Bennett College Plans Eleventh Six-Week Science Mute Through the mUtßcs' of a $21,750 grant from I the KatkJaal Science Fouh-j da Hon, Bennett . College' will conduct ita 11th con secutive six-week summer institute for 65 high abili ty 11th and 12th |rade students in mathematics] and the sciences, June 16- July 25. 1 Dr. J. Henry Saylea, chairman of the science division at the college will again direct the institute whose primary purpose is to provide subject matter enrichment, and the abili ty to perform and inter pret laboratory experl menta and reaults. The core of the program will be couraes In mathe matlca, biology, chemistry, and phyalcs, with each sup plemented by tutorial con ferences. Field trips to placea of scientific Interest are alao planned. Participants will receive an allowance corering books, school supplies, laboratory fees, field trips, and accident insurance. Medical and dental expens es must be borne by the student. The costs of instruction are paid by the National Science Foundation, with each student expected to pay at least a part of his expenses of room, board, and travel. Admission is based on the student's qualification, without re gard to financial need, Legislative Tally Is 334 The 1969 General Assembly has received 334 bills and resolu tions since convening five and a half weeks ago, the N. C. Institute of Government reported. The legislature has reached its oi«-quarter mark barring an ex traordinarily lengthy session. ' The overall volume of measures introduced is 13 per cent below its past average for the decade, but this can be ex plained by a smaller number of local hills, the institute said. The General Assembly has held 28 daily sessions and enacted 18 acts and SO resolu tions. PICTURE THIS! Br ir . GWi:\: CHWtx* Remember grandma on her birthday with a photo album filled with snapshots of her favorite people. GIFT GRANDMA WITH A FAMILY PHOTO ALBUM This year give grandma a birthday gift that's all heart. Make it a photo album chock full of family snapshots, a very personal present that will make her feel closer to children and grandchildren who are far away. Grandma will derive hours of pleasure mulling over the album and she'll enjoy showing off her offspring to other doting grandmas. Remember, grandma is inter ested in snapshots of everyday events as well as those of great occasions. Naturally you'll in clude Christmas, Easter, birth day and graduation pictures, but don't stop there. Take snap shots of the children under the garden sprinkler, Dad mowing the lawn; Mom bathing the baby or reading a bedtime story. You'll be much more apt to take snapshots of everyday ac tivities if you keep your camera loaded and in a handy spot. And because Mom is the chief chronicler of the children's most active hours, she should have her own camera—a simple one such as the Kodak Instamatic 134 camera. This model sets the lens automatically for perfectly race, or national origin. Application! forms may be obtained, and further information received from the drlector. Completed forma should be returned by April 1, 1969. Write to: Dr. J. Henry Bayles, Director, N. S. F. Bummer Science Institute, Bennett College, Greens boro, NorthCarollns 27420 Separatism Is Rejecte By NAA CHAPEL HILL _ The local chapter of the National Association for the Advan cement of Colored People en dorsed several demands of the Black Student Movement Thurs day but said it opposed others. Kelly Alexander Jr., president .of the local NAACP and son of the president of the statewide organization, aaid his group is submitting "proposals" rather than "demands" to the ad ministration of the University of North Carolina here. The NAACP wants the university to recruit increased numbers of minority and disad vantaged students but not on a basis of race. Alexander also said his organization asks for a "high risk" program for students "with high motivation but marginal Scholastic Aptitude Test scores." The NAACP "totally rejects" certain demands by the Black Student Movement, Alexander said, disclosing that demands that would make black students separate in the university must be rejected. "Any attempt to reestablish institutionalized segregation on this campus will be opposed categorically by the NAACP regardless of the origin of the demand," Alexander said. He said his organization took special exception to three Black Student demands as follows: 1) Rerouting of student ac tivity funds paid by black students from the control of the student legislature to the BSM; 2) a separate judicial system for blacks, and 3) recognition of the BSM as the sole representative of Negro interests on the cam pus. However, the NAACP does ask* for an interdepartmental major in Afro-American studies, an ex change program between UNC and Negro universities; and Negro artists to be integrated in the existing artists-in-residence program in Chapel HilL exposed snapshots indoors or out—leaving mom free to con centrate on her little subjects. Putting together grandma's album is easy. And children over five can participate by helping to select and mount the snapshots. A good way to pre pare the album is to select snap shots for it each time you have film processed. For example, when you pick up your vaca tion pictures at your photo deal ers, pick several for grandma's gift album and have the dupli cate prints made immediately. Keep the prints in a special file and add to the collection each time you take snapshots. When it's time to mount the prints, select an album at your photo dealers and pick up a good adhesive such as Kodak Rapid Mounting Cement. Many ordinary adhesives have ingre dients that cause photographic prints to fade, so play it safe. Grandma will enjoy the album most if the snapshots are arranged in story-telling order, rather than at random. And she'll treasure a birthday gift that can be enjoyed day after day the whole year through. ■ iH ■RtS ■" 'PSTXi % I K ||in MH' ffiE> .. ,k , Hp ' RESIDENTS TESTlFY— Beaufort County, S. C., residents before Senate com m.ttee are Mrs. London Butler of Hilton Head; Miss Agnes Robinson, an anti poverty worker, and Mrs. Hazel Frazier, of the Welfare Rights Union. Fund Cutoff Exemption Sought To Save School Lunch Program WASHINGTON - The chairman of. the special Sen ate committee on hunger said Thursday he will ask the Nix on administration to exempt school-lunch programs when federal funds for Southern schools are cut off because of civil rights violations. "It's a mistake to use a civil rights issue to aggravate a serious malnutrition pro blem,"' Sen. George S. McGovern, D-S.D., said, disclosing he will ask Atty. Gen. John N. Mi'chell to see if a way can be found to con tinue lunch programs when other-funds are stopped. Meanwhile, the Department of Agriculture discussed with Gov. Robert E. McNair of South Carolina the details for distribution of free food stamps in Beaufort and Jasper counties. Indications were the first free stamps would be made available next week. McGovern hailed the decision of Secretary of Agriculture Clifford M. Hardin to supply the free stshps to the poorest people in an area cited by witnesses as having a high degree of hunger and disease. "If we can get the concept established that the poorest people ought to get fed for free," he told reporters, "we're well on the way to eliminating malnutrition in the , United States." Extra In Orbit of Moon Eyed SPACE CENTER, Houston Space Center officials want to add an extra working day in moon orbit to the flight of Apollo 10 in an effort to solve navigational problems uncov ered during the Christmas moonfligbt of Apollo 8, it was learned Thursday. The change would mean astronaut* Tom Stafford, John Young and Eugene Cernan would spend almost three days -circling the moon. Christopher C. Kraft, director of flight operations at the Houston Space Center, said the 20 hours Apollo 8 spent in moon orbit proved that a lack of knowledge about the lunar gravitational field makes it impossible accurately to predict * spacecraft's path there. Accurate orbit predictions are essential for actually landing men on the moon. The first «Uch lending mission is current ly planned for Apollo 11, starting on July 11. The problem with lunar orbital navigation, Kraft said, is caused by heavy spots or "mass concentrations" buried below the lunar surface like raisins in a piece of bread. These bqried lumps on both the front and back of the moon cause variations in the moon's gravity fleld and pull a i spacecraft off the path it would follow if the moon had a constant mass. They were first discovered during unmanned lunar orbiter flights, and one of Apollo S's goals was to determine their effect on the moonship. "I had hoped that by g fring some experience with navigation around the mooi -(in Apollo I) we would be able to overcome our lack of knowledge about the mass distribution of the moon," Kraft said. Apollo 10 is scheduled for launch Msy 17 on a flight that would carry Stafford and Cernan within 50,000 feet of the Inar surface in the moon landing craft. ' Rather than landing, however, they would sip 4oyn to this altitude and then climb back up to rendezvous with Young in the Apollo command ship orbiting 7Q miles above the moon. This waa the altitude at which Apollo I nude 10 lunar orMts. .Original plans called for the Apollo 10 crew to spend almost two days orbiting the moon. Warplane Planning Criticized NEW YORK - One of America's foremost aircraft designers claims two new fighter plans the United States has on the drawing boards could be outmoded by superior Soviet planes long before they fly. Clarence L, (Kelly) Johnson of the Lockheed Aircraft Corp., designer of some of this nation's most successful planes, sug gested the United States should be developing a fighter that can fly faster and higher than any now envisaged. Johnson was in New York to receive the 1969 Billy Mitchell Award from the American Legion. He was cited for his con tributions to aviation that reach back from the P3B of World War II to the U2 and SR7 high altitude aircraft that have played significant recon naissance roles in the cold war. He also designed the FlO4 i fighter plane. The Lockheed engineer-ex ecutive, a husky, Intense man of '9B, criticized the nation's recent record at producing new fighters during an interview. "There hasn't been a true air superior ity fighter developed since 1998," he said. The Pentagon has recently moved ahead with two fighter projects the Navy's FI4A and Air Force's Fl9. But Johnson questioned whether they would be able to give the United States air superiority during the 1970'5. Carrler-Baied The FI4A is a carrier-based dog-fighter that the Navy recently ordered .from Grum man Aircraft Engineering Corp. INSTANT The two-beds in one trundle bed is a boon to the homemaker with children. It occupies the same amount of space as an or dinary bed, but gives double the service. The drawer-bed moves easily from one room to another and accommodates guests for over-night visits. Kenlea's trundle bed makes the scene in light oak with spindle head board, footboard and brass pulls. The price is right for families on a low budget. RAPID GROWTH PREDICTED IN PETROLEUM DEMAND million bbta. daily—oil aquivalant 0 3 10 IS 20 1965 1980 ON I Cat I Coal I Hjr*. I Nudtar I i Projections by the Chase Manhattan Bank indicate that oil and natural gas will continue to supply nearly three-fourths of the nation's energy in the years ahead. The dark bars show demand for the major energy sources as of 1965 and the lighter bars the bank's predictions for 1980. m and hopes to have In servie® by about 1972. The Air Force recently took the initial steps to begin development of the Fls, which would be somewhat lighter and faster than the Navy plane, and be in aervice about! 1975. Performance goals of both planes are classified. But, ac cording to military sources, their top speed would probably] be in the range of 1,400 to 1,(00! miles an hour. Maximum com bat altitude would be about 60,000 feet. Neither plane, Johnson Mid, t may be able to cope with Soviet! fighters of the mid-1970'5. Ex-i is ting Soviet fighters, he said, already can out-maneuver present U. S. planes, and by the time the two new aircraft come j along, the Russians would' almost certainly have improved their present designs. Over-governed CUTTACK, India Orissa state has a government employee for each 100 in habitants. SHAPING A NEW LIFE Training in the skilled craft of cabinet-making offers this young Latin American a life line to dignity and hope in his struggle against perpetual poverty and despair. The young apprentice pic tured above is just one of mil lions of the needy in over 70 underdeveloped countries throughout the world who have been helped to productive lives through projects and self help programs sponsored by Catholic Relief Services. Last year, aided by grants from foundations, Catholic Re lief Services donated over $4 million to establish rural ex tension courses, training schools, credit unions, consum ers' cooperatives, irrigation projects, low income housing, improved roads and modern sanitary facilities. Your help will provide schools and tools to build new lives for the "have-nots" of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Don't be a "have" without a heart. Send your contribution to the nearest Catholic church or to Catholic Overseas Aid Fund, Empire State Building, New York, N.Y. 10001. Thousands To Train for Library Work ' WASHINGTON - Mora than 8,000 ptrama will wedw training to Htararianahip tfaia summer and during tha 1969- 70 academic year at 92 Fada rally-supportad **" tnatftatee throughout tha country, tha U. S. Office of Education an nounced today. The Office will Mp fund the institutes, which are to be conducted by 71 colleges and universities in 33 State*. ?%+*- ral grants for the program total approxbnataly $3.8 million. They are authorized under Title n-B of the Higher Educa tion Act of 1965. Each college and university establishes its own criteria for selection of institute partici pants, and all applicants must apply directly to the institute for admission. Library educa tors and persons serving all types of libraries, information centers, or instructional material centers offering libra ry-type services are eligible to attend the sessions. The Federal program pro vides allowances to the insti tution to help defray the cost of training, and provides parti cipants with stipends of $75 per week plus sls for each dependent during the institute period. No tuition is charged. Last year 66 such institutes were held at 47 colleges and universities and gave training in Hbrarlanship to more than 2,000 persons. Federal funding for the program totaled appro ximately $3 million. About 80 per cent of the population of the city of Ham tramck, Mich, is of Polish origin. Does Coca-Cola have the taste you never get tired of? Is it always refreshing? Do things go better with Coke after Coke after Coke? TftAOC-MM«O . ,»*•■■>««• £ Ask assistant veterinarian Harold Murphy. Let him tell you. Write: Mr. Harold Murphy, P.O. Box 5390. Metropolitan Station. Los Angeles. Calif. 90055 I H I X ft V I I Hfc,. lHr | \ PHI "COCA COCA" ANO 'COM" AAfAfQ.»I(At O TAAOIMAA.& MICN O*L» Im( ».ODuCI Of IM COC* COl« CO«»*«. You know it. It's your best refreshment buy. Bottled under the authority offhe Coca-Cola Company by Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Co. SATUIDAY, MARCH 1, 1M» THE CAROLINA TUB- Ford Foundation Junkets Defended McGewna Bonday said Tfcarsto that'E tax-free organixatfca had Mat congressmen oversea*, bat de nied that the travel grants were for lobbying or political purpo ses. In a tense coafinntatlaa before the House Ways and Means Committee, th* former White House adviser to two presidents denied a charge that "living high off the hog" oa a trip could influence a congrraa man's voting pattern later. Bundy, fiddling with a pea and at times flashing with anger, defended the nation's biggest foundation against accu sations that it was getting involved in politics with tax free funds. The committee is investi gating foundations as the initial phase of hearngs into possible abuses and preferential treat ment in the tax laws. Rep. George Bush, R-Tex., indicated that one or more congressmen had gone on a Ford Foundation-sponsored trip to Japan last year to attend a trade conference. But Bundy, who served as national security adviser to the Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, denied there was a lobbying intent in the Japan trip. Burke said that foundation sponsored trips to Hawaii, Miami or to "the Mardl Gras in New Orleans" could result in congressmen "living high off the hog" and could influence them. Bundy said the foundation did not look at the trips that way. and he added both the Ford Foundation and "members of Congress could justify" the trips. Burke said listing of every grant and to whom it went could help "clear the air," remove the cloud of "suspicion" from the awards. In mid-afternoon, Rep. Herman T. Schneebeli, R-Pa., volunteered that he was one of eight congressmen who went to Japan on the Ford Foundation trip. Defending it, Scheneebeli said "I never worked so hard in my life." He said he looked into steel imports frees # s d trade conference. Guys and Dolls Presents Check To Libraries GRfefcNSBORO - The Greensboro chapter of Guys and Dolls recently presented a check to the director of the dty libraries for tha purchase at magazines and magazine jackets for tha predominately Negro L. Richardson Hospital. The presentation was made by Mrs. Howard F. Robinson, president of tha chapter to David Vaughn, who wfll handle the subscriptions. Guys and Dolls also plans to make a later contribution of a cart to be used to take books and magazines to hospi tal rooms. For some time the Auxiliary to the hospital, with Mrs. Marvin W. Griffin as president, has been working toward the establishment of a patient li brary at the hospital. Mrs. Griffin said of the Guys and Dolls' gift: "The L. Richardson Auxi liary graciously accepts the gift of magazines and jacketa for its library. "Plans are made to collect additional books and have them processed and available to all patients. Auxiliary members will handle the distribution throughout the facility." 7B

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