Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Feb. 19, 1972, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE CAROLINIAN ? RaLEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY IS, 1972 6 prj LING FOR OAD-Skipper Row les* daughters pause to check the license olat.e th< : r t'.u.her will use on Ms campaign car as they prepare to leave or. their ?-vn ihre-:-ucek Manteo-to-Murphy trip to promote Bowles’ campaign t •• Govern*: t Her ling the special license plate are 19-year ol.l Mari!. Bowies, who'is in her first year at the University of North c arolina t/Lapel Hill, and. Mrs. Holly Bowles Geil. Holly’s husband, -John Geil. oFi n •! <he trip md will ix? monitoring its progress. Douglas* Home Becomes National Shrme- President Os NEA Pressnt At Ceremonies WASHINGTON D. C. - On i el . 12, the F; i.L-r’ck Douglass home nen. •«.. fornidlh de-di cai ”1, makiiit it ore of 283 nattov.ui lust ri <! ■ . < i: Ui<- Co: it 1" , I'h,"* : i:c ,-.tioh opl'f - v to Its* l»r»f fiin* <•> * uni* #* IM* > lull viucot tin)!* U»« cue v inj Ir* rtats (üblJer liunsinum tons- v‘ .•:> arm with fi**d isolated eoimfti-w.ighf. $• ;J Stii!*-in e*mids)» dip petitiva U: • cariridg. toy ♦» adjust X v UyliM prtisbr* --fsnfre! *nd sisibt* its!*. :•:* ;t Sting-* way *-»rsm »>*»*» t« tfc* rs*r, >:• t; iiiii oi th* way for 'njnual pby Over v »it» fvrntafci.h*!»U»m» i.f.ry ms? << ;t : $44.50 . o, #|( j,, yrda , 9,0 S | smmmmi'i | / S't'tMv) | 4 4 HILLSBOROUGH ST.! I emwmies m* «».»,, | S On Jin? t«sr m fhtirmkt Ample Parking in Sear & . . ! rrilo secret { "THESE MUST GO" j To Make Room For More 200 MOBILE HOMES IN STOCKS JOO MORE ON THE WAY See These Specials Today! listed below ire 3 typical homes on display, 2 taiir&dsm, *3GO down plus fax. *69,31 per mo. 2 btdr®®n»,*4oo down plus tax. 5 78.0! per mo. 3 b«eisr@9f»* # *450 down plus tax. 1 *99.43 per mo. 11.99 A.P.H. available on 40 homes. This is a savings of 1 Vi%. These prices apply through Feb. 21st. CAPITAL MOBILE HOMES I II 432 So. Wilmington St. Open 7 Days Week 83243C94 J ;■} conducted by the De partment of Interior’s National Park rvice which administers the it » , and by the Frederick Duimlass Memorial anti His torical A.ssoct it ion. Donald E. Morrison, presi -1 dent of the 1.1 million-member i National Education Assoela c tion, was among 5,000 leaders in tlu* fields of education and civil rights who attended this historic ceremony. George B. Hartzog, Jr., director of the Na tional Park Service, introduc ed District of Columbia Mayor Walter Washington and Interior Secretray Rogers C. B, Morton, who delivered the dedicatory address. Commenting on his partiepa tion tn this ceremony, Morrison said: “American educators to day honor this man who, more than a hundred tears ago, de manded equal education for the nation's pwr including Ori entals, American Indians, and Blacks. Even then he called for federal aid to education, urging Congress, following the end of the Civil War, to enact “great national systems of aid to edu cation. ” “We think of Frederick Dou glass as an internationally fam ous 19th century stateman, edu cator and equal rights leader. But, in fact, Douglass was at least a century ahead of his time, his demands for civil and human rights being as relevant today as they were in the 1800's. In 1840, he spoke in defense of Irish freedom, world peace, the end of capital punishment, and the political rights of women as well as black citizens, ” Morri son noted. The Frederick Douglass home, also known as Cedar Hill, is located at 14th and\V, Streets S. !.. The 19-room house over looking the Anacostia Riberand much of the City of Washington has been undergoing restora tion since 1950, following the authorization of *400,000 by C ongress in 1969. Douglass pur chased the home, ah eight-acre site, in 1377, spending the later years of his life there until his death in 1895. In 1962 the home became part of the Na tional Park system through an Act of Congress. Secretary Morton, in making the announcement of the for mal dedication of Douglass 9 home, has said “it ate that all Americans now will be aide to visit the home of a man who never hesitated to re mind us that our future demands' that we strive constantly to be a united people,” Morrison added: “We honor the man and his memory for his love for education as a tool for reaching this united and humane state. He struggled a gainst enormous aids, learn ing to read and write lc. a time and place which denied our black citizens the right to learn. He tried to nass on this love of learning, hiding in the woods with the children whom he taught, his very life in danger had he l>een caught. This kind of deification to education can not be forgotten, nor can our nation every repay him for his contributions to all of our citizens. It is grafying that this month the people of America can at least pay tribute to his me by making his home a national historical area,” Morrison concluded. A. j» Turner Gets D. C. Appointment A. J. Turner has been appoint ed to the District Advisory Council of this week in Washing ton by Thomas S. Kleppe, ad ministrator of the U. S. Small Business Adm inistratlon. One of the functions of theSBA is to develop information about problems of the local busi nesses and to serve as a chan nel of information to improve the SBA program. Turner serves as the treasurer for the Wake County Republican Party and also Is director of T&T Associates. St. Aug. Alumni Re formers . Will Stage Homecoming Dance St. Augustine's College’s new look National Reform Alumni Assoc it ion announced this week, through that. organiza tion’s president Peter G. Hol den, Sr., that the annual mid winter 'Homecoming, Ball* will take place on Friday evening, February 18th The affair which draws alum ni and friends from many of the Falcons far flung alumni chapter, will be staged in The Carolina Room of The Raleigh Memorial Auditorium with one of Carolina swingingest bands 9 furnishing the music. The national alumni’s Social Services Committee with co chairwomen, Mrs. Lois Rogers (of the college’s Guidance Dept.) and Mrs. Margaret Ransdellfof the vic<t-pres dent for financial affair’s dept.), along with other members of this predominantly Raleigh based committee have been working over-time t make this one of North Carolina's top mid-winter soc ial events. Ever since Pete Holden, a for mer Raleighites, who now make his home in New York City, w? elected to the presidency of St. Aug's national alumni that or ganization has grown by 'leaps and bounds.’ By that sametoken, many recent graduates are flocking to new roform movement. Thus as a result whenever Holden has to attend a campus event, a large contin gent of New York. Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Bal BRANCH PRESENTS A 5-MINUTE HISTORY OF FTS FIRST CENTURY OF SERVICE. DfSgG- mssx m 1 SSL |§| Bianch«ndCompany, JHL. «dHadtey® I *^ Fayettevffl* New Both; iSftwA 19C7 W a 1 K-erger offee in jMHBFJI Mr 'V-TiWWSTrSWwi ffiflTmwiA Wiltamtton m J* 19W New office, it! Elm City Bmictbuy.it, fir„t W—^ J Galfctaw »avio» to oatoMn; ' Branch .nainut tompuy. fjTTj 192 f> &N' . ...Tr Cmm—c-m—-i I ■mk. -<m Nwaicai InWiittinwloß «BTWfHAC»m«Y M or ? to come! But 1972 also marks our W orma. hundredth anniversary. Norfli'Carolina 9 * %9m s] Oldest Bank becomes the first m the State to North Cardin, citiw. )H*TrM •/each the century mark, and we look soma fd to our second century of service with hidi - hopes and big plans/ 197 s Wi mW\ Those plans, of course, include you— we wouldn't be where we are today, with _ “ ~ over S3OS millioß in resources, You b«IOPK3 ttt SSt, i! it hadn’t been for the people of North jhaJraStotjwi&i Carolina who’ve let us serve them. ** “***“■ So this short history e? our bank is also s |||lSg bankinsandtrustcomw^* Mstory of the people of North Carolina. And MfWai'A KUDWUt MW* m wish a happy annlverss ry to you all BY MARY LOU Mrt.EOD timore and Washington alumni usually follows him. At time of this writing the New York Alumni are persuing plans to charter a plane for the trek back to ‘The Aug as the students refer to St. Augustine's. Latest reports from the Raleigh based college sat that St Augustine's internationally MISS PITTMAN TO WFT Rocky Mount-Mr. and Mrs. j. 1. Pittman, Jr. aim ounce the engagement ot their daughter, Miss -Ri.su Dinnae Pittman, of Rocky Mount to Michael v. avn Dae of Raleigh, son of Mrs. Ernest Vinson and the late Mr. Calvin C. Dae. The bride-elect is attending North Caro lina State University, Her ;i.. ;<•- is also attending North lina State University. The ■ ad ding- is planned for July 22, famous President, Dr Prezel* R. Robin'-on, is ‘all at the way this year’s home coming activities are shaping up. Other members o! the Nation al Social Services Committee are: Miss Barbara Mann sec retary; Miss Anne Bradshaw Acting Corresponding Secret ary; Mrs India Smith. Mrs. Eloise Hilliard Mrs Mtllio Veasey, Mrs. Dorothea Handy, Francis Poole and James Burt. Dance Os 2 WorldsTo Hampton HAMPTON, Va. - Dance of Two Worlds will open the new year for the Musical Arts So ciety of Hampton Institute on Thursday, Feb. 17 at 8:15 p. m. in < y,don Hall, presenting; Dh.isk-.u' an Shala, incompara ble exponents of Indian ritual istic dance, combined with A - on?o Rivera, exotic Aztec in terpretive dancer and Chief Thundovbird. American Indian, famous tor ’.ls - 'Hoop i os o.“ Bha.skat*, an east Indian tem ple dancer, born in Madras, In dia, started his eareei as a boxer. He fox mod his first company in Lidia in 1950 and shortly thereafter w is brought to the United States where his rise to fame was rapid indeed. In his set oral t roadway ap be.-iranees. Bhaskar has also been bailee as a film actor ana choreographer. Television film and concert appearances in practically every country have enhanced Ms reputation as one of the most exciting dancers In the world today. Besides giving a Command Performance for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth n, Bhaskar has also been decorated by the late Prime Ministei Nehru for his outstanding contribution to In dian Art. Together with his partner, Shala, Bhaskar can presently bo seen in the dance-film'‘Dan ces of India 99 now being screen ed all over the United -States. NEW DRILL PRESS New dimensions in crafts and hobbies will open with 1221 BLARNEY COURT—WORTHDALE O-ily 3 years old and already financed. Pay equity and take over 6 % FHA Loan or will make new GI or FHA for buyer. Brick, 1 story. 3 bedrooms, living dining, kitchen, den with fireplace, 2 full baths and comer lot with cyclone fence. Excellent condition. Shown by appointment only. BAREFOOT REALTY & MORTGAGE CO. TELEPHONE 828-5432 use of Montgomery Ward's new, moderately priced., variable-speed, ptecisicm 3/8 inch drill press. Developed a* an exclusive special for Ward’s centennial celebration this year, the durable Powr Kraft too! seiis for a suggest ed introductory price of $49.95 through any of Ward’s 2,100 retail and catalog stores. a* Metal machining, precision drilling in ceramics and other hard materials, and fine jeweler's work is possible, with the Powr-Kraft 3/8 inch drill press. It provides a new dimension of skills for do-it yourselfers who previously used portable power tools for basic maintenance and build ing tasks around the home
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1972, edition 1
6
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