future 5r:lookfc Keep Up With The Times ? Read The Future Outlook! VOL. 29, NO. 29 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1970 PRICE: 10 CENTS DEATHS AND FUNERALS Mrs. Hattie Corde, of 816 Vance Street died Tuesday at L. 1 Richardson Memorial Hospital, 1 after a brief illness. Funeral service will be held Sunday, May 31, at 4:00 p.m. from Bethel A.M.E. Church, with the Rev. L. S. Penn officiating. Interment will follow in the family plot in Maplewood Came tery. Survivors are: 1 sister-in-law, Mrs. Estelle McLaughn of Greensboro; 3 nieces, Mrs. Fan- 1 nie Mae Boyd of Greensboro, Mrs. Beatrice Neal of Detroit, Mich., and Mrs. Eugenie Lewis of Oxford, N. C.; 4 nephews, Mr. Alexander G. Faucette and Mr. Andrew Jackson Corde of Greensboro, Mr. Amos D. Fau cette of New York City and Mr. Layette Faucette of Jamaica, L. I., N. Y.; 4 great-nieces, 2 great-nephews, 2 great-great nieces, 2 great-great-nephews, and a host of relatives and , friends. The family will meet with their friends Saturday night at Hargett Memorial Chapel from 8 to 9 p.m. Hargett Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. MRS. HATTIE CORDE MR. CLEMENT MEANS, SR. | Mr. Clemeat Means, Sr., age I 79, of 1706 Bashful Lane, died Monday at Moses H. Cone Mem orial Hospital, after a brief ill ness. Funeral service was held Thursday at 2:00 p.m. from Hargett Memorial Chapel. In terment followed in the Veter an's plot in Maplewood Ceme tery. He was a veteran of World War I. | Survivors are: widow, Mrs. Blanche Parks Means of the home; 3 daughters, Mrs. Mar- , garet Slide,, Mrs. Peggy John son, both of Greensboro, and Miss Maxine Means of Akron, Ohio; 4 sons Clement Means, Jr. of Grand Rapids, Mich, Clar ence Means of Indianapolis, Ind. Jack Means of Akron, O., and1 Shelton Means of Greensboro; 2 brothers, Jack Means of Phil- i adelphia, Pa., and Dewey Means of Newark, N. J.; 14 grandchil dren, 1 great-grandchild, and a host of relatives and friends. Hargett Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. MRS. ESTHER M. WRIGHT Mrs. Esther M. Wright, age 65 of 106-A Durham Street, died Wednesday, May 20, 1970 at L. Richardson Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. Funeral service was held Sun flay at 1:00 p.m. from Jackson United Methodist Church with the Rev. R. W. Johnson, offici ating. Interment followed in the church cemetery. Survivors are: 2 uncles, Mr. Elijah Russell of Brown Summit, N. C., Mr. George Russell of Reidsville, N. C.; 2 aunts, Mrs. Lillie Russell of Brown Summit, N. C., and Mrs. Sarah Carter of Pittsburgh, Pa.; nieces, nephews, and a host of relatives and friends. Hargett Funeral Home in charge of arrangement*. MB. WILARD LONG Mr. Wilard Long, son of Mr. Walter Long, and a former resi- | dent of Greensboro, died Sunday in a New York hospital after a lengthy illness. Funeral service was held Thursday at 2:00 p.m. in New York City. ? I Survivors are 2 daughters, < Mrs. Jessie Hampton of New York City, Mrs. Irene Headen of Graham, N. C.; 1 son, Mr. Lenwood Long of California; Father, Mr. Walter Long of Greensboro, arid a host of other relatives and friends. Courtesy of Hargett Funeral Service. - MR. JOHN A. EVANS Mr. John A. Evans, age 35, former resident of Greensboro, died at Genera Hospital in De troit, Michigan, after a brief illness. Funera Services were held Friday at 4:00 p.m. from New Goshen United Methodist Chu rch, with Rev. Eugene Black officiating. Interment was in the church cemetery. Survivors are: widow, Mrs. Alice Evans of Greensboro; 2 daughters, Misses Faye and An gela Evans; 2 sons, Leonard and Fredrick Evans of Greensboro; mother, Mrs. Edna Evans of Greensboro; father, John Evans of Washington, D. C.; 3 brothers, Clarence Evans of Detroit, Mich, and Harold and Larry Evans of Greensboro; 1 sister, Mrs. Joanne Walden of Greensboro; seven aunts and six uncles. Hargett Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. The VA suggests that G.I. in surance policyholders who re ceive VA compensation or pen sion payments may want to con sider having their insurance premiums deducted from their monthly checks. Director of Inter Church Enrichment Program Named Miss Elaine C. Harrington, teacher at the J. C. Price School, here in the city was recently named Director of the 1970 Inter-Church Enrichment Pro gram. This program, sponsored by several of the local churches | was initiated during the summer of 1969 and serves many of the local children of the Greater Greensboro community. Field trips, recreation, and other ac tivities are provided for the chil dren, many of whom await the opportunity for enrichment. Miss Harrington holds the B. S. Degree in Elementary Educa tion from Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama. She has done further study at the A. and T. State University here. Her varying experiences serve as an MISS ELAINE HARRINGTON excellent background for this position to which she has been named. Her experiences include: Director of Vacation Bible Sch ( Continued on Pi|c 4) Dr. Anita F. Allen Speaker For Bennett Commencement Bennett College will observe commencement on Monday, June 1 at 10:30 a.m. in the Annie Mer ner Pfeiffer Chapel. The speaker for this occasion is Dr. Anita F. Allen, Special Assistant to the Deputy Associate Commissioner for Higher Education, Bureau of Higher Education, U. S. Office of Education. Serving in this capacity, she is responsible for assisting in the planning, organ izing, directing and coordinating of a number of Bureau of High er Education activities. Dr. Allen has previously work ed with the Library of Congress for three years and seven years with the Department of Army. She served for two years as a training instructor in the Gener- ' al Services Administration In stitute. In addition to these ex-' periences, Dr. Allen taught for several years at Howard Univer sity from which she received her j B.A. Degree in her native city of Washington, D. C. After study at the University of Chicago, Dr. Allen received her M.A. degree and did grad-i uate study in the School of Gov ernment and Public Administra tion at American University in Washington, D. C. Dr. Allen has been President of the Board of Education in the District of Columbia since Janu ary, 1970. She served as Vice President of the Board from January, 1967 until elected to her present office. The Baccalaureate Address will be delivered by Bishop Aired G. Dunston, Jr. at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, May 31 in the Pfeiffer Chapel. Bishop Dunston is Presiding Bishop of the Elev enth Episcopal District of the DR. ANITA F. ALLEN African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A&T Receives $74,000 Federal Grant GREENSBORO, N. C. ? The i newly established Language Arts Demonstration Center t>t A&T State University will conduct a six-week summer institute for teachers in recently desegregated schools or schools which are in the process of desegregating. The workshop, which will in clude participants from 20 ele mentary schools in and around Greensboro, will be financed by a $74,000 grant from the U. S. Office of Education through the Education Professions Develop ment Act. Classes will be held at A&T June 15 to July 24. j "We feel most fortunate In be (Continued on Page 8) SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS AT A & T Winners of annual Sears Roebnck scholar- ships at AAT State University last week Included (from left to right) Marion Raggett, Antryville, N. C.; Mrs. Martha Robinson Moore, Charlotte, N. C.; Dennis E. Dale, Raleigh, N. C. and Ronald Halth, Winston- Salem, N. C.

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