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VISIT DURHAM'S ONLY IN STORE BAKERY NORTHGATE SHOPPING CENTER
SATURDAY, FEB. 1, 1009 THE CAROLINA TIMES-
MISS ARETHA FRANKLIN
First Lady ofSoul ComingTo Raleigh
Singing in a style once con-sidered suitable Inly for a lim-ited negro market in the deepSouth and the urban ghettosof the North, queen of "soul"Aretha Franklin today reignsover the pop music field. Since1967 Miss Franklin has record-ed six singles and |wo long-playing albums that have sold
over 1,000,000 copies each.Her soul sound is a distillationof several streams of AmericanNegro music, including the
foot-stomping, jubilation-shoutgospels she sang as a girl in her
father's Baptist church; thewarm, poignant blues that jazzsingers Dinah Washington and
Billie Holiday immortalized;
and the frenetic, pulsating rhy-thm and blues that emerged in
postwar years and found itsjyeatest exponent in Ray Charles.
But, powerful as her musical
idiom is, it is the emotionalconviction of Aretha Franklin'sdelivery that has assured herthe allegiance of listeners. As aTime writer (June 28, 1968)
put it: "She does not seem to
.be performing so much as bearing
fitness to a reality so simpleand compelling that she could
not possibly fake it."Aretha Franklin was bom
on March 25,1942 in Memphis,Tennessee, one of five childrenof the Rev. Clarence L. Frank-lin and Barbara (Siggers) Frank-lin. Aretha's sisters are both
vocalists: Carolyn records forR. C. A. Victor and Erma
jjicords for Brunswick Records.Her brother Cecil is the assis-
tant pastor at their father's churchand her other brother Vaughn is
a career man in the UnitedStates Air Force. The Rev. C.L. Franklin, a well-known revi-valist Baptist preacher, broughthis family North when Arethawas two years old, and'fiveyears lata they settled inDetroit, Michigan where Frank-lin took over the pastorate hestill holds, at the New BethelBaptist Church. Franklin hasbarnstormed throughout theUnited States, singing gospelsongs and preaching fiery evan-gelical sermons, many of whichhave been recorded, and for thepast twenty years his Detroitchurch has attracted out-standing gospel and blues sin-gers. Among the houseguest at
the Franklin home duringAretha's childhood were Maha-lia Jackson, Clara Ward, JamesCleveland, Arthur Prysock, B.B. King, Dorothy Donegan,Dinah Washington, Lou Rawls,and Sam Cooke. By the timeAretha was eight or nine shewas teaching herslef to play thepiano and singing gospel songsat local churches in a groupwith her older sister Erma andtwo other girls.
UNC GFord G
CHAPEL HILL TheDepartment of City and Region-al Planning at the University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel HIDannounced that it has received agrant of SIBO,OOO from the FordFoundation to provide fellowshipaid for black students and otherminority group students forgraduate study in city andregional planning.
Professor John A. Parker,chairman of the Department ofCity and Regional Planning, saidthe fellowship program will haof major assistance in thedepartment's continuing effortsto recruit Negro ana otherminority group students intograduate training for pro-fessional careers In city (wa-ning and urban affairs.
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