1 HA-TI1R CAROLINA THUS Sat AugH 25, 1973 I mtftsm I I CAMPUS COATS Special J I 1 dml ft ' ill aafl I l Your BankArnericard or Your,Master Charge Card. I II ' I Zri? ?Jr man... -V- I LAZY-BONES 4: X. COKUfXT KITI INC IK A SPKIMALTY AT Q0RTH6ATE VS. faV riv oJB JBfajS 1 ' .M. 'Btaae-H sBBBaifm B-M ' bv .BBMBH aOeeW - W '.V 1 JLv hELsY V --'aeW.BVBBS bb9bw ' Bk '.BeSH t aw " 1 E VBlA BBT ' I HPrl? vBvPEaisflMr sMIIH roRONA ELECTRIC ADDING MACHINE REGULAR $59.77 Adds and subtracts electrically. Totals up to 7 columns - to 99, 999.99. Handspan keyboard. Transparent tear off strip. REG. $42.88 SMITH CORONA "CORSAIR" PORTABLE TYPEWRITER Perfect for the student! Rugged enough for office work! Full size 84 character keyboard, half spacing, tabulator, quick set margins, page gauge, much more! Case has snap-off top! fsSF CHARGE IT! CORONET ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER 9 REGULAR 143.99 88 character keyboard, electric shift keys, -5 automatic repeat actions, full length tab, more! V DRAWER DIVIDER DESK FILE ORGANIZE! WITH PEN 20 STICK BALL PENS 88' I 12 Pc. PENPENCIL SET 88 88 CARTRIDGE PENREFILLS 'I LIQUID CRAYONS 88 s 0 FIUER PAPER aeHf I Ml II OUR OWN QUALITY BRAND! FILLER PAPER Big pack of 500 sheets. 10a X 8" size. Wide ruled with margin. 5 hole punched. You save on it now! REG. 97 2 & 3 RING EQUIPPED RING BINDERS REG. 1.97 Binder, themebook, filler, dividers, more! Scotch, 1500 INCH ROLL SCOTCH TAPE 23c 12" X 1500" roll in handy dispenser. AVERY ll. REGULAR 1.87 LABEL MAKER I1 99c Miik-. 49 characters on self adhesive tape. With; 38" X 72" tape. 38"xU4" taps 47 red,, green. Ule5tali VINYL COVERED LOOSE LEAF ORGANIZER 88 REG. '2.27 Includes 36- sheet pad, 6 organizer pockets. Cm'GLE BIG 3 SUBJECT PORTO POCKET NOTEBOOK LUNCH POCKET DELUXE SCHOOL BAGS Many, colorful, roomy 11. Vi X 14X4"tyles. m) 3 dividers, 6 pockets, 1 1 4 ruled sheet's. REG. 59 PACK THE BIC BANANA PACK Or 3 Famous fineline porous point pens. COGLE rELDOO-MAJOR. INC. THEME & SUBJECT STYLES SCHOOL NOTEBOOKS 3 in u I 5 hole punched notebooks. Wide or college ruled. Some -with A and 5 subject dividers. Stock up! EACH REG. 49' PACK BIC9 PIN SPECIAL PACK OF 3 Ball; point pent. Blue ! or black ink. I BIG SCHOOL BUY1 JUMBO PKG, OF ICILS . Big pack of 25 eraser tipped pencils. EASY WAV- OPEN SUN. 1 P.MTIL 6 P.M. RIVERVIEW SHOPPING CENTER, Roxboro Rod MBS. Molester (Continued from front page) Mrs. McLester has attained the status as an outstanding educator and as a leader of both adults and youth. In 1971 she received THE CITIZEN-TEACHER AWARD from the Kiwanis Club of Durham for the Durham City Teacher who best exemplified the highest ideals of teaching 894 citizenship; in 1971 she also received the Distinguished Service Award for meritorious service as a teacher and rounselor in the City of Ddrham from the North Carolina Resource-Use daucaiion uoniereiu-e. in 1972. she was presented another plaque from the Young Adult Missionary Deparlment of the Morehead Avenue Baptist Church for leadership, loyalty, service and spiritual guidance through the years to its members, lit 1973. she has received numerous certificates of Merit from the North Carolina High School Drama Association, the Union Christian Bible Institute, The YWCA etc. During the Spring of 1973. she was voted and received the Durham Teachers nomination for the TERRY ! K AN FORD AWARD for educators of the State of N. C. Mrs. McLester brings to this office a wealth of varied experiences.. She holds membership in numerious professional, civic and religious organizations and holds active positions in several Boards of D i re c t ors-; locally, and state-wide, to extend her Missionary Service, she is mimmtlv Junior Supervisor of Durham County Junior Missionary Union, Junior Supervisor of District 7, Group 2. which covers five counties, and a member of the Executive Board of the Lott-Carey Foreign Mission Convention, headquarters in Washington, D. C. and editor of the Woman's page of the "Lott Carey Herald", the official publication of the Convention. To enhance her knowledge with practical information, she has traveled extensively to the major countries of Europe and Mexico for the last five years. KENNEDY (Continued from front page) 177 . amoiul-.i.3i. Uf Tvo. a companies, SHW w eMiOBx MiMHti dollars ' of thstfrance m weeltwller, force on the lives of nearly a million policyholders, over. 1,500 . employees servicing them in thirteen states and the District of Columbia, Kennedy can be said to have "substantive influence over a large segment of the nation's black population." Similarly, his board memberships with prestigious firms in the FORTUNE 500 list like RCA and NBC as well as the Urban National Corporation are suggestive of his "influence in a decisive way" on policies and programs beyond his own firm's activity. W.J. Kennedy was also cited by Omega Psi' Phi Fraternity as one of its outstanding young business leaders at its recent conclave held in St. Louis, The term, GL used In World War 11, was derived from two words. govMriment issue. EMPLOYMENT (Continued from front page) million. v - ?l Nonfarm payroll:: employment (as measured through the establishment survey) was also unchanged at 75.5 million in July, after rising steadily in previous months. Over the year, It has risen by 2,9 million. Among the major industry groups, jobless rate increases for .workers in construction and ttade were offset by reductions in other industries, notably among manufacturing workers. At 3.8 percent, the unemployment rate for factory workers was down sharply from the levels of 1971. This decline was most marked for workers Tn durable goods manufacturing, whose jobless rate receded to 3.3 percent in July, its lowest point since late 1969 and' in sharp contrast with its 1971 average of 7 percent. TALENT (Continued from front page) Nash further stated, that performers selected from the regional festival will be able to participate in the national festival to be held, February, 1974, in Washington, D.C., and those selected from that festival will go to the Second World Festival in Lagos, Nigeria, in 1975. BUNCH (Continued from front page) then 5 years with Home Credit Co. Allen joined Central Carolina Bank in 1971 as a loan officer. He is assigned to the Hillsborough Road office of the bank.. Allen is married to the' former Miss Brenda Thompson of Hillsborough and they reside on Rt. 1, Hillsborough. Mallard, a Durham native, was graduated from the University of South Carolina in Vdii. ne jomea iAo eariy id 1972 as a management associate. Following his training, he was assigned as a loan officer in the bank's central office. He is married to the former Jean McDevitt of Durham and resides at 2500 Nation Ave. MJJLWJ T front oarti .1 VM . y: .p,...;. with his son and . -M , I in aaugnter, agea rune uiu w, when the fatal accident occurred. According to Wiley's son, Daniel, the water was rough and choppy and Wiley was walking alongside the cabin when he lost his balance, grabbed a railing for support, and fell Into the water when the railing apparently gave way. Attempts by the youngsters to save Wltey were futile, and .. u ,.n hoarinri for mey suuacnucuwj ............. shore to seek help. Late last year, Wiley announced plans to step down as head of NWRO to form a more broadly based organization with a new strategy for securing rights for iii.. nation's ooor, the Movement for Economic Justice, which would deal with tax reform, better pay, and consumerarn. A lutfhte of Bayonne, N. J " t : NEWS BRIEFS ' (Continued from front page) up . Center for Civil Rights, the Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, president of the university and former head of the U. S. Commission on Civil Rights said recently, "JJnation is now in retreat from the civil rights advances of the last 20 years," Father Hesburgh said in explaining the purpose of he center. "And there is urgent' heed for research into America', recent civil rights history, for analysis of current civil ues, and for recommendation designed to meet the problems of today and of the Immediate future. CRANSTON ADDS AMEN DMENTS TQ FHA BILL WASHINGTON - (NBNS)- Sen.l4n Cranston (pCpUf.) fotmoS I two Amendments to Federousing Administration $S-SU before the SenaDne wouW gwe some 340 000 persons "who have been stuc)t with defective FHA hes" thT right to file claims for rtttiirs. The other would S nSrno. "to provide low-inZt loans to rehabilitate 12.258 older housing units. BLACK CATHOLICS TO CONVENE IN NEW ORLEANS NPW ORLEANS La. - (NBNS)- te fate of Catholic schools , JBt luTkwlll be the primary topic of dion At "2 19 when the third annual National Convention of Black Catholics meets at Loyc" liversity here. ' HOWARD VETERAr 'NIT TO HOLD 30TH M WW w AmilNCTON - (NBNSh Some 150 veterans of the Howard WASHINGTON r wwch was formed S TwJSX 7 Wd thel 30h ahnu.1 reunion here Aug. W Hooks, the first black member of the Fe Communication. J superior Court Judge Commissioner Kenneth Hardy, ana u. - Jr Luke C. Moore. eee ..Putt podiatric care. WUey was raised in Pturid Cf. r. L, and received a bachelor's degree from the University of Rhode Island. It was during his tenure as associate professor of chemistry at Syracuse University that Wiley became active. According to the dean of students at Syracuse, Wiley decided in 1964 to leave teaching and devote his full efforts to social activism by taking a post with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in New York. Wiley remained with CORE less than two years, leaving New York for Washington to found NWRO after he founded a abort-lived organization called the Poverty Action Center, the National Welfare Rights Organization eventually attracted a membership of more than 200,000 people with 800 chapters across the country. An example of Wiley's J- -- - -P nwtamifatinn Ptlll Qcgrec ill viouuiavivii .mm effectiveness occurred in. 1969 when he and his group joined a group of welfare mothers to take over an office floor of the D.C. Department of Welfare In an effort to speed up the processing of welfare families ww,,, net inn fflll.i clflmtW To the embarrassment of welfare workers, the welfare mothers cut the processing time in half, leading Wiley to comment, "The D.C. Welfare Department has retreated from here." A memorial service for Wiley was held at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church In Washington, ; followed by a march to j Lafayetter Park, where friends and former colleagues read from Wiley speeches. He is survived by his wife, Wretha. two children, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William D. WUey of Providence, R.L PRISONERS Z frnnt Oattt) IVOWUUW states, "If the inmate elects to have a MINOR offense heard by the region committee, he ' should understand that the i committee MAY determine j that the offense should be classified as MAJOR and may impose appropriate punishment(s)." This ; statement indicates than an I inmate must "pay the price" for an impartial tribunal (or constitutionally guaranteed right), II, in iaw, imporMo. tribunal is what it is. There is adequate and recent law to support the constitutional rights of prisoners involved in disciplinary proceedings and particularly peculiar to the contentions of Turner and Ross. One simple request of the complaint is that the defendants "have established, printed and submitted for the Court's approval, policy and j guidelines granting prisoners at Caledonia Prison Farm procedural due process of law." Another is that the defendants be required to "establish clear, precise written rules and regulations governing prisoners' conduct, which offer dear guidance to the inmate as to what kind of conduct is forbidden, prescribing minimum and maximum punishments for each offense...." The complaint states that olaintlff Turner is now eligible for parole and plaintiff Ross eligible for promotion to Honor Grade status dui me filing of this complaint will probably hurt their chances of obtaining these privileges. Will they, too, have to "pay the price" for exercising a constitutionally guaranteed right? Or will the complaint be thrown into file "13". HENDERSON (Continued from front page) Annual Convention to be held in Las Vegas in December, 1974. Although the 12,650 man organization has been recognizing "distinguished achievement" of their members with the "Laurel Wreath" award for many years, and annually considers several hundred candidates for the honor, only twenty-six men have been so recognized in the fraternity's nearly sixty-year history. s Henderson is the second Durham citizen to be so honored. The late Charles Clinton Spauiding, Sr., third president of "NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL, -reOTrvedWfcawel Wreath" m 1945. Winners in the Olympic Games of ancient Greece were crowned with a wreath of . r.w. inn Imirol tree. Drancnes uum - -- Since then the wreath has become a symbol of distinguished achievement And, Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity with its purpose of "achievement in college ftajp later life" adopted the wreath to focus attention on members if n o u t s t a n d f lT accomplishments In professional, civic and religious life as an inspiration for youth. Carter stated that Henderson's many national and local accomplishments along with his nearly forty years of unique service in the fraternity caused him to be singled out for recognition. His service on the boards of many business, professional and religious organizations ranging from his chairmanship of the Durham Housing Authority and Hampton Institute to his service as United Mates representative on several government inspection aid -YES WE ALL TALK By Marcus H Boulware.Ph.I). SUPPORTING MATERIALS liptTESnON: I am hnijjjt too many speakers make Statements without support; how do we know if they know that they are talking about? bCJML' - v iiSiNSWER: You don't know unless they use some support io "back up" what they are saying. Unless a speaker knows what he is talking about, he can hardly expect the audience to pay much attention to him. Making an audience identify review teams in Africa and a number of national groups like the Mortgage Bankers Association of America are Suggestive of his creative leadership and achievement. and beliefs with the purpose of a speech is aw shamta taefc. Some forms of Speech support include the personal experience, the experiences of others, incidents, examples, illustrations, statistics, and you name it. Sources for this kind of information can be found in library, through conversation and interviews, on radio and television, through attending lectures, reading magazines and newspapers QUESTION. Tbi younger generation of coUeB speakers seem to have no care for acceptable postnie. What would you recommend? S. P. ANSWER: A speaker's posture is one determinant of an audience's response to him. Therefore, the speaker should sot, Amt , vm stand t sad a - . ifon his Ihttrnaw .hj that indicates stability . WW SMI ' The mate apoator does noV wear a hat of cap wU3 speaking before an aodtOBdi Generation gap or neViMtf cannot be tolerated. ' READERS: For my free pamphlet "90 unique Public Speaking Subjects", send two stamps- and a 'ftflpjft self-addressed long business envelope to Marcus H. Boulware, Florida A Igjf University, Box 193, Florida 32307. When buying veg etables, select those that axe fresh and crisp. "Quick sale Items are poor buys a ft rule, says Mrs. Ruby Uzzle, exten- linn State Uarrerstty, Ansoo, dsapfc wt stajaai ef i CABPOFIBAttB The family of the late Mrs. Emma Strong take this occasion to taaak al many friends who remembered m'4 oar bevasaaaaaBt. Ynur expresdoas of aj aaaatay 'aalajtbened as ata tfaatajsaa. we were saddened ha aptrit we WW always affection and demonstration of concern for our welfare. Hat t ie S. Scarborough For the Strong Family gratitude your NORTHGATE SHOPPING CENTER DOWNTOVVii DURHAM DOWNTOWN CHAPEL HILL UNIVERSITY MALL ROXBORO n IllUlJwf riif am aawM.a w.y ICPUflfl RIIY5 " I -Mi. BACK TO SCHOOL PIECE LUliiiAtt Bv Seward 8 St sTO MNCW I KjB HI Travel In Style With Seward Luggage. Molded Luggage With Rugged Frames Covered in Quality Vinyl. a'nn! Per Set Assorted Pieces Available Separately s II I STOCK UPON SCHOOL SUPPLIES AT THESE ROSES LOW PRICES! CIIP BOARD Reg. 59- 33' PENCILS Reg. 39- 28' Spiral COMPOSITION BOOKS STARTER SET CANVAS BINDER FILLER PAPER 4-PLACE DIVIDER Reg. 99' 77 ftW HAIR Spray GIT SIT er SUAVE HAIR SPRAY Reg. 68 48( BankAmericari DELUXE TAPE CADDY Holds 24 8-Track Tapes b4 Plush Inner Linina Alligator Grain Covering Reg.$4.99 374 100 Polyester DOUBLE KNIT MATERIAL ipol Beautiful crepe knl ter for fan tashiens. ueep, L I '. At" uiirl ncn cvrara. rfw -ww Tk. material that makes being stylish always easy. 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