nJIu VOL. 32, NO. 18 DEATHS ANC MR. BILLY WAYNE ISLEY Mr. Billy Wayr.e Isley, age 26 of O'Henry Hotel in Greensboro was pronounced dear1 upon arrival at Moses H. Co.ie Memorial Hospital as result of a gunshot wound. Funeral services were held > Tuesday at 4:00 p.m. from Capadocia Holiness Church in Gib- j sonville, N. C. The Rev. Cecil' Bishop pastor of Trinity A.M.E. Zion Church in Greensboro officiated. Burial followed in Clapps' Chapel Cemetery, Whitsett, N. C. He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Ressie H. Isley of Gibson- I ville, 8 sisters: Mrs. Mable Gor- I, T"NT "VT TV* I MVM| U1UI1A) 111 A ! XVJLX Z>, JUbC" j phine Oliver, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs. Nancy Burnett, Charleston, S. C.; Mrs. Ruby Morgan, Mrs. Christine Allen, Mrs. Willie Miller, Mrs. Nellie Green, all of Greensboro, Mrs. Pauline Summers, Gibsonville; two brothers, ' Ernest, Jr., Burlington, Claude j. W., Gibsonville; other relatives I' and friends. Hargett Funeral Service in < charge of arrangements. I i < ( ] 1 < I ( MRS. HELEN JOHNSON C s Mrs. Helen Johnson, age 73 ' died at L. Richardson Memorial ' Hospital Sunday, April 2nd fol- r lowing several month illness. She lived at 1304 Bluford St. t Funeral services were held . Wednesday, April 5th, 1:00 P.M., T Providence Baptist ChurcH. Bur- . ial followed in Maplewood Cemetery. Survivors include her hus- f band, Simmie Johnson of the f home. , Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. c :.ful Keep Up With T GREENSBORO, I FUNERALS MR. MARK ALLEN VINES Mr. Mark Allen Vines, age 66 former resident of Greensboro N. C., died Monday, March 27, 1972 at a Detroit hospital aftei a sudden illness. Funeral services were helc Sunday, April 2, 1972 at 2:0C p.m. from St. John Baptist Church in Faulkland, N. C. Burial was in the church cemetery. Survivors are: three brothers John L. Vines of Greensboro, N C., Bennett Vines of Greenville, N. C. and Arthur Vines of Newport News, V6., two sisters, Mrs Louise Corham of Faulkland N. C. and Mrs. Alice Rodgers of Greenville, N. C. and a host oi relatives and friends. Hargett Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. MR. JAMES T. MOORE Mr. James Thomas Moore, age 40 of 303-A Gant St., died Tuesday, March 28, 1972 at Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital after a sudden illness. Funeral services were held Saturday, April 1, 1972 at 3:30 p.m. from Hargett Memorial Chapel. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery on the Veteran's Plot. Survivors are: wife, Mrs. Lina G. Moore of Greensboro, N. C.; ane sister, Mrs. Rosa Lee Bridges af Greenville, N. C.; one brothErr, Mr. Johnnie T. Moore of East Orange, N. J., nieces, nonhews nrH o ?.?i? ~ sr ? ?u wow v?i icia;ives and friends. Hargett Funeral Home in :harge of arrangements. MR. WALTER COLN Mr. Walter Coin, age 63, of 115 Reid St., died Wednesday, \pril 5, 1972 at the Moses H. -one Memorial Hospital after a >rief illness. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. -arrie Coin of the home; one lister, Mrs. Minnie Hall of York, 5. C.; one brother, Dunham -oln of York, S. C., nieces, lephews, relatives, friends. Funeral services will be held Sunday, April 9, 1972 from Clinon Chapel's A. M. E. Zion -hurch in York, S. C. The Rev. J. B. Schultz will officiate. Bural will follow in the church emetery. The family will greet their riends on Saturday evening rom 7-8 p.m. at Hargett Menorial Chapel. Hargett Funeral Home J} iharge of arrangements. turi he Times ? Read The NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY . .. m BRPP ) V j|L. : : l^lER^F FIV OBSERVES 92ND Mrs. Mary McMurray Herbin,, I mother of fourteen, who resides I with a daughter, Miss Ada Her- i j bin, 1015 Arbor Dr., was feted with a celebration of 92 years, j Sunday, April 2, 1972, given by her'children and grandchildren,' at the home of a daughter, Miss j Annie B. Herbin, 1915 Carlton Ave., at 4:00 P.M. Mrs. Herbin, widower of Joseph Herbin, formerly lived in the Red Hill-Sedgefield Community where she reared ten living children, of whom eight j nor are living. They are Ray- j mond, Claude, Roy; Mrs. Johnsie Alston, Ada and Beatrice, all of Greensboro; U. S. Navy Chief Petty Officer (ret.) Troy Webster Herbin of Annapolis, Md., and John William Herbin, New-1 port News, Va. The celebrity lad 31 grandchildren, 27 living; 42 great grandchildren, 41 living; and two great-great grandchildren. The eldest son who would have comprised the fifth living j generation of this family, The I JlSc -4T0| L I I Future Outlook! f, APRIL 7, 1972 ?. '. 'ytrnrrrnf ^ - ' -:' Ik ****** Jpjfe/; '"? J e generation: Rev. Connie V. Herbin died Oi ;ober, 1971. This lineage woul lave read: his mother, himsel lis daughter, Mrs. Ethel Mt Watson of New York City, hi ;on, Captain Victor Russell, 1 3. Army, stationed in Georgi lis two children, Victor Junii ind Dana. Yet, this mother ar treat-grand mother has lived i >ce each generation. She attributes her long lii which is still active at a slo aace with failing eyesight, Christian living, years of hai work and early to bed at nigh \t age 82 she retired from tl inly job she held and which si ook after the passing of her hui land a little over thirty yea: igo. At that time she was nurst naid to little Betty Jo East i he Sumner Township whoi ather had passed and her moti :r worked. During her ear rears, she breast-fed several i :he Groomes children of tl jroomtown Section, where tl (Continued on Page 4) 00 k* PRICE: 10 CENTS 1 Black Women's Institute Inaugurated || Dorothy I. Height, President II of the National Council of Negro Women, announced today i the inauguration of a Black Wo;p| men's Institute, an educational and research program designed | to collect, interpret and distri;:| bute information for and about i Black women and their families. The Black Women's Institute j will provide a channel for research and publication of information about Black women, : their social, legal, economic and educational status. ;j? In addition, the Black Wo| men's Institute will provide a Resource Service Center that women may consult to assist them in their day-to-day lives. It will compile information on employment opportunities, daycare facilities, health care, scholarship information, educational opportunities, legal assistance, and wellare rights. i The event inaugurating the ' Black Women's Institute will be a 1972 Hunger Convocation. With the cooperation and support of j a wide range of seriously con; cerned Americans from 93 naj tional and local organizations, | the convocation will focus attenI tion on the prevalence of hunger in America today and to determine a realistic course of acP tion to end hunger. On April 21, 1972, at the Americana Hotel in New York City, the Convocation will bring together national leaders, pro lessionals, the general public, and spokesmen representing vulnerable groups from the poverty ,e and hunger belts with which the 5r National Council of Negro Women is concerned. a, jr Miss Marian Anderson is the id distinguished Chairman for the to Convocation. Reservations may be secured at the NCNW Cone vocation office, 95 Madison Ave. w' New York, N. Y. (212) 889-2244. to I t J Support your Red Cross