FREE BICYCLE CONTEST CONTINUES SEE PAGE 8 Wijiston-Salat High Point iTKXtBSVllle THE TRIBUNAL AID c>eAv^iKq. oM^id^^o^n cutd (lan(lo-Lp.k Qo-u^KtleA. “Everything runs to excess; every good quality is noxious if unmixed.” --Ralph Waldo Emerson VOLUME II, NO. 24 NOVHEER 6, 1974 15 CENTS PER CCPY $5.00 PER YEAR University Without Walls At Shaw t and f\!o.teA. * HIGH POINT - Library Highlights,. Washington Street Branch: November 8th and 15th, Filmstories will be shown at 9:30 and 10:30. HIGH POINT - Y.W.C.A. Events, Fourth Street Branch; November 4th, Y-Teen Club, 7:00...November 5th, Peace Makers Club, 5:00....November 6th, Teen-Age Drop-In, 7:00 November 7th, Golden Agers Club, 11:00 November 8th, Basketball Practice, 7:00 Monday thru Friday, Adult Day Care begins at 7:00 - After School Care begins at 3:00. WINSTON-SALEM - Winston-Salem State Univer sity’s 1974 Homecoming Parade will begin at 9:00 A.M. Saturday, November 9. After leaving the WSSU campus, the parade route is as follows: The parade will procede North on Claremont Avenue to Third Street. West on Third Street to Main Street, North on Main Street to Fourth Street, East on Fourth Street to Claremont Avenue and South on Claremont Avenue back to the campus. The best locations for viewing will be Third Street, Main Street, and Fourth Street. This year’s parade promises to be one of the best in WSSU's history with approximately one hundred units scheduled to participate. These include numerous floats and other vehicular and marching units. Guest participants will include the Morris Brown College Band from Atlanta, Georgia and the Navy ROTC Drill Team from North Carolina Central University in Durham. A special feature will be an exciting marching presentation by the Patterson Avenue YMCA Drill Team under the direction of Moses Lucas. The public is invited to come out and join the festivities of WSSU’s Homecoming 1974. HIGH POINT - On Sunday, October 27, the pastor of Temple Memorial Baptist Church became the recipient of the Doctor of Divinity Degree. The conferring of that degree was awarded to Dr. Leonard Leon Macon by Dr. W.V. Cholmondeley in an afternoon service at Temple Memorial Baptist Church. Congratulations to Dr. Macon! HIGH POINT - “Aren’t You glad You Can Read” is the theme of Children’s Book Week, to be observed a High Point Public Library, Nov. 11 through Nov. !7. A variety of exhibits and programs, including a special music program on the clavichord on Nov. II, will highlight the week-long observance, designed to foster a love of reading in children. Colorful mobiles, posters and streamers will be on display, both in the children’s library and at. Washington Street Branch. Jig-saw puzzles of Book Week posters will be available for children to come in and work on all week long. Only one Pre-School Story Hour will be held during Children’s Book Week, on Monday, Nov. 11, at 1:30 p.m., when a children’s music program on the clavichord will be given by Ray Ellerman, artist-in-residence at Guilford Technical Institute. Mr. Ellerman will tell stories to music and will play Mozart’s variations on “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star.’’ That night at 7 p.m. he will offer a program for adults in the Community Room. Mrs. Jackie Torrence, the Story Lady, will hold two story hours of Tarheel Tales, Legends and Ghost Stories, on Nov. 12 and Nov. 15 at 4 p.m. in the children’s division. Mrs. Torrence visited many schools in the area during late September and during October, enchanting pupils and teachers alike with her bag of stories. It is estimated that she told stories to more than 1500 children in High Point schools. She also took part in the Youth Council’s Halloween Carnival at Blair Park. # LIFE EXPERIENCES EARNS HER A DEGREE AT SHAW - Mrs. Emma Jane Muse [above], a counselor with the N.C. Personnel Department will receive a Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University Without Walls Program at Shaw University and will march in the graduation ceremony with students 30 years younger than herself next spring, [see story] W.-S. State Presents Dance WINSTON-SALEM -- Winston-Salem State Uni versity’s 1974-75 Lyceum Events-Performing Artists Series presents the Stanza Peterson Dance Theatre on Tuesday, November 12 at 8:15 p.m. in the Hanes Auditorium at the Salem Fine Arts Center. This San Francisco based company will bring its unique approach to contemporary theatre to the WSSU campus to conduct a free Master Class and lecture demonstration on Monday, November 11 at 1:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building. The Stanze Peterson Dance Theatre which has its training center, “The dance Studio” in the Haight-Ashbury District is under the auspices of the city and County of San Francisco. Company direc tor, Stanze Peterson, origi nally from Houston, Texas, has culminated Black Dance Forms into an exciting and valid techni que much in the same way the Jazz Musician has done with Black American Musi- ca Forms. Mr. Peterson has gained a wide recognition as one of the most talented choreographer-dancers in contemporary dance; his work is often described as “ultra-modern”. The seven Continued on Page 2 Mr. Thomas Bell, a native and product of High Point, who is presently a resident of Denver, Colorado, is now supplying THE TRIBUNAL AID with a new and most interesting weekly article, “Entertainment Notes”. Tom Bell is a welcomed member to THE TRIBUNAL AID family. Read “Eiitertainment Notes’’weekly on Page 6. Shaw Prepares For Homecoming With less than two weeks before the 1974 Home coming at Shaw University activity has shifted into high gear in preparation for the over 8,000 students, friends and alumni expect ed for the week-long of activites scheduled for November 11 through November 17. NewUNC Health Services Wilh all the sights and sounds of a typical lunch counter, Mac’s Place brings a new kind of show to television on Wednesday evenings at 8:00 beginning November 20. Aimed at young parents who are a major influence on the health of their immediate families, the new Public Broadcasting Service pro gram FEELING GOOD will cover health topics. The series is produced by the Children’s Television Workshop (CTW), produc er of the popular SESAME STREET and THE ELEC TRIC COMPANY. Dramatic and comedy sketches, song and dance and documentary material will provide entertaining as well as enlightening infor mation about 11 primary health topics, alcohol a- buse, cancer, child care, dental care, exercise, heart disease, the health care delivery system, high blood pressure, mental health, nutrition and pre natal care. The resident cast includes among others, an intern at a nearby hospital and his wife who runs an exercise salon, the middle-age owner of a sporting goods store, a hip teenager, an elderly woman and a young woman raising her preschool child alone. Special guests will include celebrities like Howard Cosell and Bill Cosby. Continued on Page 3 Conxinued on Page 8 The theme for this year’s Homecoming is “Shaw University, A Very Present Spirit”. The emphasis will center around the renewal of spirit, dedication, and support to Shaw University that has surfaced in all sections of the University spectrum. Officials at Shaw have planned a flurry of activity for the alumni which has prompted buses and planes to be chartered from several locales. “We are expecting a record number of alumni for this year’s observance”, said Mrs. Marjorie Scott, coordinator for alumni affairs. She noted, “I’ve been in contact with alumni across the country and everyone is bubbling with enthusiasm in anticipation of a nostalgic return to their alma mater”. The alumni activities will include a “Miss Alumni” contest banquet, the general alum ni meeting and the cabaret. The Shaw Players and Company will kick off the week’s activities with RALEIGH - When Mrs. Emma Jane Muse was in high school, she was a model student - all A’s and a teacher’s favorite. She was sure she would go on to attend Shaw University in Raleigh. But somehow things got in the way. Her mother died and Mrs. Muse was too shy to ask her cousins with whom she was living to send her to college. A year later she was back with her father in Philadel phia, Pa., but he didn’t have the means to pay tuition. Marriage and a long procession of jobs kept her away from college for about 35 years. This spring, Mrs. Muse, who works for the N.C. Personnel Office, will receive a Bachelor of Arts degree from Shaw Univer sity. The long delayed degree comes through Shaw’s innovative “University Without Walls”. Mrs. Muse has not gone back to the classroom to get her college education. Rather she has designed her own program of study that draws on the accumu lated training and job experiences she has had outside of college. After Mrs. Muse submits her thesis later this month on “Personnel Administra tion: Theory, Function and Practices”, (based on a case study of the depart ment in which she works) she will have completed her college requirements. This will make her eligible for a promotion, she said. Shaw’s University With out Walls (UWW) has blossomed to an enrollment of 500 students since its beginning three years ago, making it the largest program of its type in the U.S., according to Dean of UWW Dr. Abdul Elkordy. Dr. Elkordy recently de clared a moratorium on enrollment, putting close to 300 applicants on a waiting list. Most of the UWW students are like Mrs. Muse; they never got around to attending col lege, but feel that their life experiences should qualify them for a degree. UWW is based on a concept of independent study that began in England several years ago. “The basic assumption is that practical life experi ence is at least as important as the theoretical experi ence that you get in the classroom”. Dr. Elkordy Education Workshop GREENSBORO - Two hundred educators, inclu ding student teachers, public school teachers and administrators, beginning education students, and college supervisors attend ed a Competency-Based Teacher Education Work shop at Bennett College, according to Dr. Lela R. Hankins, director of teach er education at Bennett. The opening session began with a symposium on “The Competency-Based Approach to Teacher Train ing.” The participants were Mr. Joe Cashwell, assistant director of teacher educa tion, North Carolina De partment of Public Instruc tion, Raleigh, North Caro lina; Mrs. Lucille Browne, assistant superintendent for Pupil Personnel Ser vices, Greensboro Public Schools; and Mrs. Linda McDougle, principal. Gra ven Elementary School, also of Greensboro. One of the workshops focused on “Exit Criteria for Assessing Student Teaching Performance and that of Future Teachers According to Guidelines from the State Depart ment.” A demonstration, “Media in Action”, was held in Holgate Library. Forty fall semester Ben nett student teachers, who will be evaluated by the new exit criteria standards, have just begun their apprenticeship in the public schools. They are: in business education, Mary Eldridge; in elementary education, Helen S. A- dams, Janice H. Canady, Stephanie F. Dalton, San dra Freeman, Diane Fuller, Marcia Johnson, Marsha Love, Wanda Maxwell, Francine Motley, Alice Myatt, Mary Rorie, Sheila Bennett; in English, Yard- ley Nelson; in history. Continued on Pane 7 said in a recent interview. But getting a Shaw University, degree through UWW requires more than simply cashing in on years of life experience. To be admitted to the program, an applicant must have at least the basic skills equivalent to one year of college classes in English, math and the social and urban sciences. The appli cant must also show social and educational maturity. Mrs. Muse’s back ground, apparently, dis plays such maturity. “I’ve had a push toward self-improvement all a- long”, she said. Reading, secretarial school, charm school, job training with Frigidaire and finally spe cial studies at N.C. State prove Mrs. Muse’s self- motivation. “Our students must meet the same require ments as a regular Shaw student, but we find alternative ways to do it”. Dr. Elkordy said. The UWW student is given an adviser, someone with a masters degree in the student’s field who supervises the program, or “contract” of study. This contract may include some classroom work, but for the most part students are on their own. In some cities such as Atlanta and Miami, large numbers of UWW students are organized into clusters. Dr. Elkordy said. The students who range in age from 20 to 70, must take at least two trimestes of study, he added. The UWW program at Shaw reflects a popular trend in experimental Continued on Page 3 W.-S. Sfofe Member Naturalized WINSTON-SALEM - Dr. Singh Sidhu. Profes sor of Biology at Winston- Salem State University, who has maintained legal permanent residence status since January of 1969. recently became a natura lized citizen of the United States. Dr. Sidhu, his wife, Bhagwan and daughter, Navjeett were sworn in and awarded certificates of naturalization on Friday, October 25 at the Federal Middle District Court in Greensboro, N.C. Dr. Sidhu’s son, Jasjeet, who is a United States citizen by birth attended the cere mony. Dr. Sidhu is originally from District Ludhiana, Punjab State, India. He received his doctorate from Cornell University, Ithaca, New York in the field of Genetics & Plant Breeding. He has engaged in post-doctorate studies at McGill University, Mon treal, Canada; North Caro lina State University, Ra leigh; and with the Rockefeller International Cereal Improvement Pro gram. Prior to joining the WSSU faculty in 1965, Dr. Sidhu served as United Nations Advisor in the areas of Agronomy and Biology. He was also Dean of Science for the Punjab State Colleges in India. Dr. Sidhu is currently interested in projects to eliminate the world food crisis. The Sidhu family resides at 1230 Bunnytail, Rt. 7 in Winston-Salem. Another member of the WSSU comminity, Mr. Boon Tzao Lee, Technical Services Librarian, received his certificate of naturalization along with Dr. Sidhu and his family. Continued on Page :i iBessoooeeocxt I What’s New? ENTERTAINMENT NOTES Page 6 i ClAA & MEAC WEEKLY STANDINGS5 Page 7 "We must give our children a sense of pride in being black. The glory of our past and the dignity of our present must lead the way to the power of our future.’' * ^ ADAM CLAYTON POWELL