Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 10, 1971, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Section B 8 Pages Saturday, July, 10, 1971 YOUR PICTURE-NEWS WEEKLY I" "\ \ is •' ?■ \ II ill fm Jg p v "' * , ||w IB ~&•• | -, f I | Jg|k 'sßPfclt*- . .-4 DURHAM COLLEGE INSTRUCTOR RECEIVES TEACHER OF THE YEAR AWARD—.President L. M. Han is announced re cently that Mrs. Constance Sartor Walker 'ias been elected as the 1971 Teacher of the Year by the Durham College faculty, staff and student body, Mrs. Walker is an instructor in Accounting and Math in the Business Administration Department at Durham College, and has served in this capacity since 1964. She is a native of Durham and attended the Durham City Schools. She rec?ived her B.A. degree from North Carolina Central University and has done graduate work there also. She is affiliated with many civic and educational orbanizations throughout the city of Durham. The honoree is married to Frank Walker, proprietor of Walker's Barber Shop, Durham. HONOREE RECEIVES PLAQUE The First Calvary Baptist Church Ushers celebrated their 50th anniversary June 20, at 6:00 p.m. The Anniversary sermon was delivered by Bishop F. Yelverton of Mount Calvary Holiness Church, accompanied l by his choir and congregation. The president. Deacon Louis Laster, who has served' in this capacity for 39 years was honored. Remarks concerning hon oree were given by Deacon Charles Jovner. representing church; Clvd Moore, Durham Ushers Union and pastor. Rev. A. L. Thompson. Presentations made to TTonoreo—Senior Ushers. Plaque—Years of Service—David Ynuns: U«hrr Hvniip Vo. 2—Mr®. Frnestine H. Perry: Junior Ushers. MiOueen'o Ja">bs: First Aid—Mrs. Effie Youns: A friend. Mrs. Caroline Dumi Houseboat Sinks; Three Rescued VIRGINIA BEACH. Va. —y Three persons were rescued their sinking 34- foot houseboat Sunday by charter boat fishermen from Rudee Inlet. The houseboat sank inside the inlet as it was being towed by Capt. J. T Haley of the charter boat Sea Gull. Robert Martin, 25, of Aber deen, Md., owner and operator of the houseboat, said he and his two passengers, Debbie Schupe, 16, of Arlington, Va., and Donald Ashford, 18, of Aberdeen, were on a short va cation and trying to find a place to dock here. He said he had tried twice earlier Sunday to get into Rudee Inlet but turned back both times because he wasn't familiar with the channel. He said he headed south from the inlet after the second try. Martin said he was about four miles south of the inlet and about IV4 miles offshore when he smelled propane gas. He went topside to cut off the propane tank, he said, and as he started down, he noticed the bow was dipping heavily into the water. He opened two forward hatches, Martin said, and found the hull was filling with water. He put out a distress call about 2:15 p.m. and the Coast Guard responded, dropping him pumps from a helicopter, but he couldn't get them work ing. The closest cutter was about two hours away, and the Coast Guard asked Virginia Beach police for help. Police said they refused to let a 23-foot police boat assist because of heavy seas, and the Coast Guard asked any nearby vessels for aid. Haley and William Meredith in the Wahoo II responded from a marina at the inlet. Charter boat Capt. John Pierce, who was with Haley, jumped overboard to help remove Martin and the teen agers from the houseboat. Haley put a line on the houseboat and started for the inlet. It sank just inside the mouth of the inlet, and salvage attempts were begun Sunday night. "My home and all my worldly possessions are out there sunk," said Martin, a Civil Service employe at Aber deen Proving Grounds. He said he had owned the boat which he valued at $12,000 about a year. He said it was his only home. Travel Ban KARACHI - The Paki stan government has banned travel abroad—except for busi ness and specialized study—as a means of preserving foreign ex change. Clw Car^aCsm^o | The First 4 I By DONALD LOVE 5) Sometime back I had some thing to say on the Twenty third Psalms. I do hope you were able to grasp what I tried to say in relation be tween animal, man and God. God gave man dominion over the fish of the sea. over the fowl of the air, over the cattle and 1 over all the earth, and over \ every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth. From this part of God's creation stands for reasons, God intended for man to ob serve the obedience of these creatures to Him more so than man. David had grown old and' had been the lcadev of both animal and man. He knew animals were more obedient than man. Why not take time out, read Genesis, the third chapter, the curses God handed out? The sheep were not included but they; not only they, all other animals have obeyed God from the beginning of time and have not done any thing He said not do and the. serpent is included. Man is the trouble maker. David was able to see as a shepherd, how dependent the sheep were on him. He was also able to see as an anointed King by God, to be the shepherd of man and how rebellious he was. There is so much to be learned from these creeping things. My wife has chick ens, she knows their every sound. Sound 1 of friendliness, hunger, danger and even when strangers appear. What ever God gave them, they have used it from the beginning and are yet using it and have not tried to change it, not even just a lit tle bit. Man with his intellect feels changes are necessary for his own benefit, so he changes things. In order to remind' man of his duty and his obligation to God, he started off in the first Psalms by charging him: Blessed (or happy) is the man that walketh not in the coun sel of the ungodly, nor stand eth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. What he is really saying is anyone is much happief nnil there is consolation when he refuses to accept advice from a sinner. He is refer ring to spiritual counseling. How can a sinner give spirit ual advice? By taking advice from spiritual leaders, he will not be a stumbling block fK sinners nor will he stand on the side lines despising or sneering at others. During the life of David, law was the key then, as grace is for us today. So he is referring to the key here, man whole interest rather than any thing else, think on, meditate on, eat and sleep If klk I s Sisss E hflm I I. ; ;; I M f WjJlT^rl fSOi ~ ml ? tiff > ■ jMf m LEGISLATIVE TALK— Philip J. Davis of Elmlra, N. Y., recent ly appointed as a legislative liaison officer in the U. S. Depart ment of Labor, is welcomed aboard by Secretary of Labor J. D. Hodgson. Davis, 35. a special assistant to New York Rep. Howard W. Robinson for eight years, served as executive director of the Chemung County Commission on Human Relations for the past five years. DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA the laws of the Lord. By so concentrating, the laws will become a part of him, they will become deep rooted in him as a tree that is planted by rivers of waters. He is qualified to give constructive counseling or advice at the right time all of the time. The ungodly or the sinners have no part in God's affairs. They come biefore God as tis sue paper in a whirlwind, as a bubble on the high seas, they are carried off to never return. Man somehow has a feel ing he can fool God. From his actions and his conduct, he can wrap God around his fingers anytime he so de sires. Man felt that way dur ing David's day and is so be lieving today. David issued a warning then to man and the warning is good for us today. You can not fool God. He knows the difference from right and wrong, good and evil. He* sat up the way of righteousness. Then how can any of us ex pect to stand in the day of God's judgement by our un godly living. So it is a must, a sure thing in that day, the ungodly shall perish. Acts 9:26-40, tells an ex perience Phillip had with an Ethiopian, who had come to Jerusalem to worship. Phil lip came in contact with him as he was returning home in his chariot reading a passage In Isaiah without understand*- lng. Phillip was not the man fit ting the description David mentioned In the first Psalm. Phillip, talked with him, rode with him, explained the scrip to him, baptized him and left him a whole and a different man. Press Panned WASHINGTON Martha Mitchell, wife of At torney General John N. Mitchell, deploring publication of a secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war, said: "I deplore the indiscreet judgment, that smells of political implications, on the part of the press, which has reached such an extent that it may result in complete sup pression of the press in which event it will have caus ed its own death." Screen Star Sue Lyon Wed LAS VEGAS. Nev. Actress Sue Lvon. who played the title role it the film "Lolita," was married Sunday to Roland Harrison of Los Angeles. A spokeswoman said that Miss Lyon. 24, and Harrison, who is in his late 20s, were wed at the Chapel of the Stars. It was the second marriage for Miss Lyon, who was divorced from Hampton Francher 111 in 1964 Harrison is associated with the Los Angeles firm of Chris Petersen Co., which makes television commercials. FTC, Rules Set On Products WASHINGTON _ How good a bargain is 5 cents off regular price? How new is an introductory offer? And just what is economy size? The American buyer should be able to get solid answers to these questions beginning next year under rules published Fri day by the Federal Trade Com mission and the Food and Drug Administration. The two agencies, acting un der provisions of the Fair Label ing and Packaging Act, issued the rules for food, drugs, cos metics and household commodi ties, including packaged appli ances. After the rules take effect Dec. 31, commodities offered for sale with any amount off the regular price must in fact be sold at so many cents or dollars off. Introductory offers, say the regulations, must be limited to new products, and economy size packages must be bigger and sell for less per unit of measure than regular size. The FTC regulations cover household commodities such as soap or appliances while the FDA's rule 6 cover food, drugs, cosmetics and medical devices. Under the FTC rules, com modities offered with cents-off prices must have been recently sold at regular price, must in fact be a reduction in price and must show on the package or la bel the regular price, the num ber of cents or dollars taken off and the new price. The rules prohibit so-called in troductory offers unless the product is new, has been vastly changed or is being introduced into a trade area for the first time. The producer must also intend to sell the product at regular orice "for a reasonably substan tial period after the promotion." To label a product economy size, a manufacturer must also have another size package of the same product to offer con sumers. Only one package of the brand of product may be la beled economy size and it must give consumers a reduction in price per unit of measure of at least 5 per cent below the price of other size packages. The FTC said its rules will take effect Dec. 31 unless it re ceives "valid objections by ad versely affected packagers and labelers." Tests Show Low Rate Of Addiction SAIGON —lnitial re sults of new tests devised to weed out and rehabilitate the heroin addicts among home ward-bound Gl's disclose an addiction rate of only two per cent, military sources said Monday. Previous estimates of the number of heroin addicts in the U.S. expeditionary force ranged to 10 per cent or even higher. However, some experts ques tion the effectiveness of the tests. Outside observers on the spot have reported that some GI addicts have slipped through the net despite the tests and others have passed them by "drying out"—breaking their drug habit—temporarily. Nevertheless, military sour ces said that, based on the findings of urinalysis testing of about 5,000 servicemen since the new tests were put into ! effect June 18, drug usage is well below feared levels. Factors Cited Military officials said that Vietnam-wide crackdowns on narcotics distribution and an increasing number of soldiers volunteering for military-run amnesty programs could be major factors in reducing the number of heroin users before they were tested at the end of their year's tour of duty in Vietnam. The U.S. command has so far declined to issue official figures on the new drug-detecting program in order to provide a more balanced picture over a longer term. Three specially-developed ma chines were flown to Vietnam last month for the start of a program to test every service man or woman leaving the war theater. A second, more precise test is given any person with a positive reading. Confirmed users of opiates— heroin, opium or morphine—are placed in quarantine in Viet nam for between five and seven days and then flown to the United States in medical evacuation aircraft for up to another six weeks' rehabilita tion at military installations. Drug users are not punished; and findings are not placed on a Gl's service record, though are listed on medical records. The first noncommercial educational television station was opened in 1953 in Houston, Tex. mft* *m ,«« ■ vSfl **« - |H VOTER EDUCATION TREK—(IoIa, Mississip pi)— John Lewis and Julian Bond, officials of the non-partisan Voter Education Project (VEPJ, pause to encourage black plantation Blacks' Political Potential Indicated in Census Data WASHINGTON - The Bureau of the Census released data Monday that indicates the immense potential political power of blacks in the South. The latest findings, drawn from the 1970 census, show that all 102 counties in the country that are at least 50 per cent black are located in 11 Southern states. The states are Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas. The data also show a dramatic increase in the number of cities where Negroes are at least 50 per ■■■■■*?:■»&***> ■ , ......... .... ' •" • """"'"nillli mm lf | T. ||--- ; B H^^hL ■ I In I Mk s—h»»t v ,^l ■Jl' tiSa' f' t wV^V^^B : ;:>; : :|>: n*»' / ■HBI ■ ISB ? ™ ■ W> :EEEm ■ftf . WYWGUII. ■:■ •>: - ■ --VM: :rc»«I»i nn.WW.u t , g N*— fc A BBfe •••>• jL is* - ifiS Is lS» .m, ■b if/ / • B ¥ / V ..cMdifM-iM . v t/ v'x 11111 ' M|^^^K'' > "'« £ " : X OIC $25,000 RICHER —Rev. Leon Sullivan, chairman and founder of Opportunities In dustrialization Centers of America, looks on as Edward A. Hyncs, director of environ mental and 1 urban affairs, The Sperry and Hutchinson Company, presents a check for Agnew Sees Aid to Hanoi In News Media Reports SINGAPORE Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said Monday that if the North Viet namese launch a successful isolated attack in South Viet nam as U.S. troops withdrew, the American news media will unintentionally aid Hanoi by portraying the enemy victory as a failure of the Viet namization program. Agnew also said the media misrepresented American foreign policy to world leaders Local, State and National News of Interest to All workers to register and vote. The VEP-spon sored Mississippi Voting Rights Tour includes public speaking and local canvassing by Lewis and Bond in a 21-county area. cent ot the polulation. In 1960, only three cities with popula tions of at least 25,000 were 50 per cent or more black. The three were the District of Columbia, Charleston, S. C.. and Bessemer, Ala. Today the total is 16, most of which are small cities. Significantly, the list of the 102 counties did not change over the period between 1960 and 1970. And ironically, all but three of the counties lost percentage points some as much as 10 points in dicating that blacks were still leaving the South, as the Census Bureau had previously reported. I However, in the context of $25,000 to Rev. Calvin O. Presley, executive director of Opportunities Industrialisation Center nf New York. The gift will be used to help support OlC's four New York cos ters. by giving the impression "the isolationist attitude" will win out in the United States. Attack Possible He told reporters that North Vietnam might take ad vantage of U.S. troop cuts to launch a pinpointed attack on the South Vietnamese that, while resulting in high enemy casualties, will give Hanoi "a public relations coup." He said that portraying the Nixon administration's Viet PRICE: TWENTY CENTS the radically improved political climate for Negroes since 1960, a census official said, ''The political potential for blacks is tremendous." That potential can already be seen in the fact that more than 200 blacks are running for office in Mississippi this year. The 102 counties form almost a contiguous band stretching from Sowh Virginia to Louisiana. Onlv one cmmtv in Texas, Waller, i» predominantly black, while two in Tennessee and Florida three in Arkansas and nine in Louisiana are mostly black. ' namization program as a com plete failure "is easily achiev ed because so many of our people in the national media are too ready to assist the North • Vietnamese by their overemphasis oo what's place." ~ OTTAWA . The Can*- dian International Development Agency has loaned Malawi* tt.s million to help finance a hy droelectric power project.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 10, 1971, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75