Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 17, 1970, edition 1 / Page 1
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Dr. Charles Johnson Named To Duke Medical Faculty WORDS OP WISDOM rilfs Cb Carqliiia Ctnreg i3n pear to be. —Socrate# y ■ TL y. Single Copy 20c VOLUME 49 No. 41 DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1970 PRICE: 20 Cents Minority Banks To Be Incrensed Durham Has Five Delegates To Postal Meet WASHINGTON, D. C. - John H. Brown Jr. Deputy Na tional Director of the Appren ticeship Information Centers, U. S. Department of Labor will be one of the featured speakers at the Regional Conference on Equal Employment. The Con ference will convene in St. Paul Minnesota on October 23rd at the St. Paul Hilton Ho tel under the auspices of the Office of the Regional Man power Administration for the Six-State region including Illi nois, Indiana, Michigan, Minne sota, Ohio and Wisconsin. Brown's office is responsible for the Administrative Super vision of the network of 36 Apprenticeship Information Centers in 22 States and the (See DELEGATES on 8A) Two New Officers Named At North Carolina Mutual Jm / / -Ik. • '--'W F ' TAYLOR Dr. Johnß. Larkins In "Personalities ~ |y - B W I * * DR. LARKINS Mrs. Billie Curry Piersawl is Appointed to Education Post Mrs. Billie Curry Piersawl has been appointed Educa tional Media Specialist for the North Carolina State Commis sion on Higher Education Facilities. A native of Durham, Mrs. Piersawl graduated from the Durham City public schools. She holds a Bache lor of Arts degree from How ard University. Mrs. Piersawl comes to the Commission with teaching experience In the W Hlflg-. fulfil ■■Bil H jH/ i PARTtCIPATIMO in the recent announcement of a program to increase the deposits of minor ity banks by SIOO million dur ing the next year were (from left): William Hudgins, Presi Bert Collins And L. R. Taylor Latest Additions To Staff Joseph W. Goodloe, presi dent, North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, on behalf of its board of directors, announced the appointment of a new assistant vice president and a new associate actuary. Named assistant vice president was Bert Collins and named associate actuary was L R. Taylor. Formerly an administrative (See MUTUAL on 8A) Dr. John Rodman Larkins, the Assoicate Director of the North Carolina Probation Commission, has been selected to appear in the 1970 edition of PERSONALITIES OF THE SOUTH. The publication is published annually to recog nize outstanding leaders in the South. Dr. Larkins was among 4,000 citizens selected from the 15 southern states. Bi ographes chosen for this publi cation have contributed to the life of their community either by professional or civic activi (See LARKINS page 8A) Cincinnati, Ohio public school system and the University of Maryland Overseas Extension Program. She returns to North Carolina after spending the past, two years in Europe. Mrs. Piersawl is the daught er of Mr. & Mrs. W. H. Curry. She is married to Lloyd C. Piersawl. ■ pilot in the United States Army. They have one child, Lisa Michelle. dent-elect, National Bankers Association (NBA), and Presi dent, Freedom National Bank in Harlem, N. Y.; Department of Commerce Secretary Mau rice H. Stans; Donald Sneed, m f u JSP. COLLINS NCCU, UNC TO JOIN IN STUDY OF INTEGRATION North Carolina Central Uni versity and the University of North Qarolina at Chapel Hill will examine the effects of school desegregation on edu cation in North Carolina in a pilot study this year. The study to Involve the de partments of education and sociology at North Carolina Central and the department of city and regional planning at the Chapel Hill University, will serve as a prelude to a more definitive cross-section study of North Carolina schools to be conducted later. Only one school system will be examined In the pilot study. Directing the study will be Dr. Charles E. King, professor of sociology at N. C. Central, and Dr. Robert Myer of the University of North Carolina. Plans call for the study to be conducted with two goals in mind, "to learn more about the effects of school desegre gation on the education of childrtfa, and to provide prac tical assistance to school sy (See INTEGRATION 8A) President, Unity Bank Jc Trust, Roxbury, Mass.; Paul Johnston, President, Glen Alden Co.; Dr. Edward Irons, Executive Direc tor, NBA, and Samuel Beard, Chairman, Capital Formation, Workshop Offered For Journalistic- Minded Persons A journalism workshop is currently going ' n here in Dur ham. The workshop is designed to prompt students, by regular assignments, to gather material and write short articles pub llshable, for example in the Carolina Times. The workshop, which is directed by Ndubisi Egemonye, (M. A. in Journa lism from UNC, Chapel Hill,) hopes to introduce students to the rudiments of effective writing. Order of topics for the workshop and class discussion includes finding ideas and material for feature stories, legal rights of m.s., special techniques and writing tools and the problems of black newspapers. There are still openings for prospective students in the workshop. Interested persons are invited to contact Faye (See JOURNALISM on 8A) We-f* $ . w ; ■ ? *^B^s^Ep^^9M|jjH HhIP B i «'l CONVOCATION LIADMS Taking time out to pose lor the photographer during the Opening Convocation of Hood Theological Seminary at Liv ingstone College, are, from left: the Rev. A. McLean Spaulding, associate professor Private Groups To Participate In Project Also WASHINGTON - The Ad ministration today announced the start of a combined govern ment-private program designed to increase the deposit balanc es in minority banks, by SIOO million by October 1, 1971. The program is warmly en dorsed by President Nixon who has pledged that "en couraging increased minority group business activity is one of the priority aims of this Ad ministration." In a joint statement, Com merce Secretary Maurice H. Stans and Treasury Under Sec retary Charls E. Walker said, "Today there are close to (See BANKS on page 8A) St. Aug. Grad To Be Six-State fEO Keynoter Durham will have delegates attending the National Postal Forum IV being held at the Washington, Hilton Hotel Washington, D. C., October 26 and 27. Postmaster M. R. Boyd, Jr. announced today that L. L. Collins, president of Munici pal Forms and Systems Co., W. Albert Graham, office services manager of N. C. Blue Cross Blue Shield, Inc., Walter R. Mason, vice president of Home Security Life Insurance Co. and N. L. Thomas, director, General Services of N. C. Mu (See KEYNOTER on 8A) IL MOWN of history and Christian ethics at Hood Seminary; Dr. J. Clin ton Hoggard, speaker, of New York City; Dr. Walter L Yates, professor of church history and missions at Hood Seminary; and Dr. Frank R. Brown, dean of the seminary. The convoca i / HV ■■ nfl KH| If. I ■■ YOUNG MIN are th* real beneficiaries of the Rochester, N. Y., work-study program. The program, administered by Ala. Native Has Served itincoln And Watts Staff Dr. Charles Johnson, who has been in the private practice of internal medicine endocrin ology at the Lincoln Private Clinic in Durham for the past three years, has been appoint ed an assistant professor of medicine at Duke University Medical Center. His appointment, to the De partment of Medicine's divi sion of endocrinology, was an nounced by University Provost John 0. Blackburn. Johnson had been on the medical staffs of Lincoln and Watts Hospitals in Durham and had been director of medical Women In Action To Open In Old Boone Building A Women In Action Clear inghouse will open on Wednes day, Sept. 21, in the old Boone Drug Building on the corner of Mangum and Parrish Streets. The Clearinghouse project is the new focus of the Women In Action for the Prevention tion took place last week at the college. Dr. Hoggard is secre tary-treasurer of the Depart ment of Foreign Missions of the AME Zion Church and is editor of its official organ, The Missionary Seer. Rochester Jobs, Inc., enjoys wide community support. J. Walter Campbell (right) is one service at Lincoln since 1968. He served as chairman of the Board of Directors of the Lin coln Private Diagnostic Clinic. He also had been a clinical as sociate in medicine at Duke for the past three years. A native of Acmar, Ala., Johnson, 43, grew up in Wash ington, D. C., where his mo ther, Mrs. Willie Doll Johnson, j still lives. He earned a B.S. degree at j Howard University in Washing- ! ton in 1953. In 1963 he earned I his M.D. degree at Howard and ' interned at D. C. General Hos- I (See JOHNSON page OA) i of Violence and Its Causes. Mrs. Robert Cushman, chairman of the project stated that the program of the clear inghouse will be as follows: To provide a call-in station to receive rumors, complaints, dissatisfactions or problems of any type that could cause ten sion. To report rumors or com plaints to the proper agency and/or pass that on to our J. A. Carter is Laymen's Day Speaker Sunday in Fayetieville Laymen's Day will be ob served at Mattock's Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church, Fayette ville, Sunday, September 20. Rev. Melvin F. Ward is the pastor. J. A. Carter, local morti cian affiliated with the firm of Scarborough and Hargett Funeral Home, Inc., will be the principal speaker at the 11:00 a.m. service. His topic will be "Man and His Discontents." Among Carter's other af filiations are Chairman of the Board of Directors of The Carolina Times, Member of (See CARTER on 8A) of the lUI instructors on loan from Ea stman Kodak; the stu dent-trail lee is Fred Radcliffe. mm m Oft. JOH» tSOH various Sub-Co mrt littees, se cure documented information and study for reci mm endation purposes. To receive citizen sugges tions for helping solve com munity problems . Thit area would be caL led "> Citizen Feed-In." The wh ole id» be ing that the lines ( >f com muni cation be kept op ten so that citizens can feel a sense of in (.See WOMEN page B.U ■ CAKTIR
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1970, edition 1
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