2-m CASUNA TIMES SAT.. DECEMBER 8, 1930 EloffirosfiGir Ctiirse .So Be Oliowi A for "IdocOIvo FJuirsos CHAPfcL HELL Inactive nurses who want to return to paractice can take an 11-week refresher course at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and be ready for posi tions as staff nurses. If they agree to work at Duke, N.C. Memorial , Hospital or Durham County General Hospital after completing the course, the contracting hospital will provide clinical experience and pay half the course cost. Nurses may take the course without contrac ting with a hospital. Their clinical experiences will be at Durham County General. Johnston scholarships also are available. 'Since these may cover as much half the fees, the course could be free for some ap plicants. The course, "Nursing Update," will begin January 29 ath the UNC CH School of Nursing. It is designes for inac-. tive registered nurses who want to revi" and update The Studio Dance School Kay Sullivan Register Now For The January - May Semester At 2509 E. Weaver St. Phone 688-6961 Tentative Class Schedule Tuet. wed. 5- 6 Pre Ballet 56 Afro-Am. Jazz 6- 7 Adult Exercise &-7 Beg. Tap 7- 8 Adult Technique 7.$ int. Tap Thur. 5- 6 Beg. Ballet 6- 7 AdultBallel Sat. 10- 11 Ballet 11- 12 Ballet 12-1 Beg. Toe 1- 2 Toe 2- 4 Workshop Adults interested in daytime classes please call to make the request. Classes are being held temporarily in the Durham College Auditorium on Fayetteville Street. rtheir nursing knowledge and skills prior to re ! entering the work force. The N.C. Board of Nurs ing requires an approved refresher course for nurses whose licenses have ex pired or who have been on inactive status for five years. "The course will enable inactive nurses to feel con fident on re-entering a work seetting," said Bon-, nie Hensley.coordinator of the program and associate professor of nur sing at UNC-NC. "The program is designed in response to the need of society for more nurses; it also is based on the number of potential nurses in this area," Hensley said. One way to fill the shortage is to help inactive nurses return to the field, she added. In Alamance, Chatham, Durham, Granville, Lee, Orange, Person and Wake counties, there are an estimated 1,000 inactive registered nurses, one fifth of the total number of in active nurses in the state. UNC-CH sponsored its first refresher course early this year, with seven women who had been out of nursing from five to 25 years. Six of these are now ' employed in nursing. A ser cond with eight nurses in underway. The course requires four days of instruction each week, with a total of 144 hours of classroom" work and 160 hours tif clinical work. Classroom instruction will be held from 9 a.m. -4 p.m. on Thursdays and Fridays at the UNC-CH School of Nursing in Carrington Hall. Clinical instruction will be from 7 a.m. -3:30 p.m. or 3-11:30 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays at one of the three area hospitals. The course con cludes April 10. Maximim enrollment is 24. Instructor for the course will be Charlotte Powell, a former head nurse at N.C. Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill, and other UNC-CH facul ty members. Applications should be sent to Bonnie Hensejy, School of Nursing, Carr ington Hall 214H, UNC CH, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514, (919)966-1411. Athough this course is being offered in Chapel Hill, the teaching materials are avalable to other areas through Area Health Education centers. 7V W V , v. f b ' I Guest of Honor LOS ANGELES Malcom L. Corrin (2nd from r.) was guest of horror, as winner of the H. Naylor Fitzhugh Award, at the Na tional Black Masters of Business Administration Association convention at the Boneventure Hotel. It is the NBMBAA's highest distinction. Corrin is president and chief executive officer of New York-based Interracial Council for Business Opportunity. ICB0 helpedminority businesses obtain over $138 million in financing over the past several years. Joining corrin, from left: William C. Brooks, director of personell for GM's Fisher body Division, Warren, Mich., and a former board chairman of NBMBAA; Miss Lois Corrin, the award winner's daughter; and Dr. Sybil Mobley Dean of the School of Business, Florida A&M College, Tallahassee. sto? YA$n::3 Youa BiERGY DOLLARS! INSTALL aloud m$:d::jg, ST0!iWSSftVWlD0VS 7,:ha30$AVi::G$ 4 00 financing IZtO available NO PAYMENT TILL 1981. AtCCK REYNOLDS DyPONT ALCAN U.S. STEELE ' CALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATES OUT OFTOWN CALL COLLECT Aluminum Company of N.C. MmtarMlir lutjMg luraeu and Chambwr tfCommwc ttmm noiboro VisH Our Showroom Today"' . DtwinM . Mttdt Sound m m a .'. ; "wm mr- w .a iL.s'-m 7 !S'W."m M Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Mason Young Is 1981 Teacher of the Year Forty Million Dollar Lawsuit (Continued From Page 1) Mrs. Young Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Mason Young, a Biology-Pre-Engineering Classroom Teacher at Durham High School, has been named Durham City Schools' Teacher Of The Year for 1981. Mrs. Young, a North Carolina Central Unviersi ty graduate, has been employed with Durham City Schools for Thriteen years as a Science teacher. Mrs. Young believes that educators must motivat,ev antf l.guide all student' til "tecbming useful citizens. She con-" siders it a challenge and a privilege to help develop young minds in positive directions. Her scientific interests challenged her to develop the curriculum syllabi for the new course offering, Pre-Engineering, in its first year at Durham High School. Mrs. Young is married to Randolph Young and they have two children, a son, Bobby, eleventh grader at Hillside High School and a daughter, Charrise, a Junior at North Carolina Central University. the FBI admitted that it still maintains active files of the socialist Workers Party and Young Socialist Alliance. Among those files is one entitled "IS-SWP (Foreign In fluence)." ("IS" stands for "Internal Securi ty").In court last week a government attorney con ceded that the files are paart of as FBI "Foriegn counterintelligence in vestigation" into the SWP's ties with groups abroad. Hooks people forward.. ' , The former judge, Federal Communications commissioner and chief spokesman for the world's largest and oldest civil rights organization, said he would seek a meeting Continued from Front' with the former. California, "governor "to present him " with his organization's assessment of the pressing ' concerns of black America as soon as possible, and to open up fresh channels of communications." imstmas wishes come true at Ncrthgate It 1 1 C ill Pi ChristfTi W I 1 1 I iltp 11 U rx m3 are as various as the people wishing. That's why Vl 7 1 1 t WSSlf 11 HA JnZlM vNorthgate is the place where Christmas Wishes Tt i Wli I lllll If Uml n corr,e true nearly 100 stores as various as the Um J XJ n ( T I imagination. This year Northgate would like to VI L C a 11 I help make your Christmas Wishes come true. . mm ' HOLIDAY HOURS: 10-&3Q p.m.v Mon.-SaL . 1-0 p.m., Sunday Ifour llife! Children! Register for Free Gifts at the Christmas Wish Book. . One gift each day, Dec. 11 Dec. 20. Registration Starts Nov. 28 20 lucky children will get a special Christ mas Wish at Northgate this year. Just regis ter your name and one gift wish each from both Hungate's and Circus World, Wishes must be valued at $20 dollars or less retail.. If your name is drawn, you'll win one of your two wishes. Visit Santa at the Wish book and have your picture made. Mon.-Thurs. 1 1 am to 8 pm Fri. & Sat. 1 1 am to 9 pm Sunday J -6 pm (PI J( 11 II II I I MS The Christmas Train takes you on a trip through Santaland. Mon.-Thurt. 10 am to 8 pm. Fri. A Sat 10 am to 9 pm. Sunday 16 pm. See "Jingles", the talking bear, and his singing cousins, each day, 4 to 8 pm. The Christmas Wish Tree means a happier Christmas for foster children. Spreading Holiday Cheer by sponsoring a foster child's Christmas raTmost rewarding. Dec. 1 -Dec. 20. Hadassah Gift Wrapplntft)ec 1-24. Free Movies FonEds! 10:30 am Dec. 6 & Dec. 13 Northgate Theater Pick up tickets at any Northgate Store 1-85 and Gregsbn SL Exit, Durhanv "The government is claiming the right to spy on us under the guise of combatting 'foreign in 'fluence,' "said Pulley. "Why? Because we think workers in the U.S. have a stake in extending solidarity to people's struggles around the world, from Iran to Cen tral America and the Car iribian. Because we oppose ,the Democrats' and 'Republicans' attempts to revive the draft, and their frive toward a new war. Because we meet with other socialists from around the world and share ideas ideas with . them. "But our activities are perfectly legal it's the government that is break ing the law. The American people have a right to hold political opinions and ex press them freely. By de nying this right to us the government is trampling on the rights of all Americans." In September 1976 At torney General Edward Levi publicly asserted that the 40-year-long investiga- tion of the SWP and YSA was terminated. Recent revelations in the SWP lawsuit, however, have raised questions about that assertion. In addition to the FBI that the Im migration and Naturaliza tion Service (INS) main tains a balcklist of "subversive" groups, which includes the SWP. The list is used to deport noncitizens who associate with the SWP. The INS list, included as an appen dix in the INS in vestigator's handbook, is based on the Attorney General's List of Subver sive Organizations. This list was reportedly abolished in 1974 by Presi dent Nixon. As a result of these revalations, the socialists have now added the INS to the list defendents in their suit. Mom: best cure The' best place for a child to re cover after minor surgeiy is in a hospital. Right? Wrong, Dr. Jack Gross, director of the Fort Hamilton out-patient Community Mental Health Center in New York told the Health In surance Institute. "The main reason to get the child home is so it can be with its mother," he-, says. "In hospitals where she is allowed to 'live-in,' the child can benefit greatly." He adds: "I think almost all minor surgery on children could be much better done on a same-day admission basis. "Hospitals can be dangerour, places. The kids are in high, un comfortable beds from which it is possible to fall, and they're usually uncomfortable and ill at ease in a clinical setting. 7 "In most cases not only Would the youngster benefit by his mother's presence at home, but so would the parent that is finan cially they would. "