jRI. Dr. Reddick BJ Negro £1newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1968-01-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf ·...

1
H jRI. jw 1 Anf^y^ H BJ '^H I 4 u^tl;3» Bl K7M KK-aufl n6« fe *** -^ ?' ? r Tv, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^ m/m, < j: ffpflHJBKE^ >*\u25a0 -4". .. . > f"? ?*** iif^f\u25a0iMit ?' sßk - . ??-,. > \u25a0 ' "\u25a0"" \u25a0 > *** \u25a0'.. - \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0' >. ? \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0BHBHBBBHBHBBBBBBHBBBMP- SORORITY HOST TO TEEN- AGERS?Pfii Delta Kappa So- rority was host to a group of teenagers from the Central Orphanage of Oxford recently. The young people shown above were entertained at the W. D. Hill Recreation Center at which time they enjoyed dancing and games. Cookies were served and each member of the group was the recipient of a gift. * Soror Ernestine Coley served as Chairman of the Committee. She was assisted by Sorors Gladys Dawkins, Mable Mabry, Annie Cruse, Hattie Crews, Lo- ? la Solice, Ella Brown, Martha Johnson and Virginia Alston. Other members of the soror- ity assisting with the program were: Sorors Josephine Yokley, Julia Harris, Lucinda Harris, Maggie Henry, Margaret S. Hayes, Lula Warren, Minnie Cromartie, Pauline Pompey, Willa Bryant, Daisy Robson, Hallie Reaves, Claronell Brown, Carlotta Holmes, Leona Hooker, Judith Settle and Eva Pratt. (Photo by Purefoy) Business Firms Reminded of Minimum Wages Increase Feb. 1 RALEIGH ?r Business firms were reminded this week that the minimum wages set by the Fair Labor Standards Act go up on February 1. The remind- er came from Julian E. Parker, supervisor of the Raleigh office of thflK? U. S. Labor Depart- the old buggy ... may be good for a few thousand mlta> more. If not, there are many good reuooM why you're better offwith a Auto Loan. Just ask your dealer or us.' Open until 5 Time Payment Dept., WACHOVI BANK * TRUST COMPANY 0, ment's Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions. Parker pointed out that the minimum for most covered workers advances to $1.60 an hour from $1.40. The remain- ing covered employees will be entitled to $1.15 an hour mini- mum, instead of the present sl. Workers who will be due the $1.60 minimum are those en- gaged in employment which was covered before the Act was amended in 1966. Included are employees individually engaged in interstate commerce or in the production of goods for in- terstate commerce, or employ- id in certain large enterprises. They are also due time and one- half their regular rate after 40 hours f week.. 4Qte> *""1.. \«4l ap- M K> to the the anM»' mente. p»rker said these in- clude employees of large ho- tels, motels, and restaurants; workers in laundries and dry cleaning establishments; em- ployees of schools atfd institu- tions of higher education, Be A Basketball Armchair Coach win with fffl 20" COLOR TV SET Guess the score oi the DUKE-STATE Basketball Game Game will be played Saturday, Jan. 27, 1968. 20" color TV set to be awarded to entrant guessing the nearest to the correct score of the DUKE-N.C. State Basketball game. Use entry blank below or pick up one where you shop for Coca-Cola. " "OFFICIAL "R ULES ! ! 1. Writ# In tcora of aach taam on antry blink. \u25a0l. Mall to bafkatball "Armchair Coach," Contast, WTVD, Durham. N.C. J m3. Parson oimtino ma naarast to actual scora will ba awardad a . Color Talavlslon »at. I 4. H mora than ona p«r»on «uam« corrtct acora, wlnnars will ba . WmKßKvk \u25a0 datarmlnad by random drawing. . \ljulff[f7M I & All tax liability on prliat will ba tha rasponslblllty of wlnnars. \u25a0 a 4. All amfka bacoma tha proparty of tha Coca-Cote Bottling Co. Nona \u25a0 *. I will ba ratumad. , I 7. No purchasa nacasMry. 11. All antrlaa must ba poitmarkad bafora midnight, Friday, Jan. W. 19M. % things CO DUKE N.C. STATE ? LQ B I cSI J ADDRESS « .J L PHONE L ! Mall to: Basketball Armchair Coach Contest. WTVD, Durham ! I J « " Dean Smith UNC Basketball show Mich Sun- -111 ATA II day on Channel Sat 1:30 P.M. 11l All U m ACC basketball (ante of the week each Sat- LV 11 lla jl urday on Channel 11 at 2:00 P.M. 111 I UI I a Vic Bubaa Duke Basketball show each Sat- . urdajr on Channel 11 at 1 >4B P.M. All brought to you by: " Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Co. whether public or private; em- ployees of hospitals and nurs- ing homes, whether public or private; and more retail serv- ice employees. Parker empha- sized that this is only a par- tial list of the kinds of work- ers covered by the 1966 amend- ments. He added that their minimum would increase by 15 cents every year until $1.60 an hours is reached on February 1, 1971. - . Also beginning February 1, 1968, workers covered by the 1966 amendments will be due time and one-half after 42 hours a week, instead of the present 44 hours. They become subject tothe 40-hour week on February 1, 1969. However, some covered work- ers are exempt from the pay provisiijns, Parker noted. For example, covered hotel, motel, find restaurant, employees are exempt from overtime. Em- ployees of a retail or service enterprise are exempt from both the minimum wage and overtime provisions if the en- terprise rgosses less than $500,- 000 a year. Similarly exempt are employees of an individual retail or service establishment that grosses less than $250,000 yearly, even though it may be part of a covered enterprise grossing more than $500,000 yearly. The $500,000 test will be reduced to $250,000 on Feb- ruary 1, 1969. Parker said that questions about the Fair Labor Standards j Act would be answered at the I Raleigh office of the Wage and I Hour Public Contracts Divi- -1 sions, located at Room 203, Lawyers Building, 320 South Salisbury Street, Raleigh, N. C. 27601. he telephone number is 9-9?828-9031, extension 9551. NCH Patrol Recruiting Men For Training RALEIGH-The North Carolina State Highway Patrol it In the pro- ceu of recruiting 39 men for a Ba- ric Patrol Training School sche- duled to begin April 21 at the Insti- tute of Government in Chapel HilL f E. W. Jones, who heads the Patrol's training and Inspection division, says these new recruits are a part of the continuing build-up of authorized strength approved by the 1967 General Assembly. The legislature authorized an increase In Patrol strength of 125 men over the biennlum 1967-^9. "Currently," Major Jones said, "There are 30 vacancies in the en- forcement division. Men recruited nowill be used to fill these vacan- cies." The patrol officer said," Some of then men will be employed on March lit, tome on April lit, and the remainder on April 2lit All will begin the 14-week training school in Chapel Hill on April 2lit" Major Jonea aid. ' The bade requirement! for be- coming a state trooper are: 21 JP 30 yean of age, a North Carolina citizen with a high ichool diploma or equivalent education, at least S feet 9Vi inches in height, 160 Ibi, and 20/20 virion without glaiaea. Any young man who meeti theae qualification! can obtain ad- ditional information by contacting the local trooper, the district «er- Dr. Reddick Negro History Week Speaker On Monday, February 12, the feature 1968 NCC Negro History Week speaker is Dr. Lawerence Dunbar Reddick, Executive Direc- tor of Opportunities Industrializa- tion Center Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A University of Chi- cago Ph. D. in History and long- time college teacher, Dr. Reddick is on leave from the faculty of Cop- pin State College, Baltimore, Mary- land. " "" ' 1 Dr. Reddick was Chairman of the History Department at Alaba- ma Stater College when the famous Montgomery bus boycott took place. He is the author of a full- length biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. which is entitled, CRU- SADER WITHOUT VIOLENCE. Chief of the Atlanta University Library where one of his major responsibilities was that school's famous Slaughter Collection of ma- terials on Negro Americans. Pre- vious to this he was overseer of the New York Public Library's famous Scfaomburg Collection of materials on Afro-Americans. Dr. Reddick's topic at NCC will fee "Historical Rootj of the Current Urban Rebellion." Systematists are biologists who classify living things. "portable typewriters' LUGGAGE WKIST WATCHES STEREOS RECORD PLAYERS DIAMOND RINGS jSam's Pawn Sh<Jpj 122 E. Main St. Ph. 682-2573; ( ? > Durham, N. C. i Ittden and mem ben of the *c* do- mic and krtnflpctml oomnroattt «v diseases "has exceeded the maximum of the epidemic period during and immediately after the Second World War " It said in some countries it is particularly the young people who are affected. For example, WHO said, iD Australia 24 per cent of all cases of gonorrhea and syphilis occurred in the 15-29 age group. Senator Edward Brooke Now Touring 12 African Nations WASHINGTON, D. C.-On Fri- day, January 12th, Senator Edward W. Brooke (Rf- Mass.) left on a 26- day inspection and fact-finding tour of subsaharan Africa in con- nection with his duties as a mem- ber of the Senate Banking and Currency Committee. The junior Senator from Mas- sachusetts will travel to 12 African countries including such prominent black African states as: Senegal Senator Brooke decided last Spring to undertake this trip so that he might study first-hand, some of the "swift and revolution- ary changes" that are occurring in Africa, while our attention has been focuied on Southeast Asia. "I want," said Senator Brooke, "to examine the resources and poten- tial of the new nations of Africa, to discuss with African leaders the needs of their countries, to explore the private and public investment opportunities am J the incentives which they could offer and the possibilities for regional coopera- tion." Brooke will be accompanied on trip by his assistant Administrative his trip by his assistant Administra- tive Assistant, Clarence Elam and Research Assistant, Marilyn Dex- heimer. Together they will talk with leading African governmental officials in each of the 12 countries plus if. S. embassy and consular officials, business and trade union MUTUAL BENEFIT .. .. LIFE INS. CO.? Jack Margolis HILL BL.DG. 682-7550 SATURDAY, JAN. 27, 1968'? THE CAROLINA TIMES- VD Increases .'?GENEVA -The Work! Health Organization (WHO) and- the United Nations Commission on Narcotics (UNCN) Wednes- day reported alarming world- wide increases in ven er a 1 SECURITY £1 AUTOMIOBhIt VACATION EDUCATION Save for your special purpose Pick your purpose for saving moi ley. Then, open your account here and start saving for the things you want MUTUAL SAVINGS and Loan AssociafiiM 112 W. FAMISH. ST. DURHA M, *? C. am mm ivrn comnem cm Wjmßß&ißil Awmßi MlH mm your store. You may be th^ big cdlh prizes. MNB&x : 1M» pmJw tJULry » mrtdmu. t+tomtf m'tJr" I*- m*? 4 "* *r rtbNai S ? GOfTMM MM, M V Imk tea ' lmwmm iinmaTuitrmi -r? .T'"..' 7 **'" y 5A

Transcript of jRI. Dr. Reddick BJ Negro £1newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1968-01-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf ·...

Page 1: jRI. Dr. Reddick BJ Negro £1newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1968-01-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf · I 4 u^tl;3 » Bl K7M KK-aufl n6« ... SORORITY HOST TO TEEN-AGERS?Pfii Delta Kappa

H jRI. jw1 Anf^y^

H

BJ '^HI 4 u^tl;3»

Bl K7M KK-aufl n6« fe***

m»-^ ?'

? r Tv, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^m/m, < j: ffpflHJBKE^

>*\u25a0 -4"...

. >

f" ? ?*** iif^f\u25a0 iMit ?' sßk - . ??-,. > \u25a0 ' "\u25a0"" \u25a0 > *** \u25a0'.. - \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0' >. ?\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0BHBHBBBHBHBBBBBBHBBBMP-SORORITY HOST TO TEEN-AGERS?Pfii Delta Kappa So-rority was host to a group ofteenagers from the CentralOrphanage of Oxford recently.The young people shown abovewere entertained at the W. D.Hill Recreation Center at which

time they enjoyed dancing andgames. Cookies were servedand each member of the groupwas the recipient of a gift.* Soror Ernestine Coley servedas Chairman of the Committee.She was assisted by SororsGladys Dawkins, Mable Mabry,

Annie Cruse, Hattie Crews, Lo- ?la Solice, Ella Brown, MarthaJohnson and Virginia Alston.

Other members of the soror-ity assisting with the programwere: Sorors Josephine Yokley,Julia Harris, Lucinda Harris,Maggie Henry, Margaret S.

Hayes, Lula Warren, MinnieCromartie, Pauline Pompey,

Willa Bryant, Daisy Robson,

Hallie Reaves, Claronell Brown,Carlotta Holmes, Leona Hooker,Judith Settle and Eva Pratt.

(Photo by Purefoy)

Business Firms Reminded of Minimum Wages Increase Feb. 1RALEIGH ?r Business firms

were reminded this week thatthe minimum wages set by theFair Labor Standards Act go

up on February 1. The remind-er came from Julian E. Parker,supervisor of the Raleigh officeof thflK? U. S. Labor Depart-

the oldbuggy... may be good fora few thousand mlta>more. Ifnot, there are many good reuooMwhy you're better offwith a

Auto Loan. Just ask your dealer or us.'

Open until 5Time Payment Dept.,WACHOVIBANK *TRUST COMPANY

0,

ment's Wage and Hour andPublic Contracts Divisions.

Parker pointed out that theminimum for most coveredworkers advances to $1.60 an

hour from $1.40. The remain-ing covered employees will beentitled to $1.15 an hour mini-mum, instead of the presentsl.

Workers who will be due the$1.60 minimum are those en-gaged in employment whichwas covered before the Act wasamended in 1966. Included areemployees individually engagedin interstate commerce or inthe production of goods for in-terstate commerce, or employ-id in certain large enterprises.They are also due time and one-half their regular rate after40 hours f week..

4Qte> *""1.. \«4l ap-M K> tothe the m» anM»'mente. p»rker said these in-clude employees of large ho-tels, motels, and restaurants;workers in laundries and drycleaning establishments; em-ployees of schools atfd institu-tions of higher education,

Be A Basketball Armchair Coachwin with

fffl 20" COLOR TV SETGuess the score oi the DUKE-STATE Basketball Game

Game will be played Saturday, Jan. 27, 1968. 20" color TV set tobe awarded to entrant guessing the nearest to the correct score of theDUKE-N.C. State Basketball game. Use entry blank below or pick upone where you shop for Coca-Cola.

"

"OFFICIAL "RULES !! 1. Writ# In tcora of aach taam on antry blink.\u25a0l. Mall to bafkatball "Armchair Coach," Contast, WTVD, Durham. N.C. Jm3. Parson oimtino ma naarast to actual scora will ba awardad a .

Color Talavlslon »at.

I 4. H mora than ona p«r»on «uam« corrtct acora, wlnnars will ba . WmKßKvk\u25a0 datarmlnad by random drawing.

. \ljulff[f7MI & All tax liability on prliat will ba tha rasponslblllty of wlnnars. \u25a0

a 4. All amfka bacoma tha proparty of tha Coca-Cote Bottling Co. Nona \u25a0 *.

I will ba ratumad. ,

I 7. No purchasa nacasMry.

11. All antrlaa must ba poitmarkad bafora midnight, Friday, Jan. W. 19M. % things CODUKE N.C. STATE ?

LQ B I cSIJ ADDRESS « .JL PHONE L

! Mall to: Basketball Armchair Coach Contest. WTVD, Durham !I J

«

" Dean Smith UNC Basketball show Mich Sun--111 ATA I I day on Channel Sat 1:30 P.M.11l All U m ACC basketball (ante of the week each Sat-LV 11 lla jl urday on Channel 11 at 2:00 P.M.

111 I UI I a Vic Bubaa Duke Basketball show each Sat-. urdajr on Channel 11 at 1 >4B P.M.

Allbrought to you by: "

Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Co.

whether public or private; em-

ployees of hospitals and nurs-ing homes, whether public orprivate; and more retail serv-ice employees. Parker empha-

sized that this is only a par-tial list of the kinds of work-

ers covered by the 1966 amend-ments. He added that theirminimum would increase by 15cents every year until $1.60 anhours is reached on February1, 1971. -.

Also beginning February 1,1968, workers covered by the

1966 amendments will be duetime and one-half after 42hours a week, instead of thepresent 44 hours. They becomesubject tothe 40-hour week onFebruary 1, 1969.

However, some covered work-ers are exempt from the pay

provisiijns, Parker noted. Forexample, covered hotel, motel,

find restaurant, employees are

exempt from overtime. Em-ployees of a retail or serviceenterprise are exempt from

both the minimum wage and

overtime provisions if the en-

terprise rgosses less than $500,-

000 a year. Similarly exempt

are employees of an individualretail or service establishmentthat grosses less than $250,000

yearly, even though it may be

part of a covered enterprise

grossing more than $500,000yearly. The $500,000 test will

be reduced to $250,000 on Feb-

ruary 1, 1969.Parker said that questions

about the Fair Labor StandardsjAct would be answered at the

IRaleigh office of the Wage and

I Hour Public Contracts Divi-

-1 sions, located at Room 203,

Lawyers Building, 320 South

Salisbury Street, Raleigh, N. C.

27601. he telephone number is9-9?828-9031, extension 9551.

NCH PatrolRecruiting MenFor Training

RALEIGH-The North CarolinaState Highway Patrol it In the pro-ceu of recruiting 39 men for a Ba-

ric Patrol Training School sche-

duled to begin April21 at the Insti-tute of Government in Chapel HilL

f E. W. Jones, who headsthe Patrol's training and Inspection

division, says these new recruits are

a part of the continuing build-up

of authorized strength approved by

the 1967 General Assembly.The legislature authorized an

increase In Patrol strength of 125men over the biennlum 1967-^9.

"Currently," Major Jones said,

"There are 30 vacancies in the en-

forcement division. Men recruitednowill be used to fill these vacan-

cies."The patrol officer said," Some

of then men will be employed on

March lit, tome on April lit, andthe remainder on April 2lit

All will begin the 14-weektraining school in Chapel Hill on

April 2lit" Major Jonea aid. 'The bade requirement! for be-

coming a state trooper are: 21 JP30 yean of age, a North Carolinacitizen with a high ichool diploma

or equivalent education, at least Sfeet 9Vi inches in height, 160 Ibi,

and 20/20 virion without glaiaea.Any young man who meeti

theae qualification! can obtain ad-ditional information by contacting

the local trooper, the district «er-

Dr. ReddickNegro HistoryWeek Speaker

On Monday, February 12, thefeature 1968 NCC Negro HistoryWeek speaker is Dr. LawerenceDunbar Reddick, Executive Direc-tor of Opportunities Industrializa-tion Center Institute, Philadelphia,Pennsylvania. A University of Chi-cago Ph. D. in History and long-

time college teacher, Dr. Reddickis on leave from the faculty of Cop-pin State College, Baltimore, Mary-

land. " "" ' 1Dr. Reddick was Chairman of

the History Department at Alaba-ma Stater College when the famousMontgomery bus boycott tookplace. He is the author of a full-length biography of Martin LutherKing, Jr. which is entitled, CRU-SADER WITHOUT VIOLENCE.Chief of the Atlanta University

Library where one of his majorresponsibilities was that school'sfamous Slaughter Collection of ma-

terials on Negro Americans. Pre-vious to this he was overseer of theNew York Public Library's famousScfaomburg Collection of materialson Afro-Americans.

Dr. Reddick's topic at NCC willfee "Historical Rootj of the CurrentUrban Rebellion."

Systematists are biologistswho classify living things.

"portable typewriters'

LUGGAGE

WKIST WATCHES

STEREOS

RECORD PLAYERS

DIAMOND RINGS

jSam's Pawn Sh<Jpj122 E. Main St. Ph. 682-2573;

( ?

> Durham, N. C. i

Ittden and mem ben of the *c* do-mic and krtnflpctml oomnroattt «v

diseases "has exceeded themaximum of the epidemicperiod during and immediatelyafter the Second World War "

It said in some countries it isparticularly the young peoplewho are affected.

For example, WHO said, iDAustralia 24 per cent of allcases of gonorrhea and syphilisoccurred in the 15-29 age group.

Senator Edward Brooke NowTouring 12 African Nations

WASHINGTON, D. C.-On Fri-day, January 12th, Senator EdwardW. Brooke (Rf- Mass.) left on a 26-day inspection and fact-findingtour of subsaharan Africa in con-

nection with his duties as a mem-

ber of the Senate Banking andCurrency Committee.

The junior Senator from Mas-

sachusetts will travel to 12 Africancountries including such prominent

black African states as: SenegalSenator Brooke decided last

Spring to undertake this trip so

that he might study first-hand,some of the "swift and revolution-ary changes" that are occurring inAfrica, while our attention hasbeen focuied on Southeast Asia."I want," said Senator Brooke, "toexamine the resources and poten-

tial of the new nations of Africa,to discuss with African leaders theneeds of their countries, to explorethe private and public investmentopportunities am J the incentiveswhich they could offer and thepossibilities for regional coopera-tion."

Brooke will be accompanied on

trip by his assistant Administrativehis trip by his assistant Administra-tive Assistant, Clarence Elam and

Research Assistant, Marilyn Dex-heimer. Together they will talk

with leading African governmental

officials in each of the 12 countriesplus if. S. embassy and consularofficials, business and trade union

MUTUAL BENEFIT.. .. LIFE INS. CO.?

Jack MargolisHILL BL.DG. 682-7550

SATURDAY, JAN. 27, 1968'? THE CAROLINA TIMES-

VD Increases.'?GENEVA -The Work!

Health Organization (WHO) and-the United Nations Commissionon Narcotics (UNCN) Wednes-day reported alarming world-wide increases in ven er a 1

SECURITY

£1AUTOMIOBhIt

VACATION

EDUCATION

Save foryour special purpose

Pick your purpose for saving moi ley.

Then, open your account here and start

saving for the things you want

MUTUAL SAVINGSand Loan AssociafiiM

112 W. FAMISH. ST. DURHA M, *? C.

am mm

ivrn comnem cm Wjmßß&ißil

Awmßi MlHmmyour store. You may be

th^big cdlh prizes.

MNB&x : 1M» pmJw tJULry » mrtdmu. t+tomtf m'tJr"

I*- m*? 4 "**rrtbNai

S ? GOfTMM MM, M V Imk tea' lmwmm iinmaTuitrmi -r? .T'"..' 7 **'" y

5A