uujjtfc?fc)UUfvv rujbLjw UBKSfcv ? ~ c 7 19^ <&> Jh t f ufer" iutlook ^ CiW 2' Keep Up IVlth . .?e / imcs ? Read The Future Outlook I VOL. 27, NO. 49 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1968 PRICE 10 CENTB BETHEL A.M.E. Laymen's Council The Executive Council of the Laymen's Organization of the Western North Carolina Confer ence will meet at Bethel Church Sunday, Sept. 29, at 2:00 p. m. All members of the Council are urged to be present. "Outer Space" Dinner Mrs. Odessa Harris and her helpers will serve an "Outer Space" dinner following the morning worship service at Bethel Church Sunday, Oct. 29. Benefit, "Outer Space" Rally in progress at the church. Kally Revort The report you help to make posible Sunday, Sept. 29 for the "Outer bpace" Rally will de termine the possibilities for the much needed new sanctuary at Betliel. Do the best you can, and then some for this project. "God loves a cheerful giver." World Communion Sunday World Communion Sunday will be observed at Bethel Church Sunday, Oct. 6. Visitors are welcome. Anniversary Service Members of the Pulpit Aid Club at Bethel Church will ob serve their Anniversary Sun day, Oct 13, at 7:00 p. m. An Interesting program -has., been planned for the occasion. The public is cordially Invited to attend. Woman's Day Sunday, Oct. 20, has been set aside as Woman's Day at Bethel Church. Mrs. H. D. Faulkner will serve as Chairman, with Mrs. Charles O. Gill as Co Chairman. Other officers and Committeemen are as follows: Secretary, Mrs. Warren G. D o r s e 1 1; assistant secretary, Mrs. Richard Brothers^ Jr.; treasurer, Mrs. Will Gunthrop. Program Committee: Mrs. C. O. Gill, Chairman; Mrs. Loren zo Anderson and Mrs. Leo Cardwell. Publicity Committee: Miss Eileen Gilmer, Mrs. John D. Henry, Mrs. Naomi W. Wynn, Mrs. Arthur S. Totten and Mrs. C. O. Gill. Finance Committee: Mrs. M. L. Cousins, Mrs. W. G. Dorsett, Miss Katrina Porcher, Miss Levada Holt, Mrs. Will Gun throp. Music Committee: Mrs. Co mey Enzlow, Mrs. H. M. Wes terband, Mrs. R. M. Otey, Sr., and Mrs. C. T. Harris. Each member of Bethel is asked to pay $10.00. Laymen's Day Lam en's Day will be observed at Bethel Church Sunday, Oct. 27. At 11:00 a. m. Mr. Joseph McKinney, the president of the Laymen's Organization of the Second Episcopal District of the A. M. E. Church will speak. At 4 p. m. the young Laymen of the church will have charge of the service. All are invited to attend. - , Special Service The Pastor's Aid Club of Bethel will present "The Father and Three Sons" Quartet and CHURCH NEWS others in Concert, Sunday, Oc-. 27, at 8:00 p. m. O. M. E. COMMUNITY CLUB On September 16, 1968, the O. M. E. Community Club held their first meeting of the Fall at the home of Mrs. Hattie An derson, 818 Logan Street. Pres ident, Miss J. W. Butler, pre sided. Devotion opened by Mrs. Madeline Turner. Plans and programs were discussed and approved for the year, led by Mrs. Ida Horton, program chairman, with Mrs. Florine Richardson and Mrs. M. V. Watson as co-workers. Highlights of Vacation was given by Mrs. Willie M. Verble, Mrs. Florance Kesler and Mrs. Beatrice Mason visited Jackson ville, Fla. by chartered bus. Mrs. Bernice LeGette visited Dallas, Tex. by chartered bus, and Mrs. Effie Marsh visited Los Angeles, Calif, by plane which was very interesting and educational to all. Refreshments served buffet style to twenty members present. Closed with benediction. President, Miss J. W. Butler. Reporter, Mrs. M. V. Watson. FEDERAL TEAM TO OPEN JOB RECRUITING SEASON AT N. O. C. Durham, N. C. ? An "Em ployment Outlook Program" to be presented October 3 by the Civil Service Commission and a team of representatives from government agencies will be the first major event of the 1968-69 career recruiting season at North Carolina College. Twelve Federal Agencies will be represented in the program. They are the Civil Service Commission, the Bureau of Customs, the Bureau of Public Roads, the Army Research Of ficer, Farmers' Home Admin istration, the Federal Aviation Administration, the Food and Drug Administration, the In ternal Revenue Service, the Marine Corps, the National Air Pollution Control Administra tion, the Social Security Ad ministration, and Veterans Ad ministration Hospitals. Summer employment infor mation will also be available. OFFICERS PREPARE FOR NEW YEAR Top ranking officers of the student government at North Carolina College prepare /or the 19*8-69 year. Shewn, left to right, are Miss Prlscllla McNeil, Marion, S. C., vice president; MIm Esther Silver, Goldsboro, editor of the Campus Echo; Edgar Grier, Belmont, editor of the Eagle yearbook: and Alfred White sides, Asbevttle, president. Some 20,000 beauticians from the National Beauty Culturists League will visit Nassau in 1970 when the league holds Its annual convention here. Code's Switch to Defense Could Propel Aggies To Title 1 f A&T comes up with a win ning football team this season, it will be due partly to the fact that Merl Code decided to switch rather than fight. Code, a 195-pound junior honor student from Seneca, S. C., was the Aggies' top quarter back most of last season. In fact he called signals and played defensive back. This time around, he has a full time job in A&T's defen sive secondary. The Aggies will play J. C. Smith in Charlotte on October 5. Asked how he feels about having to give up his quarter back post, Code said: "I just love the change. De fense to me is more challenging. I'm not looking for glory but I just want to play ball." Code is just as articulate and knowledgeable about football as he is about the physics and chemistry courses he is taking now at A&T. "Playing quarterback at A&T and in high school actually helped me," he said. "I find that I am beginning to think like a quarterback even in my defensive halfback rola. I know that on a short-yardage situa tion, the other quarterback probably won't be passing." Several pro scouts have be gun to take a real good look at Code. The youngster is in terested in a possible pro ca reer. "I would really like to give it a try," said Code. Code's main assets in the Aggies' secondary are quickness and the brute force he brings to bear on the opponents' run ners. "I love to hit," he admits, almost grinning. "What I would like to do for the next two years is to im prove in my ability to read keys. You never really become an expert at this, but if you get to the place where you can see a situation and react, you'll be "oming along and playing de fense. " "If I made a mistake as a "larterback, it usually resulted i a busted play or a fumble or! ??methinf. If we make a mi* fake in the defensive secondary, it usually results in a t-uc^ down. You have got to be at home and feel at ease." Code's biggest fans are his father, a state supervisor o'l adult education in South Caro Una; his mother, a forme** home economies teacher, and a younger' b rot be*- The Code* don't miss an home and th'nk nothinw of the 750-mTlp trip to see Merl in action. That's eno*?<rh to rnnfrf* a young m?n want to produce. A veteran's widow who re marries is not entitled to GI home, farm or business loans, says the Veterans Administra tion. He Wanted To Build Houses; He's Building Lives Charles W. Fairley always wanted to build homes for people. He wanted to be a contractor. As circumstances would hav< it, Fairley never became a con-! tractor. But there is no doub that he has helped to build a better way of life for hundreds of his fellow citizens. A 48-year-old graduate of A&T State University, Fairlej last week resigned his job at director of project operations o: the Greensboro Redevelopment Commission. He will become the executive director of the Urban Redevel opment Commission for the city of Fayetteville, N. C. Fairley will be the first Negro in the Southeast and only the second black man in the nation to head an urban renewal pro gram. "I consider this a trenmen dous opportunity," said Fairley, shortly after his new appoint ment. "I just hope to be able to improve the quality of life for someone." At the outset, Fairley will supervise ? $2 million operation in Fayetteville. The Depart ment of Housing and Urban Development has earmarked that much for projects there. Fairley is a long-time advo cate of urban renewal. "Some critics of urban renewal say that it only removes Negroes," he said. "I say it does remove Negroes. It removes them from blight, slums, and substandard housing. That's what it removes them from." He said the bitter critics of urban renewal are usually those who have a vested interest in "These are the slum landlords maintaining the status quo. and people of this type," he added. "Slums cost everybody," said Fairley. "The people in the slum pay the price of good housing, whether they actually get good housing or not." Achieving a first is nothing new to Fairley. He was the first N-gro Boy Scout field execu fSvo in Greensboro. He was the citv's first Negro mail carrier i"v' he was the first Negro "??Hip housing manager in ^?-eensboro. ? ^a-'rley has worked in urban '?"newal since 1963, when he was named project manager of t 1~7-arre development that "cl-^ed both residential and b"s'ness sections of the city. A. native of Greensboro, he married to the former Dora Lee Pram of Asheville, N. C. The Fairleys are the parents of son, Charles, a senior at How ard University. Fairley is president of Omega Homes, Inc., a low-cost housing operation which the Omega Psi PM Fraternity chapter here will construct in a redevelop Charles W. Fairley, 48, oi' Greensboro, N. C. last week became the first Negro in the Southeast and only the second in the nation to head an ur ban redevelopment commis sion. Fairley was named ex ecutive director of the Fay etteville, N. C. Urban Rede velopment Commisions. ment area. He is also a member of the National Association ol Housing and Redevelopment Officials and the Greensboro Community Council. Guardian Holds Exclusive Interview With Pueblo Comdr. Capt. Lloyd Bucher, com manding officer of the U. S. S. Pueblo, said in an interview with the Guardian last week that his ship "was definitely intruding into territorial waters of the Democratic People's Re public of Korea (DPRK) on January 23." Bucher was interviewed in his quarters near Pyongyang, North Korea by Guardian staff correspondent Lionel Martin, one of the only two U. S. news men to visit North Korea in 15 years, and the only newsman of any western country to hold a private conversation with the commander of the Pueblo. The Guardian, which carries the full text of the interview in its issue of Sept. 28, is a radical newsweekly published in New York and distributed national ly. The interview followed a 5 hour press conference Sept. 12 with six officers of the captured ship, 13 enlisted men and one civilian. Martin writes that Bucher opened the press conference, in answer to a newsman's ques tion, by stating that "the Pueblo was an intelligence-gatherisg ship. It operated under the cover of an oceanographle re search ship." Bucher confessed, says Mar tin, that the Pueblo had fou? (Continued en Page 4)

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