Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 1, 1972, edition 1 / Page 11
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PIC I am happy to hear that Brother Ross Farrington, the young aggressive Exalted Rul er of Pride o* Orange, is do ing a fine job as their leader. We are glad to have those kinds of reports on our young leaders in Elkdcm. According to Brother J. H. Barbee, Bull City Lodge of Durham has taken on new life and it is due largely to the close relationship they have with the daughters and, of course, the new building has meant a let to them. I have just finished talking to Brother A’exar.der Barnes, a dedicated Elk through the years, who is a resident of Durham and a member of Bull City Lodge. Brother Barnes and a couple of his close friends web. getting ready when he called, to head for the Omega Conclaves, which is being held in Heav enly, Houston, beginning + he 27th of December, at the Shamrock Hilton. Houston will be a very busy place dur ing the holidays, with both the Omegas and Kappas hold ing their National Conclaves at the Shamrock Hilton and the Rice Hotels, r< pectively. I give them credit for picking a place like Houston I am sure they will be well enter tained while there. In regards n the absorbtion cf schools, we think the very fine records madi by some of Mrs. Evers Comments On Women’s Movem’t NEW YORK - Commenting In McCall's on (he current role of Gloria Steinem in the femi nist cause, Mecigar Evers wi dow says, ‘I think she’s the most important person in the Women's movement today, ’ "Mrs. Evers observations ap pear in the just released cover story of January McCall’s, whose editors chose Gloria Steinem as Woman of the Year for 1971, ‘‘That lovely, fragile body en cases a strong, determined very sensitive human being who is genuinely concerned about other people - at this parti cular time, women." According to the McCall’s story, a good portion of Miss Steinern’s time and effort In the past two years has been de voted to barnstorming at the grass roots level on behalf of women's rights. Speaking on college cornpuses, factory towns and in rural communities, she usually appears with her black partner and friend, Do rothy Pitman Hughes, “to underscore her point that what ever the color, women are sis ters under the skin.” Black women and white women »-et uur Experts TIRES * • BATTERIES Keep Tow Car _ S® AUTO ACCESSORIES Tt?p Sftftpef $ WASHING ♦ LUBRICATION (|«°> OFFICIAL Licensed "SSSJT Credit Cards Honored mmmmmemmtma iiicflf.ii m yiTntiifrmrrrntr DUNN'S tSSO uivKurra See Us For Complete Car Care! DIAL ”55-9993 602 S. BLOODWORTH ST. WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS! FRE^H BLACKEYE PEAS 17 oz. can 23c FRESH PORK NECK BONES . lb. 23c FRESH CHICKEN WINGS ... lb. 25c FRESH FRYERS—WhoIe lb. 29c THIN FAT BACK lb. 23c PORK SAUSAGE or PORK LIVER lb. 39c FRESH SPARE RIBS lb. 48c FRESH PIG FEET or PIG TAILS lb. 28c RIB STEW BEEF or SLAB BACON lb. 49c LUCK’S GROUNI) BEEF lb. 59c or 3 lbs. $1.69 PORK CHOPS or BEEF LIVER ib. 59c GOLD SEAT, FLOUR 5 lb. bag 49c GOOD WIENERS or BOLOGNA lb. 59c COUNTRY CURE SIDE MEAT lb. 59c COCA-COLA—2B oz. Bottles 3 for 87c OPEN 9:30 TO fi;3o MONDAY THRU THURSDAY OPEN 9:00 TO 7:00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Horton’s Cash Store 1415-17 SOUTH SAUNDERS ST. RALEIGH, K C. TARHEEL\ ELKS A __ ON THE *3^^ MOYE^ BY. A. J, Turner Publicity Director our Black coaches wnen they had the opportunity to serve as head coaches in the form er Black high schools. I refer to men like Clarence Moore, who held the reign at Stephen Lee, Asheville, (Dynamite) Dunn, Highland High School in Gastonia, Jack Martin, W. Charlotte High School, Char lotte, Kelly and Carter E. E. Smith, Fayetteville, J. Royal ■Skink) Browning, Statesville and Roxboro, Blount, at Hill side in Durham, Gid Johnson; Georgetown High School, Jacksonville, Furcorn. Dudley High in Greensboro and our own beloved Peter Hines (Big Pete) Wnliams, Ligon High School in Raleigh and a num ber oi others. None of the a bove men were given head coaching jobs at any of the other schools when the sup posedly integration came. The most of them had very good coaching records in the former Black high schools and a number of them sent play ers to some of the major col leges and universities an d some are doing fine jobs with the Pros., but they are not good enough to be head coaches since integration. These are some of the things to remember come voting time. Enjoy the holiday season and try to ce with us come '72, Read your CAROLINIAN. See you next week. have more in common than they have dividing them,” says Miss Steinem. “As long as society is sexist, it holds back half the black community as well as half the whites, Puerto Ri cans, Chicanos and other mi norities.” One of the main thrusts of Miss Steinem's campaign has been to improve the working conditions and wage scale for domestic workers, the majori ty of whom are black, “The white housewife who ex ploits her black sister is real ly saying that woman's work isn’t worth anything. She’s ad mitting her lack of respect for her own work,” Miss Steinem claims. McCall’s points out that Miss Steinem does not speak for all black women since “many place black solidarity before female solidarity.” Accordingto Myr lie Evers, “Gloria is beginning to be known among blacks be cause of her work in welfare rights and welfare - mother groups, but a large number of black women feel we should push the black man ahead, and are not really gung -ho about women's lib as such,” CADETS RECEIVE COMMISSIONS - Four Army ROTC Cadets have re ceived second lieutenant comm■-Mens in the reserve after completing re quirements for bachelor : \■. s Youth Carolina State College at the end of the first semester. IK ' art. Robert W. Ashby (Infantry) son of Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Ashby;':' ( . rleston, S.C.; Joseph E. Brown (Medical Serv ice Corps), a son nt Jr-. Ella C, Brown of James Island, S.C.; Bobby G. Coleman (Signal Coro , son of Mrs. Mattie M. Coleman of Edge field, S.C.; an ’ Jimmie , Mo tes (Signal Corps), a son of James Motes of Cross, S.C. Muskie “’Spells Out” The High (. Jou rt Philosophy WASHINGTON, D. C.--“I at; not satisfied that as a Supreme Court Justice William Rehn quist would con side’ C ... a guardian of the Bill of I-n hts, that he would be a bulwark gainst abuse or over-v.-x.-hiur by the Executive and 1 < >-;ia live branches, or that he would resist encroachment onti ‘lib erties guaranteed to all of us by the Constitution.’’ With these words, Senator , • mund S. Muskie (D-Me) a nounced last week that he wool i vote against the confirmation of Rehnquist to the U. S. Supreme Court. However, Rehnquist wa: confirmed for the positi ; last week. Speaking in the Senate, Senator Muskie said that Rehi.quist had not shown himself comm Wed to the fundamental prineij 1- equal protection before ? he law. '■During the past two deesm one of the most far ; caching Despite the reluctance > i m .. members of the black communi ty to join forces with -s Stelnern’s cause, ‘ -he -vx: s more than she lose :;,” - . McCall’s, in eno. . men of all colors t < ■■ ■ r together against the con. u <>i justice.” PREGNANCY PLANNING AND HEALTH BY GLORIA RIGGSBEE Dear Mrs. Riggsbee I have been married for most a yeai now and I haw been hoping for a chile -/> far I am not pregnan; and I thought I would have be oy now. My husband says net to worry yet, that it take:; timr. but I am afraid I car : rj. children. 1 want to go see a doctor, but my husband says to w- • a little while lonrer. He sm.; that some women take lon,. to have children than other.- He told me jus., to bt path -a . What do you think? My - band has been married on >. before so I know he •.. children. So I be’.e-. What should I do: I ; years old, MRS m Dear Mrs. M.: X am sending you the bo - - let “Fertility Tests r, nn Trt- r ments.” This bookie: - able free to anyone who r - quests it) describes some - the tesis and treatments used by doctors to help women pregnant. I think, however, that y t and your husband Simula' ... gree on the matter ox seeing a doctor. You in the booklet that the dor-.r usually wants to talk to the couple, not just the w> Ev en if your hsband had eh:'- dren by a former marriage r. doctor might want to exam ine him to be sure he 1 . producing enough sperm c- "e. to enable you to get pr« ynr r At the age of 18, y u u - :i have many y-a, attend which you could ye. yr. .u It could be tha- you: band is just not re;,.; .1 a baby yet. l 7 ou haven't been ■ ; quite a year yet. It < u ,i o that your husband >. ,:k-> company so inch wants to keep you all h seif for a little lon, •.. 1. i: could agree that you cm do something in six m ml!is -r a year, it might be wed war h the wait for both of you. A pregnancy that is v.mK-.i by the wife but not by :he husband, can cause real trou ble in the marriage I? rn it help if you md youi husband could have some senou- <but not angry) discussions about your desire-. or a baby You could try to explain to him why you want a baby now and why you don’t want to wait before seeing a doctor. He should try to tell you why r.e does not want you to see a changes in this nation has been • m o\ . meat towax racial e quulity. >■ quality in social jus- SHd constitutional law have expands; in ways that must ne ver be undone. As all Ameri cans know, the Supreme Court im placed a central role in that effort.’’ senator Muskie said that Rehn quist public statements as a private citizen havi displaced his dis•. • ;mrd for the law’s role in securing racial justice for all Americans. Senator Muskie’s opposition to i-hnquist ; s in keeping with his past record on civil rights. Since his election to the Senate in 19fm, he has co-sponsored and sw ported every major ci >l ! igi.is bill introduced in the I he’ include the C ivil Rights Act of 1964, which expanded h clerai powers to allow suits u desegregate accomodations, public facilities and schools and o waved job discrimination, as v. -ll as the Voting Rights Act of I j 65, which prohibited the col lection of a poll tax, suspended ’ilex ac test and nuthori/.edfed eral voting examiners to regis ter Blacks in states where voter activity had fallen below speci i led levels. In his Senate statement, Senat doctor yet. ; As you probably know from read:, 1 - tin.*-, column, it is my - .’r ~ belief that every baby I should be a wanted baby , wanted by both parents. This mem; that a couple should i s!'.i;v. (heh rmotienal reac- , lions, 'heir financial situation ’ and then mutual desire for a ' child. | If you and yeur husband can try to see one another's ' point view and come to an ; ar-reenu ai on having a baby, then, try all rn .ms see a doc- 1 tor for a fertility work-up. Dear Gloria; I have three children, ages 3, 4 and 5 My best friend has two child en three years a part :-nr\ another friend lias on; child about 4 years old. Both of lhe‘-f girls tell me I make too bit? a deal about birth control One says she douoh s iu keep from petting pregnant. and the other says he husband use; “withdraw al." Why does this work for ’hern when it didn't work for nr MRS. S. Dear Mrs. 8 : The fact is that some wom en ret pregnant much more easih than others. There are a fc.v v men who would only have one or two children cv.-n ■ ■ they never used birth con trol. There are others who would have 15 or 20 babies if they did not use something. Your two friends may well be in the low fertility range. Their mi :hods of birth con :')'< certainly very pocr f«nd iit her one lay find hcr <• f n riant v. •- en she least exp-'-e 1 ft. On the oiher hand, you are a: pa rent ly in a high fertility r .. e and would pro bably s* ill be having babies each : ear i. you weren’t us p •,-] m heel of birth * control. L you arid your husband feel that your family is com plete with the three children you have, why don’t you con sider a method of Derma net if birth control (sterilization) such as a vasectomy for him or a tubal ligation or laparo scopy for you? Then you would never have to worry a bout an unwanted pregnancy again. II you have any questions about sex or family planning, write: Mrs. Gloria. Riggsbee, 214 Cameron Avenue, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514. or Muskie cited Rehnquist's op position in 1964 to the proposed Arizona public accommodation bill that was a local version of the Civil Rights Act of that year. He also criticized Rehn quist for opposing "modest” steps in 1967 towards voluntary school desegregation in Arizo na. •‘These clear indications of Mr. Rehnquist’s rejection ofthe use of law to guarantee racial equality are from a period of years during his mature life,’ - Senator Muskie said. "...they represent that each time Mr. Rehnquist weighed the social and Constitutional values of a proposal for rac ial justice, he decided against the proposal...l find this lack of adherence to one of our Con stitution’s most vital con cept s- - equal pr ot ect ion --un ac - csptable in a Justice of the Su preme Court.” * * * Enrollment in the Work In centive Program (WIN), rose from 90,000 at the beginning of fiscal year 1971 to 109,000 at -.ear’s end. This growth in on-board strength was steady throughout the year, each mouth’s figure rising above that of the preceding month. DOR m HOW/ , joro fJLtiili UUK.. \ savings § jn p AjSi i——JOIN NOW- , i SAVE RECEIVE Club’s Open! WMm S EACH WEEK NEXT YEAR n r!lil * Open your 1972 Christmas Club r. $ 1.00 $ 50.00 account now. Then you can be * 2.00 100.00 who will be cashing their holiday io.oo iToloo Next November you'll recei ve jjjj| | Prepare For Next Xmas Now! ] V jj Mechanics & Fanners lank s 4 RALE IGH—DURH AM—C HAR LOTTE S MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION | ....... . ... .... ..... ...» ...» ...t .. .... .... i«tw htl jCM Jill jr! Great Blacks In History BY MISS ELEA L. JACKSON Each week, we shall present to the public some Information concerning great blacks In A merirsn History and World His tory. You may know about some, of these ities and others vou may never! nave been inform ed about. Here is our e leventh personal-, ity: mmmmm fßjflr Miss Jackson PATRICIA ROBERTS HARRIS (1924 - Director of Chase Man hattan Bank, Lawyer, Educator and Former Ambassador to Lu xembourg) Mrs. Patricia Roberts Harris is the new director of the third i freest commercial bank In the nation, Chase. Manhattan Bank Corporation and a former Am bassador to Luxembourg. She is a director of IBM, Scott Pap er Company and the National Bank of Washington. One of the mbst remarkable experiences in her life was to be appoint ed ambassador to Luxembourg on May 19, 1965, by President Lyndon B. Johnson, She re placed William R inkin, who was resigning. It was a great day for American Negro women as Mrs. Harris became the first Negro woman to represent this nation as an ambassador. She was the second woman to be sent to Luxembourg. A woman of strong self-as surance and determination, Pa tricia Harris is utterly feminie in appearance. Her credentials are extremely impressive, in cluding several first as an A merican woman. Her husband. William Beasley Harris Is a lawyer and is associated with the Federal T: ade Commission. Patricia Roberts Harris was born in Mattoon, Illinois, in the heart of the corn belt, the daugh ter of Bert and Hildren Rob erts. She received both her elementary and high school education in the public schools of Chicago. Upon begin graduated from high school, Patricia had five offers of college scholarships from which to choose. She de cided on Howard University in Washington. D. C., where she did her. undergraduate work in economics and government. She graduated first in her class, summa cum laude, although she is not sure that she excelled in any particular subject. Eight years later, a Howard Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa v/as estab lished. On the chapter’s t£nth anniversary, Patricia Harris was invited to become one of the 10 alumni members. She did graduate work in industrial relations at the School ctf Economics and Poli tical Science at the University THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY. JANUARY 1 1972 of Chicago, Upon completing her courses, she accepted a as oroeram director with the Young Women’s Christian As sociation in Chicago. In 1949, she returned to Washington, where she enrolled at Ameri can University and concurrently served as assistant director of the America.-- Council on Human Rights. It was during this period tha f Patricia Harris yielded to her long delayed desire to study law. She entered the School of Law at George Washington Univer sity. There she was a research assistant and associate editor of the George Washington Uni versity Law Review. Ln law school too, her academic rec ord was exemplary and she re ceived many awards including membership in the Order ofthe Coif, the John Ordronaux prize for the highest average as a second year student and, in 1960, the John Bell Lamer prize as first scholar in her class. That same year, she received her law degree and was ad mitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court, and the courts of the District of Columbia. From 1960 to 1961, she was an attorney in the Appeals and Research Division of the De partment of Justice and found it a very pleasant job. The first brief Mrs. Harris filed in the Supreme Court proved to be extremely rewarding, for it at tracted the attention of the head of the Law Division at Howard, who went to the Department of Justice and invited her to join the faculty. At Howard she taught part time and served as associate dean of students. Two years later, she became assistant professor of law and devoted all her time io teach ing constitutional law. In 1963, President John F. Kennedy appointed her co chairman of the National Wo man’s Committee for Civil Rights. In April, 1964, President Johnson appointed her to the Commission on the Status of Puerto Rico, which was to study the change that would be best for that island. Mrs. Har ris holds other important posi tions too numerous to list. To all my faithful readers and those who wish the best for me, here are my thoughts for you: "A greeting seems much warmer, a wish is more sin cere And good friends seem still dearer, For there is no time quite like this for remembering the friendships we cherish, And there are no friends like the tried and true ones. Throughout this season, may you tind new jots, renew old friendships and reioice in happy memories ana may the New Year bring fulfillment of your brightest hopes. And may ■ the joy of Christmas remain with you throughout the New Yearn” Chancellor Say? Press Guilty, But,.. NEW YORK - John Chancel lor, anchorman of NBC’s Night ly News, says in the January issue of Playboy that "some of the editing in CBS’s "The Sell ing of the Pentagon” came dan gerously close the ethical line.’’ Chancellor, In an article on "The News Media: Is that All There Is?” examines recent at tacks by government officials on the electronic press and finds It guilty--but not as charged. In his comments on the con troversial CBS News special, NBC’s Chancellor writes that "the uproar that followed in the Congress made matters worse. CBS compounded the problem by issuing an almost theologi cally complicated directive to its news staff on how to edit film--a directive that made the network look guilty as charg ed.” Although CBS was "courage ous in its refusal to turn over private papers on the program to a Congressional panel,” Chancellor adds,’’...its victory in that fight left a lot of peo ple in Congress more hostile to television news than they had been before.”• Discussing the statement by his opposite number on CBS, Walter Cronkite, that there is "a consipiracy in the Admin istration to discredit the news media,” Chancellor writes, "Maybe he’s right, but I see the current anti-news campaign as more fundamental to the character of the President and the men close to him...” In many countries, "The newspapers are run by and for political parties... What charac terizes the news in these party newspapers and on politically controlled television programs is bias...ln some countries, one must go through four or five papers a day, reading between the lines, to get a coherent i dea of the real news. Mr. Ag~ new would take us in that dir ec «*>.• 1 • ... The average enrollee in a job training program is substanti al!;. and sometimes specta cularly better off in terms of employment stability and earn ings because of his program participation, according t a re port recently released by the Department of Labor. jr? V V ft 7H. -TT -xv fc .ts !■*. J VV. rs V. J Tv. 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Jan. 1, 1972, edition 1
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