Saturday, November 20, 1971
Section B 8 Pages
YOUR PICTURE-NEWS WEEKLY
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CITED FOR ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE
President King V. Chock (left) of Morgan
State College and William M. Boyd. II (right)
who delivered the Honors Day Convocation
address, pose here with a group of the more
than 800 Morgan students cited for academic
excellence.
Pictured here, from left to right, ate:
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UNIVERSITY MALL, Chapel Hill, I.orth Car
olina. Fifty store, 400.000 sq. ft. enclosed
mall shopping center being develop.'d' by E.
N. Richards and Associates of Raleigh. Lo
University Mall Sets 1973 Chapel Hill Opening
By JOHN MYERS
At an evening social hour
for Merchants, their wives, and
newsmen, Thursday 11 at the
Carolina Inn in Chapel Hill,
formal openings plans were an
nounced for the University
Mall to be completed in 1973.
E. N. Richards and As
sociates Architects on the pro
ject announced the mall will
be situated on forty acres of
land in a triangle pattern be
tween Estes Drive, Willow
Drive, and 15-501 by-pass in
Chapel Hill.
The Mall will contain ap
proximately 350,000 square
feet of stores and about 40,000
square feet of mall area. Some
2,400 spaces will provide park
ing for all sides of the center.
Future plans call for the
Mrs. Bella S.
Abzug Speaks
In Chape Hill
By JOHN MYERS
At a press conference at the
University of North Carolina
in Chapel HillrecentlyMrs. Bella
S. Abzug, 19th district New
York Congresswoman, spoke
of women's roles in politics:
"We are in a new age. The
men only signs over the doors
of politics are cojning down.
These achievements are not
going to be given to women.
They must work for them.
Through working coalitions
We must support the women
caucuses through out the na
tion."
Mrs. Abzug further stated
that women comprises 52% of
the population and due to this,
are in the position to change
the power structure if they
work at it.
When asked about President
Nixon's Phase II policy she
replied: "I am very pessimis
tic about it. I was very pessi
mistic about phase one and I
was pessimistic about our eco-
Continued on page 6B
President Check. Alpha Kaikai, Sierra Le
eone; JoAnne Ililton, Baltimore, Md.; Gayle
Martin, Baltimore. Md.; Delores Moore, Bal
timore. Md.; Sabina Bcckman, Baltimore,
Md.; Jacqueline Dutton, Baltimore, Md.; Nel
lie Howard. Baltimore, Mdo.: Sandra Sears,
Miami, Fla.; Reginald Sawyer. Baltimore,
Md.; and William M Boyd, 11.
cated on 15-501 bypass, this modem shop
ping complex will feature the le est mer
chandisings techniques.
widening of Estes Drive from
the present 2 lanes to a future
5 lanes before the opening of
the Mali. Within the next 2-3
years, highway 15-501 by-pass
into the city will be expanded
to six to 8 lanes according to
Richards.
Major stores for the Mall
Duke Plastic Surgery Resident Given An Award
An investigation into a new
method of storing skin grafts
has won a national research
award for a plastic surgery
resident at the Duke Univer
sity Medical Center.
Dr. Glenn Shepard won the
top research award in scholar
ship provided by the Educa
tional Foundation of the Socie
ty of Plastic and Reconstruc
tive Surgery. He was runner-up
last year.
The top award was a three
month tour of medical facili
ties in Europe, plus travel
funds. Shepard's runner-up
award last year, which he has
not collected on, was for a
shorter European trip, so he
plans to combine the two for
an extended European tour in
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RIBBON CUT TO OPEN BLACK-OWNED
BANK Mayor Jim Melvin cuts ribbon to
open newly established black-owned Greens
boro National Bank. Assisting him is Bishop
€it*
thus far will be Ivey's Depart
ment Store, Belk-Leggett-Hor
ton, Rose's Winn-Dixie Super
market, Kerr Discount Drugs,
and K&W Cafeteria.
Upon completion of the
mall there will be over fifty
stores under the one roof em
ploying 1,000 to 1,200 people.
thenext few years.
Shepard's research involved
the taking of skin grafts and
then the "storage" of them on
the area of the body from
which they were just removed.
In work with 80 patients,
he has shown that skin pre
pared and stored in this man
ner adhers and revascularizes
to graft areas from one to
two days earlier than fresh
grafts.
He found that skin can be
stored in this way for up to
14 days without complications,
and that this method has ad
vantages over other methods
such as freezing or refrigera
tion in saline solutions.
Shepard, 34, is a native of
Newport News, Va. He earned
Wyoming Wells, the tank's board chaifman.
In rear is Rep. Henry E. Frye, president of
the bank.
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
"Come Man, See God" |
By DONALD LOVE 5
Man has, from the be
ginning, fought God by being
disobedient. For reasons, man
is interested in doing things
his own way when he does not
have a way. There are only
two ways, right and wrong -
good and evil, God and the
Devil. So man has to accept
either God's way or the Devil's
way. The decision is his to
make, since he does not have a
way.
Man was told, do not take
that you can not give. Why
take a life when you can not
give life?
Cain, Adam's son, killed, his
brother Abel, then lied about
it. God had a way of knowing
just what was going on. After
questioning Cain, God told
Cain, his brother's blood was in
tune with him. There was a
communication between God
and Abel's blood. The blood of
Abel talked with God.
There have been many in
stances God proved himself
over and above Man, and Man
had to turn to God for Mercy,
for relief, and for deliverance.
Joshua, needed more time
in a battle to win this battle.
He asked God to prolong the
time long enough to get this
job done. God extended the
time by causing the Sun to
stand still. Joshua 10:12-14.
David was being chased all
over the country by King Saul.
David went into a cave with
his men to rest. As they slept,
King Saul and his army came
to the cave. There was no es
cape for David and his men,
God had a spider to web a
web over the mouth of the
cave; proving again that he is
God.
There are many more illus
trations that could be used
proving that God is the Master.
TTiese stories have been told
to man from one generation to
another and none of the
generations let these miracu
lous acts of God disturb them
enough to change their ways.
In some of the battles,
Joshua had, going into Canaan,
his B. S. degree at the Uni
versity of Virginia and his
M. D. there in 1962. After
surgical internship and real
dency at Vanderbult University
Hospital, he was an Army sur
geon for two years. Including
10 months in Vietnam.
At Vanderbilt again from
1966-69, he spent his final
year as chief resident in general
and thoracic surgery before
coming to Duke as a resident at
Duke has been under the guid
ance of Drs. Kenneth L. Pick
rell, Nicholas M. Georgiadeand
Lawrence K. Thompson in the
division of plastic surgery.
Cuts in U.S. sea power
worry admirals.
U.S. agency is financing
sterilizations.
God killed mare of the ene
tm
mies with haif storms than
Joshua's armies with swords
and spears.
It is time and past time
for us to become educated
with God and ignorant to the
material world. When will we
begin to see God? As much
proof as we have declaring
God, we are so dumb reject
ing Him.
We seem to have material
reasons to reject God. We now
know where the wind comes
from and what generates it,
but we have not found what
happens to it. We know what
causes electrical storms but we
have not found which of the
clouds are positive and which
are negative. When these two
clouds come together, they
cause lightening.
Matthew 26: 14-16. Judas,
then acted as we today. He
figured how he could get a few
extra dollars by selling Christ
to his enemies. Jesus, seeming
ly was not too well known by
the ones who wanted his life.
Judas, came up with a bright
idea identifying Jesus from the
other disciples. A kiss was the
key. The time for the kiss.
Matthew 26:3-10.
Matthew 27:3-10; Now
Judas can and did see God.
We too should see God long
before some of us do.
The many mistakes made by
others should cause our minds
and eyes to open and refrain
from making the same mis
takes.
Christ came to die for
sinners. All are sinners, some
of us are sinners saved by
God's Grace. It is this group
who can turn the world com
pletely around by seeing God
for the sake of others.
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A*T RECEIVES ENGINEERING GRANT—
Marshall Colston, director of planning and
development at A&T State University (left),
receives SI,OOO check from David M. For
HEW Official Addresses Conferene at NCCU
"If the environmental
movement is a fad, it's cer
tainly the last fad of the 20th
century," said George E.
Lowe, assistant director of the
Division of Environmental
Education of the U. S. Depart
ment of Health, Education,
and Welfare.
Lowe addressed the annual
session of the North Carolina
Resource-Use Education Con
ference Thursday at North
Carolina Central University.
He told his audience, largely
made up of high school stu
dents, their teachers, and
school administrators, that
environmental education is
desperately needed today.
"A glance at your TV or
newspapers, or a glance around
you, will indicate that we are
in an environmental crisis,"
Lowe said. "I don't think there
is any question about it."
Lowe said mankind is in the
situation of a miner whose
canary has just died. "The
birds are dying and they are
trying to tell us something.
You used to have brown pell
cans off the coast of North
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BLACK AND BROADCASTING DISCUSSED
(Left to right) A! Wiggins. Minority Affairs
Reporter from CBS Television Company in
Oklahoma City, tell? Saint Augustine's Col
lege Students to go into the area of broad
eating. The students afe. Miss Annette Re d,
Penal Reforms Discussions are Held by WIAPY
Women In Action For the
Prevention of Violence and Its
Causes (WIAPV) heard Lee
Bounds, Commissioner of State
Board of Corrections and Ken
neth Harris, Project Coordina
tor of the State Corrections
Dept. of Community Volun
teer Program explain various
facets of the penal reforms
were already being effectuated
at the prison centers before the
Attica Uprising.
Bounds' discussion centered
around the development of pe
nal reforms in North Carolina
and other penal systems in the
nation. He reiterated that there
is no way to really assess the
full impact of the Attica Up
rising this fall on any prison
system in the country, but pri
sons still face the question of
sythe, personnel representative for Atlantic-
Richfield Company of Dallas, Tex. The funds
will be used to support A&Ts engineering
program.
Carolina. You used to have the
peregrine falcon which would
fly through here. Many osprey
would also fly through.
DDT, Lowe said, has made
those birds almost extinct. The
shells of their eggs, he said,
have become "mushy," and
when the birds sit on the eggs
they crush them.
"Our environmental pro
blems today basically stem
from the high prosperity of
the last 30 years," Lowe said.
He said that with the decade
of the 1970s an effort has
been begun to reverse the
destruction of the environ
ment.
"Beginning in 1970, Presi
dent Nixon opened a new de
cade - the decade of our
environment. He said it is
literally now or never." Lowe
said the new emphasis on the
environment has resulted in the
creation of the Environmental
Protection Agency and the
Council on Environmental
Quality, and in the passage of
the Environmental Protection
Act and the Environmental
Education Act.
Local, State and National
News of Interest to AD
a sophomore biology major from Goldsbon;
Marshall Harvey, a senior sociology major
from Enfield: and Miss Marilyn Green, a
sophomore mathematics major from McCl'.-l
lansville, S. C.
"how we can anticipate what
is right and proper for change."
Harris, a graduate of Hillside
School and North Carolina
Central University described
the Community Volunteer Pro
gram in detail. This is a pro
gram whereby Volunteers take
selected prisoners outside pri
son walls and into homes,
churches and recreational
areas. These prisoners are us
ually those destined for re
entry back into the com
munity. He pointed out that
prisoners come from all walks
of life and of varying edu
cational levels from Masters'
Degrees on down. Thus, Volun
teers of a variety of intellec
tual levels are needed to assist
in these programs of rehabili
tation.
"Environmental education,"
Lowe said, "implies a some
what different education than
that which you've been re
ceiving. It's problem focused,
it's multi-disciplinary ... It's
community centered, it's stu
dent and teacher-centered.
"We've got to get students
active working on these pro
blems themselves," Lowe said.
He said the environmental
crisis was the concern of other
agencies then the schools.
"Everybody has something to
contribute," Lowe said.
Barry Goldwater. Senator
(R-Ariz):
"For reasons of peace,
not war, America must re
main militarily strong no
matter what rt costs."
Robert F. Froehike, Secre
tary of the Aimy, on re
moving slot machines:
"It is my intention that
these machines will no long
er tap soldiers' pockets."
An act of duty is law in
practice.
-Benjamin Whichcote.
PRICE: TWENTY CENTS
Favorable statistics show
only a small percentage of in
fractions from prison leaves by
the prisoners. Since the com
munities will be involved in
such programs, it is felt that
the communities need to know
and become closely aligned to
the problems involved in penal
reform programs of rehabilita
tion.
Bounds further emphasized
that the N. C. penal system
has been changing from "an
institution, that punishes, puts
down the dehumanizes," to a
"help services institution, as
sisted by programs in mental
health and treatment centers
for physical diseases and dis
abilities as well u job training
for future entry back into the
communities."
It is hoped that many
Volunteer groups will become
involved in this much needed
area of community services.
Pan Am Seeks
Stewardesses
From Minorities
CHICAGO - St. Paul,
Minnesota-born, Fisk educated
Alice K. Brown has taken on a
new assignment in addition to
being a stewardess for Pan
American World Airways. The
attractive Black stewardess is
one of a nationwide team of
Pan Am recruiters who are
looking for 100 eligible ste
wardess applicants from the
Black and Puerto Rican mi
norities.
Pan Am has committed it
self to hire this number to
join the ranks of the some
5,000 young ladies of many
nationalities serving passengers
aboard the airline's worldwide
system. Alice and the recruit
ing team have been recruiting
since September and have seen
thousands of applicants. They
have selected 50 from the
thousands and are still looking
for the other 50 who will start
stewardess training at Pan Am's
Training and Development
Center in Miami early next
year. The group tours colleges,
Urban League, NAACP and
Pan Am offices nationwide.
"Trying to get applicants
from minority groups la a
special problem," says Alice,
who started flying for Pam Am
about a year ago. "Girla with
college backgrounds are peon*
to go into teaching and other
professions and never give air
line work real consideration as
a career."
A summer Job with Braniff
while attending Flsk University
introduced Alice to the airline
Industry. During that summer
she traveled throughout the
United States and learned a
peat deal about people.