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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>
\
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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