mme. tie.., MThnn, J, c, 7JKV. WmWKUi CAROLINA TIMES M, Wl WILMINGTON DURNAL OFFICE BUILDIN INCOME TAX TAKE A ,;:??-V,;K;.S. y. .-v;.. . - ". immmaKHHiii&tg at mammW. LnV -AltvlrB I eiQMBEr Although your Taxee are all paid, l there enough left? IWt fret, come to mm rf mn a epeed km coat, conflden- tial loan which it jwl OM of OUT mm torvlcoi. Income- fnfoy mil Unrhw Banking Checking Saving Accounts Auto loons Mortgage loam Home Improvement Loom e tank-by- Mail e Safe Deposit Mechanics & Farmers Bank DURHAM CHtnoni KAIEI6H Thursday Highlights 1 a m TODAY - Tennis player Marty Riesscn is scheduled to discuss the book he wrote about the gamt. WRDU 1 p.m.-NOT FOR WOMEN ONLY Dr. Theodore Cooper of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare dis cusses the cause and treat ment of hypertension. WRDU 4 30 p.m. - MERV GRIF FIN Florence Henderson, Jack Jones. Karen Valentino and actress Susan George are scheduled. WTVD 4:30 - MOVIE - John Wayne, Ella Raines and George Hayes star in "Tall in ttie Saddle." the tale of a cowboy touched by crooked dealings. WRDU 7 p.m. JOYCE CHEN COOKS - Barbecued spare ribs are en toe menu. WUNC 7:30 p.m. LOVE TENNIS The lob and the smash are demonstrated. WUNC 7:10 pm-WACKY WORLD OF JONATHAN WINTERS Sarah Vaughn and Ernest Borgnine are guests. WRDU I p.m-MOVIE-Tb "Sun King" too principal fiber- actor in too film biography, "The Rise of Louis XIV," with Jean-Marie Petto in toe title rote. WUNC I p m.-FLIP WILSON -Jim Nabors. Barbara Mc Nair and Broadway actor James Coco join in the comedy sketches. WRDU 0 p.m. - MOVIE - David Hemming, Vanessa Red grave and Sarah Miles star in Antonioni's "Blow-Up." the tab of a photographer caught in a murder mystery. WTVD, WFMY 11:30 pm. MOVIE The Marx Brothers spoof spy fucks in "Night in Casa blanca," starring Groucho. Harpo and Chico. WTVD, WFMY 11:10 p.m. - MOVIE - A young gjrl is ruled by a sadistic guardian in "The House and the Brain," with Hurd Hatfield and Carol Wfllard. WRAL 11:30 p.m. JOHNNY CAR SON Sammy Davis Jr.. Vic tor Borne, Phyllis Oilier and Sarah Miles are scheduled. THURSDAY, MAY 17 WTVD, CHANNEL It DURHAM 4:30 Stmtittr !;$cc.Brr 0:00 McHilu Navy ,:St Secret Storm 10:00 Wetereete 4:0T1WtSW 4:30 MOT Griffin 4:00 Newt 4:30 CBS Newt 7:00 PrasMt 7:31 Prnt 0:00 The Wi :0 Movie II 00 Nm 11:30 Movie WRDU-TV, CHANNEL St, DURHAM 7:H Toaav 0:00 Now ZOO ,:M Not. Worn. Only 10:00 Wtrat 4:00 Somoriof 4:30 Movlo :oo now, 4:30 NBC Nw 7:00 The Protector 7:30 Jon. Wkitoro 0:00 Flip WHOM 0:00 h-onildt 10:00 Doon Morns' 11:00 Nowt Ht30 Tonight Show WFMY -TV, CHANNEL I, 4:00 Good Monrin 0:00 Coot. Kanaoroo ,:M OM Robot t:30 Merv Griffin 10:00 Wotortato 4:30 Gortwr PVW SiSO Volley 4:00 Nawt 4:30 CBS Now, 7:00 AMty GrHfHfi 7:30 Draonot 0:00 Woltont t:00 Movla 11:00 Now, 11:30 Movlo WRAL-TV, CHANNEL t, RALEIGH 4:00 OaybraaK 4:0 Commontiry 7:00 Now, 7:30 Make With SiSO Undo Paul 0:30 EIHott-UUnno :30Mlka Dooglot 10:0 Wottrooto 4:00 Truth 01 4:30 Parry Moooa 5:30 Andv GrlHrth '00 Newi 4:25 Commentary 4:10 ABC Novo 7:01 Bonanza e0O iTeotf Sciugoj :00 Kuns Pu 10:00 Sen Frandaao tisoo owtwpt. 11:30 Enltf tthlltlflit WUNC-TV. CHANNEL 4. CHAPEL HILL 0:30 Eftocttvo SuparvltM 11:30 Electric Co. 9:oo Pilm IjM Granny RJ!&T.TNnai rr 10:00 seooma St. , 3:00 Pifii 11:00 Sign Off :) Ready, Sot, Film 11:00 rmegee 4:00 Miotorasora 4:30 ! ISO I 4:00 7:t0 Joyce Chan Cook 7:11 Love Ton 0:00 Watergote WsmW&'itim mmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmKmmmmmmmmmTmm mmSBBSm Wm HEB sbbbbbI snaar of: I Vojk9Hbb bbbbbsh JgaHPCH nanasiK ataflajnvtRjSM bbbbh itasav ocHbbbbbb! MILESTONE OMEGA -Oldsmobile's 50,000th Omega in given special attention on the assembly line by Shirley Andrews, a supervisor in the General Motors Assembly Division Division plant at Willow Run, Mich. Mrs. Andrews, who works in the inspection department and helps make certain all Omegas built on her shift measure up to exacting Oldsmobile standards . couldn't resist adding an appropriate sign to the windshield of the bright red hatchback coupe. Introduced last fall,' the compact Omega also is built at the Van Nuys. Calif., GMAD plant. Here's one time you should rush out and buy the tires you need! DsMmiiim Tiro fllA I Willi i" STEELPREME Mors than a mile and a quarter of brass-coated steel filament is stranded into cables, then weven into belts and embedded deep in the body of the Hercules Steelpreme tire. These belts keep the tread firmly on the road, rolling straight rl tru. Because there's less tread movement, less squirming and scuffing, it's one of the longest mileage passenger tires Hercules has ever made. And steel belts do things for car handling which will surprise you! At low speeds you ,n't notice much difference, but at high speeds they handle the way you always thought the best tires shouldl Polyester plies add easy riding to steel s toughness. This tire can live through shocks which used to kill ordinary tires. Think you can't afford such luxury? Come in and get the surprise of your life! Something Better iri a Tire . . . and a Man Who Stands Behind It! RIGSBEE TIRE SALES romnlolo TireServi ce We Do It All! 1 08 Lakewood Ave. 2720 HillshoroMgh Road 688-1383 286-4444 I'M I Pfsill mm Saturday Highlights A SUBSCRIPTION TO THE CAROLINA TIMES WILL KEEP YOU INFORMED OF THE NEWS IN YOUR COMMUNITY. STOP IN 08 OIL 6S2-W13 08 68-4587 TODAY Friday Highlights FRIDAY, J1AY 18 WTVD, CHANNEL U. DURHAM e.St a.m. MIKE DOUGLAS Princesi lieatbLikOfflce Prog taped to Washington. DC, WRAL 1 sun. NOT FOR WO MEN ONLY - Eyestrain and color blindness are dis cussed. WRDU 4:10 p. m. MERV GRIFFIN - Jack Benny. Met Ferrer and Twiggy are 4 30 p m MOVIE -As heiress whose fiances meet violent deaths is the principal character ef the comedy -mystery "The g Ghost." with Alexis Smith. Wayne Morris sad Brenda Marshall. WRDU Lester, John MMs and Sylvia Syms star is "Run Wild. Run Free," the story ef a mute 10-year-old boy sad. a colonel who teaches Mm about nature. WTVD, WFMY 0:30 p.m, -MOVIE-An agent is ordered to prevent a deadly germ virus from wiping out pert of America in "Hunter." with John Vernon, Steve Swat and Fritz Weaver. WTVD. WFMY u 30 p m - MOVIE -Deris Day, Robert Morse and Terry-Thomas star to the farce, "Where Were You Whoa Oh Lights West Out?" WTVD. WFMY 419 SlM Sejmeof 7:01 CBS Mean , 00 McffolwNovy 0:30 SoerotStorm 10:00 Jokaro WINJ 10:30 01000 PyramM 11:30 Lav Of Life u:0t Youno and Rootlets : NOWtftOt. 11:3S Soared 1:00 PeeovMenn 1:30 At WorM Turns . 1:00 Guiding LkjM J:3o Be at Mom 3:00 Right Prlc 3:3 Hollywood'. Toiklms 4:W That Girl 4:30 Marv Qrtffln 4:00 Nowtbott 4:30 CBS Nowt 7:00Orognt 0:00 Movl 11:00 Nowt 11:34 Movlo WRDU-TV, CHANNEL SB, IHJRHAM 7:00 Toaav 0:00 Now Zoo Spy. fell Not WDtlTMMl Qi 1A.-U f nr. - IV. JO OnCWfirT aTto low saw any i-rnv 11:30 HollynfVood Squtm '230 Whej, "oVtiatr Wtv n:40 NBC Nowo 1:00 Your CSW 1:30 Son Motrt 2:00 Dayt Our Llvto 1:30 ThoDoctort :oo wr vnr S: Bat Pa. PL 44 em - - - - -W wmmmWrnw 4M Movlw :00 Ntwi 4:a NBC Now 710 fitf Bon I Senior I 0:00! 0:30 Little p two Sen 10:00 BOM Opt 11:00 NWt or rear 11:30 Ionian 1:00 MMnKs WFMY-TV, CHANNKL S. GREENSBORO etsMI flmul Mnrnliw w-ww avyan psdv nopap 7:35 Devotion 0:00 Copt. Kanaar 0.-00 Old Robol t. JO Momv OrHiiti 10:30 810,000 Fyrarnltl :-10 0)ojimOJb9 tt: Yn S KaaNtaa 11:31 NSW 1 12:30 Storeti T'row i: ToaaVo Woman 7:30 Edge of NbjOW 3:00 Ntw Prlc 1:10 Hollywd't Ttlkln 4:00 Secret Stornrt e-' l a m. MIDNIGHT en omays Pies totro- four. John SiowoTt. rock or. johb, rocs; WRAUTV, CHANNEL i, RALEIGH t oo Si vallav tiScaTitawi 7:00 Andy Ortftltfi 7: Buck Owant 0:00 Movlt 11:00 Newt . 11:30 Movlt 1:30 Loto Movlo 7:10 p.m. - Itoigm and the 7:10 n.m - UNTAMED WOsTLlJ - The balance of VM rm. - MOVIE -akire is exantined is the Aerial sad romantic hot 4-40 Oaybrotk 85 Vlow point 7:00 Nwt 730 'ONftrfhifclO 0:00 Unci Pool emn i7:3o lam Satan 1:00 AN My CNMr , 1:3 IBM l.00 NeWiTflTVOdst 0:30 Sett SI via 11:00 11:30 11:00 710 SiM Toll trie truth 4:00 Truth or 4::, M l.','5iitv fffleffJ?-''-- 4:1 Aiurv Vffflfh too Mttf UM ii m 11:30 mm. arm 7 s. m. MOVIE Gene Barry and Lydia Clark star in "Atomic City." WRAL 1 p.m. - CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL - A young boy enters the world of fantasy after a frustrating rebuff from the adult world in the Hungarian film, "Tony and the Tick-Tock Dragon." WTVD. WFMY 2:30 p.m. - MOVIE -Rick Nelson stars in "Love and Kisses." WFMY 2:30 p.m. - MOVIE -Auche Murphy and Gale Storm star in "Kid From Texas." WRAL 7 p.m. FLIPSIDE Soul music performers Curtis Mayfield and pop group Sba Na Na are guests. WRDU 7:30 p.m. - STAND UP AND CHEER Florence Henderson is guest. WRDU 8 p.m - ALL IN THE FAMILY Mike and Gloria's wedding is recalled in the concluding part of this episode. WTVD, WFMY 9 p. m. - MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW - Mary's parents have difficulty adjusting to their home in the city. WTVD, WFMY p.m. - MOVIE - William Holden, Cliff Robertson and Vince Edwards perform to a story about American and Canadian ttxrnps being trained for commando action in Europe to "The Devil's Brigade." WRDU 10 p.m. - MISSION, IMPOSSIBLE - Roddy McDowall is a syndicate boss in a $100-rniUkm crime. WTVD, WFMY 11:30 p. m. - MOVIE - A mercy killing and an illicit romance form the plot of "The Bramble Bush," starring Richard Burton, Barbara Rush and Angie Dickinson. WFMY 11:30 p. m. - MOVIE -Dean Martin, Alain Delon and Joey Bishop star to a comedy-western, "Texas Across the. River." WTVD. 11:45 p. m. CREATURE FEATURE Dianne Webber stars in "Mermaids of Taxuron." WRDU 12:45 p.m. - MOVIE -"The Counterfeit Traitor," An American businessman blackmailed into helping the British finds himself caught in a web of espionage, with William Holden, Lilli Palmer, Hugh Griffith and Ernest Schroder. WRAL SATURDAY, MAY 19 WTVD, CHANNEL 11, DURHAM 4:00 4:30 7:00 7:30 0:30 0:00 0:30 10-30 11:00 11:00 Summer Stmtittr NOW McHale't Ntw Gllllotn't Island tabrlna Chan Scoobv Ooo pueeveatt HlnHtone .. Archie 11:30 Fit Albert 1:00 Children'! Film 1:00 Soul Treln 3:00 Wild, Wild Wett 4:00 Lloyd Bridfltt 4:30 Cor And Track 5:00 Del Reovei S:30 Nashville Musk. 4:00 Stock Unlimited 4:30 CBS Newt 7:00 0:00 1:30 1:00 0:30 10:00 11:30 1:30 1:30 Het How All In Finally Bridget Love Mary I VMM N Mission, hnpoatlMe Movlo wild, Wild Watt Ktltldotcopt WRDU-TV. CHANNEL M. DURHAM 0:00 HOundcatt 0:30 Roman Holiday 0:00 Jattont 9:30 Pink Panther 10:00 Underdo 10:30 Berkleyi 11:00 teoltb 11:30 Runaround 12:00 Eighty Oayi 12:30 Giant 1:00 Call of the Wett 1:00 Mel. League Bosob 5:00 TBA 5:30 Wrestling 4:30 NBC Nowt 7:00 FllptWe 7:30 Stand Up 4:00 Emergency 0:00 Movie 11:01 Let Movie WFMY-TV, CHANNEL 2, GREENSBORO 7:30 Pebblet 0:00 Bugt Bunny 0:30 Sabrlna 0:00 Chen 0:30 Scoobv Ooo 10:30 Puitycatt 11:00 Fllntttonet 13:00 Archie 12:30 Fit Albtrt 1:00 Children'! Film 2:00 Hozol 2:30 Movlo 4:00 Roller Dtrby 5:00 High Speed Living 5:10 Ptront Game 4:00 Newt 0:30 Bob Newhert 4:30 CBS Newt 7:00 Hoe Hew 1:30 Bridge Lovm Bom 0:00 Mery Tyler Moor 10:00 Mlttlon, ImptotlbM 11:00 Ntwi 11 : Movl WRAL-TV, CHANNEL J, RALEIGH 7:00 Sunrise 0:45 Scouting Newt 0:00 Otmondi 0:30 Superstar 10.30 Brdv Kid 11:00 Bwltchtd 11:30 Kid Power 11:00 Phentom 12:30 Frollct 1:00 Monkeet ' 1:30 Am. Bandstand 2:00 Country Son 2:30 Movie 4:00 Indie 500 3:00 Sport! World 4:10 Arthur Smith 7:00 L. Walk t:M Hero W Go Again 0:30 Touch of Grace 0:00 Strauss Family 11:15 Wrettlln 10:00 The Men 11.00 Newt 11:30 Movie nmniiiniHooTinio WUNC-TV. (3UNNEL 4 CsTAFEL HILL : LewnToThlr i Br. 11:00 OfMPy Sg5r 1:15 Moth 1:MPHm 1:00 Moth 1:30 Sign Off 4:30 Zoom 4:3 Steam l:M (Itctrk i Bt urr m READ ABOUT YOVRSilf EACH WttK IN THE CAROLMA TIMIS. IT'S YOUR PAPER. i'is.A' & '''' mnmiiiHiiitUHHIHMM8 neeimmH hihhmmhmhiI OSBBsi itt mm BBBBBs iiMait "'i V m i raPiei I BBBBBBL .SBBBBaV w aBBBBsl BBBBBBBBsW ' ' ' ' ''IfE I oRnfflsHHl Tai mmm ' : ':HisBB H ' mmmmjMmBmmmmmmmmmm IH ( WW 0BbUbHbH BBBbPBBBbI BBSSSSl' f iW ' " SBBBBB BBBBBKk'nll H - Wants THE CHARMING Miss Claronell Hope Brown, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Eldee L. Brown of 1616 S. Roxboro Street, along with N. C. Lt. Governor Hunt on the date of her initiation as a Page in the Senate during the recent sessions. This was her second time to serve her State. local JWfss Serves with Governor's Advocacy Commission on Children Niahf Blast were still VOLUME 53 - No. 22 DURHAM, N. C, SATURDAY, JUNE 1878 PRICE: 20c U, S. ... . . ,r v':.'-' ji1 ,:r - .. 'ii-: Merg Lona Court up rente Court Blocks erOf Richmond School ' Miss Claronell Hope Brown will be meeting on June 1 in her last session as an official member of the Governor's Advocacy Commission on Children and Youth. Her appointment was a two year term given by the former Governor Scott. Recalling her experiences gained while serving the two positions, she says that they have been most rewarding and of tremendous help tip her. She is also most grateful for having been allowed to serve North Carolina in this capacity; and further, she has attempted to render this service with cheerfulness, dignity and respect. The charming young miss, a rising senior at Hillside High School has been active in student activities at both junior and senior high levels. She has served as the former president of WhiUed Junior High School Student Council and was a member of the Junior High School Honor Society. Miss Brown feels that her experiences at the State level has had a great effect on her choice of career. Her love of history; along with these governmental experiences is causing her to possibly consider a major in Political Science. tynder i,he Reorganization SERVES page 2 A) Fight Setback For the Blacks WASHINGTON (NBNSjjl On a tie, 44o-4 vote, thijjj Supreme Court last week affirmed a lower court ruling blocking a merger of Richmond, Virginia predominantly black public- school system with thttf predominantly white schools of two neitrhborine suburban' counties, Henrico a4Mf Chesterfield. v Justice Lewis P. Powell Jft who had served on both the city and state boards . tw edueation during the!', state-sanctioned resistance to, integration, had disqualified himself earlier from the case. The hjghL. milt, thus, was unable to decide whether school desegregation orders may cross the lines of a state's! political subdivisions, a major constitutional issue which affects not only Richmond, but several other cities. The decision, the culmination of a long court battle, was a setback for Richmond's school hoard and black plaintiffs who charged that the State was denying them their right lmML$ r toee wurti page o WMle auUtotttiss probing the extastff of the wel known Wilmington Journal, Jervay announced paper would bo oat OB schedule on Thursday of thss T. C. that mm flfe'; mm tmummm . m m v WmufoffiMw&s wy&Mt2MWmmm PVHgUUj m immhmm&tmW ' -JmBm BBBBBBS. ' IBBBfl mmimSA6iSmm BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl! HaHo9aHam m j$Rj$ J?' .t77Wb gjBlglignP jH BBBBBBBBBBBBBsEeS SsLjjtfrfE&i LW Mi, ggggHaga Wmt& ' JBtsHK11)' FORMER CHAMP GETS AWARD (Daytona, Beach, Pla.) Former World's Heavy weight Champion Joe Louis, is all smiles as he is given an award for his everlasting effort in the promotion of the Black Race in Snorts. Present ing the award is Dr. Richard V. Moore, President of Bethune Cookman College during grad uation exercises. Army Names Three Retiring Dir. of NCCU Honors Program Feted with Luncheon Bl Minnie T. Spaulding, I director of the Mrs. retirin University Honors Program at North Carolina Central University, was honored at a surprise luncheon on Saturday, May 5, at 2:00 p. m. in the dining room of the W. G. Pearson Building on the University campus. The luncheon was sponsored by the Freshman Honors Class and was attended by sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the Honors Program, by the family of the honoree, by members of the administration and several members of the faculty. The students participants in the program were . freshmen: Jacqueline Hairston presided; Pamela Suggs and Donald Smith presented the honoree with a white orchid; William L. Frasier, student speaker for the occasion, paid trubute to Mrs. Spaulding; and Charellitta Wllkerson and Jonathan Davis presented a silver tray inscribed with "In Appreciation-Freshman Honors Class". The principal speaker for the occasion, Dr. Charles A. Ray, chairman of the Department of English, linked Mrs. Spaulding's heritage with the history of the University by calling attention to the fact that the building in which the luncheon was being held was named for her uncle, W. G. wm BssWattrl BHrrraB ORCHIDS TO THE HONOREE Donald Smith, assisted by Jacqueline Hairston (partially obscured), pins orchid on Mrs. Minnie T. Spaulding at a luncheon in her honor sponsored by the Freshman Honors class at North Carolina Central University. Pearson, close friend and staunch supporter of the founder. He then praised her for her concern for excellence, for the impact that she had had upon the lives of her students, and for the significant contribution she had made to the Department of English as teacher and to the University as director of the Honors Program. Chancellor Albert N. Whiting, Dean of Students James F. Blue, and Dr. Waltz Maynor, assistant dean of the Undergraduate College of Arts and Sciences, also paid tribute to Mrs. Spaulding. In her response Mrs. Spaulding praised the students who had done so much to keep the Hopors concept alive at the University, described the luncheon as the "happiest surprise" of her life. ' ! as BnjajBfpij - -' acks WASHINGTON (NBNS) The Army has nominated three black colonels, including a Medal of Honor winner, for promotion to the rank of brigadier general. This action, which was announced last Wednesday, means that the number of black generals and admirals on active duty will be increased to 16. Col. Charles C. Rogers, 43, of Indianapolis, who is currently assigned to Germany, will be only the second of 508 Army generals now on duty who hold the Medal of Honor, wnich he received for rallying his men to repulse three human wave attacks on his artillery battalion at a fire base in Vietnam in 1968 when he was wounded three times. The other new nominees are Cols. Roscoe Robinson Jr., a 44-year-old West Point graduate from St. Louis, who is As Generals now assigned to Ft. Bragg, and Fred C. Sheffy Jr., 44, of McKeesport, Pa., who is assigned to the Pentagon. Fifty-five colonels had been nominated for Senate approval to be promoted to brigadier general. ATTICA TRIALS WARSAW, N. Y. - Trial dates for the 60 men indicted in connection with the riot at Attica facility may be set soon by a state Supreme Court justice. Fortunately i injured in the Monday blast of the JoarnsJ around 11:00 p. m. Investigation by FBI, SBI sad local investigation continues in an effort to seek the cause for the extensively damaged offices. Located in a two-story building, with a residence on the second floor, the newspaper has been published since 1911 in the building approximately a half a mile from downtown section. It is reported that the blast was heard more than seven miles away by the editor-owner T. C. Jervay. Several cars, parked ar by, were damaged along with windows being broken from the blast Siding was also torn from the outside walls of several nearby homes. Fire trucks were also caned, but were not needed, as there was no fire following the blast. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Warren, who occupied the residence part of the building ne at the rear and thus escaped injury. It is reported that Jervay said he could give no reason tor the incident. However he dad say that "when you have been in the news business s long time you have Mends and enemies". The Wilmington Journal has been in the forefront In fighting for oppressed blacks as well as backing civil rights activists, Ben Chavis and Molly and Leatrice Hicks, who are being tried this week on charges of conspiracy after the (See BOMBING page 2A Rev. Philip R. Cousin to Conduct "Days of Dialogue" in Europe Committee For Two-Port y System NoUs Fund Raising Drive Dinner The N. C. Chapter of the National Committee for a Two-Party System held its kick off fund raising dinner on May 25 at the Hilton Inn, Raleigh. Speakers for the black tie $100 per couple dinner included Gov. James Holshouser, Mayor Johnnie Ford of Tuskegee and Dr. Charles Hurst. Ford and Hurst are Board Members of the National Committee for a Two-Party System. The National Committee for A Two Party System was founded on August 7, 1972 by Floyd B. McKhaick who has been serving as it's chairman. The N. C. Chapter is the second local chapter "to be licensed by the National (Sea TWO-PARTY 2A) Solicitor-Defender Internship Seminar Held By Law School . The opening Orientation Seminar for t h e Solicitor-Defender Internship Program, sponsored by the School of Law at NCCU, was held on Tuesday, May 29, at Holiday Inn-Downtown. , The Seminar brought together 29 rising third year students from the law schools of Duke, North Carolina Central University, University of North Carolina and Wake Forest University, the Solicitors arid Defenders from the N. C. counties in which the students will work during the summer and the deans of the four saw schools. Also presented were representatives from the North Carolina Intern Office (NCIO) and the Administrative officers of the courts. This is the third year such internship programs has been sponsored by NCCU Law School. The program is founded by the N. C. State Law and order Division. Subjects to be covered (See SEMINAR page 2A) mWKmlm Mm . eHffiEStllB iSfflmmmmMZGammmmmw BACK KING HOLIDAY (Hart ford, Conn.) Rep. William P. Abrogio, D-New Haven, in troduced a bill to make Jan uary 15th a holiday in honor of Martin Luther King and Rep. Margaret B. Morton, D Bridgeport, (foreground) the first black woman elected to the Connecticut Legislature, supported the smendement to have the holiday on the second Sunday in January as being the way to insure safe. (UPT) REV. PHILIP R. COUSIN, Pastor of Saint Joseph's AME Church, will be conducting "Days of Dialogue" for the United States Army European Command, June 6-14, on various United States Army Bases in Germany. "Days of Dialogue was designed to promote the professional development and leadership abilities of Army Personnel. The program focuses on present day problems as they affect the attitudes of the individual soldier in the areas of equal opportunity and human relations. Rev. Cousin will be conducting the second series of this program and will be speaking to chaplains, commanders, staff officers, invited wives and personnel involved in race relations. His subject will be "The Black Religious Experience in America". Its major thrust is that a historical review of Black religious experiences promote harmony and understanding among all races and creeds when the false and misleading images and ideas of non-Black Americans are exposed. The schedule for the "Days of Dialogue" will be as follows: June 6-Frankfurt; June 7 Wuetzberg; June 8-Nuernberg; June 11-Stuttgart; June 12 Heidelberg; June 13-Kaiserslautern; and June U Mannheim. In developing the Dialogues, Rev. Cousin will draw from his religious, educational, and political experiences. He has a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree from the Boston University School of Theology as well as BA degree-cum laude-in Philosophy and English from Central State University, Wilberforce, Ohio. He was awarded the Doctor of Divinity degree from Kittrell College. He has done further (See COUSIN page 2A) 6 KLANSMEN Found (willy In Mich. School Bus Bombing DETROIT (NBNS)-Five Ku Klux Man members, including a former Grand Dragon, have been found guilty on charges of bombing school buses in a plot designed to disrupt a court-ordered school busing plan in Pontiac, Mich. The esse was heard by a federal judge, who rendered a decision since the defendants had been tried without a jury at their request. They maintained that they would not be able to receive a fan trial from a jury of blacks and Northern whites. Ten empty school buses which were to be used in the school desegregation plan were destroyed in the Aug. 30. 1971 bombing. Further acts of resistance followed the incident The defendants are Robert E. Miles, 48, of Howell . Mich., a former Grand Dragon of the Michigan KKK; Dennis C. Ramsey, 26, of Drayton, Mich., who was identified as the Exalted Cyclops of the state Man. Wallace E. Fruit, 31, also of Drayton Plains; Alex J. Distei Jr., 24, of Clsrkstoa, Mien.,; and Raymong J. Quick, 26, of Lake Orion, Mich. .CC.IJ. Hod $4 Million In Won- St ate Funds During School Year Grants in force at North Carolina Central University during the 1972-73 school year totaled $3,968,078, according to Joe L. Gibbs, the university's grants officer. Gibb's final report for the fiscal year 1972-73 shows that the university received $ 702,560 from private foundations and organizations. That figure does not include gifts made to the university's Faculty Endowment Fund or other capital funds. Most of the money came from agencies of the U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, which gave the university a total of $3,098,014. That include 19 grants from the U. S. Office of Education, six grants from the U. S. Public Health Service, and one grant from HEWs Social Rehabilitation Services. Other federsl agencies making grants to the university included the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Science Foundation, and the U. S. Department of Justice. Financial assistance to students was the purpose of msny of the grants. The Office ef Education have four grants to that purpose, the Public Health service tame, and the U. S. Department of Justice one. Private scholarship grants included $50,000 from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants A number (See FUNDS page. 2A Hillside High School Paper Faces Crisis A crkds sMuation twjasaaCB of the la mirror the images of classes -a tradition at excellence that is Hillside High tSaJhsekV 10, to $6,000 in la)

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view