_.7 .?VfO zQV v-*i otW.4 o*^u88W Keep Up WithT he Times ? Read The Future Outlook! VOL. 28, NO. 4 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1968 PRICE 10 CENTS DEATHS AND FUNERALS MRS. NOVELLA WHITE Mrs. Novella White, age 60, died Thursday morning; No vember 14, at L. Richardson Memorial Hospital follow ing several weeks illness. She lived at 1507% Perkins Street. Funeral service was held Monday, November 18, 2:00 p. m., Brown's Funeral Home Chapel. Rev. W. R. Small, Bap tist evangelist, officiated. Burial followed in Piedmont Memorial Park. The body remained at the funeral home until the hour of service. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Marie Bullock, Goldsboro, N. C. and Mrs. Minnie Hinton, Tarboro, N. C.; one brother, Joseph W. Malone, Greensboro, N. C. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. MR. ABRAHAM L. CARTER Mr. Abraham Lincoln Carter, age 41, World War II veteran, died suddenly at a local hospital Saturday, November 16 follow ing a very brief illness. He lived at Route 2, SummerfieW,.N. C. Funeral service was held Tuesday, November IB, 2:00 p. m., Thomas Chapel Holiness Church. Bishop Tommy Flor ence, : pastor, officiated. Burial followed in church cemetery. , The family received theiy friends at Brown's Funeral Home Monday evening from Ti to 9. - Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Ruth Enoch Carter; two daughters, Leverne and Angelie Carter; two sons, Aaron and Eric Maurice Carter, all of the home; mother, Mrs. Mary Car ter, Rockingham Co., N. C.; five sisters, Mrs. Nina Mae Jor dan, Summerfield, N. C., Mrs. Janet Womack and Mrs. Marie Cummings, Greensboro, N. C, Mrs. Helen Parker, Reidsville, N. C. and Mrs. Maxine Steven son, Jersey Cty, N. J.; four -brothers, Linwood, John Henry, William and Melvin Carter, all of Reidsville, N. C. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. MISS BRENDA DICKER80N Miss Brenda Delores Dicker son, age 21, died from multiple injuries received in an automo bile wreck three miles north of Pittsboro, N. C. on Highway 15 Monday morning, Nov. 18. She lived at 2117 Joe Louis Blvd., Greensboro. Funeral service was held Thursday morning, 11:00 a. m., Providence Baptist Church. A second funeral was held at 1:30 p. m. at the Mt. Vernon Baptist Church, Durham, N. C. Burial followed in Beech wood Ceme tery, Durham. The family re ceived their friends at Brown's Funeral Home Wednesday eve ning from 7-9. Survivors include one son, Terrince Leon Dickerson; par ents Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dicker son; four brothers, Pvt. Jack Dickerson, Ft. Bragg, N. C., Bernard, Kenneth Wayne and Ronnie Ray Dickerson; two sis ters, Misses Gwendolyn and Denise Dickerson, all of the home. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. MR. COLEN H. CLYMER Mr. Colen H. Clymer, age 48, of 709 South Ashe Street, died Monday, November 18 at L. Richardson Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be held at 3:00 d. m. Thursday, Nov. 21, it Hargett Memorial Chapel. Burial will follow in the Vet erans' Plot at Maplewood Cem etery. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Judv Wilson Clymer; his mother, Mrs. Mamie Clymer Foust of McLeansville; three sisters, Mrs. Velma Jordan, Miss Willie Mae Foust and Miss Mabel Foust, all of McLeans ville; one brother, James Clv mer of Greensboro; two step children, Robert L. Thompson, Jr. of Greensboro and Mrs. Marsha T. Hester of Washing :nefits of running and jogging, and second, to call attention to t>>e vMCA's 125th Anniversary in 19R9. Hicks explained that runners are organized into teams 'of from ten to 100. The Hayes Tsvlor YMCA has entered two teams, 10 individual joggers. More than 450 teams in YMCAs ?hrouebo'it the country make up 25.000 individual runners Darticipating, he said. Farh jogger is required to complete 125 miles in laps ground a YMCA track. The 125 miles, keyed tp the 125th Anni versary, may be completed over a 25-week period. The Run is not geared to track stars, Olympic or other wise, Hicks pointed out. It is meant primarily for a maxi mum number of YMCA mem bers, whether experienced run ners or first-timers, he said. A (Continued on Pag* 8) STUDENTS DISCUSS PROBLEMS WITH AUTHOR Negro author Loais Lomtx enjoys chat with A4T State Vni\ eraity students following his address last Sunday. From left to right are Miss Constance Henderson, New York City; Miss Alxata Ransom, Philadel pha; and Miss Joyce Harris, Oxford, N. C. Negro Church Could Become Target Of Black Militants Will the Negro church be the next target of the black powei militants? Negro author Louis Lomax hinted this action in an address last Sunday at A&T State University. "I am sick and tired of seeing only pictures of persons with blonde hair and blue eyes, even in the Bible," said Lomax. Per haps it is time for us to save the black church if they can't give us a religion we can relate to." Lomax said he has just re turned from a trip to the Holy Land. "From what I saw there," he said, "it is not possible for all persons to come out with blonde hair and blue eyes." Lomax also said that white Americans must begin respond ing to non-violent protest, 'I# violence is to eno* jn this nation. "America simply does not re spond to the Judeo-Christian ?thic," he said. The author of the best-selling book, The Negro Revolt, said, "America is not ready to get down to the nitty-gritty busi ness of overhauling the system in give freedom and justice to all." "It's a question of altering our economic priorities," added Lomax. "If we spent the money at home that we are spending in Vietnam, we could eliminate the ghettoes." Lomax criticized the use of the terms "law and order" as Veterans Corner Editor's Note: Below are ? au thoritative answers by the Vet erans Administration to some of the many current questions from former servicemen and their families. Further informa tion on veterans benefits may be obtained at any VA office. Q ? I was recently discharged from the Army after only 19 months of service. I have heard that I may still be eligible for up to four years of college edu cation assistance from the Vet erans Administration. Is this true? If so, I will enroll In col lege. A ? As of Dec. 1, 1968, under a new law recently signed by President Johnson, a veteran such as you with at least 18 months of service after Jan. 31, 1955, who has satisfied his mili tary obligation, will be entitled to 36 months (four academic vears) of educational assistance from the VA. For full time institutional training you will receive $130 a month as a single veteran ? more if vou have dependents. Check with your nearest VA re gional office for detailed infor mation and assistance. ? ? My father was killed in service in World War II. I re ceived four years (36 months) of war orphans educational as sistance from the Veterans Ad ministration while attending college. After graduation I went into service and will soon be discharged after two years of active duty.. Am I entitled to any additional educational as sistance from the VA as the result of my own military ser (Continued on Page 5) they relate to the black power movement. * ? \ ' * t ' ? , f "? " "Could the words 'law and order' be another middle class way of saying ?nigger'?" he asked. "Nobody said a word about law and order when we were having all those lynch ings." Lomax also charged this na tion with having a psychological hang-up about communism. "They always want to know if there are Communists in the black movement," he said. "Can you imagine anything so absurd as a black man from Biloxi, Miss, standing in Saigon with a machine gun, trying to give the Vietnamese the right to vote?" HAYES-TAYLOR YMCA BASKETBALL CLINIC The Hayes-Taylor YMCA will feature Gene Little, star bas ketball player from High Point College Saturday, November 23, 1968 at 10:00 a. m. Also on the program will be Coach Cal Irvin with two of his stars from the A&T State University. This clinic is for boys between the ages of 7 and 16 years of age. I