63 THE CAROONA TEIE3 SAT, MARCH 23, 1974 V. an - , v.' . vu i . r;n- i for? - I LOVELY LYNETTE-Asheboro, native Lynette Shoffner is a picture of loviliness on campus of Fayetteville State University. Lynette is an early childhood education major at FSU and is an an honor student.(FSU Photo by John B. Henderson) ( ;::i:::ili5 (11 V.AfT . ' 2 f'-'-tssfei flTi t res :sr& Jfc fit ' .vx-'w-a 4 . PRETTY PAULA MOORE-gets set for spring break vacation at Fayetteville State University. The FSU beauty is a native of Plymouth, and majors in intermediate education. Paula is the presently reigning "MISS FRESHMAN" at FSU. Spring vacation begins March 18 and continues through March 24. (FSU Photo by John B. Henderson) k ' 4. a m mmm A "- i V? ; i fti i. liil i mil liJ-grfemrirrrrriT-''- u -,i.-i-"v" , MninnriiT-nn.n SPRING BREAK-Pretty Fayetteville State University coed Beverly Ranking gets set for a break from the books. The first year student from Lexington is a picture of beauty on campus and wants to pursue a career in French and English literature. (FSU Photo by John B. Henderson) Standing In Una tins For Car Tco Soon To End RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK-For the owners of North Carolina's four million motor vehicles, today's deadline for displaying 1974 automobile license tags marks the 'beginning of the end of the annual agony they have had to face of standing in long lines to purchase .new plates. This may also be next to the last year they will all face a single deadline for having new tags on their cars, if recommendations for a staggered system of registration expiration dates are adopted. This year the usual February 15 deadline was extended one month for the convenience of truckers who were delayed out of state during the truck work stoppage last month. ""Beginning next' year accoraing to Department of Motor Vehicles commissioner Body C. Miller, streamlined procedures developed with the assistance of Research Triangle Institute will go a long way towards eliminating the sometimes lengthy and irritating waits for new tags. The new procedures can result in savings to the state of several million dollars over the next five years, Miller said. They are among several changes the Department of Motor Vehicles is putting into -effect after! consideration of a vehicle registration systems analysis by Research Triangle Institute. Senior members of the Institute staff making the study include computer applications analyst Ms. Nileen Hunt and department manager Robert H. Thornton. "Starting in 1975, one-year plates will be replaced by durable five-year plates," Miller said. "Then for each of the next four years we will issue an annual renewal sticker to be attached to the permanent tag." The stickers will be available by mail order. Miller predicted that this method of renewing license plate registrations will be significantly less painful to motorists than queuing in line at motor vehicle license service offices. Mailing of the full-size license plates has not been encouraged because of high postage costs, the commissioner said. Individual mailings under present postal rates would run to 30 cents. Validation stickers, however, can be mailed for ten cents. SPEAKER (Continued From Front Page) the late Theophllus E. McKinney, then dean of Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte, to bring together black social scientists, who were generally excluded ' from other Tb first state law .fixing 10 hours as a legal workday, was passed In New Hampshire In 1847, according to "Important Events m American Labor History." "" ' The Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks (BRAC), AFL-CIO, under a contract : with the U.S. Labor JJCpWMUCUk, . m ViaUllllg VIUUUCCS infill WU WWip Iivuieu a Center's and placing them In well paid jobs as railroad office clerks. The program is being conducted In Kansas City, Los Angeles, Tulsa, Cleveland, and Charleston, W. Va. 'j.O-i .'-v' . . . . - Threes times as many black children (43 percent) as white (14 percent) ; live In families where the father is absent,' unemployed, or out of the labor force, according to special study conducted by the ' U. 8. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics. professional organizations within . their , fields," so that they ." could Interact .more frequently with each: other. excluded non-black lociat' . . . .' i ' j ' j '- -1 k ii scientists ana Interested persons ;frpm participating. ' - !. f; l, Dr. Ralph H. Hlrtes, Vice-President, , Meblarry Medical CoUege, NashviUe, Tennessee, is program chairman. . , ; Mrs. Smith and Mr. Chambers, as well as . ASBA officers will be available 'for interviews during - the conference. Hazards of Immersion In Cold Wafer W A S H I N GTON, D.C. Early season boatmen and fishermen were warned by the American Red Cross that open waters, are still cold, despite warm weather, and can be killers if one falls into them. Many early spring drownings are caused by sudden immersion in cold water, Edmond Mongeon, national director of Red Cross water safety, said. . The ; water has a numbering effect, preventing the victim from getting to shore quickly. In many areas of the country, rivers, lakes and ocean waters makes them immobile." v Fatal cooling of the body is more apt to occur in water than In air, Monegon explained, because wetting rapidly decreases the insulating effect of clothing. Loss of body heat occurs at two of four times the rate in air, he said. Mongeon advised that users of open waters In early spring wear two or three suits of thermal underwear as well as other suitably warm clothing. Suits such as those worn by scuba divers can be protective if the boatmen or fisherman falls into cold water. . As a general rule, the Red Cross recommends that boatman stay with their capsized craft. But there are exceptions, and the victim of a boating accident nust decide whether special circumstances, such as; cold water or proximity to falls or rapids, justify swimming away from the boat to safety, Mongeon said. A person who frequently engages in water sports should except to find himself accidentally In the water on some occasion, he added. . "More than 60 per cent of the people who drown in this country each year had no intention of being in deep water." It is desirable that the boatman, while afloat, utilize the "buddy" system having a second boat nearby to help . in case of accident, he concluded. STUDENTS : ; (Continued From Front Page) ix heading "Business" and the theme of "Black Capitalism, Opportunities, and Involvement,'.' two. . black businessmen j will sharer the podium at 8 p.m. in tBiologlcal Sciences Auditorium for talks in their Individual; fields.!. The speakers are: W. J. Kennedy, III, President , of N. C. Mutual Life Insurance Co., Durham, and William Toles, Sr., public relations "director for ITT-Continental Banking Corporation.. .vV,'.','y; I Mrs. Inez Kaiser, president of her own firm," Inez Kaiser and Associates, Inc." of Kansas City, No., makers of women's wear, will speak to the group Tuesday, April 2, at 8 p.m. in Gross Auditorium, with a special fashion show to be a feature of the presentation. On April 5, with "Black And Hot Air Some people can't tell the difference between working up steam and generating a fog. If you like a blond ...this Is It! FIFTH 390 12 GAL. PINT 935 250 Ik VMI'Wlt ltxb 9m3UJU KSm WHISKEY QGDTYNOOF'HK 0U1 KUIMl IPIWT8 t pwwHf urn vm oo. vmm mm. . Expressions" the theme under a "Fashions of' Black"; topic, black students will present a program of black art, music, and drama at 8 p m. in Baldwin Auditorium, with the Modern Black Mass Choir again featured in. this public program. . . ' ' ' . , There will be ' an intercollegiate gospel singing concert on Sunday, April 7, at 3 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium with participants attending from ,Duke, Durham College, East Card lin a 4 University, Fayetteville State, Wake Forest, N. C. Central University, Shaw University, UNCChapel Hill, and UNC-Greensboro. A i cash prize and trophy will be awarded to the winning group, according to Chairman Miller. ' Final events' of the fortnight will take place April 10 and 11 " under the heading "Education" and the themer "The Future of Black Students At Predominantly' White Institutions." ; ' ' . Speakers . at 8 "p.m. Wednesday, April 10, will Include Duke President Terry Sanford and Duke's first black . trustee," Dr. C. ;E. Boulware, of Durham. ' A discussion period will follow thrt" m ee 1 1 tflgTla Gross Chemical Audltoriunv A "round-up" discussion by Duke Black students in a Thursday afternoon seminar from 2-4 p.m. In Room 317 Perkins Library f will close the r program The seminar theme .- will ber "Black Students In White Universities: Problems and Prospects.". APPOINTED (Continued From Front Page) month four times in the New York Distribution Branch office, and was listed as an Outstanding Young Woman in America In 1971. She is -a member of the American Chemical : Society, . the New ' York Shaw Club, -and. the Queens Alumni Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority." - 'Mill "tit ntnn l th daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sharon Hinton' of 1700 Southgate Drive, Raleigh. TO OPEN (Continued From- Front Page) market .here children's shoes." The store, ; which will be the 11th Roscoe " Griffin outlet :, In Raleigh, " Durham, Rocky Mount and ' Chapel Hill, will -'have some 3800 square feet of floor space. Work Is expected to be completed by Aug. 15. Roscoe Griffin Shoes, founded in Rocky Mount in 1918, lhas operated in Durham since 19 30. r U.S.D.A. INSPECTED Ml'MFUl fM Mil HOT AVAHAILI TO OTMI IT Alt MAUM AND WNOilUUM rltCM KfffMHVO ' TI n n vfs WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES f 1 warn VhoicC. y n i RAr.L S t ii fupiR-kiGHT" corM no hiavy! ,LIMIT2 BAGS PLEASE - mm quautyX HfiCS 1 : "SUPER-RIGHT" CORN FED HEAVY UU at Hanfliit W.lgli Cut M Ttw SlfMtlM IrM) Rmm4 StMka, Rump RMMt SlrWa, T M-WitpM ot No bIfoClMcto. ' 0risrUM U.SMI M PsiflM Lb. 89 liUtliwI sresf m9 t. u TmRhi4 stHk Lb. $ 1 .79 . 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