PWS" J- nSajajjBlJ n i i i C AROLINA TIMES Sat, March 10, gg FlrstllcrwIadiaTBcitcd" Tire Sole Ever! t Rig rsr s.u Continues This Week . o Europe! wpj roodi! tett miteaa tire we moke. by any tu m em line tor mtleoje, cornering end tw-ipoeei mm. 2 plyltr radial pliet running beod to bead MmJ 4 lejyon cord boh under the f read called radial centtruc ban, five a whole new experience la driving. Give up to 6 morr gasoline mileage Check These Prices! 9 Wit M.T. rtetailtitt Wholesale tl M7Q.13 S1.92 S59.t5 $34.16 flt.36 W78-U 2.77 66.46 41.12 34.41 HH7t-t4 3.02 79.S 46.16 I.0 B5 205 5975 40.26 SB H.7I-1S 2 70 66.45 42.76 jjjj GH781S 2V90 72.80 44.96 36.01 HH78-15 3o 79.95 47.60 31.04 Use Kigsbee Tin Socs Convenient Budge f Plan or Your Favorite Bank Charge Cord- Complete Tire Service We Do It All RIGSBEE TIRE SALES Hows: Monday thru Thun day I e ; frkfay 100 Lakewood JUe. 2720 HWlweiHjh Road i 018.1383 Phone 286-4444 Thursday Highlights THURSDAY, MARCH 8 WTVD, CHANNEL U, DURHAM 6 30 a.m. - SUNRISE SE MESTER - Part 2 of the psychology of Carl Jung is presented. WTVD 4:30 p.m. MOVIE Stanley Baker stars in the action-romance "Sea Fury" about two seamen compet ing with a salvage crew in Spain. WRDU I p.m. - ADVOCATES -A fonim on the lettuce boy cott. Issues include the in volvement of the Teamsters Union in the dispute and the three-year strike by Cesar Chavez's United Farm Work ers against California grow ers. WUNC I p.m. - FLIP WILSON -The Supreme, Ruth Buzz! aad comedians Burns and Schreiber join Flip. WRDU p.m. - MOVIE - Telly Savalas, Jose Ferrer and Marjoe Gortner, a former boy evangelist star in this special threejkur drama, "The Marcus prison Mur ders," about a detective who beads a mammoth invest.) fatten into tha murder of two young women in their apart ments. WTVD, WFMY 9 p.m. - AN AMERICAN FAMILY In this episode. Bill Loud is asked to move out of the house by his wife Pat. Despite their separation, the Louds maintain a sur face calm. WUNC 9 p.m. - KUNG FU -Wendell Burton is on the threshold of manhood and heading for a showdown with a gang of killers. The stars are David Carradine, Philip Ahn and William Schallert. WUAL 11:30 p.m. JACK PAAR Oscar nominee Cicely Ty son of "Sounder," Phyllis Diller and members of the Gay Activist Alliance are guests. WRAL 12:30 a.m. MOVIE Audie Murphy and Bill Maul din perform m John Hus ton's adaptation of Stephen Crane's "The Red Badge of Courage," the Civil War classic about a young Union volunteer emotionally con fused at the prospect of com bat WTVD, WFMY 4:30 Semester 7:00 CBS New 1:00 CaM. Kangaroo :00 Merv Griffin 10:00 Jokers wild 10:30 Price Is Right 11:00 Gambit 11:30 Love of LH 11:00 Where the Heart 12:25 NewsDeet 12:30 Search 1:00 Petty Matin 1 :M World Turns 2:00 Guiding Light 2:30 Edge of Night 3:00 Love It 3:30 Secret 'Storm 4:00 McHale's Navy 4:30 Wild, Wild West 5:30 That Girl 6:00 News 6:30 CBS NeWS 7:00 Oragntt . 7:30 Parent Gam 1:00 Walton 9:00 Movie 12:00 News 12:30 Late Movl WRDU-TV, CHANNEL 28, DURHAM :00 :00 :30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 11:30 12:55 Today New Zoo Not. Worn. Only Dinah Short Concentration Sale of Century Hollywood Jeopardy Wh, What. Wh. NBC Newt 1:00 Watch Child 1:30 3 on a Match 2:00 Dayt of Lives 2:30 Doctors 3:00 Bay City 3:30 Peyton Place 4:00 Somerset 4:30 Movie 6:00 News :30 NBC News 7:00 Call of Wait 7:30 Jona. Winter 8:00 Flip WlllOO :00 Ironside 10:00 Dean Martin 11:00 New 11:30 Tonight Show WFMV-TV, CHANNEL 2, GREENSBORO 6:00 Good Morning 1:00 Capt. Kangaroo f: 00 Old Rebel :30 Mtrv Griffin 10:30 Price It 11:00 Gambit 11:30 Love of Life 12:00 Where Heart 12:25 Newt 12:30 Search 1:00 roday't Woman 1:30 World Turns 2:00 Guiding Light 2:30 Edge of Night 3:00 Love I 3:30 Secret Storm 4:00 Vln Scully 4:30 Gomer Pyl 5:00 Big Valley 6:00 New 6:30 CBS New 7:00 Andy Griffith 7:30 Dragnet 1:00 Walton 9:00 Movie 12:00 News 12:30 Movl WRAL-TV, CHANNEL S, RALEIGH 6:00 Daybreak 6:55 Commentary 7:00 New 7:30 Make wish 1:00 Unci Paul 0:30 Elllott-LaLanne :30 Mike Dougla 11:00 Password 11:30 Bewitched 12:00 Newt 12:30 Spilt Second 1:00 My Children 1:10 Make Deal 2:00 Newlywtd 2:30 Dating 3:00 General Ho. 3:30 Tell the Truth 4:00 Truth or 4:30 Perry Mason 5:30 Andy Griffith 6:00 New 6:25 Commentary 6:30 ABC NOW 7:00 Bonanza 1:00 Mod Squid :00 Kung Fu 10:00 Street 11:00 New 11:30 Enter. World 11:30 Jack Paar WUNC-TV, CHANNEL i CHAPEL HILL 9:15 Ripples 9:30 Phys. Selene 10:00 Sesame St. 11:00 Cultures 11:30 Humanities 12:00 Images 12:30 Electric Co. 1:00 Mulligan 1 :30 Granny 1:50 Math 2:30 Cultures 3:20 Ready Set Go 3:40 Film 4:00 Mliterogar 4:30' Sesame St. 5:30 Electric Co. 6:00 Evening Edit. 6:10 writing 7:00 Engineering 7:30 Farmer Ed 1:00 Advocate w Am. Family 10:00 World Pros 10:30 30 Minute A SUBSCRIPTION TO THE CAROLINA TIMES WILL KEEP YOU INFORMED OF THE NEWS IN YOUR COMMUNITY. HOP M M CALL 682-2913 OR 688-6517 TODAY Friday Highlights FRIDAY, m Arch 9 WTVD. CHANNEL 1L DURHAM a.m. SUNRISE SEMESTER - Aztec astron omy wffl b discussed. WTVI.) 441 p(ti. - MOVIE -Maris Oberon. Robert Ryan nd PauMukas stai in th neo-Nazi underground at tempts to kidnap a diplomat on his way to a WKUU T p.m. COLLEGE BAS KETBALL Winners of the quarterfinal match ups meet as too semifinals of the Atlantic Coast Conference A C C Tour nameo! at Greensboro Coliseum WTV'n. WFMY f ML - COLLEGE BAS KETBALLA continuation of the ACC Tournament Billy Packer and Jim Thacker re fort. WTVD, WFMY ML - UZA WITH A Z - A repeat of toe hour-lone leading money winners, who failed to win in any of 25 tournaments of 1972. WRDU 11:10 p.m-MOVIE-Jane Russell, Howard Keel, Brian Donlevy, Wendell Corey and Terry Moore star in "Waco," a dramatic western dealing with toe restoration of law and order to a town tightly enmeshed in crime and cor- ruption . WTVD, WFMY 11:30 p.m. - JACK PAAR The comedy group, The Muledeer and Moondog Medi cine Show, is WRAL 4:30 im 1:00 9:00 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:111 141 Sim. CSS Htm . Karva.rT '4k I tt I Ho Where Moot 0j &2 1:00 1 ntV 2:00 Guiding Light 2: tdg. of Night 3:00 tOVt Ji30 ttcrtt Storm awawawawawawaVaTawHr -Y. aTVaVafJ BSmTv ' illi JaeTawV aLwawawBaK '' -y&8Kttt&' avLS'vlaawawawawawawawBV oewlwBoP JmL 0U aaaaEnai aaaaV nafl aaaaalaKa WHsfo McHale-o Navy f wild, wild Watt :30 That Girl ' :00 Newtbeet Sia) CBS News 7:00 ACC B'ball Tournai 11 :00 News 11:30 Movie WRDU-TV, CHANNEL U, DURHAM NewZo Rev. Jwf Wornu Only vnmn t9R 9:30 10:00 M:30 !' 00 Sal of Cent. : 1200 11:10 wne What. Wh. 11:51 NBC New 1:00 Yur Quia 1:36 3 on Mate 2:00 Day, o-.r Live J: The Doctor 3:00 Bay ClrTT 3:30 Rt. Py. PL 4:30 Movie :. 6:00 Nw : NBC Newt 7:00 Kathy Hill 7:3J KIMar 1:00 Sanhxd S Son 1:30 Th Little Poplg .J:S?7,l,.w,m Z 10.00 Arnold Palmer Sea 11 :00 News " 30 Tonight 1:00 Mldnlt Special WFMY-TV, CHANNEL I, GREENSBORO Copt. Kmaargg we mm : 7:H 1:00 M '0 Price It Right 1141 12:00 Love Uf. Whert Heart 1 a.m. MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Paul Williams is host to Ravi Snankar, Seals and Crofts, Loretta Lynn, Hurricane Smith, Son Na Na, the pop group Edward WRDU 12:2J I 12:30 Searrh T'ni 1:00 Today's Woman l V Wor. Tumt 2 00 Guiding Light :30 Edge at Night 3:00 Love ' 1:30 Secret Storm 4:N Vln Scully ', 4:1 Owner Pyl ItOO Big vtHey :00 New 6:30 CBt News '5 7:00 ACC BMll To... na. 11:00 News 11:30 Movl -1: Ll Movlt . WRAL-TV, CHANNEL I. RALEIGH WRDU rilKM SPECIAL A yeor io the We of Arnold pl nser, on of golfs all time VM am - movie - A 4MjMk scientist (Ian Car michael) attending a chess touraamMt bocotnes a pawn in a spy game. Janet Munro and George Pravda co-star In "Hide and Seek. 6:00 6:1 7:0 7:1 :00 ':30 11:11 1:30 Oayfereik Bullwlnkle Uncle Paid Mike Dotajla Pawword 13:00 News 12:30 spin Second 1:00 All My Children 1:10 Make a bee! ': 00 Newly wad 3:00 Oen. Hospital 3:30 Ton the Truth 4:00 Truth or 4:30 Perry Meson 1 30 Andy Orimth W New, : Viewpoint 6 30 ABc New, 7:0 Bonania ' 1:00 Brady Bun :St Odd ruk l:0t Lev, Am. it 11:00 News ) Mack Pa. 11:3. : Phy. Set. 00 Humanities slip" 11:4 SNW Off :SS Electric c WUNC-TV, CHANNEL 4. CHAPEL HILL HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY Fred Rogers, host of Mister Rogers' Neighbor hood television program be lieves that the honest way is the only way to deal with children. Rogers, who talks with more than four million children daily must be right, for the letters tha t flood his offices each week indicate that most young viewers have com plete trust in him. The pro gram is sired on over 300 PBS stations across the country. Ho is shown here visiting a tot's classroom. I i , V.'cSj" aaRRan LbMRl ' nBsSRs .plaRRRRB 4akJt am eaeBeBAeeaak B , , 1 S S -a R aa fj M aj mm et ijiaj oei your neeoo with m?niiniani Maamce. J: A Full Service Bank I Chicking SivlngB - Loans Mechanics & Farmers Bank I DURHAM XHARlOni JtttHiSiM Saturday Highlights 7 a.m.-MOVIE-Jeff Mor row and Rex Reason star in "A Creature Walks Among Us." WRAL - 12:30 p.m. TALKING WITH A GIANT The mem bers of the First Edition rock-folk-couritry group per form and chat with teen agers in a special musical installment of the a e r 1 e s . WRDU 1 p.m.-CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL - In "The Little Ones," two runaway friends, one of whom is black, search for a better place to grow up. WFMY 2 p.m.-ABA GAME-The Denver Rockets face the Vir ginia Squires, from Hampton Roads Coliseum. WFMY 4 p.m.-CBS GOLF - Gay Brewer, former Masters champion, and Doug Sanders team up against another Masters titleholder, Billy Casper, and long-hitting Johnny Miller in a quarter final match. WTCD 4 p-m.-GOL' - Outstand ing golfers compete on a Florida course. WFMY 0:30 p.m.-ACC TOURNA MENT Live coverage of the championship game to deter .mine the winner in the ACC after one of the most hotly contested seasons on record, with three ACC teams con sistently rated among the nation's top ten teams. WTVD, WFMY 9 p.m.-MOVIE - Melina M e r c o u r i , Oscar winner Maximilian Schell and Peter Ustinov, in his Academy Award-vTinning performance, star in "Topkapi," a comedy about a team of international jewel thieves who plan the theft of a sultan's jewel encrusted dagger. WRDU 11:30 p m.-MOVIE-In "I Saw What You Did," starring Joan Crawford and John Ire land, two teen-agers alone for the weekend play a mis chievous telephone game and meet serious trouble. WTVD, WFMY 11 :40 p.m.-MOVIE-Esther Williams and John Saxon per form in "Unguarded Mo ment." WRAL SATURDAY, MARCH 10 WTVD, CHANNEL a DURHAM 6:30 Sunrise 7:00 Now 1:00 Bug Bunny 1:30 Sibrlna on Chan 9:30 Scoobv Doo 10:30 Pussycat 11:00 Flintstone 11:41 Norm Slew 12:00 Archie 13:3 Special 1 :00 Child Film Fait. 2:00 ABA B'ball 4:00 CBS Golf 5:00 Del Reevet 3:30 Nashville 6:00 Sleek Unlimited 6:10 CBS News 7:00 He Haw 1:00 All In Fimlfy 8:30 ACC B'ball Town. 11:30 Mevia 1:3 Kaleidoscope WRDU-TV, CHANNEL 28, DURHAM 1:00 Houndcatt 1:10 Roman Holiday 7:00 Jetton 7:30 Pink Panthar 10:00 Underdog 10:30 Berkleys 11:1 Sealab 11:3 Runaround 13:00 Eighty Daye 12:30 Olant 1:00 Wrtttlln 2:00 NCAA B'ball : NHL Hockey 6:30 NBC Newt 00 Untamed v 7:30 Stand Up 1:0 Emergency 11:00 Late Movie WFMY-TV, CHANNEL 2, GREENSBORO 7:30 Mulligan 1:00 Bug Bunny 1:30 Sabrlna :00 Chen 0:30 Scoobv Doo 10:30 Pussycats 11:00 Flintstontt 11:30 Archie 12:10 Fat Albert 1 oo Child Film Fet. 2:00 ABA Basketball 4:00 Golf 3:00 Outdoors i 5:30 Partnt Game 6:00 Newt 6:30 CBS News : Hoe Haw 8:30 ACC B'ball Tour. 11:00 New 11:30 Movie WRAL-TV, CHANNEL S. RALEIGH 7:00 Sunrise 1:45 Scouting Nawt 7:00 Osmonds :30 luperatar 10:30. Brady Kids 11:00 Bwltchd 1:30 Kid Power 12:00 Phantom 12:10 Frolic 1:00 Flying Nun 1:30 Tobacco Today 2:00 Soul Special 3:00 Am. Bandstand 1:10 Pre Bowler Tour 1:00 Chimp. Wrest. . 6:00 A.Smlth 6:10 P.Wetemr 7:00 L. Wik 1:0 Long Day't Journey ii o Newt 11:15 Movl 1:0 Ripples 1:15 Math 1:3 Phys. Id. 1: Mattl 2:30 Sign Off 00 Mlsttroger 4:30 Sesame St. 1:11 Electric CO 7io Yev'tn M 7:MN.C. Pegji, :uu wesn. ween Vls&Sl ! r.....or... I I I ! I I I I i ! : f s ! ! ! JUwolSRRaROta mmm m . ( Ml i mm " w i READ ABOUT VOURSttf EACH WffK i IN THE CAR0UHA TIMS. IT'S YOUR PAPER. iJurh T, Ms Cs 17706 it C. UNIY. HAS $3 MILLION W FEDERAL HINDS WORDS OF WISDOM An orator or an author is never successful till he has learned to make his words smaller than his ideas. -Emerson Every man is a production manager in charge of producing results. Donald L. Brown mm Warns GOOD READING IN THIS ISSfXE Vrw-... oj VOLUME 53 No. 11 BLACK ACTOR HONORED New York Paul Winfield (r), Academy Award best Actor nominee for his role in the picture .Sounder" is present ed with a plaque by. Roy In- nis. national director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE, recently, honoring him for "bettering the image of. the black Americans in motion pictures." .DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1973 WRITERS FORUM By GMfpe B. Rus DAILY LIVING By WsVsaa HHI PREGNANCY PlANNlNG By G. Rlgpfcst SCOUT CORNER By E. L. Kearnev DURHAM SOCIAL NOTES By Mrv Syminer Daye FROM BLACK By Mm ttpi. FROM THE PEN OF DONALD LOVE PRICE: 21 CENTS r Mammoth Subscription STARTS Drive MARCH 26 . See Details Page 3B Funds Awarded Roughly Equal to Quarter of Us Annual Budget North Carolina Central Uni versity currently has three mil lion dollars in federal grants in force, Chancellor Albert N. Whiting told UNC President William Friday this week. Although some of the fede ral money is for periods longer than the current fiscal year, the gross amount of federal funds awarded is roughly equal to a quarter of the university's total annual budget. It is this level of support that could be interrupted should the result of Judge Medical Core To Be Provided For Syphilis Study Survivors WASHINGTON --(NBNS) - Caspar Weinberger, secre tary of Health, Education and Welfare, intervened last week and announced that all tii!WflB5st-? ' ttfettl WW be provided survivors of a controversial syphilis experi ment known as the Tuskegee Study. Last week, officials 'at HEW said now that the study had ended, they had no au thority or funds to continue physical examinations and medical treatment for the 40-year experiment. The study of untreated syphilis began in 1932 and ended only last year after public disclosure of the project. The study involved more than 430 black men from Macon County, Ala. At least 28 and perhaps as many as 107 of the participants died as a direct result of the un treated disease. w "taking the announcement, said: "I have personally review ed the facts in this study. Because of this highly un usual and, to our knowledge, fortunately unique research project, I feel that the federal government has a strong obli gation to continue medical care for all the participants by providing them a full range of medical services for the rest of their lives." Weinberger said he had directed the Public Health Service to provide the medi cal care. -NEWS BRIEFS - RACIAL CLASHES CLOSE OKLA. SCHOOL FREDERICK, Okla. (NB NS) - Classes have been can celled until Monday and an evening curfew has been ex tended indefinitely because of racial fighting Wednesday at Frederick High School here, Mayor Wilbur Brown reported. Police used chemical repellants and fired warning shots during a disturbance which broke out during the lunch hour with about 50 students throwing bottles and swinging belts. No injuries were reported. NBNS RACE TROUBLES CONTINUE IN CHARLOTTE SCHOOL CHARLOTTE, NC -- (NB NS) - Violence erupted for the fourth straight school day Wednesday with a me lee at Independence High Sc hool that injured two teachers, sent a black student to a hospital in an ambulance, and caused numerous other minor injuries in this Charlotte-Mecklenburg County School system which experienced little violence in 1970 during its landmark bus ing crisis. Independence, located in the southeastern part of the county, was to reopen last week for seniors only, joining four other violence- plagued schools operating on curtailed attendance schedules. , NBNS CHRYSLER, INNER CITY GROUP TO BUILD SHOPPING CENTER DETROIT - (NBNS)-Chry-sler Realty Corp. and an inner city group announced plans last week to build a $2 million shopping center complex on 6.7 acres of land in an urban renewal area in the heart of the city. Ths center, tho first of its kind for the near northside, is designed to serve a planned 424-unit housing and apart ment development and medi cal center for low and mode rate income families. NBNS SENATE COMMITTEE DEFEATS RENT CONTROLS WASHINGTON - (NBNS) - Splitting on an 8-to-8 vote, the Senate Banking Commit tee defeated last Thursday a proposal by President Nixon to impose national rent con trols. In considering a presi dential request to extend wage price controls for one year, the Committee ended in s tie vote. According to Com mittee rules, a tie vote defeats a motion. The proposed rent control amendment would have limit ed rent increases to 2.5 per cent per year in areas where apartment vacancy rates were less than 5.5 per cent. How ever, landlords would have been able to pass along to the tenant the cost of taxes, fees, service increases, and ne cessary capital improvements. The Committee also voted 9-to-3 to increase the number of workers poor from workers who make $2.75. an hour to those who make $3.50 an hour. NBNS BURKE URGES BLACKS TO DEVELOP POLITICAL STRENGTH WASHINGTON -- (NBNS) - Recalling that the number of blacks in Congress dimini shed when the Reconstruction era ended, Rep. Yvonne Burke (I) Calif.) called , on blacks last week to prevent a recurrence of those days. "We can't let that happen again," Rep. Bur ke said. D.C Chief To Remain On Job WASHINGTON is hard to turn down any president, particularly President Nixon," said Jerry Wilson, the District of Columbia chief of police. He made that statement Tuesday after emerging from a 30-minute meeting with Nixon. At the meeting, the President convinced Wilson not to quit as he had planned. John H. Pratt's ruling that North Carolina has been neg ligent in submitting desegre gations plans be a cut-off of federal funds to the univer sity system. Judge Pratt ruled February lb in U.S.. District Court that North Carolina has not sub mitted a plan for desegrega tion of the public universi ties, as requested by the VS. Department of Health, Educa tion, and Welfare. The court made the same judgment aga inst several other Southern states in a suit brought against HEW by the National Associ ation for .the Advancement of Colored People. Cameron West, UNC's vice president in charge of planning Said recently that no request fot a desegregation plan has been made by HEW since the restructuring of the state's system of higher education. West has reported that a draft plan to "reduce the identi- fiability?, ojf .t.4traditionalIy See FEDERAL FUNDS 3A Named To HUD Post Controversial Figure Picked By Pres. Nixon HBMrJttarBHiH VW aB Hfl rJjw V m ffijtfe jjjjlik J B;&jtoa bbUt afl WRtfBmLStoHtom aH aBaaaaaaaafliilBaaUaBfl BBeft iPH iaaaar Bw m L .Jafl B afl iaaaaaeaV ' MEMORIAL SERVICES Se attle, Wash. Juanita Carr of Detroit, a sister of slain Se attle police officer Fred D. Carr, was consoled by Capt. Marvin Wubbens (1), City Councilman Sam Smith (to her left) and the Rev. Samuel McKinney following memori al services recently for her brother. Carr was killed on February 25 in exchange of police gunfire with a teen ager. Autopsy showed Can was hit by bullets fired by fellow officers instead of gun shot blast fired by David Mc Mahon, 18, who also was kill ed by police gunfire. (UPI) first Block ood Second Student Nominated To Duke Trustees Scott Paper Co. Insures Group In Black Co.s PHILADELPHIA - Scott Paper Company today announ ced it has reinsured $9 million of its group life insurance with two black-owned insurance companies. The two com panies are the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Los Angeles and the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Durham, NC. Each has been assigned $4.5 million of group life volume. In making this announce ment, J. F. Gaylord, staff vice president for industrial rela tions services, said, "This ac tion is in accord with our corporate policy of promoting the utilization of minority owned businesses in satisfying the company's procurement needs and is one dimension of a continuing corporate pro gram designed to carry out Scott's social responsibility to shareholders. Ins. Officers' Mid-Year Meet Held in City The 34th annual Agency Officers' Mid-Year Conference, sponsored by thfe 41 Black life insurance companies of the National Insurance Associa tion, will be held March 14-16, at the Downtowner Motel in Durham. The conference theme, "Building the Agency for pro fitable Growth in the 70's," reflects the group's concern with profitability, service and growth, according to Agency Chairman Rumor L. Oden, agency director, Winston Mu tual Life Insurance Co. The me eting will consist of speeches an(j panel discus sions beginning Wednesday afternoon, March 14, witli an address by Ernest L. Hogan, president, People Life of Was hington, D. C, a veteran of nearly forty years in the in dustry. The chief spea ker on Thurs day, March 15, will be William J. Kennedy, III, new chief of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co. On the final day, a major address will be given by NIA President I. H. Burney, II, president, Afro American Life Insurance Co. See INSURANCE 3A A second- student and tfaeV first black have been nomi nated for membership on the Board of Trustees of Duke University. Susan Tifft, a senior English major from St. Louis, Mo. and Dr. C. E. Boulware, a mathematics professor at Nor th Carolina Central University, have been nominated by Duke's trustees to the stite's two Methodist conferences. Jeff Kurzwell, a Duke gra duate now studying law at Vanderbilt University, became the first student trustee in 1972. Miss Tifft and Boulware will join six other new trus tees on the university's 36 member board. Six present DR. C. E. BOULWARE SUSAN TIFFT Young Journalists Attend Meet Columbia Scholastic Press Ass'n Nevia Garrett, Johnny Man gum, Daniel Smith, Michael Brown and Leonzo Lynch, Fifth and Sixth Graders at W. G. Pearson Elementary School will be among the 5,000 editors and their advi sors attending the 49th annual convention of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association 5 aefaaaaal noeHeaT Icelllli aaaE Br SBflflSS SMb& ESB bUk lliaBaw f:mmSk B M B ''''MBP . ' ''MKM ft:.SF iaTaeeeBeaB ' ' ""' 3SSH BKI li V'K aaaffiBYeWaaT Bl area BjWajaMf-Sf ...M Bern! :: : Mpjlr I w HaW " .taaaeBaaal T fl aeH HS 1 H HHai eaeanssl 4 ? BBI SUPPORT INVI (Washington, D. C.) Rep. Donald V. Dellums, D-CaUf. (left), the first black member of Congress to be named to the House Armed Services Committee, said it should reopen its investigation of disorders among crewmen on two aircraft carriers to get testimony from black sailors. At right is Donald Miller, formerly in charge of the Pentagon's equal opportunity programs for servicemen. on the Columbia University campus in Ne w York City, March 15-16-17. This is the nation's largest national jour nalism convention. Mrs. Bernadine S. Bailey, the advisor, will accompany the group. The young editors who will spend three days at Columbia are from 35 states, Puerto Rico and Canada. They will choose from among 250 lec tures and discussions devoted to all phases of production of school publications. Highlight of the convention will be an awards luncheon on Saturday, March 17. Sena tor Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts will address the assembled editors. Awards will be made to school pub lication for typography, writ ing skills, cartoon work and literary achievement. This year more than 1,500 news papers and maga zines from elementary and high schools and colleges were placed in competition. The Columbia Scholastic Press Association, sponsored by Columbia University, was established in 1925. In that year 179 newspapers and ma gazines were entered in the first contest and 308 persons attended the convention. In 1935 a yearbook contest was added and a two day October Yearbook Conference started in 1940 See JOURNALISTS 3A trustees also were ll-elected by alumni or nominated to the Methodist conferences for additional terms. To fill vacancies on the board, the Rev. Wallace Kirby, pastor of the Hay Street Me thodist Church in FayetteviUe, and Mrs. Isobel Y. Martin of Lexington were elected to membership. Under Duke bylaws four trustees are elected by alumni. Eight others are nominated by the board to the Methodist conferences, which formally elect the nominees in June. Terms of office for trustees are six years. All new and reelected trustees begin their new terms in January, 1974. The university alumni elec ted Mrs. Kathleen Watkins Dale of . Cincinnati, O., and Edward S. Donnell, president of Marcor, Inc., of Chicago. Re-elected were Raymond Na sher of Dallas, Tex., and Char les S. Rhyne of Washington, D.C. Nominated to the Metho dist Church's North Carolina Conference, in addition to Boulware, are Alfred Hunt of Pittsburgh, Pa., Thomas F. soutngate, jr., oi Mt. Airy, and K , Brantley Watson of Durham. All three are cur rently board members. . Nominated to the Western North Carolina conference as See TRUSTEES 3A WASHINGTON - (NBNS) - A controversial black hous ing manager has been nomi nated by President Nixon as an assistant secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, it was announced Wednesday. H. R. Crawford, who has, during the last two years, gained a reputation for being a tough businessman and dis ciplinarian, would be the highest ranking black in the Nixon Administration if his nomination is confirmed by the Senate. A self-avowed "law and order" man, the 34-year-old Crawford has said that he carries a gun around his pro jects. When it was rumored in early January that he would be nominated to the HUD post, John Hampton, of the National Tenants Or ganization (NTO). said the appointment would be "fur ther confirmation that the Nixon Administration is ho stile to public housing.' Crawford, who has cha stised public housing pro- See HOUSING 3A Whiting Meets Congressonal Leaders in D.C. WASHINGTON, D.C.-Cha-nceUor Albert N. Whiting of North Carolina Central Uni versity was among a contin gent of state college and uni versity -presidents who met with Congressional leaders in Washington, D.C. to urge their action on what is becoming an emergency student aid situ ation. As a member of the Ameri can Association of State Col leges and Universities which arranged the legislative con ference, Chancellor Whiting and his fellow institutional heads represented 300 state colleges and universities in the . nation in their talks with Con gress on February 27-28. Chancellor Whiting contact ed the North Carolina Con gressional delegation, impres sing upon them the adverse effects which the federal stu dent aid programs could have upon students unless certain See WHITING 3A Hillside Principal J. H. Lucas Elected President of NCAE John H. Lucas, principal of Hillside High School for the past 11 years, has been elected president-elect of tho North Carolina Association of Educators (NCAE) for the 1974-75 school year. As president-elect. Lucas will serve as vice president of the 50,000-member NCAE during 1973-74 and as president the next year. Lucas, a Rocky Mount native, was nominated by the 519-mem-ber Durham City Association of Educators. Asked about the direction NCAE may take under bis leadership, the former chtntistry teacher said, "I hope that we would move ahead in areas of legislation, research and general educational development.-" During ir3M, when hi- ls vice president . Lucas said, "I will be studying and nirveyiog, listen ing to students, listening to, teachers and listening to educa tors. Then I will project con-! cepts and seek cooperation. - I 'The next year as president." he continued, "I will advanea th gMgi m wtocatioa. I wB .i HIAS port legislate before the stale i such are, tutors aides and for supporting our "But right now.- he sakl "t will just stand hack isj5i my support to the c dent. Wayne Miller.

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