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8A THE CAROLINA TIMES Sat, J une 30, 1973
Current Happenings &
Events At NCCU
LIBRARY RECEIVES
GRANTS
A grant of (5,000 hu been
awarded to NCCU Library to
aid and upgrade their library
collections. The grants were
awarded under Title -11-A on
the Higher Education Act of
1965, as amended, for the
improvement of services to
college and university libraries.
Grant funds are used by
higher education and library
institutions for the acquisition
of library materials such as
books, periodicals, documents,
other printed and published
materials, magnetic tapes,
phonograph records, and
audio-visual materials.
School of Library Science
has received a grant of $35,200
from the U. S. Office of
Education to aid graduate
student's in the school's Early
Childhood Library Specialist
Program. The grant will
provide stipends of $3,000
each to five full time students
who will be enrolled from
August 30 through 1974
summer session. The students,
who will be working toward
the MasUr of Library Science
degree, will also receive an
annual stipend of $600 for
each dependent.
Increased opportunities for
librarians trained in work with
young children have been
created as a result of the
current national interest, and
in N. C. as a result of the Early
Library- Specialist Program. No
other library school in the U.
S. offers a program in the area.
School librarians must
expand their services to
provide more meaningful
learning experiences for
kindergarten pupils. Public
librarians also are now
compelled to give more
attention to serving
pre-schoolers and their parents
FACULTY MEMBER TO
WORK AT U. S. TREASURY
F. Victor Maafo, ass't
professor of Economics will
spend the month of August in
the office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, U. S.
Treasury, under a special
fellowship granted by the
National Urban League.
The Urban League program
provides experience to faculty
members in black universities
at the higher management.
levels of the Treasury and of
business organization.
Maafo will work under the
direct supervision of the
'Deputy Comptroller of the
Currency, Economics Section,
David Motter. The Comptroller
of the Currency is responsible
for the supervision and
regulation of national banks.
Maafo is a native of Ghana,
West Africa, and received his
Bachelor of Science degree at
Wesley College in Ghana. He
holds the M S. in Commerce
from NCCU and the M. A. in
Economics from Duke
University. He has been a
member of the NCCU faculty
since 1966.
ROSS TOWNES NEW
CHAIRMAN OF
DEPARTMENT OF
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Dr. Ross E. Townes,
recognized authority on
intramural sports, will become
chairman of the department of
physical education. The
appointment has been
announced by Chancellor A. N.
Whiting.
Townes has been a member
of the NCCU faculty since
1951 and holds the rank of
professor. He replaces Dr.
LeRoy T. Walker who resigned
the post this spring.
A former president of the
National Intramural Assn.,
Townes was recently named in
a survev of the association as
one of the top 15 men in the
field of collegiate inlramurals.
Townes is a graduate oi
Virginia Stale College and
holds the M. S. and Doctor oi
Physcial Education degrees
from Indiana University. He is
a native of Scotlsdale, Pa.; and
was formerly chairman of the
department of physical
education at Wiley College,
Marshall Texas.
GIVE BLACK BOOKS TO
BLACK LIBRARIES, SAYS
GROUP
The reaction of the recent
giving of the letters and papers
of W. E. B. DuBois and Arna
Bonlemps to large white
universities was deplored by
participants in an
African-American Materials
Project coordinated by the
School of Library. The group
called for the gift of black
papers to black libraries.
The group, which has
compiled bibliographies of
black newspapers, and
checklists of black authors,
joined June 16 in a resolution
originally prepared at the
Institute for Training
Librarians for Special Black
Collections and Archives, held
in Montgomery, Ala. in April.
DuBois was one of the
founders of the NAACP and
perhaps the leading black
scholar of the 20th century.
Mrs. DuBois sold his papers to
University of Mass. Bontemps,
a literary scholar and poet who
died last week, has left his
collection of papers to
Syracuse University.
The resolution adopted was
followed:
"Whereas, the records of
black heritage and experience
are the keys to the past and the
destiny of black people;
And whereas that
documentation is in danger of
being destroyed or lost through
neglect, indifference, and lack
of consciousness;
And whereas it is the
responsibility of black
institutions, organizations, and
individuals to be aware of the
importance of these records;
And whereas it is and has
been the tradition of black
academic institutions to
collect, preserve, and develop
documentation M black
experience;
Therefore be it resolved that
black Institutions,
organizations, and individuals
be urged to realize the value of
their records and personal
papers and to donate these
writings, documents, and
memorabilia to black academic
libraries, black research
centers, and black archives."
The giving of such records,
documents and other
memorabilia to an educational
charity is tax deductible.
GLIDDEN DURKEE GIVES
EDUCATIONAL
TRANSPLANT
Two representatives from
Glidden-Durkee Company Miss
Patty Cobb and Bob Bryan
presented a three day
management workshop June
20-22 as part of the
"educational transplant''
program of the university and
the company.
The same workshop that is
used in training the company's
own managers and executives
"Management Theories and
Practices" was given.
The program is the
outgrowth of Glidden-Dutkee's
participation in NCCU Business
Advisory Council. The
company presents ts
workshop at no cost to the
university. Students enrolled in
the program came from the
course in Business Policies.
Dr. Ross E. Townes,
newly-appointed chairman of
the Department of Physical
Education has been elected
chairman of the university's
Faculty Executive Committee.
As chairman of the committee,
Townes will serve as the
university's representative in
the faculty senate of the
University of North Carolina
system.
Elected vice chairman was
George B Nixon, instructor in
the department of history and
social science; Mrs. Helen
Miller, department of nursing
chairman was chosen secretary
and Vinston Burton, ass't
professor of geography, was
named assistant secretary; Dr.
S. J. Kim, Political Science
department chairman was
named parliamentarian.
Grady P. Morein, currently
a doctoral candidate in
management at Louisiana State
lifetime income
Be our travel representative
FREE COPY "Mexico Adventure"
sC Send $1.00 to
Caravaneer
3114 N. HARWOOD, DALLAS. TEX. 75201
ARMY ANNOUNCES $2500
ENLISTMENT BONUS V., ."
That's on top of the Army's new starting salary of
307.20 a month.
You must bo a high school graduate and enlist for
either Infantry, Armor, Artillery, or one of many
new special skill areas like Radio Teletype or
Missile ReDair
Your local Army Representative has a complete list
.of bonus fobs and, qualifications. For detailed
information contact him at:
oS-S25 in Durham.
Today's Army wants to join you.
Ms ottsr may end on 10 Jane Ufo
University, has been appointed
an associate professor in the
school of library science. The
appointment is effective
September 1.
A grant from the Mellon
foundation has made his
employment possible and will
thus strengthen the department
and expand the curriculum in
the areas of management and
literature of the social sciences.
Morein is a graduate of the
University of Southwestern
Louisiana. He received his
master of science in Library
Science from Louisiana State
University and earned the
master of business
administration degree at
Nicholls State University,
where he taught and served as
ass't librarian for six years.
Tokyo Offers Funds
PARIS ' Japan has of
fered to contribte more than
$100 million toward the estab
lishment of a United Nations
university if its- main center
were set up in Japan, U.N. offi
cials reported.
WHAT YOU MAKB '
By WILLIAM fflPWjfrSSaaSffcO
,. There are many people
today who believe that every
life situation must become
competitive, that in every kind
of human relationship,
someone must win and
someone must lose, and
winning is always good and
losing is always bad.
Fortunately, most of us do not
accept this doctrine
completely, or there probably
would be little love and
happiness left in the world.
Perhaps, most of us have
been at least slightly affected
by the competitive outlook on
life to the extent that we over
value material success and are
over-anxious about failure.
Thus situations which involve a
strong probability of failure are
thereby highly charged with
anxiety for us.
For instance, stage fright
is familiar to all of us. Making a
speech would not involve so
much anxiety if we were not so
afraid of failure. We can tell
ourselves that there is nothing
to worry about, yet we find
ourselves dwelling on the
nossible blunders we might
commit, on the poor
impression we may make, or
on the possibility that our
speech will be poorly received,
and we are made doubly
anxious by the foretaste of
failureWlff
In most cases, such
anxiety precedes the speech,
and very seldom does anyone
have stage fright after the
event. Thus it is not so much
failure itself which brings on
such feelings, but the
anticipation of failure. In other
words, we are usually upset by
anticipating a certain event,
rather than by the event itself.
My idea concerning this
subject came into my mind
while in church last Sunday
just before my Pastor asked all
visitors to stand. I could see
the expression of anxiety on
some of the visitor's faces,
fearing or afraid he was going
to ask them: "would you like
to have something to say?"
Finally, after dealing
with the public for over twenty
years, and observing different
experiences of this nature, it
has taught me a great deal
1. . :&Hm3i'
about the judging of human
personality. It taught me as
follows: not to belittle myself
in the presence of anyone; that
no one need to feel Insecure or
inferior, or inadequate, that we
don't -have to create and to
nurture these mental images
through fear of others, and
also, that life seems to be
exactly as we make it - every
day. ' WBtWfc'll
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Road OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 OPEN SUNDAY I P. N. Tl 6 P. M. Restaurant Opens 9 A M
-NOTES
(Continued bom Page 5 A)
(Edward) Parker. -Bit
Hedspebeth (Washington, DC),
Helen M. McClain, Lola G.
Bullock, Lona. Parker,
Dearborn Dr., Clyde Riley,,
Lillian Allen, Bettle Webb,
Lucinda Jones, Mary
Lawrence, S. Alston Ave.,
Mamie Parrish, Fannie RUey
Harris, Hernon Pettieford, L.
F. Warren, Mary SUnfield,
Dearborn Dr., Meardie
Mangum, Valeria Hester,
Alfred Jones, DOvie Lunsford,
James Long, Sammie Atkins,
Hazel Crews, Annie (Dep)
Mack, Fred Sletton, Magelene
Riley, Judge Harris, Rev. Ed.
Hoskin, Mary Glenn, Jake
Pointer, William Thompson,
Josephine Walker, Emma
Royster, Seminon Shaw, and
Pearl Bailey (singer).
The Father himself loveth
you. John 16 27. '
"v
WOMEN'S DAY TO BE HELD
AT CALVARY BAPTIST
CHURCH
Annual Women's Day
Program will convene at
Calvary Baptist Church
Sunday, July 1, at time
o dock. Miss Annie Dunigan, a
great civic leader of this city,
will be the speaker. She is a
member of the Union Baptist
Church, where she holds many
offices, a retired teacher of the
Durham City Schools and a
Junior supervisor of the East
Cedar Grove Missionary Baptist
Association. The public is
invited to come and worship
with us. Rev. W. L Butler,
pastor.
Forty-Six Years Later, NAACg
Confab Returns It) Indianapolis
NEW YORK - With lb
theme, "Fest We Forget Our
Fallen Heroes," the 64th
NAACP Annual Convention
will open on Monday, July 2,
in Indianapolis in what, was
once a stronghold of the Ku
Hux Klan 46 years ago when
the Association last met there.
The convention will salute
martyrs of the civil rights
movement, whose lives were
brutally taken in the struggle
for racial justice. Scores of men
and women, black and white,
have been killed by guns,
bombs or other such violent
weapons since 1951.
Among the most notable
were the Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., and Medgar
Evers, both of whom were
killed by snipers. Some of the
others were the Rev. James
fteb, who was beaten to
death; Viola Liuzzo, who was
fatally shot during voter
registration demonstration in
Selma in 1965.
Micheal Schwemer, Andrew
Goodman and James Chaney,
summer workers in Mississippi,
were shot and their bodies
hidden in the mud of a dam in
Mississippi. Vernon Dahmer, a
local MMsappi NAACP leader,
was fatally injured
when night-riders fire-bombed
him home because he was
actively working in a voter
Mr. and Mrs. Harry T.
Moore, NAACP coordinators,
were kil led on Christmas n.ght.
1951, when their Mima, Fia.,
home was bombed. The Rev.
George W. Lee, one of the first
Negroes in his town to register,
was killed in Beiom, Miss.,
Sen he refused to remove his
name from the voting lists.
I n dfa napolis. like the rest of
the country, has changed much
over the years. When the
NAACP 18th Annual
Convention, as the convention
was then called, met in that
city, delegates from 27 states
fearlessly voiced their
condemnation of the Klan and
of lynch ings.
In his address to the
convention, NAACP Secretary
James Weldon Johnson
stirringly denounced the
rampant lynchings that were
the
Mm- ': CAROLINA
to
mmmm
Despite the miasma of
Mtattoa that chug so that
convention, the NAACP's
IfPllllililii leader aroused the
fighting spirit of the gathering
with a ringing cry of triumph.
That year, 1927, he said,
was one in which the NAACP
had won three gnat victories.
Through the fearless effort of
Walter White, and aide, the
NAACP brought the severity of
the problem of lynching to the
attention of the nation; the U.
S. Supreme Court reaffirmed
the unconstitutionality of
segregation ordinances in a case
involving New Orleans; and, in
the Texas white primary case,
the High Court declared that it
was unconstitutional for the
state to bar Negroes from
voting Bl Democrats
A tribute to the state war
the fact that Indiana Gov YA
Jackson delivered the
welcoming address to the
convetion despite the bitter
racial atmosphere that was so
prevalent then. Furthermore,
the two principal IndhmapoBs
rewspapara, the "Star" sad
"News", coirassendei the
convention in their editorials.
Against this historical
background, NAACP delegates
from aO 50 states wffl meet to
review the conditions of racial
injustice in the land and set
policies that will guide the
Association's leaders for
another year.
Instead of being forced to
crowd into the homes of
friends , and sympathizers and
Is hresL
rights fa the Isrfkma
Convention Coatee. msi
untiring work of civil right
csjostttjr
Moving Trmk If teH
stiSTto move ItMA
rail. The waste is uauprassed,
of London.
g Period Season
I
dash Of SAVINGS !
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24 V
FAMILY WEEKLY
WEEKS-ALLEN LINCOLN-MERCURY
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Dir. 1266
Phone 688-4331