V10T!!ECU&U3ATPU : SAT-. fPUADY 7. 1881 Charles Daye NCCU Prof waro' Bblto, When Charles Daye was growing up in. rural North Carolina he dkJ not know a single lawyer and cer tainly was not familier wiih any law professors. One eveenjng in 1958, his mother took him to a PTA meeting where he heard oyd McKlssick, a lawyer IvIa I Jueouy national ve Director of the ea of Racial . auality and founder of -Soul City), speak. That was he spark that lit the flame, "Who is that man?" Daye asked his mother. Fayettevflle Happenings By Mr. T.ll. Kinnvy Hello Hearts!! Win someone's heart on Valentine's Day by sending them flowers, cards, candy or fruits. You can see and enjoy "776" at Fort Bragg Playhouse; "Raft On the River" at Methodist College; "The Member "of the Wedding" at the Fayettevillc Uttle Theater and "Sound of Music" at the Bordeaux Dinner Theater. Also National Brotherhood special program of "People Caring For People" at Fayetteville State University on Sunday at 2 p.m. Cardinal Savings and Loan Inc. of Fayetteville is be ing reorganized following the 1979 death of Dr. Claude Stephens. Jr., former chairman of the board of direc tors of the institution. Wilson A. Lacy has been named the new chief executive, officer and subscriptions are now being sold at $ 10 per share. Stock will be sold until July I. and plans call for reopening in December, 1981. Lacy, a former vice president of United National Bank i and former branch manager and loan officer of ' Southern National Bank, is a 1977 graduate of the North Carolina School of Banking. He is a native of Bladenboro.. Cardinal is one of the very few minority owned savings and loans in North Carolina. The Fayetteville Area Chamber of Commerce and Center for Educational Study at Fayetteville State University are sponsoring a contest for area elementary teachers. A,n award will be presented in March to the winning teacher who has demonstrated "excellence and creativity in teaching free enterprise and economics con cepts" in her class. Any fourth through sixth grade teachers may submit applications by Feb. 15 to their Social Studies supervisors. This is a ''first" in this ef fort. Its objectives are iq: recognize outstanding teachers in economic education promote creativity and improve economic education teaching practices, etc. A workshop will be held on Wednesday, 8;3O-3:30, on the campus. Members of La Madrmna Toastmistress Club held their regular meeting on Mpnnay night at the home of the president, Mrs. N.L- McLain. Floyd L. Shorter, assistant vice president of United Virginia Bank, has been selected president and chjef ex ecutive officer of United National Bank here. A native of Eufaula. Alabama,, Shorter has an MBA f TonYOM Dom"mw UiMverat Stfr,USU. Afc.., my captain who received the Bronze Star in Vietnam. He has served as an instructot in business and marketing at Norfolk State University, is a member of the board of directors of the National Business league, a Martin Luther King Fellow and was named to the Outstanding Young Men of America of 1978. The Door Committee of the Blue Revue held a meet ing on Thursday past at the home of Mrs. S.L. Bur ton. Brotherhood Sunday was observed on Sunday even ing by a joint musical service presented by Fayetteville, area black and white Baptist churches. Scripture readings and prayers were included. Participating male chorus groups were from the host church. First Baptist Church, Moore Street; Cape Fear Baptist Church. LaFayctte Baptist Church, Mt. Pisgah baptist Church and Lewis Chapel Baptist Church under the direction of John McQueen of the host church. Harry Campbell, Calvin Smith, D.P. Stiles, Dr. A.C. Jones and the Rev. J.J. Fulk, representing the associa tions; and the Rev. Ronald Loftis, a planning leader. "She told me that he was a lawyer and I decided right then, back in 1958, that I was going to become a lawyer." Daye, a visiting pro fessor of Torts and Hous ing and Community Development at North Carolina Central Universi ty School of Law in Durham, believes that "law is not for everyone." Professor Daye insists that . "only those people who want to serve others should go to law school. It is a powerful profession. It requires discipline and clear thinking." Daye believes that young people who want to become lawyers should start preparing themselves in junior high school. "They should read everything they can get their hands and they should be prepared for hard work. A graduate of North Carolina Central Universi ty and Columbia Universi ty's Law School, Daye :: well liked by students anc his, fellow faculty members: r -V VHe really expects, 100 percent of you in the classroom," said one first year studetn who is taking his torts class. "I don't mind thepressure he puts on us because he puts a lot of pressure on himself. I think that he has read some of the cases as many as 50 times." Daye's course in Hous ing and Community Development is well liked by students. Not only do students from North Carolina Central Universi ty, take it, but students from the University of North Carplina at Chapel Hill travel ten miles three times a -week Xo hear his lectures. A textbook that he and several other pro fessors authored on Hous ing will soon be published. When the book is published it will be one of the primary works in the field of housing. Daye says, "I am really looking forward to its publication. It has been a long and dif ficult struggle." While at Columbia. Daye thought of parctic ing international or cor-, . porate law. "I had the op- portunity to, work during " the summers with Wall Street Law firms, and "I saw the possibility of mak ing a lot If money." But in 1967, blacks in . Watts rioted and in 1968 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was killed. "Those events raised my consciousness about national problems. I decided to drop the idea of becoming an interna tional lawyer or diplomat and decided to, return to North Carolina to see just how I could help out with some of my state's iv blems about which I was ffamilier from . participa tion in the sit-ins in the early 60's. Daye, who has been teaching law for nearly ten years says that young blacks should not be afraid of competition in Law School. "It requies the ability to work hard and make some personal sacrificies," he said. "When I first went to.Col umbia, I was scared as a jack rabbitt in a fox den." "I had come from an all black school, from a poor black family, and from the rural south. I just had to keep pushing myself. I started on one day never gave up." . "Clear thinking is at a premium," says . Daye, "the . law allows you to train your mind. Lawyers know the system. They know where the pressure points are. They know when to touch them and they know when to leayv them alone." Aside , from his academic work, Daye is heavily involved in the Durham community. He is a member of the. Durham Committee on the affairs of Black Peo ple, and the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers. "Community Service is very important," Daye says, "those of . us who have had the opportunity to become lawyers owe our communities a tremendous debt. But for many of the people who struggled for me, 1 would not have not have even had the opportunity to study law. Every lawyer should spend dome time in community service." rjU--v-i-ftr$-W.-r . V,.'" Vv v? !V"" cr V v .erMmrif M jl ) Daye I Durham Notes Of interest By Mrs. Sy miner Daye 477-3370 Mr. and Mrs. Wcldon Williams and son, Chris, of Brooklyn. New York and Roy McCall of Philadelphia, were recent house guests of Mf . and Mrs. Ervjn McCrae of Durham, Happy birthday anniversary to Kelly Hamlet, Jr. ' Mrs, Gina Purefoy Brown of San Francisco and Jody Purefoy of Airborne, Kentucky, wejre home with their mother, Mrs. Ora Purc'oy, following the death of their father, Benjamin Purefoy. Please pray for the sick an shut-in: Mesdames Mayola Holeman, Hattie Parrish, Annie Myers, Maud Lucas, Estelle Nixon, Mary C. Holman, Grace Mack, Allie M. Bass, Delores Stanley, Annie Chavis, Luvenia Lockhart Shaw and Lucille Turrentine; Messers: WA. Harris, Joseph Wade, Ervin Lyons, Jural Johnson, Larry Turrentine, Lucious Glenn, William Carrington, Rev. Cheek, Robert Holeman, Robert Lee Harris, Hosea Moore and Broadie Daye. Heartfelt and sincere sympathy to the families of: Benjamin Purefoy, Mrs. MarjQrie Hayes Hughes, Mrs. Ora Foster, Mrs, O. Spicer, Arthur Higgins, Mrs. Fan nie Rhodes and Ms. Shelia Evans. Attorney Elvis Lewis, Jr., is the new chairman of the Fayetteville Metropolitan Housing Authority, Lewis was elected Thursday by the Authority Commissioners to succeed Hawkins Stan ton, chairman for the past two years. Stanton moved touhe position of vice chairman, which was formerly held by Lewis. l fori? ff m"i I ,UWiS . ' r 6AV0 UP TO 40 OSJ GGOPZ3 coot correal ttSPASED TO OTHER BMX8S IT KKCSER. 'FN SOU SOOTfl COST CITTEIS. MO OTMEI IUIBS IK tTOCU AOVERTISED ITEM POLICY tKh ft turn adwniHd (Mm raquind n ta 1 mmmt nM Tor w 1 ncn ktogw SIM. octpl M I W "owl in tm m n m do run om of i MMwl I Mm. m aw orttr you yow choict ( comjaribH Ham. I ihm rtdtut, rtflKting ttw una Mvmg, or raincrack I ianlirauloourchawrhtadvvlMdiUTialthal KiiiiiinupncawmijDdiyt. 11 II BrMMMMB .fl. rMiiuiitiit'ri 1:3111 if iiuib v! x at -m. v r , im U'aM'iiu i y?r v . -vr-.. . -n?) y 1 rats' mm 2227 CHAOEO CHOICS . 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