future 6uM&pJt* Keep Up With The Times ? Read The Future Outlook! ~,y ^-fc . **0q VOL. 29, NO. 23 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1970 .ilCE : 10 CENTS Deaths MRS CARRIE MARTIN LYLES Mrs. Carrie Martin Lyles, age 76 died at L. Richardson Mem orial Hospital Monday morning, April 6th following several weeks illness. She lived at 4414 Swift St. Funeral service will be held Friday, April 10th, 2:30 P.M. at Swift St. A.M.E. Zion Church. Burial will follow in Raleigh Cemetery. The family will receive their friends at Brown's Funeral Home Thursday evening from 7:00-9:00. j Survivors include daughters: Mrs. Carolyn M. Draft of the home, Mrs. Pauline Whitworth, New Haven, Conn, Mrs. Eloise Hood, Washington, D. C., Mrs. Geraldine Henderson, Moores town, N. J., Mrs. Delores Scott, Washington, D. C.; sons Furman Lyles, Bennettsville, S. C., John Nolan Lyles and George Harold Lyles, both of Greensboro, N. C. Thomas Lyles, New Haven, Conn.; sisters: Mrs. Aire Jones, New Haven, Conn., Mrs. Nena Chapman, Pomaria, S. C., Mrs. Elise Powell, Bronx, N. Y.; and one brother, Jack Martin, Pomaria, S. C. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. MRS. BESSIE REID PEASE Mrs. Bessie Reid Pease, age 83, died at L. Richardson Mem orial Hospital Sunday morning, April 5th following several mo nths illness. She lived at 1211 Cottage Grove Avenue. Funeral service was held Thursday, April 9th, 4:00 P.M., at Gracc Luther Memorial Luth eran Church. Burial followed in Maplewoori Cemetery. The family received their friends at Brown's Funeral Home Wednesday evening from 7-9. Survivors include brother, Charles Moose, Detroit, Mich.; nephew, David Moose, Lexing ton, N. C. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. MR. MARSHALL D. RAY Mr. Marshall D. Ray, age 56, died at Moses Cone Hospital. Thursday, April 2nd following a brief illness. He lived at 1620 Woodbriar Street. Funeral Service was held Sun day, April 5th, 3:00 P. M. at Mt Olivet A. M. E Zion Church. Burial followed in Veteran's Plot Maplewood Cemetery. The family received their friends at Brown's Funeral Home Saturday evening from 7-8. Survivors include wife, Mrs. Helen Hayes Ray of the home; son, Richard Ray, New York, N. Y., and step-daughter, Mrs. Felicia Sanders. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. at *9*45 a m?'*' DudIey Senior- directs fellow students for "Operation English" assembly program to be held Wednesday, April 15 "OPERATION ENGLISH" AT DUDLEY An air of excitement pervades i the English Department of Dud ley Senior High School as prep arations go forward for "Oper ation English," a project which involves every student in the school. The idea of having a day different from the regular school day was introduced in a depart mental meeting early in the school year and then offered to the students who received it en thusiastically and" made it their I own. For the past few weeks | planning and preparation have j occupied the time and talents of many students. Ideas have flow ed freely back and forth, have been weighed and sifted, and those that seemed good have been adopted and worked upon. This is an experiment that the j students want to try, and there is every indication that they will carry the project through splen didly. Wednesday, April 15, is the day "Operation English" goes into effect. On that day students ; will be free to leave their reg ular English classes and visit other English classes where stu dents committees will engage them in a number of activities, all English centered and all ' j showing the variety and the ex [ citement that experiences in English provide. The student-planned activities include panels, debates, discus sion groups, films, explanations of student work on display, readings, dramatizations, inter pretations of selections from j ; classroom study and from orig- j ina'. stories, essays, plays, and [ poems written by the students. I An old-fashioned "spelling bee" is planned by one committee, and some students are using musi cal interpretations of selection* [ they have studied. One of the highlights of "Operation English" is an audi torium program tentatively cal led "The headers' Theatre," which will feature a pot poarri of selections ? many of them o riginal student work. Two one hour assemblies are planned in order to accommodate the entire student body and visitors. Students are doing most of (Continued on Page 5) PLAN LAW DAY ? Student members of North Carolina Central University's Law Day committee are shown making final plans for the May 1 observance by the NCCU Law School. Speakers for the day include Matthew O. Carter, mayor of Montclair, New Jersey, and Lieutenant Colonel Talmadge Bartelle of the Judge Advocate General staff, TJ. S. Army. Law students shown above, clockwise from left, are Miss Mabel Minor, Archie Elliott, Mrs. Cecelia Cook, chairman, Miss Sandra Turner, George Manning, James Ethridffe, Raymond Sitar, Linwood Bowers, Joseph I MS vitti, Oliver Upshur, _ Ronald Barbee, and Miss Sadie Smith.