I—THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1967 8B Bfl & KEi Bv . i. '** I Vjfc' * # 9 I mam I STORMY WEDDING (Liege , Belgium) Negro Brazilian soccer star. Jose Germano, 25, and runaway Italian heiress Cnuntcss Giovanna Agusla hold hands on balcony of their "hideaway" here. Her mother. Dr. Joseph Taylor Named Dean By Indiana U. DR. TAYLOR Star-spangled present with a future Here's a Christmas present the Bond itself is always there to re youngsters on your shopping list mind them of your gift, can't lose, break, wear out, or get In meantime, Uncle Sam will tired of. 9 be using the money to help make If* a IIS Savines Bond the their future secure in other ways, gift that grows while they grow. (Which is especially Practical. And appreciated, even when 50 "£PZ ?* 9* by younger children. Makes a child are committed in Vietnam.) feel important to be entrusted with Give Bonds this Christmas. Buy « such an adult-looking document, them where you do your banking As the years pass, the money helps and avoid the shopping crowds, pay for important things like col- Prices start at $18.75 for a $25 lege, marriage, and emergencies. Bond. And until they do cash it in, the '■ :W • RF GIVE U. S. Savings Bonds | ; THE MESENT WITH A FUTURE A m SISMSSS 9 » Count Domenica Augusta, spoke to Giovanna at a meeting ar tanged by Catholic clergymen, but failed to dissuade his 21- year-old daughter from marry ing Germano. Family friends BLOOMINGTON*. Ind -- Dr. .'ospph T. TaylHV has been •lamed dean of the Inriianap- Doiis Downtown Campus o* In diana University by the I. U. Board of Trustees. "resident Fhis J Stahr annour.c'd this week. Dr. Tayior ha? si rvcd as act •."■.••.v. dran i: ;"ic Indianpoolis Downtown Campus sinet last Tilhe when Virgil Hunt, dean of the Campus since 1936. be came registrar of the I. U. Medical Center. Dr. Taylor becomes dean of the largest and oldest of the University's six regional cam puses. With a current enroll ment of more than 3,800 stu dents, the Indianapolis campus said marriage bans were to be published later this week, and under Belgian law, the wedding could take place three weeks later. (UPI Cablephoto) | must be moved in 1969 to new expanded facilities to be lo cated adjacent to the Medical Center and is expected to have an enrollment of 12,000 by ■ 1975. A sociologist, Dean Taylor I joined the I. U. Downtown | Campus faculty in 1958 as part j time lecturer, was named asso i Sate professor in 1962, and u | sociate director of the r art frits I in 1962. From 1957 to 1962 Dr. Taylor was director of pro gram development fpr the Planner House of Indianapolis. Learn from the mistakes of others you can't live long enough to make them all your self.—Anon. Julian Bond Speaks at A&T College's Men's Council Meet GREENSBORO—JuIian Bond, the stormy figure in Georgia politics and a member of the Georgia State Legislature, who spoke last week at A. and T. College, warned that the rights and lives of people are neither "ballotable, or negotiable." The youthful legislator, de nied his seat after being elected three times and finally granted it by an order of the Supreme Council, was the main speaker at the annual observance of Mcti's Week. The program, held on last Sunday afternoon, was sponsored by the Men's Council, a student organiza tion. He said under the system of democracy, there can be no middle ground in the matter of human rights. The Speaker said the right to buy a hamburger at a lunch counter, the right to be served in a bus station restaurant and the right to vote are not the full answers to the racial prob lem in America. "This can be solved only through full par ticipation in American life,' he told the audience, "For the rights and lives of real human beings are at stake." He told the group that Ne groes in the deep south are beginning to wonder if the right to vote, often for the first time in their lives, is so im portant when there is not much choice for whom to vote. One of the founders of the Student Nonviolent Coordinat ing Committee (SNCC), Bond traced the development of the civil rights movement in this countiy. Bond gave A. and T. students credit for having started the campaign which led to the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He said the stu dent sit-in at the lunch saunter at the Greensboro Woolworth Store on February 1, 1960, marked the beginning of the big civil rights push. inn YEARS IvF vf OF SERVICE . ■ ' To f Washington D.C. * The Nation * The World • I'. rf * ipis' - sj&fa *•£ Howard Univeiwity takes the occasion of its 100 th anniversary to thank its alumni and friends for their support in the past and to ask their continued assistance now and in the years ahead. ■ f . * zm,f. '■ ;■ ■ . Jk MARCH 2nd M W 1867-1967 W\ | Wheat Needed J "Wa pay five to 10 cents a bushel in freight charges to bring wheat from north of the Ohio River. This money coirid and should go to our Tar Heel producers." That's what an official of Interstate Milling Co., C. D. McKemie of Charlotte, told a meeting of North Carolina soft wheat millers here the other day. The meeting was held at N. C. State University to determine the needs of millers in order to help Tar Heel farmers fulfill those needs. The discussion brought out that North Carolina farmers have been losing thousands of dollars each year by failing to produce wheat desired by mills in the Southeast. In recent years the State's farmers have produced most ly varieties that range in quality from soft to hard. Many of the harder varieties have poor milling qualitiea, however, according to Dr. Charles Murphy, assistant professor of crop science at N. C. State. In addition to soft wheat millers and N. C. State re search and extension person nel, the meeting was attended by shippers, variety breed ers, and N. C. and U. S. De partment of Agriculture rep resentatives. i HAVE YOU TRIED THE NEW SOFT ROLL SHIRT? CALL 682-5426 i 800 N. MANGUM ST. DURHAM.. H. C llpl ■A BP Mi I 'SMi ■■■r I MW« AFRICAN VISITOR (Washing ton, D. C.) The Honorable Simon M. Kapwepwe (r.) For eign Minister of the Republic Use of Sprayers^ Sprayers, nozzles, pumps, and methods of constructing drop nozzles will be displayed and discussed at a meeting at the Linden community building, Cumberland County, Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock. of Zambia visited the U. S. re cently to bring a message of his countrymen to a group of interested Americans. The oc casion, was the Third Biennial Conference of The American Negro Leadership Conference of Africa held in Washington, Purefoy's Photography Y '-' > * >■ *fj, V t ... _ . 9 Natural Color Commercial Wedding - Family Photos Proms - Dances and Groups Call: Day 682-2913, Weekend 682-7316 D. C. Chatting with the Foreign Minister is Charles A. Sterling, Assistant to the National Sales Manager of P. Lorillard Com pany. P. Lorillard sponsored the luncheon where the Honor able Kapwepwe was the main speaker.

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