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Seminar In Economics Held At State PETERSBURG—The Eco nomic, Seminar Committee, a group of business' and civic leaders from the tri-cities area, held itg annual meeting recently in Petersburg to evaluate the economics semi nars held at Virginia State College during the past aca demic year. Under the direction of Dr. Huey J. Battle, head of the committee and professor of economics at V9C, the group discussed the three sessions held during the year to in vestigate the problems of marginal-skilled workers. ATTENDANCE at the three sessions totaled 5(19. During the meeting the 14 leaders gave frank opinions about the three sessions and t' -> continuance of the semi nars, and (he group decided to give more energy to pub licizing the seminars to in crease participation by busi ness leaders in the area. NEXT TEAR'S three ses sions will be held after the first of the year, eliminating, the fall session date. Thus the seminars are to b® held once in February and twice in March to preserve con tinuity. , Among those present at tbe recent meeting to evaluate the seminars were: SCORPIUS (THE SCORPION) ■ z Face south. Follow the red planet Mars as it wanders I A—near the red star Antares in this realistic constellation I ■ the next three months. ~ J ■I DOWNTOWN ngBIHinSBBDI NORTHGATE ■ The Quality Sale of the Year Our Famous SAVE 20% i. 40% on this area's Largest Selection of Men's Fine Apparel yj Suits y Sport Coats J Slacks J Sport Shirts J Straw Hats J Knit Shirts J Shoes v / DAKS The great money saving event ... a vast selection of outstanding values in men's fashions at unheard of sav ings. Nationally known brands that you have become familiar with. Everything is from our regular stocks. Shop both stores for greater selections. Lite Your Y.M.S. Charge Account, or Your Favorite Bank Charge Card Aemr stoks I' MWMI«WH TO lnvi YOU Hi Otto Parker, vtcenpresi. dent. First and Merchant!, Petersburg. Dr. Da vide N. Bader, vet erinarian, Colonial Heights. Mrs. Arlin e Phillips, Vir ginia Employment Commis sion, Petersburg Dr. Edward W. Whitlow, director. School of Com merce. Virginia State College, Petersburg. Wesley C. Garr.. Jr., public relations officer. Virginia State College. Petersburg. Bernardin F. Dabney, de velopment officer, Virginia State College. Tnhn G. Savers. Bank of Vir ginia, Petersburg. J. Wilson Monroe, *4co president. Rucker Rosen* stock. Petersburg " Peet. deputy direc tor. Support Services, Fort Lee. Walter Johnson, president, Johnson Cleaners. Colonial Heights. E B. McDonal, plant man ager, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Company, Peters burg Richard T. Wilson. HI. vice-president, State-Planters Bank, Petersburg. Dr. H. H. Battle, chairman. Economics Seminar Commit* tee. Virginia State College, and Mrs. M. G. Wilson, Stee cetary. Economics Seminar Committee, Virginia State College, Petersburg. Newt Briefs Africans Riot at Funeral NAIROBI. Kenya - Thousands of rivai tribesman rioted Tuesday outside the cathedral where funeral services were being held for slain government leader Tom Mbova. Scores were injured. Tear gas seeped into the church and choked mourners. Jeering Luo tribesmen, the followers of Mboya who believe he was shot by a Kikuvu. sparked the rampage by pelting stones, sticks and shoes at President Jomo Kenyatta as he entered the cathedral. Kenyatta is a Kikuyu and a political idol of black Africans. Kikuvus waded in for revenge and police charged the melee swinging nightsticks and firing tear gas at 30 second intervals. The crowd of about 100,000 persons smashed shop windows and windshields as it retreated, kicked over trashcans, trampled flower beds and stoned cars. Fistfights flared everywhere. Occupy Hilltops VIENTIANE, Laos - Laotian government troops have occupied most hilltops surround ing strategic Muong Soui and enemv forces who took the out rt il days ago have burrowed at the foot of the hills, the acting defense minister said Tuesday./ The official, Tiao Sisoumang Sisaleumsak, said Muong Soui itself was empty of forces of ei ther side. Air Surveillance NORFOLK, Va. -A spokesman for the Navy's Commander in Chief Atlantic Fleet (Cinclant) said Tuesday the Navy is conducting regular air surveillance of seven Russian warships which are steaming to Cuba for what the Kremlin said is a "friendly visit." Navy Cmdr. F. R. Ellis, Cinclant deputy public informa tion officer, said the Russian ships are more than 200 miles off the U. S. coast. "There's nothing sinister about them," Ellis said. Title Change MOSCOW Dang Quang Minh presented his cre dentials Tuesday to President Nikolai V. Podgorny as ambas sador of what is called the Pro visional Government of South Vietnam. The ceremony represented ony a change in title. Minh has been serving here as permanent representative of Viet Cong's National Liberation Front. The Viet Cong's provisional government had announced ear lier that its representatives in Communist capitals had been redesignated ambassadors. ml3Bped july 8 Red Warships Are Reminder LONDON - The Krem lin's dispatch of seven warships to Cuba is a reminder to President Nixon that Soviet influence extends close to American shores, Communist diplomats said Tuesday. The Soviet leadership was annoyed by Nixon's decision t o visit Romania next month and consider it a veiled intrusion into Russian political sphere. The U.S. must expect a corresponding Soviet reaction, the diplomats said. Communist diplomats here said Nixon's trip to Romania disturbs the Kremlin hierarchy because it is coming at a time when Soviet influence in Bucharest is being contested. The U.S.S.R. is hitting back "in its own way" by sending the rocket-equipped flotilla to Cuba, the diplomats said. , Showing the flag has become a big factor in the Kremlin's global policy. This has been underscored by the growing presence of the Soviet fleet in the Mediterranean and a recent task force visit to Africa and the Indian subcontinent. The choice of Cuba, however, has added motives. New York Nets Acquire Hunter NEW YORK . Lea Hunter, a 6-foot-7, 235-pound forward who played for the Loyola of Chicago national championship team in 1963,' has been purchased by the New York Nets from the Mia mi Flonaians cf the American Basketball Association for an undisclosed sum. Hunter aver aged 16.7 points last season. Noble Example LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - Odu megwu Ojukwu, leader of seces sionist Biafra, sent President Nixon a message quoting from the American Declaration of In dependence and saying the same principles apply to his people. Biarfa radio in a broad cast monitored here said the quote was "We hold these truths ... pursuit of happiness" and that Ojukwu told Nixon, "This noble example has beta a source of inspiration to my peo ple." ' ' ' "it M RECENT GRADUATE MISS JUDITH DENISE BROWN, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Wal ter M. Brown of Silver Spring, Maryland, former residents of Durham, and granddaughter of Mrs. Mary T. Horton of this city, was recently graduated from the Montgomery Blair High School of Silver Spring, In addition to her varied school activities, one of which being a member of the orchestra, Miss Brown was President of the Youth Fellowship Council of the Woodside United Methodist Church of Silver Spring and Co chairman of the Christian Citi zenship Committee of the Bal timore Conference Council On Youth Ministry of the United Methodist Church. For the summers of 1968 and 1967, shp was a scholarship par ticipant at the Hull House Music and Art Camp in East Troy, Wisconsin. At the camp, her area of special concentra tion was the Viola. She Is also the immediate past president of the Senior Teen Group of the Montgomery County, Mary land Chapter of Jack and Jill of America, Inc. Miss Brown will enroll at Hampton Institute, Hampton, Virginia, in September to pur sue a degree in Speech Edu cation. Nixon Aid Seen ABM Key WASHINGTON , - Sen. John Stennis said Tuesday the key : ssue in the Senate vote on the antiballistic missile is the need to uphold President Nixon as he prepares to start arms re duction talks with the Soviet Un ion. "I lhink it comes down to that in the final analysis," Stennis told newsmen as the Senate pre pared to launch formal debate on the ABM controversy as part of a military procurement au thorization bill. The administration has been talking of a possible start late this month on the long-consid ered disarmament talks, but no firm arrangements have been disclosed. So&e ABM opponents have contended that a decision to de ploy the missiles now would ad versely affect the talks, but Stennis said he sees no way to explain to an adversary a Sen ate denial at this time of a pro gram Nixon has asked. "If he thinks he needs it," the Mississippi Democrat said "why that's a big factor." Methodists Set Church Visits ENFIELD Delegates fiom the Southeastern Jurisdictional Historical Association of the United Methodist Church will include a visit to three historic churches in Halifax County during their meeting a* Louisburg College this week. Members attending th e sessions this week will come from about a dozen Southern states. The meeting is held every four years. On Wednesday, the Methodist historians will visit Bethesda Church at Brinklevville, Eden Church, six miles northeast of Enfield and Whitakers' Chapel, six miles east of Enfield. Bethesda Church, built in 1853. was the site of the annual conference of the Methodist Protestant Church in 1862. Eden Church and Whitakers' Chapel *vere both Anglican chapels that joined the Methodist "reform*' movement during the 1770'5. Resort Votes 4 Yes* on Beer WHISPERING PINES —Voters in the resort village of Whispering Pines have recorded a resounding "yes" on the question of selling beer and wine. In • Monday election, the vote was 114 in favor and only five against. There are 171 registered voters in the village. Officials of the Whispering Pines County Club, the only commercial establishment in the village, said they would apply as soon as legally possible for the licenses to permit the on-premise and off premise sale of beer and wine. Whispering Pines, with a population of 322, was incorporated as a village last March. The community now is trying to work out a budget and ti 1 rate. Tale of Intrigue Book Says HHH Didn't Use Issue WASHINGTON - Hieodore H. White's new book reports a Chinese-born supporter, of Richard M. Nixon gave Hubert H Humphrey opportunity for a last-minute campaign issue when what White calls an attempt to "sabotage" Vietnam negotiations was intercepted by the Johnson adminis tration. But, says White in "The Making of a President 1968," Humphrey refused to air the story of intrigue despite urgings from his campaign staff. The book, although not officially released, appeared Tuesday in a Washington bookstore. When Nixon aides learned of the activities of the supporter. Anna Chan Chennault. there was "fury and dismay" and the feeling was that "if they lost the election. Mrs. Chennault might have lost it for them," White writes. When asked for comment. Mrs. Chennault's Washington office said she is in Asia. Humphrey is in Europe, but aide William Connell said the the story is correct as he knows it. Raised Money Mrs. Chennault, widow of the wartime hero Gen. Claire Chennault and now an American citizen, had raised money for the Nixon campaign chairman of several Nixon Tj* / _n. 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KATIE BYNUM, Route 2, Durham, N. C. 14,000; 16/000/ 17/000 Gr 23/000 BTU in Th» colculoted weight of our iceberg was 6,145 lbs., 4 Jjj ox. and Mrs. Brnym guessed 6.048 lbs. to win the Air- j | 220 Volt. I temp Sleeper air conditioner. . STEWART RIGSBEE J. D. BROTHERS Q Rigsbee Tire Sales I >; x; Open Monday Through Thursday 8 to 6 Friday 8 to 8 1 108 Lakewood Ave. end 2720 Hillsborough Road vSs 808 SALMON W. Durham Sales Mgr. Phone 68S-IM3 Phone 286-4444 and was chairman or co citizens committees. White, in his third book on presidential campaign*, reports the incident this way: Mrs. Chennault learned by gossip, rumor and speculation of the October negotiations preceding the U.S. bombing halt and the Paris talks and. White says, "had undertaken most energetically to sabotage them." ''ln contact with the Form&an. the South Korean and the South Vietnamese governments." White writes, "she had begun early, by cable and telephone, to mobilize their resistance to the agreement—apparently implying, as she went, that she spoke for the Nixon campaign." Mrs. Chennault, the author NEW YORK Former Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, writing about the refusal of American Allies in Asia to contribute more to the Vietnam War effort: "Was it possible that those nations which were neighbors of Vietnam had a clearer perception of the tides oif world events in 1967 than we?". SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1969 THE CAROLINA TIMES— continues. "nefJected la take the moat • inmtitnry precwrtans af an mrigmer" and km mwiwUmHibi wttk directly to the perusal of yv —i J—f AkasAfl ri rToiiODo\ j'jnnaon. Your professional beautician knows the answer... Is peroxide needed to color unwanted gray hair? Hair care and beauty experts know that the first traces of gray hair—and even slight fading of natural color after chemicaf re laxing—can dull a woman's appearance and make her look older than she feels. While most women hate these premature aging effects, many are hesitant about using permanent peroxide haircoloring which may change the natural hair color while coloring gray. Professionally-trained hairdressers know the importance of their customers' preferences when unwanted gray becomes a problem. These experts also know that Clairol created semi permanent Loving Care* hair color lotion without peroxide . . . to color only the gray without changing the natural shade. They also find Loving Care blends back color faded by chemical processing. Because of its mildness. Loving Care maintains healthy looking hair and lasts through a month of shampoos Whatever a woman's reason for wanting Loving Care for her hair, she is always wise to consult a professional beautician. Hairdressers are equipped with a family of fine Clairol products and the training to promise each patron the loveliest and most personalized haircoloring effects every time she visits her salon. If you dislike gray, and want no peroxide, why not ask your beautician to glamorize it with Loving Care? ©Clairol Inc. 1967 Courtesy of C'at r ol Inc. Mm, the bMk adds bad b«pfl aware ef Mrs. Cte—rit'a mwHW More ha awMwcad Thursday Oct. 3 the halt of U.S. benfaitoiff and the anticipation of peace talks bat had not taken her communications seriously. 3A
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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July 12, 1969, edition 1
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