Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / June 2, 1973, edition 1 / Page 13
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I UA-TH1 CABOUNA TIMB8 8H., J 2, 197S women-in-Acnon lommitfee Presents Panel Discussion Tht Community Correction Subcommittee of W1APV under the leadership of lire. Jean Janssen presented a most informative panel discussion at the May 14 meeting of the Women In Action. .H. Janssen served as moderator tor the program. Panelists included Donna Lyon, counselor at Oak Grove Elementary School; Sgt. Brown, of Youth Division, who works between the Juvenile Court and Youth Division (ages 7-16) and Prank Bright, who is the Supervisor of the Probation Department. Miss Lyon related that some signs of anti-social behavior may often include the end results of early temper tantrums which may lead to stealing, lying, cheating and especially among those who are easily led. Such children often bring with them a poor self image, perhaps stemming from bad home situations or other problems. She urged that within the child-home-school context, parents and teachers must cooperate to get the maximum from each child. Sgt. Brown related that in working with children, less than 20 children in the past 2 years were involved in dope, the greatest problems lie in larceny (stealing) and runaways, where he has found that in such runaway cases, parents as well as the child are often at fault. The community at large should try to heop in alleviating these problems. Probation Supervisor Frank Bright caused a ripple when he related that his offenders fell under the category of ages 16-86. Most however, fall between 16-25 and consist in Greek Organization Chooses 73-74 Officers Fonda C. White of Salisbury will head up the Alpha Chi Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority for the 1973-74 school year. The service organization has Involved its members in many programs during the past year. Included in the many programs have been a screening program for sickle cell trait, bingo pafffw for patients at Chapel Hill's Gravely Sanatorium, tutoring programs for high school students, and volunteer work at Durham's Lincoln Hospital. Other officers of the chapter include Regina Robinson, a Durham senior who serves as vice president or anti-basHeus; Joan C. Parks, a dope. Drug offenses and drug larceny, housebreaking and related offenses range high. Volunteers are needed so that some assistance may be rendered in this particular area. Recruiting and training are important and usually is the key for successful volunteers. The end results will be seen in the educative gains of the community and all persons are better informed of the serious problems involved. Persons who are interested in assisting in any of the ares may contact WIAPV at the Clearing House. We Took Our Very Special Sports Car . . . Added Soul and Came Up NEW '73 Pontiac GT Rally Sport The diffrent kind of sports car . . . with the economy kind of price this one comes equipped with soft ray glass all around, vinyl trim, rear bumper guards, protective bumper strips, 3-speed heavy duty opening mouldings, Rally wheels, Rally stripes, dual exhaust with chrome extensions, GT decal iden tification, white lettered fiberglas tires and much, much more! $3492 f TW.'n Cnmrin'u fiJT Polk, o i . . o - - opoix. Ana O knmuil QUA iMMnut A H 1 m " ' wu8uf, nm radio, rront and floor shift, body color mirrors, wheel wVhrtsvw It fNikw ff 3b CIS .Coeeln W Coggin Pontiac Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. 'dumb 2MUW SSEIvVay between durHAm and GHAPL HILL ON 15-501 JHGHWAY junior from New Bern, recording secretary or gnmmateus; Vivian E. Trice, Durham senior, asst. secretary; Lavonda G. Gillespie, a senior from Elizabethtown corresponding secretary or epistoleus; Anita L. Powell, a senior from Kinston, treasurer or tamiochus; Rwanda E. Gagdale, junior from Elizabeth City, Dean of Pledgees; Thoris C. Barnes, a junior from Battleboro, Co-Dean of Pledgees; Charlene D. Clary, a senior from Suffolk, Va., Hodegos and Joan V. Bond, senior from Sunbury, Philacter, Miss Janie Troubiefield, a senior history major from Newton Grove, will bead Zeta Phi Beta Sorority's chapter for 1973-74. Special focus of the social organization is scholarship, service and academic achievement. Gamma Gamma chapter has won NCCU's Academic Achievement Award, given to the social fraternity or sorority whose members compile the highest academic averages, every year since the award was first given in 1968, except for one year. .1; ;r' , Other officers Mesdames: Man EbMaVWl senior elementary major from Belhaven: first DUnne An business admit from Wilmington, anti-basileus, Glenda Hoffler, a senior psychology major from Hertford, grammateus and Mary J. Wilson, senior elementary major from Newton Grove, tamais Mint Gertrude Carter, a junior nursing major from Beaufort, will serve as bond of the Chi Eta Phi Sorority during the 1973-74 academic year. f jENERAL mBaHHmL 40,000 Mile Steel Radial General Calibrated DUAL-STEEL RADIAL" Steel Belted Protection Against Punctures Radial Ply Construction for Responsive Handling Distinctive Whitewall Design NOW Size DR8 14 $46.95 Plus $2.35 Federal Excise Tax Other Tires Comparably Priced SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION SS MAG WHEEL New & Used 1 1 ijpf Jjggggr 3-Pi6CG WIND N RAIN SUIT Year-Round Outdoor Protection Set Includes . FULLY ZIPPEREO JACKET ADJUSTABLE ci Arve DETACHABLE ONLY HOOD $-195 l Charge it at General Tire E 6 . OPEN SATURDAYS 'til 2 P.M. For Your Convenience INGOLD TIRE GO. Car. Main & Gregson Streets- Tel.. 682-5461 Sooner or later, you'll own Generals The average investment per U. S. farm doubled between 1950 and 1958 and more than doubled between 1958 and 1968. - JUNE - SALE OF SALES! SAVE UP TO $100G IAAPALAS MONTE CARLOS VEGAS ALSO Harriet d CAAAAROS CHEVELLES Connors M2-31S1 Chapel Hill's Volume Dealer 1079 Durham-Chapel Hill Boulevard 544-1716 Distinctive Unique The Winners CONTINENAL MARK IV Tlu Final Sit pip Fine Selection Noh In Slock LINCOLN CONTINENTAL Family Weekly LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 4-nOOR SKDAN See Ford's ad on Car'Buying Made Easier in the Sunday May 20 FAMILY WEEKLY Also Lots of Lincoln-HIercury Trade-ins Avail iiu$$t i frit Jlnutricu'm Momi IPiMttrttftainthfitl Luxury Motor (art ... WEEKS-ALLEN MOTORS Lintolih Mewiy Sates and Service far over 25 years Dealer No. 1266 Cor. Rigsbee Ave. at Goer St. 688-4331 t:.:-i. inrffiii if Tmmm iwweMjwip SATURDAY, JUNE 1975 8 Pages In This Section i i iiaiiaiaatliajpja " 'J .'- far LoOeL State and NatkntaT Ntw erf Interest to AH 1 VOLUME 53 - No, 22 DURHAM, N. Cv SATURDAY, JUNE 1973 IHEK.' "IMHi mm SC STATE QUEEN AND COURT Lovely Pam Smith (left) has been elected Miss S. C State College for 1973-74. Her attendants are Jerline Simpson (center) and Veronica Williams. Miss Smith is a socioloty major of Charleston, S. C. A native of Rowesville, S. C, i Miss Simpson is a psychology major, and Miss Williams, a mathematics major, is from St. George, S. C. All are seniors. James Milton Devone Elected To Membership in The IPA The Board of Governors of the International Platform lames Milton DeVon,- Association (IPA) has announced the election to IPA membership of James Milton DeVone. The DA .a non-partisan organization of distinguished and dedicated persons from 55 nations, was founded one hundred fifty years ago by Daniel Webster. The IPA has NCCU to Offer Summer Plan For Teachers The North Carolina Central University's Summer Activities Program for elementary school teachers will focus this summer on language experience approaches, according to Dr. Norman C. Johnson, chairman of the department of education, n. The program, which is part of the university's curriculum leading to the master of education degree in elementary Continued On Pap,e 2B included among its members most of the U. S. Presidents since Theodore Roosevelt and including the last four presidents. Other members include celebrities of the press, TV radio, movies and theatres, as well as a leavening of those who listen and those who are interested in furthering IPA's objective-that of improving the equality of the American Platform. Among persons who have appeared before the group are such distinguished citizens as the late former President: Lyndon B. Johnson, George McGovem, Art Linkletter, Hubert Humphrey, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King;, Jack Anderson, Lawrence Spivak and many others of similar caliber. DeVone, who serves as Recreation Coordinator for Durham Housing Authority, is a NCCU graduate. He is currently completing Thesis Requirements for the M. S. Degree from UNC. He is a former member of the Charleston Rockets . a professional football team, with Continental Football League of Charleston, W. Va. He played backfield. His military service was served at NATO .Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers in Europe at Casteau, Belgium. DeVone is affiliated with many professional affiliations, and has served in several recreational capacities. His biography is also included in the 1972 Personalities of the South. DeVone is the son of Mrs. Irene DeVone of Durham. He is married to the former Lillian Henry of Durham. They are the parents of two children, James 4 and Jamie 2. Carmen Map Picked By Pres. Nixon to Head Women's Bureau Evers Charges That Whites Sell Drugs On Black Campuses NEW YORK - Fayette, Miss. Mayor Charier Evers, the brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, has charged that whites in the South are spreading drugs on black college campuses. Speaking before hundreds of students and faculty members of Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, Evers said: "They (whites) are scared that young folds is getting too smart, so they're trying to spread drugs to keep them down. They don't try that stuff on old folks like me-who drink". Urging his listeners to fight all forms of oppression, Even said his slain brother was partly reponsible for some political victories achieved in the South-aimed at a new determination of southern blacks. "The system works", he told them, "it just hasn't worked for us yet". "Black folks have got to get ready because nobody is going to do anything for us". "Instead, he said, the stress must be on blacks undertaking economic programs such as "buying clothing stores, liquor stores, markets and everything else we can". He pointed out that blacks have taken control of Fayette's Board of Education and "are going to take more towns, like Canton and Bolten, , Mississippi". Re-elected to his second four-year term just recently, in a town which is 70 per cent black, Evers said "whites have not left, because they ain't got no place else to go and I'm the best thing that's happened to them, too". Evers also confirmed that he Continued On Page 2B WASHINGTON-President Nixon has announced his nomination of Ms. Carmen Rosa May mi as Director of the Women's Bureau within the U.S. Department of Labor. Ms. Maymi, a native of Santurce, Puerto Rico, has served as the Bureau's Associate Director for Program Development since November 1972. As Director of the Women's Bureau, Ms. Maymi will be responsible for formulating standards and policies which promote the welfare of working women and advance their employment opportunities. As Associate Director of the Women's Bureau, she was responsible for developing, monitoring and evaluating programs to increase employment opportunities for women. For six months prior to iaMB ""Sal b . ,1 H; Wm BF aW- HKk j & ... & $ 1 Hjlnii i eaPR8BHMDl!$;; iiffrii D r. Benjamin Pay ton 283 Receive Degrees at Benedict Finals pining the Bureau, Ms. Maymi served as consultant to the 'Women's Bureau. She 'conducted a major analysis of jthe Women's Bureau's goals 'and activities. From February 1972 to May 1972, Ms. Maymi worked with the President's Cabinet Committee on Opportunities for the Spanish-Speaking. bhe was responsible for evaluating the effectiveness of 'the efforts by 10 major Federal agencies to serve the Spanish-speaking and to develop Affirmative Action plans. She was employed by the consulting firm of Volt Information Sciences, Inc., from June 1969 to January 1972. From July 1968 to June .1969, Ms. Maymi served as a Community Action Program specialist with the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO). Ms. Maymi began her career as an employment counselor with the Migration Division of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico in Chicago, 111. She left that post in February 1965 to become Assistant Director of the Montrose Urban Progress Center of the Chicago Committee on Urban Opportunity. Ms. Maymi entered federal service in June 1966 as a Community Services Specialist in thr. Great Lakes Regional Office of OEO. Educated in Chicago public schools, she earned a bachelor's degree in Spanish and a master's degree in education from DePaul University in Chicago. She also attended the University of Illinois in Chicago and the University of Chicago Graduate SchooL In 1967, she was named Outstanding Puerto Rican Woman by the Council of Puerto Rican Organizations of the Midwest. Ms. Maymi is an active member of the Conference of Puerto Ric.m Women in Washington, D.C. .where she lives. Kin II U iir ,,. ST'bm LLEPft isHbbI pyH k:' ' 'mfflMKfewk -? ' I M l M. IBs ML Wk $ mk;M w$Bk mm I am flfll: mWKmw W S ALLS BUR Y- -Mlss Velma LaVonne Brantley a 1973 graduating senior from Bennettsville, S. C, received her lieutenants bars of the U. & Army Reserves upon taking the oath of commission on graduation day at Livingstone College in Salisbury. Her aunt, Lt. Col, Vashti V. Jefferies, USMALMC -Fort Lee, Va., herself a 1947 graduate of Livingstone College, administered the oath. Above from left they are Lt. Col. Jefferies, Miss Betty Howard, Oxford, Ga., 2nd Lt. Brantley and her grandmother Mrs. V. 0. Jefferies, an AME Zion Minister of Bennettsville, S. C. Lt. Brantley was born in Gaffney, S. C . COLUMBIA, S. C. - Addressing 283 graduating seniors at Benedict College's 103rd Commencement Sunday, Dr. Benjamin F Payton, former president of the college and now a Ford Foundation offical, spoke out strongly against a U. S. Supreme Court case aimed at removing the racial identity of black colleges. "Black Colleges represent the best potential that black people have for higher education in America", he said.. Payton, now head of the Ford Foundation's $100 million program of assistance to minorities in higher education, told the standing-room-only crowd in Columbia Township Auditorium that "next to our faith in God, it has been the black colleges which have been the greatest saviors of the black people". "Black colleges are not now, nor have they ever been, the cause of segregation or discrimnation", he said in reference to the U. S. Supreme Court suit charging black colleges with fostering discrimnation by not enrolling whites. Payton also voiced support of the Benedict Board of Trustees decision in naming Dr. Henry Ponder, Vice President of Academic Affairs at Alabama A & M University, as the new president of the college, effective July 1. Benedict trustees have been criticized recently by alumni, campus and Baptist Church groups for passing over Acting President Luns C. Richardson in favor of Ponder. Richardson has been serving as the college's chief administrative officer since January of 1972 when Payton began working for the Ford Foundation. In his commencement address, Payton praised Richardson publicly as a "capable and popular leader who guided Benedict through a difficult interim". But he added that the trustees' election of Ponder as president must be accepted by Benedict supporters. Following the speech, Richardson awarded 165 Bachelor of Arts degrees, 23 Continued On Page 2B Million Yets Are Placed in Jobs, Training WASHINGTON-President Nixon's Veterans Program has passed the 1 million mark in jobs or training placements and will exceed its goal for fiscal year 1973, Secretary of Labor Peter J. Brennan has announced. Latest reports, he said, show that through February 28 a total of 946,539 placements had been completed, and preliminary figures for March indicate that the one-million mark was reached early in the month. "The record number of placements," Secretary Brennan said, "represents the attainment of 104 percent of the established goal for the period covered and assures that the 12-month goal will be surpassed." The total includes 404,651 returning servicemen placed in jobs and more than 600,000 enrolled in training or furnished other major assistance aimed at placing them in a job. The Secretary pointed out that this is the second straight year that more than one million Vietnam-era veterans have been placed. One of the major factors in the drive, he reported, "has been the outstanding work of the. National Alliance of Businessmen which had placed 141,651 ex-servicemen in jobs by February 28. Their goal is for 150,000 jobs by June 30, which now seems within easy reach." In other segments of the program, the Secretary reported these accomplishments: -404,077 initially enrolled (up to March 31,) under the G.I. Bill in college and sub-college courses, and in apprenticeship and other on-the-job training. -268,000 placed in full-time permanent jobs (up to February 28) by, the public Continued On Page 2B RUNNERS-UP-These are the two runners -up in the NAACP annual "Mother's Fund" Rally. Mrs. R. B. Montgomery, Montgomery County Branch, came in second in the Small-Rural Division, left, and Mrs. Addie Bar bee, Durham Branch, right, who was second in the City Division. Congressman Parren J. Mitchell, 7th Maryland District, center, was the principal speaker. Results Demonstrated By Durham Chapter of the NAACP Stimulate New Interest Throughout State Officers and members of the S. C. State Conference of Branches NAACP, readily agreed Sunday, May 20, at the annual Freedom Fund Rally, that the results demonstrated by the Durham Chapter, in the past three years had stimulated new interest throughout the state that caused the raising of more than $28,000.00 by NAACP mothers, this year. This was testified, too, by Charles G. Irving, Sr., retired Raleigh postman and real estate mogul, who is said to have been responsible for the Raleigh Branch to donate $500.00 to Mrs. Haveleigh White, who was the mother of the Apex-Raleigh Branch and took state honors by reporting $2805.00. Irving told the Freedom Fund audience that he was tired of Alexander Barnes, Durham Chapter president and the Durham people taking honors year after and year and he vowed to do something about it, in friendly competition. When the winner was announced Barnes was NAACP Continues To Win Cases Despite the Opposition of Nixon NEW YORK (NBNS)--The nation's chief legal advocate of integration has continued to win court cases despite the Administration's opposition most of the time, its director said last week. Jack Greenberg, director of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, reviewed the progress of the organization since the 1954 Supreme Court decision ending legal segregation in the nation's school systems. During the 19-year period since the decision, Greenberg especially pointed to the sweeping order of U. S. District Judge John Pratt in Washington that forced the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to threaten to cut off more than 100 school districts in 17 states that have been operating segregated systems despite decisions ordering them to cease the practice. The Administration has asked an Appeals Court to reverse the judge's order. Unlike the four previous Administrations, Greenberg pointed to some 13 cases when the present Administration has opposed the civil rights Cont inued On Page 2B stunned and for once of the few times in his life, he was short on words. He finally said, "I have done it I put Raleigh to work". However, the Durham mother, Mrs. Addie Barbee, representing Ebenezer Baptist Church, was runner-up, reporting $2114.00. Durham has been in the thick of the fight for three years. Mrs. Ehrete Monroe was the representative in 1970 and broke the ice for Durham. In 1971 Mrs. Annie Mae Bynum was runner-up. She again was the representative in 1972 and went on to take state honors. 1973 placed Durham m the second spot again. Mrs. Barbee was able supported by Mrs. Ruby Phihaw, Mt Vernon Baptist Church, $600.00; Mrs. Elizabeth Napoleon, Morehead Baptist, $346.75; Mrs. Emma Harris, Oak Grove Freewill Baptist, $314.00; Mrs. Elizabeth Edwards, Union Baptist, $185.00; Mrs. Kula Laney, Lincoln Memorial Baptist, $69.00; Mrs. Edna Royster, Orange Grove Baptist, $52.00; Mrs. GussJt Russell. Gethesamne Baptist, $47.00; Mrs. Gladys McKinme, Kyies Temple AME Zion Church, $25.00 and Mrs. Mary Vanhook, Mr. Zoar Baptist, $20.00. Mesdames Eva Campbell and Alice McCowan, Ebenezer CME aad Mt GBaad Baptist respectively were not available for reports. FSU ALUMNI HONORS B ARNES Alexander Barnes, an alumnus of Fayettoviue State University, was the recipient of- the "Outstanding Service Award" at ALUMNI DAY CONVOCATION ceremonies held recently on campus. FSU alumm.. acfc to!
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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June 2, 1973, edition 1
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