ff
2A THE CAROLINA TUBS Sat, Not. M, lfTl
A PKSSN6 WOWfM 1 THE BUCK COMMWHY
EDITORIALS
ENERGY CRISIS BRING NEW FOCUS
With the growing demand for
conservation of fuel and energy saving
tactics at all levels some important
points come to mind for many of our
communities.
The fuel shortage will now place
new emphases on where one lives;
how far or how near one lives to his or
her place of work; local stores for
shopping, recreation facilities for
relaxation, whether far or near to
one's home and many more facets of
our daily living that will be affected.
Suburbia especially must take a new
look at itself as gas limitations prevent
high speeds to and from city jobs.
We have talked a lot about
economic development of th
communities; now will come serious
thought as fuel conservation and
energy saving takes on new meaning
for all families and communities.
With all the problems that will
come face to face with individuals
much more thought will be geared to
taking a closer look at available
resources close at hand and seeking to
put them to better and greater use for
the communities.
Most Americans will survive
through the winter, just as we came
through the summer with various food
shortages.
Remember, most Americans have
an uncanny ability to adapt and meet
the new challenges, regardless of the
tasks required once we realize that the
energy crisis is not just hot air, but a
cold reality of life.
GET m
TH
STILL YOUR RESPONSIBILITY
As more and more blacks move into
elective positions within the nation,
focus must still be placed on the value
of continued registration and
especially actual voting by those who
may already be registered.
Reports show that many blacks,
while registered, did not actually vote
in recent elections. Blacks must
continue to register and go to the
ballot box, not only for those issues
of local interest, but for those issues
involving national interests as well. We
cannot afford to settle for only a few
public offices, but must continue the
voter registration drives, get out to
hear what the issues are and what
decisions should be made and then
actually vote your convictions.
Locally our citizens are now being
asked for suggestions on how and
what to spend the various funds that
your vote and mine helped to pass.
The meetings are being held at several
schools and since it involves all
Durham's citizenry, everyone should
plan to attend at some time and make
your voices or wishes heard.
No one can ill afford to say that the
issues do not concern them for all the
citizens have the responsibility to
become informed as much as possible
on any and all phases of bond money
spending. The real place to effectuate
power changes is at the local level.
The opportunity is present there for
you to be heard and make your
decisions known.
JOHN S. STEWART RETIRES
December 3, 1973 will mark the
close of nearly 1 7 years of dedicated
public service by retiring Qty
Councilman and Mayor Pro Tern John
S. Stewart , However, he will continue
to seive in some capacities for the city
of Durham , as he .returns -to his
business world.
Stewart was first elected to the
Durham Gty Council in 1957 and has
worked untiringly for the interests of
all the citizens of Durham. He chose
not to run for re-election this fall.
We hope that he will continue to
share his great wealth of knowledge
and expertise with other members of
the Council. This becomes
increasingly important as
governmental authority appears to be
shifting to our states and cities or
municipalities.
We wish him continued success as
he returns to the private world of
business and bids adieu to public
office.
To Be Equal Vb
by Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. VM
National Director of Urban League ITBl
Balloting Shows Hopeful Trends
An encouraging future of the recent election
was the defeat of many candidates around the
country who campaigned on the old broken
record of law n order. In New York City's
mayoralty election, for example, the two
candidates who made crime the focus of their
campaign barely polled a quarter of the votes
between them.
I think this may be due to two factors. First,
people are finally beginning to realize that
promises of more cops on the beat - and on the
city payrolls - won't stop crime. They fell for
the 'law ii order" line before and wound up
with still higher crime rates, so now people
seem more willing to vote for candidates who
recognize that creating more jobs and equal
opportunities is a more rational way to tackle
the crime problem.
Another reason is the overflow from the
Watergate sewer. When you see the nation's
number one "law u order supporter plead
guilty to a felony and observe other hardliners
under indictment or under a swelling cloud of
suspicion, it becomes harder to accept the
proposition that they have the comer on the
issue.
Another encouraging sign in this election was
the continued success of black mayoralty
candidates. In addition to black mayors of Los
Angeles and Atlanta elected earlier this year.
Coleman Young won in Detroit. James McGee
in Dayton. Rev. Lyman Parks in Grand Rapids
and Clarence Lightner in Raleigh. N.C.
The growing ranks of black mayors are
important not only because they are symbolic
of black participation in politics and black
acceptance of the responsibilities of
citizenship, but also because the greater the
demonstration of black political muscle the
greater the possibilities are for constructive
change in our society .
But too many commentators have been
carried away by the uncommon spectacle of
blacks in the mayor's chair. The reality is that
RAPE HAS DECOME
4 BLACK CRIME'
A BLACK DETROIT
POLICEMAN
RECENTLY STATED.
HE SAID IN ONE 24
HOW PERIOD EIGHT
RAPES WERE
REPORTED, ALU
VICTIMS WERE DUCK.
SO MERE THERAPISTS.
M Kt ws
w- " 0 i Saw X sW:. t
HrVnhBsJfl Br kJafc." k nil ;9Pvmf 'ahl ByJAk WSW
WFAmWffljm isr Kmltm m JBaTH K3 fli
PJjTsgfSgtVr .ssSij3h3tVV wt& UaksnnR KpjY iw Bl
Lw loniai IEffijBp A jk fSjpf!si'w...,B '''.....A: fm SmS
bw3B,
black political power as reflected in
office-holding is still far below what reasonable
parity demands. Blacks still make up one
percent of the U.S. Senate, three percent of the
Congress, two percent of judges, and less than
one-half of one percent of all elected officials in
the country.
We have come a long way from just a decade
ago when few blacks were allowed to vote at all
in some parts of the country. Now there are
black office-holders, though not enough, and
black voters are showing considerable maturity
in their voting, including sophisticated
ticket-splitting and a good , feel for the
time-honored "reward your friends and punish
your enemies" ballot booth behavior.
But there is a fly in the ointment. When a
black candidate is in the race, or when their is a
local issue of special interest to blacks, the
black vote is high. But when neither of these
conditions obtains, it is relatively low - and
that spells trouble ahead.
A just-released census report shows that
black voting last year was down, with less than
55 percent of eligibles voting. And the
participation rate for Hispanic voters was much
lower still. A big part of the problem is the
structural barriers that keep people from
registering and make it harder for low-income
and working people to register.
Spanish-speaking citizens face vicious
discrimination as well, since few areas provide
for Spanish ballots.
Unless black people and other minorities are
willing to settle for a few mayoralty offices and
accept second-rate status, it is necessary to
begin now to organize voter registration drives,
to keep minority citizens informed of the
candidates and issues, to break down the
system that prevents many from voting, and
finally, to get out the vote in overwhelming
numbers on Election Day . Only in this way wll
the latent political power of minorities become
a force for change and not just symbolic power
in some places.
ROY WIUUHS SAYS
Executive Secretary of NAACP
Black Decline Is Worrisome
Just as it appeared that the Negro minority
had made some additional breakthroughs in the
elections, census figures tell us that the Negro
American total vote has declined about 5.5 per
cent from the total registered in the Presidential
election of 1972.
The black population was ready to celebrate
new black mayors in Detroit, Mich., the
nation's fifth largest city , and in Raleigh, N.C,
an important Southern metropolis, when the
census revealed that the Negro totals had
declined at a greater rate than those of the
whites.
As has been the lease for many1 ekictioriV
United States voters showed up badly with only
63 per cent of those of voting age actually
voting in 1972. That came to 85,766 ,000 votes.
These included 7,032,000 black votes and
2,103,000 whose background was Hispanic. In
those with less than an eighth grade education,
blacks and whites came out about equal. Thus it
cannot be said that less educated blacks forced
their ballot box choices on the whites.
But the black total was about 386,700 less
than it was in 1 972. Of course , some of the drop
should have been expected because fewer
people vote in an off-year election. But the
decline among blacks was greater than that
among whites. There were other factors such as
lack of interest in local issues or personalities.
However, black citizens were on their way
up , politically . The Voting Rights Act of 1 965 ,
which provided for the sending of federal
registrars into countries where there has been
no attempt to register Negroes, since
Reconstruction, spurred the black population
to new activity. The census figures show that
only Southern Negroes held or increased their
voting.
A discouragement to Negro voting gained a
small following several years ago when the
prophets of "no progress for blacks under the
American system" went about preaching
largely to younger blacks and to various
disappointed ones.
Now, however, is not time to spread
hopelessness. A black mayor has been elected in
Raleigh where only about 30 per cent of the
population is black.
Thomas Bradley is mayor of Los Angeles,
' where the blade population is about 20 per
cent. Maynard Jackson is mayor of Atlanta and
a black mayor has been chosen in Detroit. Both
candidates in Detroit played down -the race
- issue and emphasized the problems facing the
city as a whole.
Every election of a member of a minority as
mayor of an American city is important. A
non-white mayor of San Jose, said to be by its
boosters to be the fastest growing city in
California , is in a challenging spot .
The election of a black man is doubly
important especially where black voters are a
minority that never could elect a candidate by
themselves (even if every black vote were cast
and counted). This is why the Los Angeles and
Raleigh votes are significant. There may be,
among the 87 black mayors, others where
Negroes are in the minority. But the record was
handed down by Senator Edward Brooke of
Massachusetts where only 3 per cent of the
population is black. It means that the American
electoral process is working out.
Negro Americans are beset by many troubles, .
some of their own making, but mostly those
visited unfairly upon them. They can fight their
way up and rise in the esteem of their fellow
citizens by the caliber of the men they put
forward for public office. The pace is slow by
impatient standards, but swift as time goes. The
system will work for those who take the trouble
to study it, prepare themselves and make it
work.
a
LETTER TO THE 1
EDITOR
M.I1HII vwmmmmmmnk m i . a.aawawaw,
Congressman
Hawkins
Column
By REP. AUGUSTUS F. HAWKINS
Squeeze On Students
The Nation's colleges and universities are facing a crisis of
proportions unique in their collective histories. Key to this crisis is
i he fact i hat 637,000 fewer students are t hough t to have enrolled i his
fall than previously estimated and the fact that 578.000 fewer
students are expected to enroll next fall.
With an enrollment in I972of8.265.000and an estimate l b.37o ooo
students in 1973. and 8.500.000 for 1974. the Carnegie Commission on
Higher Education which predicted enormous college growth
between 1980 and 2000. now foresees 1.5 million fewer students in
l9Mihan originally estimated and 3.4 million fewer students in the
year 2000 than originally projected.
MKMHKItS (IK TDK Commission, supported by university and
government experts in this area, see a combination of things
causing this trend in the enrollment decline: high school
graduation rates are leveling off, fewer 18 to 21 year olds are going
to college, college age white male and female enrollment in higher
education is falling, enrollment for degree credits is leveling off
and declining, graduate enrollment is leveling off and the United
Stales birth rate is falling..
i believe that a key contribution to the current student enrollment
decline is due to cutbacks in federal financial aid programs and to
the stringent requirements for loan and grant eligibility which has
hit hardest at middle income families. Fellowship assistance and
training grant programs have also been drastically affected by the
Administration's rigid inflexibility in its budget ctniing
philosophy.
( ( OHMM. TO ItKCKXT United Slates Office of Education
'figures, the volume of educational loans being granted lor 197:! 74
has fallen off drastically. Both the number and dollar amounts of
federally guaranieed student loans, which are a primary
Administration student aid plan, have dropped approximately 411
per cent from the comparable period last year.
The Basic Opportunity Grants program, which is also a cor
nerstoneof the Administration's student aid program, promises to
be even greater problem for students, since its average award w ill
be about $260. The maximum Basic Opportunity grant is S-istt.
available, however, only to full-time freshmen. This program is
totally inadequate, considering the increasing costs of a college
education and the needs of students.
IN ADDITION TO AM. of the foregoing, higher education in
si it ul ions' operational costs have risen tremendously. This means,
of course, thai universities and colleges need more income Irom
tuition and from government subsidies. In apparent response to
this situation, the Carnegie Commission and the Committee for
Economic Development have recommended that high and middle
income families pay a greater share ( the cost of education
through higher tuition charges.
Turned off by high land increasing) college costs, students, not
willing to pay an average of $3,280 annuo I costs at private tour-year
schools or $1,492 at public higher education institutions, have ..plod
to attend cheaper two-year college.
HOTII TIIK HOUSE AND :he Senate have passed appropriation
bills for higher education: they will resolve differences in the bills
at their joint conference arrangements.
I: presently appears that student loan and grant money will
remain light, and that the present stringent eligibility (actors will
continue.
My office, of course, will continue to press for liberalization of
student aid requirements, and for increased student aid which is
realistic and commensurate with increased college costs.
THROUGH BLACK EYES
By Rhett Tanner
Dear Friend:
Our political leadership has
been disgraced. Day after day
key operatives of our
government admit perjury,
burglary, theft, electoral fraud
and obstruction of justice. Our
Bill of Rights is near death.
Legal freedom is being sold as a
commodity to the highest
bidder. Out choice to buy and
eat the foods we want and
need, and the freedom to
purchase fuel is being
subverted by shortages and
inflation. All of this is occuring
in the land of opportunity,
supposedly ruled by a
government of the people, by
the people and for the people.
What has gone wrong?
The fight, for basic freedoms
were too long thought to be
the concern of the minorities
alone. Because of this, the
simple freedoms of all
- Americans are now at stake.
But together we can do
something to change the sad
state of our affairs.
The Law Students Civil
Rights Research Council was
founded ten yean ago in
response to the critical need
for actively involving' law
students in the problems of law
regarding civil liberties
constitutional law, racial
discrimination, unfair labor
practices, environmental
protection, prison reform and
consumer problems. During the
summer of 1973, 415 students
were placed in summer
internship programs by the
Law Students Council:
women's rights, Project ACLU,
Wounded Knee Defense
Offense Committee, Attica
Defense, Employment Loss
Law Center, Center for
Corporate Responsibility, to
name some.
LSCRRC law students are
paid subsistence stipends
during summer recess to work
and assist overburdened
practicing lawyers. The Law
Students Council has over 100
law school chapters that
continue vital work, with labor
donated by law students during
the school year. The Council
established programs to recruit
minority students for law
school, coordinated efforts to
help students remain in school
and complete their legal
education, assisted in the
defense of most major political
trials across the country,
organized conferences and
seminars to Inform, educate
and encourage students to
enter the practice of law. The
Council is a true student
organization. It membership
and board of directors are law
students. Its staff positions are
filled for one or two year terms
by recent law graduates, thus
insuring the LSCRRC programs
remain responsive to the
students and the constituency
they serve.
The struggles in which we
are involved concern all the
people of this nation. Equal
justice Is not possible unless
honest, qualified lawyers are
available to everyone. Support
us, so that we may continue
organizing, educating,
litigating, advocating and
protecting our precious
constitutional and universal
freedoms.
Freedom Through Law
THE ENERGY CRISIS
i f ,a ty i m H V IP m
As people all over the
United States are bracing
themselves for a cold winter
with a critical energy shortage,
more and more reports indicate
that the crisis is really the
result of a smooth ptiblic
relations job by the Nixon
Administration and the big oil
companies. According to some
observers, "a steal of
government riches that makes
past political scandals look like
peanuts is being carried out by
the White House and big oil."
Arguing that the fuel
shortage is a fake, consumer
advocate Ralph Nader accuses
that oil giants "of deliberately
creating a short-term oil crisis."
"There is an abundant
short-term supply of oil around
the world," Nader asserts,
"indeed, there is some evidence
that the oil industry is not
levelling with the public about
the natural gas supply."
Other critics argue that the
administration's PR campaign
is designed to trick the people
into supporting the turning
over to private corporations
millions of dollars worth of
valuable public lands. These are
lands owned by the Federal
Government and are supposed
to be developed for the benefit
of the entire nation.
In his televised speech to
the nation last week, Nixon
called for public lands to be
opened up to the oil companies
vi m d!
for production. One such aA
is a seventy-two square miles
piece of land southwest of
Bakersfield, California.
According to an oil spokesman,
the area could produce
350,000 barrels of oil a day in
three years.
The spokesman continued
that this field has "estimated
reserves of 1.3 billion barrels,"
and "still to be explored are
deeper horizons that offer
hope for more oil." The oil
wealth is valued at
"considerably more than $3
billion." One observer states
that the deal being arranged by
the "White House will be a
give-away."
Nixon's friendship with big
oil is a well known fact around
the country. His political
campaigns have been financed
by big oil money. To some, his
apparent choice to succeed
Him in the White House,
former Texas Governor John
Connally, represents another
example of Nixon's oil ties.
Connally has represented the
interests of big oil companies
since he entered national
politics in the 1940's.
One report has it that this is
in keeping with Nixon's
cash-and-carry ' government,
paying off big campaign donors
and friends. In the words of
columnist Jack Anderson,
Exxon oil has "A tiger in the
White House tank."
Wilhelm Joseph
to the citizenry, rather than
the special interests, and
believing in openness and rule
of law rather than secrecy and
conspiracy.
National Director
P.S. Give as much as you can
today, so that LSCRRC may
continue creating its generation
of people's lawyers- responsive
K3
p. 0. box JUS
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA mm
I & AUSTIN
Editor-Publisher 1937-1971
WbUaW am Saturday .t Durham. N. C.
m niMumen,
by United Publishers. Inc
VTVTAM ATTOTTM BnuAtma ,
CIRHNac TONNBPTB """ ruonsner
3. SLWOOD CARTER .''''"" a aSmI $?!!?2!l
I Claaf Postage Paid at Durtem, N. C. STO
OUB5SUKUTTON RATES
1 Year
SUM
.... t Veani SUM
United States mf
United States and Canada
i brachial jtteM?atedjt 436 jEast Pettigrew
1,u" arouna ZT'US
1 Year
ity " hrp sssk - jggwm 8b
BH IBlfefeu&SgSwSl BSBSBBSBSB: &?lilts&
GETTING SMART
alpha 7RTA nMEr.A - Rowntlv inittatad into Alalia Zeta Omen Chapter, Alpha Kappa forory
seated left to right: Sorors-Martha Johnson, Elizabeth Knight, Gladys McAdams. Standing: Sorors
a i j n...u. tir i. ti i oul ..ksi t amia nwanrinlvn Paschall. Christianna Link.
iumeia ooraan, ruumie wuuus, ruuei ouiuu, imw m-, .. ,
Spring Lake Doctor and Wife Are Sentenced
GREENSBORO - A Spring
Lake doctor and his wife were
fined a total of $30,300 and
placed on probation for three
years by a federal court in
Washington, N. C. Monday
(11-5) for wilful failure to file
federal income tax returns.
Dr. Eugene R. Shanahan,
52, pleaded nolo contendere to
three counts of wilfully failing
to file federal income tax
returns for the years 1968,
1969 and 1970. Joanne M.
Shanahan, 42, his wife, pleaded
nolo contendere to charges of
aiding and abetting hei
husband's wilful failure to file
federal Income tax returns.
Judge John D. Larkins
accepted the pleas of the
defendants and found each
qullty on all counts.
Dr. Shanahan was placed on
three years probation and fined
$10,000 on each of the three
counts. In addition he was
directed to pay all civil tax
penalties involved.
Joanne Shanahan, a
registered nurse, was placed on
probation for three years and
fined $100 on each of the
three counts.
A special agent for the IRS
testified that Dr. Shanahan had
a gross income of $90,603 for
the years 1968-70 on which
tax returns should have been
filed.
aiaiBsisi"sHlBBsl""""""""B,l""B""i,"Bllr
SUPER MARKET . 910 N. ROXBORO STREET
Open 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily V
Specials Good Thru Sunday Open Till 9 P.M. and
Sunday 12:00 A. M .
l,mmmmuwmmmmMmmmmmwmmnnnnmmmunmnmmmnnmm
S iGRADE " A" FRESH WHOLE
I FRYERS u. 37 I
NEED FOR MORE DOCTORS
IN URBAN AREAS URGENT
AND NECESSARY
The nation's medical
schools have been warned that
federal funds may soon be cut
for medical student
recruitment and tuition
support. Dr. Charles C.
Edwards, Assistant Secretary
for Health, Education, and
Welfare, gave such a warning at
a Washington meeting of the
Association of American
Medical Colleges. He said the
continued financing of the
Health Manpower Education
Act threatened to create a
"doctor surplus."
He further stated that if we
maintain the current rate of
medical graduates, in 1985 the
United States will have 50
more physicians, 40 more
dentists and 60 more
registered nurses than it had in
1970.
There were 334,025
physicians in the U.S. in 1970.
The National Medical
Association states that of this
number only 7,000 are Black.
Edwards estimates by 1985
there should be 501,042
doctors in the U.S. or 1 doctor
for every 478 persons. Today
there is 1 doctor for every 612
persons. What makes . this a
surplus? We know that there is
still a chronic shortage of
doctors in the urban areas,
particularly Black doctors.
Often the ratio is 1 in 10,000
We suggest that federal support
should be continued in this
area of vital need.
I called the office of Dr.
Edwards to find what criteria
was used to determine a doctor
surplus. His reasons were not
entirely based on numbers. I
talked to his public service
director, Tom Fliger, who
revealed that Dr. Edwards feels
there are surpluses in various
medical fields. He cited
surgeons. Again, asking what
surplus meant, he explained
that because there are more
surgeons, the demand woum
lessen. A similar argument has
been advanced by the
American Medical Association.
The thought of having a
surplus of doctors is
incredulous! I am more
e,Q,njSjerned , with the
derives from bureaucratic and
political goals because the
number of people who are
poor, who are hungry, who are
in need of assistance is not
shrinking at all. Congress,
which burdened the
Administration's welfare
reform proposals with so many
punitive amendments as to
make them unacceptable, must
now act to provide for a
national income floor below
which no family will be
allowed to fall and to insure
that the hunger and economic
insecurity that stalk the lives of
millions of people will finally
be a thing the past.
": Employment. This may
be the most crucial area of all,
for despite the rosy figures
coming out of Washington, the
structural disfunctionlng of our
economy is such that millions
of people are incapable of
finding work, even in a period
such as we now find ourselves,
with rising prices, rising profits
and rising employment. Even
the official figures admit that
over four million people are
out of work. And there are
twice as many who are
unemployed but not officially
counted as such, or who are
underemployed, working
full-time for below-poverty
wages, or working part-time
when they want full-time jobs.
"And so I renew the Urban
League's call for a national Full
Employment Policy that
insures a decent job at a decent
salary for everyone willing and
capable of work. Federal hiring
programs and federally-backed
economic development
programs to put people back to
work can help put the
economy on a firm basis, can
erase the divisions created by
competition for scarce jobs,
and can begin the long process
of bringing Americans together
again in a society of harmony,
cooperation and equality. The
drive for a national Full
Employment Policy is one that
should unite all groups in a
coalition grounded in
economic reality and mutual
respect, just as the great civil
rights coalition of the 1960s
was grounded in iedalism and a
thirst for justice.
81, Pec 1, ITS THE CAROLINA TDM tA
gKSHjfgHIHHBHL
1 I iB$t$? ' I MM an:?
fill a 0RMl I
Kvvlnv Hk JHk jpM'ik aj
nvssa BKHssnV ' 'dimsBBy&K&tt W ' & t jjHkv JUjf Wsi&W'' I mW ijniiff P
. agaagggi aaaH
sM jkfjjjH m 3& Bp Wk H VI 'm
H i Mmmk WwKS.. '"smW Wmt 9 Bf5l HI
bbsPbbI MMKSWBW.'IgMH BssaaaaHiW mm 9 Mir X nal
BKgs&am HragHfs&l&g'' KM Bar ' mlwm X. Baal
gar. . ? XSr lgga gmj BflBfl BI aal
i M : AjfcH fpfifj i I I flf V
gM : WPwjJBBi Jji kPbbV SBm I: f 1
B l'f'w' BBJ BJt flB
I ' -1- P liii-f BflLLaJ
aaf tiP iLt jSJfigP
gafff! j! i f bb iyfl
I TOP CHOICE - The "Media Woman of the Year" honors went to Ethel L. Payne, center. Associate
Editor for the Sengstacke Publications, during the annual convention of the National Association of
Media Women held recently in Kansas City, Mo. The internationally-known columnist and
commentator on CBS-TV Spectrum is seen being congratulated by Kansas City Mayor Charles B.
Wheeler, Jr., second from right, following the Awards Banquet sponsored by Pepsi-Cola Company.
Others are: Doris Saunders, right, of Johnson Publications, who accepted the "National Achievement
Award" for publisher John H. Johnson; Lois K. Alexander, President, NAMW: and Sam Hall, Manager
Communications Programs, Pepsi-Cola Company.
"There is much else to be
done: in public safety, in
housing, in health, in a host of
other areas so long neglected.
But this is a minimum program
that the Congress can
undertake now--in this
session--to reaffirm the
integrity of the governmental
process, to demonstrate to its
deprived citizens that it is
concerned with humane goals,
and the rescue the nation from
the awful prospect of further
drift and indecision."
CUT UP
. ! i
LB.
49
$1.29
u 89(
FRYERS
I U. S. CHOICE BONELESS
i STEW BEEF
I BEEF SHORT RIBS
BANANAS u 10
RED LABEL
j LUZZIANNA COFFEE 79
S puBUQUE
SVICMMA CAIKAftl A $100
5 W IL 1111 ft ifflVifivii 4 Uz. lans
; OLE WYE
j CORN
. 1 ... f ....
4 15 Oz. Cms l00
Energy Saving
Plan Taken By
UNC atC. Hill
CHAPEL HILL - Energy
conservation measures for the
University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill were announced
recently by Vice Chancellor for
Business and Finance Claiborne
Jones.
Although the University has
enough fuel on hand or on
order to heat offices and
dormitories this winter, Jones
urged all departments to work
toward the goal of 10 per cent
reduction of fuel consumption.
He also said state-licensed
motor vehicles operated by
University personnel are not to
be drive at speeds higher than
50 miles per hour except in
emergencies. Violations will be
investigated. Jones urged those
using University vehicles to
drive only when necessary and
to car-pool when possible.
Heating controls are being
adjusted to reduce building
temperatures five-six degrees
and the working hot water
temperatures is being reduced
to the feasible minimum in
areas where water temperature
is not crucially important.
The University, which uses
approximately 900 tons of coal
a week in cold weather, has on
hand 8.000 tons of coal and
STORE HOURS
WELLON VILLAGE
10 a.m. -10 p.m.
ROXBORO RD.
9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Sunday 1-6 p.r
UNIVERSITY
9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Sunday 1-7 p.r
4-WHY-
II m 1 1 Ml rnr ii.i
IT
PAY-M0RE?.T77
SHOP BIG STAR
and SAVE !
U. S. CHOICE BEEF
EYE ROUND
ROAST
$1.88
FRESH - DRESSED WHOLE
FRYERS
2 IN A BAG
LB.
34?
rjtfr
TRAY
CUT
Fryers
39
LB
BONUS BUY!
OUR PRIDE
SUGAR
49
5 LB.
BAG
BONUS BUY!
MOTHER'S
Mayonnaise
QT.
59
Washington State
RED OR GOLDEN
DELICIOUS
APPLES
PKG.
OF 11
98
LARGE FLORIDA
Tangeloes
5 LB.
BAG
64t
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT , DEC. 1 , 1973 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
In... .................
one million gallons of fuel oil.