EDUCATORS MEET - A Program Development Symposium for Teachers of Disadvantaged Learners was held at North Carolina College Friday and Saturday. Among those in attendance were, from left, I'r. Edward A. Nelsen, University of Wisconsin; Dr. Randa Russell, A&T College. Dr. Mavis Heatherington, University of Wisconsin; Dr. Peter B. Thornton, Texas Southern Uni- Y versity; and Dr. Harold E. Mazyck, A&T College. Dr. Joseph McKelpin, director of the NCC Bureau of Educational Research, was in charge of the sessions. 18 School Teachers Organize Fayetteville Reading Council FAYETTEVILLE -- Eighteen college, elementary and high LINCOLN RALEIGH, N. C. STARTS SUNDAY JUNE STH TWO BIG FEATURES “Blood Feast” —Plus— “Two Thousand Maniacs” STARTS THURSDAY * JUNE9TH “The Bad . Executioners’ STARTS THURSDAY JUNE 11TH THREE BIG FEATURES “Hercules In The Hounted World” “Goliath and the Dragon” “Goliath and the Sins Babylon” National Brands WILSON’S CERTIFIED CIIUCK ROAST POUND ' V | CHUCK COLUMBIA STEAK BACON roc ND POUND 49‘ I3‘ — CITATION SWIFT S SHORTENING , ICE MILK JEWEL ASST. FLAVORS 3 lr CTN. 39« 69 COKES 1 75 BANQUET FRUIT CHASE AND SANBORN PIES COFFEE APPLE, CHERRY, PEACH SAVE 28c -3 HOC 2 $149 ' roR 00 “• 1 0 GRADE A FRESH , r ' , f§ > DOZEN EvUj |J school teachers as well as ed ucators of Fayetteville and Cumberland County convened and organized The Fayetteville Reading Council, an affiliate of the International Reading As sociation. The Fayetteville Reading Council proposes to re search the reading problems common to pupils, students and adults alike. Chosen by the Fayetteville Reading Council membership to lead the organization are William C. Bridgers, of Ed ward Evans Elementary School, as president; Winifred D. John son, English instructor at Fay etteville State College, vice president; .and Mildred P. Jones, assistant professor of Tutor Writes Ed. Article DURHAM Mrs. Octavia B. Knight, assistant professor of education at North Carolina College, is the author of an article in the Spring 1966 Is sue of the Journal of Negro Education entitled “A Study of Attitudes of a Select Group of Principals Toward Special Classes for the Mentally Re tarded." Data for the study were ob tained from questionnaries completed by principals in at tendance at the 14th Annual Con ference of Supervisors and English at Fayetteville State College, as secretary-treasur er; Augusta M. Haynes, Eng lish, E. E. Smith Senior High School, as assistant-secretary; Charles Brown, associate pro fessor of Education at Fayette yille State College, as publicity chairman; Emma W. Greene, of Edward Evans Elementary School as membership chair man, and Helen S. Davis, Eng lish Instructor at Fayetteville State College, as program com mittee chairman. Membership in the Fayette ville Reading Council is open to any interested educator and citizen in the Fayettevllle- Cumberland County Area. Principals at NCC. Os 74 respondents to ques tions regarding a special pro gram for the retarded, Mrs. Knight reports, "59 were ex tremely in favor of the pro gram, four were mildly in fav or, three were neutral, and one was extremely against having a special class’’ ir. his school building. Seven principals ex pressed no opinion. She indicated that the major reason for objecting to such classes was the lack of trained personnel to take charge. Alumni Os A&T Set Meet Sat. GREENSBORO -- The A&T College General Alumni Asso ciation will hold its annual na tional meeting here on Satur day, June 4. The meet is set for the Carver Hall Auditorium beginning at 9;30 a. m. Howard C. Barnhill, Char lotte, president of the Associ ation, said the meet, to be at tended by the largest delega tion in history, will draw rep resentatives from more than 40 chapters in 18 states and the District of Columbia. The weekend program begins with a dinner meeting of the Executive Committee on Fri day, June 3, at Holiday Inn, South, beginning at 7:00 p. m. Other Saturday events include a luncheon, at 2:30 p. m., with Dr. Lewis C. Dowdy, president of the college, as host, and the annual Alumni Dinner, also at Holiday Inn, South at 7;30 p. m. . > ■ ...... r[ -- . _ - ‘ttf" CHICKEN " V 4 «n<§ R©IU % Fries and Rolls 85c . ‘yfy/ Family Pack 8 pcs. $1.40 »<»' PHY YOUR FA WILY ALSO iA dkivmn 6 Hamburgers 75 c ♦ PQWWTOWM BIVP * /- "• ~ 1 Let Our Experts • TIRES • BATTERIES . Keep Your Car • AUTO ACCESSORIES /|K In Top Shape! • WASHING / \ • LUBRICATION !0k J _- OFFICIAL Licensed 'l' K Inspection 1 ' Station Credit Cards Honored DUNN’S tsso SEtVICENTER See Us For Complete Car Care! DIAL 832-9496 502 S. BLOODWORTH ST. 1 31 Nurses Capped At A&T College GREENSBORO - Thirty-one student nurses at A&T College, who had completed their first big hurdle, were last week a warded caps at the annual Cap ping Exercise. The group, all sophomores, had satisfactorily completed all requirements in the physical, natural and social sciences and introductory courses to nursing and will now begin clinical ex perience in local hospitals. The class, the largest in the history of the A&T School of Nursing contained one male student, George Watson of Washington, D. C. He is the second male to enroll in nurs ing at the college since the be ginning of the program in 1953. Main speaker for the pro gram, held at Harrison Audi torium, was Mrs. Naomi W. Wynn, dean of the School. Speak ing from the subject, "The Challenge, Understanding the Nature of Nursing,” she told the class, "understanding the nature of nursing requires knowledge and skill of high or der, an education grounded in rigorous study and an under standing of man and his behav ior.” Three of the students were singled out for special honors. Virginia Johnson of Wilming ton, received the Dr. C. C. Stew art Memorial Scholarship A ward, given by the Greensboro Medical Society and presented by Dr. Flotilla Watkins, presi dent. Ella P. Hollowell, Winfall, received the Moses H. Cone Women's Auxiliary Award, pre sented for that organization by- Mrs. Claude Pierce, presi dent, and The Medical Surgical Nursing Award, given by the Greensboro Academy of Medi cine, went to Brenda J. Smither man, Winston-Salem. It was presented by Dr. Richard Kel ley, president. All ofthehon orees were ranking students in the class. SMAT DRIVE AMARILLO, Tex. - Almost half of the student body of all- Negro Carver High school has asked to be transferred to this ctty ’s predomlnately w h i t e schools. A registered letter containing 103 names was sent to the public school adminis tration asking for transfers. A student group called Students’ Mass Application for Transfers was said to have sparked the request, Did You Soy STEAKS! ' Specialize In-’Em • BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER CHICKEN - BAR-B-QUE SEAFOOD Anything You Want! PEEBLES Charcoal Flame Restaurant 309 S. Wibnlnffton Street — call — 832-0724 For Advanced Service! RALEIGH. N. C. L > J, „, 'Hj E . s*** % ••-. ■ - • m •*- ’ '•• ■; *v/ w “DOES A PLASTIC HEART HAVE LOVE IN IT?” - Pitts burgh, Pa.: Linda Griggs asked famous Houston heart surgeon Dr. Michael Deßakey in a letter if a plastic heart has love in it. Deßakey wrote back to the second-grader of Garfield Heights, Pa., “Yes, if you can think of how much love there is in hundreds of hearts.” Deßakey recently operated on a coal miner and kept him alive for several days using an ar tificial heart mechanism before the patient died. (UPI PHOTO). it Pays To Patronize Carolinian Advertisers | GAMES COST YOU MONEY! j •DOMINO SUGAR 5-ib. bag 57c* }GOOD BANANAS lb. 10ci I PORK SAUSAGE lb. 45c] I PORK SPARE RIBS lb. 49c* iBOOK i 8 MATCHES box of 50’s 10c* ! GOOD WIENERS or I BOLOGNA lb. 49c i | GOLD MEDAL i BLACK PEPPER 1-oz. can 10eJ | GRADE A MEDIUM I EGGS doz. 37c i 8 END CUT PORK CHOPS lb. 59c* J BEEF or PORK LIVER lb. 49c! J PURE LARD 3-lbs. 63c! I VESPER 8 TEA Vi-lb. pkg. 29c | I I I Open Friday Night until 9! § i Horton’s Cosh Store ! * 1415-17 S. SAUNDERS ST. 833-2851 RALEIGH. N. C. * Lb Mi MMWMiimiMMM mpmmm-bm m at m J wiiinmiimiWßrwimraiiwniiMiiiie—n ■iiiiiiiiiiirraMWHwmiweriiwiinMwa nmnarnni So mova r ' VODKA MOO U *955 4/5 Quart It j| Pint 100 PROOF DISTILLED FROM GRAIN BOAKA KOMPANIYA, SCHENLEY. PA. AND FRESNO. CALIFORNIA MADE FROM GRAIN. PRODUCT OF THE U S A. 100 PROOF THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY JUNE 4, 1966 All-White jury Gives Blond Life In Slaying Os Negro BY LEON L. LEWIS FORT WORTH, Tex, (NPI) - A white defendant found guil ty of murdering a Negro be cause he was a black patron of a white tavern, was given life in the state penitentiary by an all white jury last week. Veteran jurists and lawyers stated that this was the first time In Tex as that a white man has receiv ed such a “stiff” sentence for the slaying of a Negro. Witnesses testified that James L. (Little Sid) McGood wln, 39, shot Joe Hughes Wal laces, a 28-year old shoe shine boy, in an all-white tavern. One witness quoted McGood win as saying, “I think I’ll just blow that nigger's head off,” shortly before Wallace was shot through the head. A surprise witness, who is an ex-convict and in jail, testified that he saw McGoodwin, shoot Wallace, and saw hirn pull the trigger of his revolver. The WILL FILE SUIT BUTLER, Ga. - Georgia’sat torney general, Garland Byrd, has announced that he will file a suit against the Taylor Coun ty Board of Education and the U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, seeking block school systems from for cibly transferring Negro stu dents to achieve integration. “Neither the board of education nor the U. S. government has the right to force these students to go to a school not of their choice because of race,” Byrd remarked. SAVINGS Headquarter S n Hi FRONT END ALIGNMENT «Hff fleering OUR EXPERTS DO ALL THIS # oorrefl eeste? • oomsa* ts&mim • «w»R « MQuot oteerte* * tai MMy ; HUNT 6ENERAL TIRE CO. <®H® SL XSaDOWKLX. ST. 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