univer
sity City in the Raleigh area to
be called a Living Learning
Center. It will provide facili
ties for housing commercial
stores and businesses, spots
and recreation , cultural and
community services. The en
vironment will be one in which
Shaw faculty members, stu
dents, and local residents can
learn from each other. Many
of the facilities in the Living
Learning complex were design
ed to be continual sources of
revenue for the University; .3)
the creation of Metropolitan -
Colleges In several metropoli
tan areas.
Murphy said that Dr. Cheek,
the University’s Board of Trus
tees, administration and facul
ty and students have been en
PLAY IT SAFE
ANTISEPTIC
More- than si million people are injurep each year in
HOME ACOIPENTS the POTENTIAL rangers that cause ACCIPENTS
LURK IN EVERY ROOM .
M' More than of home
I nTV ACCIDENTS OCCUR IN THE KIT
•I I >7~f -A' CHEN MINOR BURNS, ANP CUTS
- * s m “1 S + FROM KNIVES ANP GLASS’ ARE
V-.v THE MOST FREQUENT, A SUP
-Jsffc M / VTv x PIEMENTARY FIRST Alt? KIT
; 4 Jy'l yf i A[\ Vv SHOULP BE KgfTlN THE
JS* ! Urn
DISASTER AREA IN THE ‘"I 1 j ' U
HOME IS THE WORKSHOP , A -A Vpfill M
CARELESSNESS on PAP'S j : —'ll
PART OFTEN RESULTS IN , >• — L _ p
minor wounps. here, IsMhs i 1 L> —'
ALSO, SIMILAR M6PICAL V
FIRST AIPS SHOULP 8E J V
AT HANP __ I V
M 1 V All OF THESE CAN 8E
T £S~ ) v SIMPLY TREATEP WITH
V s\ "CLEAN'N TREAT t."
' I \ SINCE CHILDREN seem to
Z Ai'iill tm 1/If ' 'IS, FV EVERYW here, an V
T •|\ N .ARE CONSTANTLY COMING
\ UP WITH MINOR BURNS,
Ml \ CUT'S, SCRAPES.AMPSRUISES.
pi/ V\ USE 1 CLEAN 'N TREAT t,
IT PD6SN-T STING ,ANP
W PAIN IS RELIEYEP ON CON- .
•ydi ~'Al TAC.T. WITH PAIN GONE THE
/ U wounp is cleansep with
f A oenne- motion.
mmmrn:: l 2J
On Unsafe Tires
As some readers know, the automobile tire industr\ in
this country operated virtually without binding safety re
strietions or requirements for fifty years. Only comparitively
recently has there been a Department of Transportation in
Washington and only in the last few years has much atten
tion been focused on the problem of protecting the American
consumer from unsafe tires.
A couple of years ago many automobile manufacturers
saved money by passing off two-ply tires on the U.S. public
on their new cars—even some high-powered models. These
were rated four-ply, whatever that really added up to. but
many of them were not satisfactory.
The latest charge concerning tires comes from Congress
man Benjamin S. Rosenthal, a New York Democrat who is
chairman of a House subcommittee looking into consumer
interests. Rosenthal charges that the Dunlop Tire Company
refused to recall some of its French-made tires which failed
to pass federal safety tests. The Congressman believes
manufacturers are obligated to recall such tires under pro
visions of the National Highway Safety Act by not acting
voluntarily.
He proposes that Congress give the Transportation De
partment the authority to require recall of tires which do not
pass federal safety tests. And he warns that unless Con
gress acts, the law, which pertains to automobile recalls
as well as tires, will “fall apart.”
There should lie no hesitancy on the part of Congress to
act in behalf of safety on the highways for the American
motorist and pedestrian. Too many lives are at stake not to
do so. I nsafe automobiles and tires should be recalled if
they do not pass federal safety tests, and the Transporta
tion Department should be given that power, to be used
sparingly, of course, said only after any new standards arc*
well known.
gaged in comprehensive studies
relating to the educational needs
of the nation to which Shaw
should and must be responsive.
The results have led to the de
cision that in the years ahead
the resources of Shaw should
be devoted to: 1) the extension
of educational opportunity to
new and larger student popu
lations; 2) the development of
new knowledge, social techno
logies and strategies in an ef
fort to contribute toward re
solving the "CRISIS OF OUP
CITIES,' 5 and 3) creating a net
work of educational resources
directed toward accelerating
the achievement of full equali
ty for all Americans."
He explained that the uni
versity was now embarking up
on a bold redevelopment pro
gram which would result in
the reorganization of the Uni
versity in a manner that would
enable it to provide education
al services of greater scope
than it presently is doing, or
ever had done before.
Funds for expansion of the
university’s physical facili
ties through the Shaw Mater
Plan account for approximate
ly $75 million of the total $250
million and funds sought for
Permanent Endowment make
up the rest.
The Raleigh campus and the
Living Learning Center com
plex is expected to serve ap
proximately 6,000 students. The
Metropolitan C olleges, which
will be operated as branches of
Shaw is projected to start In
Detroit, Michigan.
In this decision, Mr. Mur
phy noted that it is in the na
tion’s major cities that the
problems of educational depri
vation are the most acute. In
spite of the abundant educa
tional resources in the cities
these resources are not avail
able to members of the mi
nority populations to the extent
ana in the manner required;
Officials at Shaw believe it
possible to design a new type
of educational Institution speci
fically created to be respon
sive to the needs of such popu
lation groups.
IMPRESSIONS IN BR ONZE |
1301 Branch Street pry EDDIE HERMAN DAVIS Phone 828-2415
The purpose of the Black Mis
sionaries is to help all Black
people and organizations in time
of need.
The patch that some of you
might have seen is the symbol
of our organization. The Cross
stands for all of our Black
People that have been cruci
fied over the mmmmmmmm
years, the Red in
our patch .stands
for the blood that K 1
was shed by
our people, the WB*’ ‘® M Wwp
Black in the ’ , ||fr
patch stands for i Jm
Blackness. The
B. M. stands for S £ „ £ V §ll
Black Mission-® HH
ar ie s, because DAVIS
our mission is to help.
Brothers and sisters it lurd
to put together an organization
that is truly uptight because we
have so many brothers and
sisters that say they are Down
and to listen to them talk about
what they will do and what
they have done and said to the
white eves and how' they have
backed their brothers and sis
ters up, but when you ask for
a little help to help feed or |
cloth a child those same Black
RECEIVED NEW HONOR -
New York: Among the 15 A
mericans notable in the arts
named here February 23 to
• membership in National In
stitute of Arts and Letters were
jazz pianist and composer Duke
Ellington. (UPI).
Who’s Who
Selects 22
AtShaw
The 1969-’7O edition of Who’s
Who Among Students in Ameri
can Universities And Colleges
will carry the names of twenty
two (22) students from Shaw
University who were selected
to join the ranks of the coun
try’s most outstanding campus
leaders.
Shaw University’snominating
committees and editors of the
annual directory included the
names of these students based
on their academic achieve
ments, service tothe communi
ty, leadership in extracuricular
activities and future potential.
They join an elite group of
students selected from more
than 1,000 institutions of high
er learning in all 50 states,
the District of Columbia and
several foreign nations in North
and South America.
Students named this year are:
Onie Almetra Alston, Pearlie
Mae Aytch, Martin L, Banks,
Susan B. Barnes, Ronni L. Best,
Mary L. Davis, Edward D. Ellis,
Frager F, Foster, Kenneth a.
Grady, C a ro 1 v n E. H odg es,
Brenda L. Hofler, Maria A.
Johnson, Alda L. McNeill, De
wilda Me Knight, Ernest B.
Moore, Ann E. Mott, Conrad K.
Pridgen, Viola Ramsey, Gwen
dolyn D, Reid, Chris Thomas,
Constance T. Walker and
Luretha Wilson.
* * *
And running under a certain
Island which is called Clau
da, wehadmticb work to come by
the boat;
We Offer Lew Cott '
FUNERAL
INSURANCE |
For Every Member Os Your Family
Call Us Far Details
Lightner Funeral Home
Where Service Excels
| 312 Smithfield St., Rafcigh, N. C. Telephone 833-1676 1
■ - -
THE CABOLINIAN
RALEIGH, N. C . SATURDAY, MARCH 7. 1970
Power, brothers, and with there
sfros are never available. Well
brothers and sisters there is
truly a Black Organization that
is truly (what you would call
out there). Because we are an
organization if Black men who
have lived in poverty and we
understand it and know how
to deal with. it. We organiz
ed to help our brothers and sis
ters, not to give them the run
around like other organiza
tion w ill do and leave you hang
ing on a limb that is about
too break.
The Black Missionaries' Or
ganization is working on a pro
gram now- that is needed in the
Black Communities, Tie
Breakfast Program in the South
side Area is a program that
was not set up because South
side is a popular area now but
because some Brothers finally
got together and stopped each
other a few times befon thev
finally realized what was really
need in South side. (There is talk
about mothers on welfare fath
ers without lobs, not money for
coal, self help programs for
South side peon 1 e . it doesn’t
UMCTTAIi'C grocery store
UmJICMi/ J TRANSFER CO.
UO! HAUUNG m ’ FIXL IPtt O,
LOCAL A LONG DISTANCE GROCERIES
Courteous—Prompt
Efficient Your Patronage Aporeciated
MARY A. UMSTEAD, Manager
602 S. Dawson greet Tarboro A Martin Streets
dial te 2-2zn
; G. E. 9” dIagTpORTABLE TV |
f: All chonnel VHF-UHF reception; 42 sq. in. picture; »ex* Y
tured polystyrene, eosy-to-cleon cabinet; solid state tun
£ mg; fold-down antenna; front controls ond sound for X
true fidelity, 10'. 2 lbs. of tuck-owoy viewing pleasure. •(
7; NO. 54460 mmmmmmmmm
•V Feb ?7 1. 7i -V.
I (Tight fixtures 40%«,'"! Z? (
I[sMTo|TTj®
use your enioiT; l L. a.
£ 1401 Downtown Bird. 828-3251 £
•y i%*
USE YOUR BANK AUTOCARS
matter what program vou are
a part of). If we are still un
able to feed your child a good
hot hardy meal in the morning
then you are not getting any
help.
Dig on me for a min., a lot
of the time we are working
for that white man and we have
to leave the house at five in the
morning and the wife has to get
out at seven to work for vhitey
and the children are sent next
door or to school for the rest
of the day and I can dig on
that, because I have done it
myself. I'm asking you brothers
and sisters if you think this is
a good and needed program
and if you think the Black Mis
sionaries Organization is the
type of organization you as a
black man or woman would sup
port. We need all of the money
we can get to get the progran
started, if you bring a dime !>;.
that will be enough to buy a
child some milk'"
Send contributions to Black
Missionaries, Breakfast Pro
gram, 704 South McDowell Si.,
Raleigh, North Carolina 27601.
Telephone: 834-2273.
9