Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 30, 1977, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 - th m Tt"?S fJCCU Con6c?s Clinical VJorli Sfuo'y Program of lWC 1 . - .Thirty-two North Ciror Um Central University and UNC. students -are receiving a nine-week educational work experience for students en- roDed m health or health re- lated curricula at the two" cooperating institutions in Durham and Orange County. The objectives of the program are to encourage stu dents who have the motiva tion and potential to enter the many health career pro fessions in addition to pro viding academic experiences designed to strengthen the language study and communi cative skills essential to pro- r .,!? r: 'i Win . - s inn r t riTr- V.,; lLJ-jtoS. ' .L- Ji - -1 CLINICAL WORKrSTUDY Summer Health Program Carolina Central University and UNC-Chapel Hill. BAPTISTS - Continued From Front Page Tutoring Centers to teach slowlearners;!-:,; . rrecruit students for predominantly black institu tion! of higher learning for all races;';- ,'J; ' . - support the Wilmington 10 m their fight for freedom and petition Governor James unt jr., lor tneir paraon; r M ii cornmenas -rTesiaeni Jimmy Carter; for his .signi ficant appointments k:of . .minorities,- but- insisting that his appointments fall far short of (Sirnpaign "promises; ,l commends ' the' ! Presi- i dent for his firm stand on Human Rights, but the .same iS time request ' he practice what he preaches at home first; . commends U. S. Am bassador Andrew Young for his courageous stand on Human Rights, Racism and t telling it like It is at home ?anaaoroaa, . . : y'J-- commends Gov. Hunt for; his ' significant appoint, raent of minorities ; . . and Purges him to appoint more, since the appointments do 22 !"!.:"' ii 'nmm r - Ron Coth would lika to invito in quirioi concerning cottring, portiot, bonqutti, or othor functions. Ron . hoi 20 yan xptrionc in cottring and will bt obit to cmiit you with all of your nttdi. Strvict clubi art alio invittd to oik Ron about Fivt Pointi' facilititk :.. - .. 5 - y Plenty of Fret Parking across the street at First Federal ' SAT- JULY 30. 1977 Sessional training.,, George L Suggs, Jr., director of the Health Careers Recruitment and Counseling Center . at North Carolina Central University, states that, "the educational work" experiences in the health care Agencies will increase ; . Durham, .Veterans fAdminis the students poteritial for tration Hospital Durham; success in health care training programs." ' All thirty-two students are North Carolina residents and are enrolled in health or health related .curricula at the two participating institutions, with at least a 2.5 grade point average. Twenty-one of not reflect in any "way the population ratio of Blacks in the state; strongly urge President William Friday and the North Carolina Board of Governors to carry out "the recent Health, Education and Wei-. . tare . guiapiines srenginening . the .predominantly , Black Institutions of higher learn- ing: , Further, to : . support chancellor . Charles , A. Lyons of Fayetteville State University , in his statement, "Black enrollment will not decrease.--but--will-' increase alopgwith whjlesJ'; y jj, 'igoroAslyt' protest to President Fridav and the B(qard . o Governors at suggesting the closing of the predominately black nursing schools of North Carolina Central, N. C. A&T and Winston-Salem: State univer sities provided their graduates did not ' make significantly higher test scores by 1981 , ; , . urge the strengthening of these schools by greater tund : . ,t Urges the governor, .the Department ; of Corrections and the: Legislature to refrain from spending millions of rb . .rf- ami-, ' HOURS Luncheon; 11:302:00 Dinner: 1 '5:00-10:00 Open 'til 11:00 pmFrt. St Sat SUNDAY BUFFETS . Brunch , Dinner: , ; 10:00-2:00 5:00-10.00 $3.95 " . $5.95 ; m thirty-twu students are en rolled at North ' Carolina Central University and have a combined grade point average of 3.0. V The participating agencies- include, I; Lincoln Community; Health 'Center Durham County General Hos- pitaL Prangc Chatham Com-' prehensive Health Services Carrboro. v Durham Community Guidance Clinic Durham, Duke Medical Cen ter - Durham, and Sarah Bar ker Day Care Center -Durham. v,t.- mm m$ sear' t5t3i participants from North dollars m the construction of prisons and use the money to eliminate the causes of crimes: poverty' illiteracy, injustices, ' inequities in the Criminal' Justice system, dis- crmiulatory practices in hir- ,,ing, .hbusing, education, low swages,, i; poor neann ana recreational facilities: - - ' V urges the Legislature to ernploy more chaplains in the Department of,, Corrections and :outht,rVfces(,t In . he last 'year' rof the bieruiium, to expand- religibui sefylces and "counseling for the inmates;.. ,!',,- ,in' lf, : conduct 'a statewide Crusade for Christ Campaign to 'save 8, 000' souls; - '"' '.- cootdinate'l-ooperatiye "programs with 1 Shaw Uhiye'r sity.' Baptist State' Conylen tion, National Conventions, interfaith and interdenomina tional groups and coalition of consumer groups '. , (on church housing, church 'plans, church , programs (rural and urban), social ..ministry (welfare; prisons!,'- politics,, lobbying, etc.) education, libraries (adult' ' literacy classes, voter ediication'con-, sumer education.' child care, literature, day care), and 'A TV- .13 1 ",'i't lliii! 79 Opening Thursday ? July 28th """" '" "-"' i -rt---"y - ...... i t 1 -vjTrf-ii-mi ,(nii um mm ii . i j iiii'M -ii i ' ' - i . " -I I il iiniiinMini -riaMM 'jmm m n , mi , SPECIAL EDUCATION PANELISTS a Special Education' Workshop recently Participating in the workshop were Dr, Nathaniel Futlwood, (I), NC Department of Administration; pr. Ronald Brown,1 tci nv.LU ana cawarq Dmun i. f. ii.. li-Ju: .C. Spdufdmg Scholarship Day of IVbife Roth Set For The White Rock Baptist Church will observe the 25th annual Charles . Clinton Spaulding Scholarship Day, Sunday, July 31 during the regular 10:55 a.m. morning service. , The speaker will be Charles Clinton Spaulding, Jr., retired, vice president, General Counsel North Carolina Mutual Life Insu rance , Company. . Special music will be furnished by the Senior Choir under the direction of John H. Gattis, W. J. Kennedy, III; will preside. C. C. Spaulding, it,, an church finance,, (budgeting, bookkeeping, .banking, pur chasing); , . , deplores the looting and buring by Blacks' during the blackout . in rew .York, which will cost the tax payers millions pf dollars, due ti) the losses , by the ' owners and irierchants . , . , the Conven tions condemns crijnes and violence by all ;t any time and any where. .. ; '.The Woman's Baptist Home; and Foreign Missionary Convention, under the leader ship of Mrsv' Johnnie' B. McLester. president, exceed ed r'lts ' proposed-i budget' of $250,000 by raising an addi tional 325.000., For beihgihe best in the nation;' the1 WBH& FM ;hai been awarded the Stewardship " '' frOm tlie ria'liorial body. Mrs. McLester, in her address to the conven tion; "said that '"We must create the futjure. we want:" PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS 1 ' in a hard-hitting speech entitled "Crime and the Cri minal; Justice ' System of North Carolina A Challenge to the Christian Church" de livered Wednesday morning, Rev. Joy J. Johnson said that while "the rising crime rate in American has as tonished and perplexed the professionals and experts, plus creating a dilemma -for That's our now slogiin. We want every body in Durham to know-how we Teel about where we are. We'vo been yn Parrish Street lor 5d years, yielding top interest rates on savings and making thousands of home mortgage loans We ., want you -.to ,; know about us. because a lot of you don't. Shaw University's iri a unyicaiiy naiiui(,dppu i ai..u: r r Attorney is associated with the law firm of Pearson. Malonc. Johnson. DeJarmon and Spaulding. He is busi ness manager - treasurer, Dea con and -Trustee of White Rock. He is active in many other civic and religious or ganizations. ,,. vrivv-' The late C. C. Spauld ing. Sr. served as President of North Carolina Mutual for 23 years and was also president of the, Mechanics and Farmers Bank,- the Mutual Savings & Loan Association and also a Deacon and Trustee of White Rock. Upon his death he bequeathed a sum of. money the courts and ii financial crises for most of the states . . . . the Christian Church ,has oeen doing business in t he usual manner - not getting , involved,, not rocking the boat, hot mixing politics W"ith religion, not disturbing the system, religiously preaching and praying, with no effect on .'the politics and politi cians." "Also, the. Church says nothing about mistreat- ; ment of the poor, deprived, needy . neglected, aged and "handicapped," A Rev. John- : son: continued. Further lie said, ;the' Church has. ."'in ' most' cases,, benfj absorbed and obsessed in the world Citjn'g 'numerous , ex amples of his charges.'. Rev. Johnson concluded saying "Unless we, are faithful in all these relationships, our preaching " and is vain." J(t,e'1l8 FINAL PROGRAMS Thursday morning ses sions wil include a Theme Address by A. B. Sutton.,The theme for this year's conven tion is "The Old Gospel For A New Century".!,; Reports will be given by Ernest ' B. Moore, Prison Chaplain; Leo Williams, : Jr., ,; Director of Christian Education; L B Horton. Baptist Informer: i merribcr Education Division held nicmuei ui m miiwhi Sunday ; io White Rock, which was : appropriated as a Scholarship Fund. L. B. Frasier is Chairman , of the program and the Rev. 2; ! Lorenzo Ai Lynch is minister. , What creates sand? The ongoing battle between the sea and land., Waves cutting : inexorably into a rock face can undermine and cause it to collapse, then break down the' . rubble into pebbles.'and the pebbles into sand. It has been estimated that the sea may take several hundred years to reduce a boulder. ' one foot in diamtertosand. Elbert Lee. Historian; and . A.;; R. Smith;; Statistician. , Shaw Divinity. SchooFs Hour ; will be under the direction of J.Z. Alexander. -. . ' " Wavery Camp.; Jr will present' a , dehionstratiori, in Giurch Music at ? ;p ni. at Mount Vernon 'Baptist Church, followed by the J. F. Wertz Oratorical Contest. '"'' '-',, ''( ,' Closing - activities will begin' Friday morning, at 9 a.m.- a?' Mount Vernon and 'will? include final reports of committees. The elbsing ser mon will be delivered at 11 H.tn. by T.-Ri'VinefoUdW' ing which the Convention Will adjourn; , . , ( SHERRJLL THROWS 'IN TOWEL, . tivc Secretary of the General Baptist State Convention gave his last annual report to the Executive Board after thirty years in the top administra tive post. Declaring that he was ''Throwing in the towel", ShorHIl said that he was in . good, health, had been taught by ' his fellow ministers to :"prayf and that financially troubled Shaw University would open its doors again in August with prospects of ; major funding in the pipe . line. - And Downtown is the only place you'll get a Mutual interest You see we don't have branches anywhere else. But we do have roots, and the strength that comes from growing'.ovv'r half a century in the same place. 11 2 West Parrish Street. See you there. . .' . . scvings 8t lozn csedctj!on FS.LLG StizvMvcrsty Mas , Snoticl Etic. I'Jor'islm - . -; ,' : ' V r RALEIGH Shaw Unf- ? berl of the National Con versity held a Special Edu- ference on the Handicapped cation Workshop recently as emphasis on physicaDy handi- part one of a: three part, :f4i?aPP?1-; r i three-year i Institute on- Also-; 'participating were Special Education. v "Ms Linda Lewis,- Speech . The workshop heard Bert ; j. Pathology and V Audiology, Coppock, Director Education rshaw Unwersityf Mrs. Julia for the Handicapped Pro- wuhanis, Director, Learning gram, Moton Memorial Insti- ., . Together, Inc.; Barry Kaalund tute, Washington, D. C, ashe '0f Protective Services for analysed P. L; 94-142 and A cMdren; Human Resources discussed its implications. In Department of North Caro- addition, a pane t discussion j on the economic, political, and social dimensions involv-. ed in the identification of the exceptional child was'" heldV t Panelists were Dr. Nathaniel 1 Full wood (who is blind) N. C. Department ! of Adminis- t rat ion. with erriohasis onthe- v blind: Dr. Ronald Brown,. NC fentral Unfoers tv in Durham, . emphasis, off pro grams for the handicapped; and Edward Smith, a phy sically handkapped mem- Why Minimum IVarjo Ditto Hallos No Sonso The. AFLCIO has run' :- into a statistical buzz saw in ' its campaign to induce Con gress to raise the federal minimum wage to $3.31 an hour by Jan. J.."" , As a veteran Washington laborite recently observed: "What might make sense at full , employment might be ' lousy with 8 or 9 out of work.' He was speaking of another matter, not the mini mum wage; but the same caveat applies to the mini mum wage proposal.; . "' Raising the minimu wage,, particularly by such a large amount as 44 . ' re gardless of whether it would make sense at full employ ment - makes no sense at all today when inflation and unemployment both are stubbornly high. ;" ' - Supporters of the- mea sure are confronted by two hard facts and no soft place: j ' 'w Teenage unemploy ment is perhaps the single most tragic feature of to day's stubborn unemploy ment.' "J ' ; . j i Sharp . Increases in' the minimum wage clearly price many teenagers out of the job market. . r "Look at the national statistics, and you have . the proof of the pudding" says Dr. Richard L. Lesher, presi dent of the Chamber of Commerce of the 1 United States, : which estimates up ward of 2 million Jobs would be lost if the -minimum rises to $3.31 and reports teen agers would be especially hard hit. v Latest figures of the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show 17.9 of our teenagers in May were unemployed -almost J three , times the average national rate of 6.9. Unemployment among black ima; Octavia Knight, and Paul Woods, Department of Special Education, NCCU; and Ms. Thomasine ' Hardy, NC State Department i of Public Instruction. w The workshop was spon sored by the bnaw university Education Division, and was unuer uic uucvuuu vi ui. Randolf Tobias, Division Chairman and Mrs.. Jackie Kaalund, Coordinator of the Institute. ' youth is considerably worse, with 38 of nonwhite youth out of work. Leading studies by eco nomists confirm the Cham ber's findings. A study by Dr. Edward M. Gramlich of the University - . of Michigan relates: "The most reasonable verdict is that teenagers have more to lose than to gain from higher minimum wages; they appear to be forced out of better jobs, denied full time work, and paid .lower hourly wage rates; and all these developments are Pro bably detriniental to 'thefr income prospects in both the short and long run. I If one of the goals of the minimum . wage is to eli miniate sweatshop , low-wage jobs for teenagers the, law appears to be counter-pro-ductive." . , , .. ' A ' more . recent study madd by three scholars at the University of .Chicago, Esti mates that ' the decline of employment among youthful labor , groups '- would range from 10 :to 20. It esti mates, there: would bef 602, 000i fewera jobs for rlwhite teenagers (16 t,o 19) and some 119,000 fewer jobs for nonwhites.vi : u;. ; 1 With more 4han 1,650, 000 teenagers rcurrently out of work and shut off from the labor . market, does it 1 make sense to pass a law that threatens to rob our economy and youth of ; nearly 750, 000 ' additional jobsi"' hot counting jobs jOst for ytiung adults and other age groups which also would be affected? ' ' ' . It makes about, as much sense as Walking into a buzz saw. , CHASING GHOSTS AT ' TAXPAYERS' EXPENSE . World War II ended more than 30 years ago but some members of Congress don't want to give, up therghosts. They want to squeeze every ounce of political capital from harassing defense con tractors on the pretext of exposing "excess profits." But even worse from the' taxpayers' point of view, Rep. Joseph Minish (D-N. J.) wants to expand the powers of the Renegotiation Board, which expired last October, and hire 4,000 additional federal employees for the board. Commenting on the situation in its legislative newsletter, the Chamber of Commerce of the United States points out the agency was designed in World War II to recapture any "excess profits" from federal defense contractors. Re-established for the Korean War, it since has been extended 1 2 times. "The Board has long out lived its intended purpose," says the Chamber. , "A raft of safeguards are now built into the Federal contracting business that assures no com pany makes 'excess profits.' " Nonetheless, Rep. Minish wants to extend the board's life another five years, give it greater power to subpoena uuum ana cnange tne metnoa of renegotiating contracts so , as . to impose a greater accounting expense on busi- ness. .';... N;. : ,y(f-y- The story is a classic .vnwfiw w U1V iaaftUlg- . ton bureaucracy keeps getting bigger and biggeh OJd govern ment agencies have nothing in ; common with old soldiers. They neither die nor fade . . away. ' ' . 1 '"'
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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July 30, 1977, edition 1
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