COMPLETE PLANS: A group of Knights of Columbus are shown making the final plans for its second annual Teen Age Talent Show which will be held Feb. 27 at the Greens boro War Memorial Auditorium. They are left to right: Robert Hanson, George Breathett, Grand Knight Bill Frawley, and Don Bonnett. (Photo courtesy of Jack Moebes, Greensboro Record) ____ Johnson Bill Continued from page 1A classes and cultural enrichment programs. HUBBELL WHOSE organiza tion is lukewarm about dual en rollment or shared-time programs, told the House committee that “wholesale application of shared time across the nation is an im possibility.” He said no public school dis trict should be empowered to adopt a shared-time program without full consultation with, and the con sent of, local non-public school officials. In other testimony, the Ameri can Civil Liberties Union gave to the subcommittee (Feb. 1) a de tailed series of objections to the bill’s provisions for shared-time and shared services. LAWRENCE SPEISER, director of the ACLU’s Washington office, charged that “as it is written the bill could authorize the most dan gerous subversion of the constitu tional principle of Church-State separation since James Madison’s famous remonstrance set the di rections of American religious lib erty in 1786.” Speiser, who stressed that a major debate is under way in ACLU’s ranks about the merits of dual enrollment programs, said that dispite ACLU’s lack of a final stand, it did see a number of areas in which shared-time might violate Church-State separation. HE WARNED THAT the “inter institutional relationships” that may develop from cooperating pub lic and private school officials “creates a risk that public services will be extended further than to the student — to the parochial school itself.” Speiser also said that the law should not require • public school CARSONS LAUNDRY Akers Shopping Center Wilkerson Blvd. Phone UN 5-0451 ONE HOUR MARTINIZING “Back In One Hour Fresh As A Flower” 1328 E. Franklin Avenue Phone UN 4-3172 Gastonia North Carolina districts to assist poverty-stricken children in parochial and other private schools. SPEISER WAS critical of the provision which allows the U.S. Commissioner of Education to deal directly with private, nonprofit schools seeking Federal assistance for their pupil’s textbook and li jrary needs. The commissioner would be em powered to do this if state laws fail to authorize a state agency to pass such Federal assistance to private schools. “It is entirely indefensible,” Speiser said. “If the people of a state have decided to make ex plicit in their constitution that their state shall not support reli gious education, then it is a viola tion of all sound Federal-State relations for the Federal govern ment to negate that by going over and around the State.” Bonzes Are Open Foes of U.S. { 421 MOTOR SALES t Rambler—Peugot—Renault Sales Gr Service 1 Mi. West of N. Wilkesboro on New Highway 421 Phone 838-5642 Phone 973-3310 N. Wilkesboro, N. C. Champion, N. C. Franklin Drug Stores, Inc. Russell Franklin, Owner Fast City Wide Delivery Fifteen Graduate Pharmacists 5 convenient locations to serve you "There's one of our stores near you" #1 401 Tate Street, Dial 272-8197 #2 2140 Lawndale Drive, Dial 275-3318 #3 4701 High Point Road, Dial 299-6261 #4 3111 E. Bessemer Ave., Dial 275-7657 #5 1457 E. Cone Blvd., Dial 274-2438 Business office 2140 Lawndale Drive Dial 274-3300 Open a convenient monthly charge account and keep a record of your purchases Greensboro, No. Car. Continued from page 4A who were given asylum in the U.S. embassy here in September, 1963, during the last phase of President Ngo dinh Diem’s regime. He told this correspondent once that he had studied English at the Vietnamese-American Association and during his sojourn in the em bassy. Now he came back to the em basy leading a crowd bearing ban ners with these inscriptions, among others: “The U.S. Must Assume Entire Responsibility for Huong.” “The Americans Must Not Sup port a Reactionary and Anti-Revo lutionary and Anti-Vietnam-Peo ple Government.” FORMER PRIME MINISTER Huong is not a Christian. His government, which was only pro visional, did nothing against the Buddhists or anybody else, except the communists, during its less than 3 months of existence. The political bonzes attacked it as soon as it was formed. They were par ticularly indignant because he an nounced, at the start the politics and religion must be kept sepa rate. In 1963 the same faction of Bud dhists led the agitation ending in the American-promoted coup that overthrew the late President Diem, a Catholic. Now they bracket to gether Prime Minister Huong and Diem, with whom he disagreed, denouncing them equally as “reac tionary and dictatorial govern ments, whose policies are to ex terminate Buddhism ...” No case, example or argument of any kind has been produced to prove .that anybody is trying to “exterminate” Buddhism. The U.S. embassy here has had bonzes as vistors before, but in different circumstances. THICH TRI QUANG, one of the most militant, bitterly anti-Catho lic, and two of his colleagues (in cluding Thich Nhat Thien) enjoy ed asylum in the embassy for two months in 1963. Last Sept. 13, when there was an attempted coup in Saigon, Thich Tri Quang again took ref uge in the embassy. This time he came disguised as a Catholic priest, wearing a black cassock. With him was Thich Tam Chau, anoth er political bonze, wearing a base ball-type cap, sweater and slacks. They left the embassy that after noon and went to a private house in the city, still under the wing of U.S. officials. On Jan. 16 Thich Tri Quang and two other bonzes were received by Ambassador Taylor and Depu ty Ambassador U. Alexis Johnson. Tri Quang repeated his determi nation to bring down Prime Minis ter Huong and his cabinet. On Jan. 19 the political counsel Requiem for Paul Hubert Paul Demming Hubert, 76, of 222 S. Tremont Drive, Greensboro, died recently at Wesley Long Hos pital, where he was taken after suffering an attack at home. He was born in Carlyle, HI., and had lived in Guilford County 41 years. Hubert was a retired farmer and cattle breeder; he op erated Piedmont Dairy Farm from 1924 to 1957. He was a parishioner of Our Lady of Grace Roman Catholic Church, a past Grand Knight of the Knights of Columbus, and a member of BPOE Elks Lodge No. 602. lor of the embassy and a Vietna mese-speaking assistant drove to the Buddhist headquarters in an official embassy car, having the U.S. seal on the door, to talk to Tri Quang. He informed them of the “hunger strike” that he and four others intended to start on the morrow. Members of the political section of the embassy have been seeing these antigovernment bonzes fre quently. All these parleys have apparent ly done no good for either the U.S. or the hard-pressed Vietna mese government, though they have doubtless given “face” to the seditious bonzes. THE AIM of the agitation by the political bonzes seemed to be: —to scare the U.S. government into putting pressure on the then Prime Minister Huong to resign and make way for a government acceptable to the bonzes. —or to cause enough disorder to provoke a military coup favorable to them. SACRAMENTAL WINES (Pure California) CANDLES—Mock Miller LOUIS W. PETERSON 1200 S. Peters Street New Orleans 18, La. Spend a Weekend with Christ at MARYHURST RETREAT HOUSE FOR WOMEN Write: Sisters of Mercy P.O. Box 431, Pinehurst B. H. HERRING ond SON DECORATION CO. Interior Designers Painting & Paper Hanging Complete Decorative Service 427 West End Bird. Dial 725-8551 Winston Salem, North Carolina KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT COMPANY / “America’s Favorite Doughnut” 259 S. Stratford Road Phone PA 4-2484 Winston Salem, North Carolina j