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C AROLINA TIMES Sat, March 10, gg
FlrstllcrwIadiaTBcitcd"
Tire Sole Ever! t Rig rsr s.u
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9
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i 018.1383
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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
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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
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READ ABOUT
VOURSttf EACH WffK
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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
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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
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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.