? V?l. n, N?. 29 I I W I V I.. *>J : n - x' .W^T<5^VXX ^ rrf ?? I: ^ i?4rfHP.|'.r*^t ifg^K* * ??HGHM > *; > < *> a, Jtv nW, > s AkM^KM _" if i |w*L| I i.^.^i <jrKM Myfl ? * *?-?<-y T*-wai- *. mH t^~t^r; ?-fa ' :Ma Attorney Cora T. Walker [ce Livingstone stndents Fred Mil Appointn * F or State Appointments for taking the state merit exams has become mandatory as of March 1. An official from the Department of Administration in Raleigh said the Office of Stare Personnel announced that applicants who want to qualify for a state competitive service job can schedule the time, location and merit exam by calling Raleigh. Scheduling Walker Gets Navel Acad. Appointment Jerome Linward Walker, II, of 2617 Raleigh Avenue, was appointed last week to the U.S. Naval Academy for the coming year. The appointment was announced by a member of Congressman "Steve Neal's office in Washington, D.C. Walker was one of nine students from the Fifth Congressional District to be nominated for appointment to the U.S. Military Academy. Walker, 17, is the son o\ Mr. and Mrs. Jerone L Walker. He was formerly elected tc the North Carolina Boys State attorney general and is i FINST - W1NSTQN-S> \ I j ~ r ^ * * i. & *?**. % tfej^BH^BB ^ VB K!H f?;t r^V ^m* ^1 "II. i%hn"0'i'A ir I r 11111tni ! ?nr^y< ^ K IH^ ^"^'^^SwidB' ./ nter] poses after speech with chell and Beverly Ingram. tents Mam i m !-+ r._ ificrii iJAti will allow better utilization of test centers in Asheville, Boone, Winston-Salem, Charlotte, Raleigh, Fayetteville, Greenville and Wilmington. Each month about 1800 ?applicants take one of the 150. different merit exams to qualify for jobs in social services, mental health and public health. When jobs become available in the 16 lli MH^VPMIL flHHBBk mm ' Jerome Walker National achievement scholarship semifinalist; a U.A. Naval Academy engineering seminar delegate. He is a member of the cu^,, r\itU Mnclf rinh fllpp JL-# L/VJI1J \>IUV| xawwn -v?w, Club, Wrestling Club and Jets Club,, / $$ CASH SSS GIVE-A-WAY ! See Page 12 Atty. Sa; Civil Rig by W. Clyde Williams Special Correspondent "The fight for civil rights legislation is, for the time being, ended. There is no expectation of new civil rights legislation out of the present . or the next administration. No one even talks about a civil iatory ms state competitive service agencies, applicants are considered in order of their test scores. Merit exams are administered by the Recruitment and ?Testing?Division of State Personnel with assistance from local Employment Security Commission and Department of Human Resources rvrr. V/I1ILC5. 2nd Year Law Stu City . by James Smith Sta?f Writer A Winston-Salem native has been hired as a summer intern * with the Criminal Division of the King County Prosecuting Attorney in Seattle, Washing ion. Jerry Drayton, Jr., a second ? f year law student at the University of Washington in Seattle, is the son of Dr. and i Mrs. Jerry Drayton, Sr. of K Court Avenue. His father is pastor of New Bethel Baptist 1 Church. The hiring of Drayton was announced in January by Christopher T. Bayley, King County Prosecuting Attorney. He was selected from \ among over 100 applicants 2?* S>1 Don't . ' ^ ^ _ *hts Leg] rights platform today," said Attorney Cora T. Walker of New York as she addressed an all-college assembly recently at Livingstone College, Salisbury, N.C. ine second lecturer in a series of six Cultural Enrichment Programs offered thus far this season by Livingstone, as a result of a grant from Title III -and the U.S. Office of Education, Ms, Walker said, "The legal effort over the next five years, 1 believe, will be primarily in the enforcement of existing legislation.", "But, we must implement our input of goals and objectives that will develop us as a race of people concerned about our future. The big push in both black and white communities should be in providing jobs for blacks at standard income levels, and in creating an environment lavmauic iu uic CAiaicutc ui substantial black-owned businesses/' she said. The speaker, discussing economic development, said, 44There are roughly some 25 million black people in the dent Man Gets It aliyl f/* Jerry Drayton, Jr. Selected as Summer Intern from law schools across the county to fill one of ten internships. As a summer intern in the Criminal Division, he will be responsible for trying criminal cases such as drunken driving. i 1E lTURDAY MARCH 20,1976 Expect J >>V islation United States, and they have a gross annual income that goes for food, clothing and shelter. However, without too much difficulty we could develop an entreprenual class and an economic base, and have our youth use their academic and educational skills to contribute to the development of this country." "You (college students) are the ones," she said, "who should be looked to, to support black economic development. Not as a duty but as an insurance policy for the future of your children and their children." Attorney Walker was introduced by Dr. Joseph C. Settle, Livingstone director of student services. W. Clyde Williams, the college's director of public relations, awarded gift certificates, courtesy of Belk-Harry, Co., to persons having the best three bulletin board displays announcing founder's day. The recipients were Mrs. Doris P. Jones, first place; Dr. Willa C. Bryant, second place; and Mrs. Mildred C. McCrary, third place. * iternshio ? Washington law permits law students who have completed two years of law school to try cases under the supervision of a licensed practicing attorney. Last summer, he worked as a legal intern with the criminal defense section of the Judge Advocate General Corps of the U.S. Army at Fort Lewis, Washington. He interviewed prosecution and defense witnesses, investigated con tested facts, prepared defense witnesses for their trial testimony, researched the law of a given case and prepared legal memoranda and briefs. Presently, he is a president of the Moot Court Honor Board and was one of six students chosen to represent See STUDENT Page 2 <x

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