f people... Holmes Graham Duncan MYRNA DENISE HOLMES has been awards fl ight attendant wings by Piedmont Airlines for the completion of an intensive four-week training coui. at the local service carrier's home office in Winsi i?Solom. '??- " ? . ?u-? c. 81 ' During her training, Ms. Holmes studied first aid, passenger service techniques, weather and safety procedures Ms. Holmes is a graduate of Roxborough High School ur Philadelphia" : Ttr A VW A kPTIIAUV r>n A WW A rnM 1 1- J - J tt n i list a nun a uaauaim iias occn awarucu flight attendant wings by Piedmont Airlines following completion of an intensive four-week training course at the local service carrier's home office in WinstonSalem. The son of Mrs. Dorothy Wheeler of Winston-Salem and the late Mr. Richard Kelly Graham, Graham is based in Winston-Salem. During his training, Graham studied first aid, passenger service techniques, weather and safety procedures. ? Graham is a graduate of Parkland High School in? Winston-Salem. He also attended the University of North Caroliona at Chapel Hill, Winston Salem State University and Central Piedmont Community College at Charlotte JOHN W. DUNCAN of Midwest Piedmont in WinstonSalem was one of 17 persons chosen from North Carolina to represent the state at the White House Conference on Small Business to be held in Washington in January 1980. The newly elected delegates were selected at the Charlotte Open FOTum conducted by the - White House Conference on October 5th. Others elected in this area were J)on Henderson of_ Winston-Salem, Charles T. Byrd, Jr. and Kenneth R. Croft, and Richard Bowling of Greensboro. J. BRUCE LLEWELLYN of the Bronx, "New York has been nominated by President Carter to be president of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation. Llewellyn would replace Marshal T. Mays who has resigned. UF1C assists U.S. investors in making profitable courages investment projects that will help the social and economic development of these countries. Llewellyn was born July 16, 1927, in New York City. He received a B.S. from City College of New York and LL.B. and J.D. degrees from New York Law School. Lewellyn was assistant director of housing for the New York City Housing and Redevelopment Board from 1962 to 1965. In 1965 he was executive director of the Upper Manhattan Small Business Development Corporation, and* from 1965 to 1966 he was regional director for the U.S. Small Business Administration in New York. . In 1966 and 1967 Lewellynwas, executive director oL_ the New-York Small Business Development Center, and? ? . -from 1967 to 1969 He was deputy commissioner of the New York Housing and Development Administration's Department of Rent and Housing Maintenance. Since 1969 he has been president of Fedco Foods Corpora tion, a supermarket chain with 18 stores in Manhattan and the Bronx. Llewellyn is treasurer of the South Bronx Overall Economic Development Program, and a member of the board of the Freedom National Bank and the Urban National Corporation. He is past chairman of the board of Coalition Venture Capital Corporation, and President of One Hundred Black Men, Inc. n. ijuwmaw CUTTER, the OMB's Director for budget, spoke at the Charlotte Opoen Forum of the White House Conference on Small Business. He told 255 North Carolina small business people that the Carter Administration has adopted a policy of "fiscal and budgetary restraint" in order to fight inflation. "The country needs a moderate, steady, predictable rate of growth that will bring down the rate of in flation," Mr. Cutter said. He predicted that the federal budget now being drawn up in Washington will be "the most restrictive budget of this decade." The Small Business Administration's guaranteed loan program will be one of the last federal programs to be cut back, Mr. Cutter said. "President Carter is well aware that small business ac-' counts for half the gross national product. And he knows that small business has a tougher time getting over bad economic times than other sectors of the economy," Mr. Cutter said. The Charlotte Open Forum was one of a series of meetings being held across the country on the problems and special needs of small business. ELWOOD T. DRIVER, has been named a member o." the National Transoortation Sa/i -tv Rnar/4 _I ? ?- . UVW1 UI IV l/V ? iw chairman of the Board. President Carter named Driver to the Board in January for the remainder of the term expiring December 31, 1980. In another appointment, President Carter appointed Otis M. Smith of Detroit to be a public representative _ on the seven-member Council of Administrative Conference of the United States. Smith is general counsel of General Motors and a former Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court. Driver, a native of Trenton, NJ, had bee.. ' ? j ? Department of Transportation and ? j nis -appointment by President Carter wa* of the Office of Crash worthiness, Moto*' *hicle grams, at the National Highway Traffic Administration. > Locatlon^Open , J' ?*** ?wufH main St. NO DEALERS OR the iBESTm^cm WHOLESALERS EVERYONE SAVES MORE ? A1 | < jSf ^ _ FRESH Wl If FRY! I (2 PER B/ B- ^ : FRESH WHOLE FRYING P Wf CHICKEN L - ^ LEGS. qtrs. B Family y '**<<^4 Pack mKF Jw lb. J ;r-? WILSON CM B FANCY FRESH YOUNG PORK LOIN END I^J PORK 7 A( i ^SF ROAST # T ,b. v ^ 3 to 5 ibs. 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