m Sat., Oct 18, 1178 ami EHHp-W I tori ot foundation Hears Plans PUSH EXPO '73 - CHICAGO: Push Expo '73 opened its five-day stand at the Chicago International Amphitheatre, Sept. 19th. The exposition ia expected to attract more than 500,000 visitors. The theme of the show is, "Save the Black coueges." Jail or Prison - Which Is It Going to Be Caked? BY PAT PATTERSON Tk wordf "jail" and "priaon'V-iroften inter e t a n gi'ab 1 y b y nayapapeta, magazines and people speaking in general, but they do not refer to the same type of fadUty. O v Jails are primarily facilities for dentention for those awaiting trial They are operated by the counties and cities and they are supervised and! inspected by Jail and Detention Services of the Division of Facility Services of the North Carolina Department of Human Resources. Prisons, on the other hand, are places for confinement of criminals and those found guilty of more serious crimes. They are operated by the state. Up until 1868, North Carolina Jails and prisons were operated on a local basis, but in that year the Constitution atottahed corporal punishment in all forms and limited the death penalty to four ejibes--arson, murder, rape and burglary. It also directed the general assembly to make provisions for a state prison. As corporal punishment iff way to imprisonment, it became apparent that a separate prison system would is established by the State. Hue, the administration of prison punishment, borne almost entirely by the counties prior to 1868 with some help from cities and town, began to shift to the State. The shift continued as the state prison . .- -,i aarate plpnta and buildings foi separate from 1907 through the his stay might be whether it is for an hour or several months, a man has a right to a clean cell and being treated as a human being. It is up to the Jail and m. Powell Named to Speech Pathology Board at 5. C. State Detention Services to see that these s andards are met and that supervisory personnel are properly trained. Today there are 100 county Jails, imiittal eight juvenile detention homes. During the past year, more than 251,000 persons have been committed to North Carolina jails. Approximately 2,100 of those committed were juveniles. i'Mkm to 1967. the Department of Public Welfare could investigate and supervise the jail system, but it had no authority to do anything about their condition. In 1967, however, the N. C. General Assembly adopted its historic local jail legislation, it gave what is now the Department of foeial Services, tf responsibility for developing and enforcing minimum jail sianaaran uu ucvcipi..6 training for personnel operating these jails. It made it compulsory that local jails abide by these standards and also have their personnel Wfjfjaati in the training program. The Commissioner of the Department wis given the authority to close jails that did not meet the new standards. Bids year, improvements are made in local jails. From 1941 to 1968, only 28 new Mix were built (one par yeer). However, since January 1969, when jail standards were finally put into effect, 28 mom new jails have been built at a cost of $10.5 million. That is an ajaetage of mom than five new jails per year. In 1978, alone, three jails I completed, 56 are in ay of renovation and I are currently being built. dm ettkzen in the state could find himself in a local jail IH something as petty failing to atop for a red light or chanting bis address on his car registration card. Frightful though this may sound, It ORANGEBURG, S.C. - Dr. Harold Powell, chairman of the Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology at South Carolina State College has been named to a five-year term on the Board of Examiners in Speech Pathology and Audiology in South Carolina, The functioikof the rnirtrsteact governing the licensure of speech pathology and audiologists in the state. Dr. Powell, who has served chairman of the South Carolina State College Department of Speech and Pathology and Audiology since 1971, formerly served as associate professor and speech clinician, and i ath and Hearing CBnte at the college. He was also employed as a gradual assistant speech clinician at Pennsylvania State University and a teletype operator for the United States A ntly a member of the American Speech and Hearing Association's Legislative Council, Education and Training Board, and its Committee on Special Rules. He is the South Carolina Speech and Hearing Association's representative to egislature Cour wjm member of the Editorial Board of the South Carolina Journal of Communicative Disorders. Dr. Powell is also a member of many other professional organizations including the National Association of Hearing and Speech Agencies, ciation of University Professors, Society for Religion in Higher Education Association for Retarded Children. He further serves as a member of several advisory committees, and is an active member of Alpha Kappa Mu National Honor Society, and Alpha Phi Gamma Honorary Journalism Fraternity. He was the recipient of the Danforth Fellow in 1961-65, and the Woodrow Wilson Fellow in 1961. " He earned a bachelor's degree in speech correction at South Carolina State, and earned both master's in clinical speech and a Ph.D. in speech pathology and audiology at Pennsylvania State University Dr.Po Dr. Powell is a native of JacLsonboro.SC. Bv 1980, unless present trends are reversed, 820 million uinK uitfonttM are nredicted for the world; UNICEF exnlorine non-formal, out-of- school channels for education to reach functionally illiterate youths beyond school age. Members of the Directors of the North Central University Fou recently heard and approved a pun of action which makes the new foundation the primary receiving agency fy charitable contributions of the university. Chancellor Albert' N. Whiting told the board members that the first priority of the foundation should be the creation of a $500,000 Founding Fund. That fund would provide money for the foundation's fund-raising activities, supplement the budget of the university's office of development, and create a general endowment for the university. An ad hoc Founding Fund Committee of five was named. Board members who were named to the committee include J. Floyd Fletcher, vice president and director of Capital Cities Broadcasting Corporation; J. B. Brame, president of Brame Specialty Company; Durward R. Everett, senior vice president ot Wachovia Bank & Trust Company; Milton Harrington, chairman of the board of Liggett & Myers, Inc.; and W. J. Kennedy 111, president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. In addition, Chancellor Whiting and William P. Malone, executive director of the foundation, will work with the Founding Fund Committee, f Other committees named by the board, on the motion of Milton E. Harrington, include a finance committee, a university relations committee, an annual giving committee, a committee on directors, a capital giving committee and a deferred giving committee. Members of the board of directors attending Monday's meeting included Ivery C. Brandon, district manager ror Spg me. Maxie L Bailey NORTHGATE SHOPPING PHONE i Office gfttfRt Home: 696052 STATI PASM INiUIANCI TJte .Sound 0J e 6UtytWf Robert Sprutll, President Community Radio Workshop PUe: 336 East Pettigrew Strtfit Durham; North Carolina Warn t iMBr mMmW '-'-Mt m&mmf-1 I i Mh Ml r jfaaKSfci wl Boud-.oiLM. mmm mm mmr WASHINGTON MILITARY COMMANDER Maktr General Frederick E. Davison, the Army's senior afcci General. wW hteoite Commander of the Military District of Washington in November. A graduate of Howard University, he is now commander of the 8th Infantry Division in Germany. eee .: , TOP ENLISTED MAN Air Force Chief MSgt. Thomas N. Barnes has been named the top enlisted man marketing the first lime that any of the military services have chosen a Black to serve in the highest ranking enlisted post. THE "AFRO" - And there's the htfrdo that has becomes Mnd of symbol of Meek pride-The Afro.. North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Greensboro, an alumnus of the university; J. R Brame, president of Brame Specialty Company, Durham; Dr. Walter N. Brown, management consultant with Lewin & Associates, an alumnus of the university; T. C. Cooke, president of T. C. Cooke, P. E.; Lawrence G, Cooper, director of manpower, Choanoke Area Development Corporation, Mufreesboro, and president of the NCCU Alumni Association; J. Floyd Fletcher, vice president and director, Capital Cities Broadcasting Corporation; Milton E. Harrington, chairman of the board, Leggett & Myers, Inc.; Hiliary H. Holtoway, vice president and general counsel, Federal Reserve Bank of Pennsylvania, an alumnus of the university; W. J. Kennedy III, president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co.; H. M. Michaux Jr., member of the North Carolina General Assembly, House of Representatives, an alumnus of the university; Mrs. John S. Stewart, accountant; Tom White, vice president of Wheat, First Securities, Durham; and Chancellor Whiting. George Watts Hill, the first of a number of honorary directors to be named by the foundation, also attended the meeting. .. ' The water used by 90 per cent of the population in the developing world is either unsafe or inadequate, or both. UNICEF projects help provide abundant, unpolluted water. 2623 Chapel Hill Blvd. RIVERVIEW SHOPPING CENTER 1?here aw great fririjt fish iK161 lakevAnaourcontirfierk biology program hel)) keep them rat ami frisky for you to enjoy- want to Know how to catch them? We have a colorful chart that tells you. Fick one up at your friendly, neiKmxwhoou Duke Power office. Striped Bass (Morono saxutijus) AtUwtetl by artificial Iwit. Hut there's nothing hony alut his fighting instinct. STATE FARM Insurance Corrmanie: ssi samsarrTviu A.iiiii .-,.m "rmwiMiBima-..,, .,i'T''M"Nvass- 5 jtP-ic Black Crappie (lVimoxiii niKi-ixnaciiliiiusi Popular panfLsh thia plays hiclr -and amoiiK sulanorxort li'usli ami slumps. A J .A. A While How (MitmiU' chrysopsi An oiK-n-waU'i- fiuhU'i- ihttt likis his iliiUHT IhU' in llu day. Bluogill (IcjMitnis macitK-liinisi You 11 work uj a real apitciiu battling tliis lixlitwoihl -liani Yellow I'm 1 1 Viva flavifninwl OfU'ii r,illcl "Kan-uin" lVivh. ltts of inn to calcli. vtnv dm ( mil. hw 20 BIT :-c, " .-i-o' -A' iiajinth Bass (Microptci us salnniidcsl The "It! fwh. Ho'll chulli'iiKo your anxiinK ulalily tht yoai -around. Try it. wm uukc rower Your friendly, neighborhood power company Crossword Puzzle 1. Berth pigment 11. Dry land 13 Wisdom goddess 17. Arabian riiaee ' in uiui.. est decree 23. Insert 27. Bright 29. Plural suffix 31. Are 32. In 33. Continent abbr. 35. Husband or wife 31. Begins 40. Vehicle 41. Chum ESb UU rww m J r:PS it 3b I ST (fJUlI 1) fesn- g h-Sra Portuguese money Fact collection . Southern states Answer to PunU 47. Large mammal 48. Outdoor meal 50. Merchant 52. Cortger fishermen 53. Quiet 54. Smooth. 55. Combs wool low 1. Monsters 2. Wading bird 3. Multitudes 4. Regret 5. Prefix: into 6. Saint: abbr. 7. Article 8. Cure 9. Aromatic plant 10. Social 12. Perishing 13. Flower 16. Building wings 19. Sherry and port 20. Ermine 26. Be adjacent to 28. Heavenly body - 29. Flees 30. Dog 33. Salary 34. Declares 36. Divine revelation 37. Heroic poems 38. Narrow cuts 39. Textbook 42. Tool 45. Dagger 46. Boy's name 49. Born 51. Wing THBWOfilD.. r t- TELL HOW FAST DOES RADiUNl LOSE T VALUE? . a I J 9 ; : VALUE IN OBOUT 1AOO VEASS... NO MftTTER HOW CRKEFULLV KHCltCU', Mi Which is THE LARGEST BEETLE IE WORLD I -TmE S6UffTW BEE flC mt , IkFRICA' If 3t?rWS TO A LENGTH OF 10 INCHES' jjiisCiP THE CABOUNA "Scottiib" Spoken Hare The term "soot free" has SSStfcaa t do with H.l land or the Scottish pcoplr, ac cording to Ibr Tfat-hw 8ooieh Information Ccotrr. Ip Shakespeare' day and before, a "aeot" (or "wen," as it was orisjiBally apttted) was a munictpil tax. one paid to a sheriff. The prrarnl-day mearung of "without payment HOW LONG DO eSOPt-VINES Produce FCyrr? OME VARIETIES REMAIN FRUITFUL FOR AT L.EAST "Do SOME SNORES -PWE VES f MANV lORGER snres MRVE .... . .v . . r- , , . j ... f v. v- . .. rr-r i? irr SKIW NEAR THE TAIL jtfl$ VAiLe4 Ikl THE U -4. DDfcj'T UMk PAR TO io rtNi iPwwrwRin ivn . we HAVE TH6 worlo SUSIST IOO TKILLIOM fA5f U6SR MIUR& EACH AR; MOKE CROSS TIC OM TMC RAIkSOtAP -ruAU AMVWUaee h-se , over 2.00,000 Maes of .them-. AnK APOUT MILLION MILS S OF TAPCP ROA03. UILLOU AMESlAM5 'TV ' ' ' . - AMP FORBI6N VllirOHi Wit UOUPAV in THE I).' THI5 'VSAB, Bur MAV vuii L make uoreL or MOTSI. RBSSevATlOWS tmev will MOT icraP. IP iUWkStP6lt PJf,. , wor 9O0Y. re i in', u&wv or HO MII LIOM WOUkP HMl WO PLACE TO STAY, AMP TRAVEL CO&T5 WOdtPrJE'MWiU'. TO HOW TRAVEL COiTS POWM AJP MAKE LIFE EASIER. ALL AROUMp, AlWAIi TRV TO MAKE APVAMtS ReiERvATIpIO, AM TMBN C SURE 10 KEEP, fMAMtf 0V CAUUL TMf M - tmi iiwiih SAVINS GAS mBcoum URGENT BOTH TO REDUCE NATIONAL USE AND PROTECT vnno nUWN POCKETBOOK. : , - ,,A, .-,1Mm- WITH THE CAR AND ENGINE i7t; OTHER FACTORS EQUAL. A g.OOO" POUND CAR MAY SET 30-IO AAORC , V- i I !' A M.OOO- POUND MODEL. rm,K k r m Iff RIVIN HABITS ALSO AFFECT AftlteASfc. JACK-RABBIT STARTS, HARD BRAKING, HIGH SPEED, ALL use. vou use ONE THIRD MORE FUEL AT T0AAPH THAN AT 50. ''Ij fIVEYOURPOttAR MORE POWER WHEN VOU SWOP lOP-VOAEN'S AND CWLDREN'ft APWJ2EL NSr ON THE LABEL AT THE RttHT. AT THE LEFT IS THE LABEL OF THE BWLPIHfr SERVICE EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL UNION. "Obesity is a tale uf horror told by the bathroom scale." (Anonymous) 1 "Marriage has many pains, but celibacy has no pleas ures." (Dr. Samuel John son) Sjn WKmmBBS - .. U I IBP Ull. oismnii... sjss U6 TBtATMENT 15 AVAIlABlt ) fOR Fl I6IBIE VETERANS IN J V NEED OF KEIP FOR DRU6 OEPENOtNCy.' r 1m Mtiinlii, i HI ml VA pfpl IcfcO iippiliplfc litHmimtm. UK.tlYii.i w..WW.itlii B.C.IWH or a juat penalty" can be traced to the "wot free" per sons of Elizabethan En land who managed successfully to dodge paying their taxes. The Scotsman, though he has a well earned reputation for canninesx and frugaKly, has equally well earned his reputation for facing up to his just obligations. Thus be is in no way libeled by the phrase "scot free." There are at least two oth er apparently "Scotch" terms in English. . ."hopscotch" and "Scotch verdict." The follow ing facts should help you to scotch any rumors about them. Hopscotch is an old Eng lish children's game. The play er hops from one division to another of a diagram marked or scotched upon the ground, kicking a stone, or tile, with the foot on which he hops. And a "Scotch verdict" is one "not proven." Although in I tunr mm required to bring in a of "sjsry"-er "lit-- . mm IfcaRjl . fmmm' PUGGY AMERICA'S MOST LOVE ABLE LADDIE UirCOMt IN PMtVnl A rVIXrCW VOUR MBWViEJW) H ITS TIME FORM AMP DON'T URrV ll SSt j REMEMBER... ff'S IHPOLrTE IF YOU CRN HEAR WUK-J SELF SIPPING f IT MEfiNSV rOU'Rg WO CIHTUMRHj i r t ii --i-riwisirtiRy SORpy....8UTNO H L, zIU FIX jrttfrMtfMr IH I DOOS ARr ALLOWED !'!M THPfT, f "MA W0? on yBBMcny Imsi JH r Wk J MUST BE FUN... BEING A CARTOONIST... UNCLE1. KUCr7 . V WHAT KINO OF A BRUSH IS THAT ? (THrS 15 A CAMEL'S WOW! IT MUST TAKE HIM A LON0 TIME TO BRUSH HIMSELF ! DID VbU ENJDV7 N0lwl THE TWr -r W Mrwc ABDnSny 1 ,.J He i I EK KIWI'S irl OllO OuJkl VI COUWTrTHERE RZS fvSS CrV m TUF i I r Iltotaaaewi-iejs w wtsf '- I a flOOO OL".-.A.L iwnz a to be j i HOW DlOfMi WDU'TJ LIKE EUKPE? CI THE FIZZLE FAMILY LIKE OUR NEW) LmuCH m ii r...AND NOW I'LL SHOW ' THrS IS WHERE v N SWUBBV FIXES TrttpSSR ytiT.pfciPS pfcrOKt leMU 1HEM OUT TO BE RE Be careful with fire: There are babes in the woods. And those baby ;mim;ils and nve tuvifli place where they can jrfw ptnmK aij healthy The ttrest is their htwne. When ymi come tovisit. please don't burn it dtwrn. WHAT'6 WR0NS) WELL.; wiTrt HIM, (ITl5UKi jtorV Xthis .DRNOAN OPERATION NECESSfiRy VNOULD YOU HHVE THE MONEY? f LISTEN DOC, IF VOU S THE MONEY.... WOULD NCU FIND N OFERPfTtON NECESSARYn rWWr VS r lPjSpf tH A hrt-rtiMi g ' v T : 'of ' t-t T': I piHy A HAPPr auo FiiAMiAtiy ecui R8TjMier CAW"- t. i-'-r yr oie wie nmn w bQoMlpCR VERTjCAWUIfty tElSURE TEK4 ".U THE ANIMSR IS MO, flSTMAf VOU -jMOUIP lOOtC INTO AUvme- wk imit tAM OTHER IIU90MC WU MAT HAVE 41 r ASiPC Foe youa. RETiieeusuT ieAR...Ap THT AK if POOWIpf AM IMCOMt If 1'U AM iWCOHt WHUH CUI S f 'niu ivei'. VShNUITIGS ARE ElfKSMSLY tr MtSM C . Ht iM. iris e rniy TO tpJOW AftoUV THEM ... AMMUiry MAi tic riMUUAkfP iu Okie uu nil pOUwHT OM THC IDrALLMCMr Cl.AU WlTH AMMVAL Moos pHvsir pMeMT.. AMNUtT (ICMCIciTy MAY ?IM iMOKTLV AFTStC tut PUHCttASaP OK MAX bl Pfeaacp for a whmr jf iCA8 Arrest .-j.i. h 6 AM AMNUIIT MAY CM Ot .Ik M HVI .til m9m "lib ; TXmmuity encfit cpmtimuc rA. LOUl'. AVTME AMMUITAMT L.IWi. if a esruwP ff ATUHE IS IMCIUPSP AMt? TMC AHKUITAMT fit.', kit (OKI BecEiviww a& much Moaey as we put inhv BALANCE MAY 9E PAIP TO Hl SueVlVOKS ElTHItR A LUMP -.uu ee im ieULAR AUklUtTV fAve4T5. ,,iur..: rfllln- ' w'i l m V?t ' iffEMEWT MAY ESIA A 0v TIME AWAY.-. UT I IT r r, IMFoeMATOM HAS SEEM PKOVIPtP TO YOU A A M-Cxu-'t OP YOUK LOCAL MtmorCl-iTAk LIPS IMSUKAMCC ... OHPAKji .Ait ResescuTATme.if: wtrui uaup AiY.'?MjrsTie. A.u ; .Auwme, mc'll ae chap to help ow YflJfc pict 11 s ahw ai ...,mmrim?jv IjKDM I A VITAL f ousTiTUtwi OF MlMOl.WBiM , THE tXV ( OIOKIMC MAI 1 H OF TSM Kt P 0LOOP r fc i i , ami 1 Wf CAveite of OlMaAi MM ' the liiui,'. -to ail pAsrirH of the awy AwessfUriAL IMPOSTAMT ICOI.E lAt 'Hi MAHUACTUe HUAO.LOKIU YrlTUlM TW Hop OMCt PTTOfXtceP. HEMO6LO0IU act to r i j rnir rtttCL ntOPUCT AMP CABBY CAKMBS PIOAIPC ha m tSC uriiti . LUM6S, u AMPlASM SMOTtMa. I- 1 ' MeM TMC BOPV i V- ptf '-.f mi or ism, AMP THCSTf FOCC me Motesa piiv ' " Tl&SufS PAIL TO cecJisc TMf quota Of pfss)tri a MSS1 mvmec cp ajp VVO0P CLLS AVE CLIMIHATEP CACH VH ATMSlC UPS pau is coatpUTep. THfiS CEU MUST MtlrUCtP n W TMC PA5T, the ouKk-E w With WMICM A A TAKIM OPP" KJk-UUI A AMP PUT "OM whole MKvK wa - .OM4.FtSP A MAtfMOMf S i MATucnot hi a hCavtny IMFAMT- IMIrSfi4M MaNC swap lOt. ce IMaVSflpiBlsm PUPWM THS.IP PiRST FUIL ti. MOUTHS ACOORPIMit.Y, THE . oMiunif om MurejmCM of the. AMIHCAN ACADEMY OF PtoiAaic utus rHYiKiiASi TO AWHM SH TO USE iStM-MnvitC THai4aiX)TTW'MMM'yetrYiAeoFUf4,g

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