Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 22, 1969, edition 1 / Page 6
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6 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIQH, N. C , SATURDAY. MARCH 22, 19851 Clifford C. Coles New l'Than Affairs Coordinator For AMA NEW YOHK, N. Y.-Clifford C, Coles has been named to the newly - created post of Co ordinator of Urban Affairs for the American Management As sociation. He will also retain his present position as Director of Operation Dialogue, an ac tivity of AMA's affiliate, The Presidents Association. Cl IF FOP D C. COLES In making the announcement, Alexand.- r B. Tro w b ridge, President of AMA, said that Mr. Col. « • ill serve as the central point of coordination of AMA’s activities devoted to the stun of America's urban problem s and the role of tue management community in their resolut ion. He v. ill advise those in the Association’s program, publication, media and researcu fields as to t; e scope and con tent of their projects. He v.ill serve as the official point of contact for AMA with those other organizations en ■ ■' -c*.'VO.. t;; ■.. J' .; ; -. SANDERS FORD : ■ , '■ . , h: . .ii fAA WHERE THE DIFFERENCE KM IS WORTH THE DISTANCE UV 100% FINANCING AVAILABLE 1 m SELL MORE FORD'S FOR LESS CAROLINA S VOLUME FOR D iD^HHy| SANDERS FORD RAItIGH S m FbiUIKE AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER \ - : A/' ■ v /;7A : -.'V 1: '‘A-’ ■'' ■ AL' ’-A.,.;; ■ ... 329 SOUTH BIOUNT ST 834-7301 a.■ ■ ■ ■■- ■ ■■■ ■- ■-■■■■ ■- ■' 'A ; :2. ■ A--V v - r gaged in urban-oriented pro grams and generate outside re sources for use in company activities. AMA’s commitment, reflecting our membership's evident desire, is to add our resources to the search for con structive solutions to the na tion's urban problems." Mr. Cokes, a native of Brooklyn, New York, came to The Presidents Association in 1966 from Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he was Director of Development N. €. Gets Grant For Technical Work WASHINGTON, D. C.-The a ward of a $106,000 Federal matching grant for the sup port of technical services pro grams for commerce and in dustry in the State of North Carolina was announced lasi week by the Office of State- Technical Services, U. S. De partment of Commerce. The matching grant, made to the North Carolina Department of Administration, is the fourth received by North Carolina in support of technical services projects designed to encourage a more effective use of sci ence and technology by com merce, business and industry within the State. Institutions providing the technical ser vices are: the North Carolina Science and Technology Re search Center, North Carolina State University, an d East Carolina University. Technical services include: a field liaison program to pro vide visits to industrial firms to identify and solve technical problems, a technical informa tion center for making sci entific and technical informa tion available, and a series of seminars to enable man age r s to acquire skills In utilizing statistics, mathe matics, and computers. The North Carolina Depart and Public Relations. Before that, lie was with the Federa t ion of Protestant Welf are Agencies, Inc., as a Home find ing Consultant, and with the Children’s Aid Society as Case - worker. He holds a B. A. in Sociology from Shaw University and an M. S. from Columbia Univer sity Sctiool of Social Work. Coles is married so the former Miss Bernice Cumbe of Raleigh, also a graduate of Shaw University. rnent of Administration is the agency responsible for plan ning and administering techni cal services projects. The a gency is assisted in its efforts by a State Advisory Council chaired by George E. Freeman of William F. Freeman, Inc., of High Point, North Carolina. In the previous year of opera tions, the field liaison progiam visited 1,005 firms to provide technical information, the in formation service ran computer searches for new technology in furniture, packaging, pigments, alkali metal silicotes, and bene fication of minerals. Four short courses and two education TV courses were presented in the areas of: protection of electric circuits and machines, engi - neering applications of comput ers, statistical procedures of textile mill management, numerical control, and noise control technology. An example of the services offered and results achieved is represented by the following: The Raleigh, North Carolina works of a major chemical company consulted the State Technical Services Program in North Carolina for advice on of «. waste liquor con taining about one-fifth sulfuric acid and traces of nitric acid and other materials. Economy ALMS’S - NEW CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSIONER-James E. Johnson, right, is ad minisiered o:i ! l. of office as t . S. Civil Service Commissioner by Com mission Chain-.i,-in Robert L. Hampton, left, as Mrs. Johnson, his wife, holds Bible. Commissioner Johnson was also designate ! as Vice Chair man of the Commission by President Richard M. Nixon. Prior to join ing the Commission, he served as Director of the California State De nar tine nt of \ o'erans .Affairs. (Civil Service Commission Photo). Jaycee President Seeks Poverty Program Changes TULSA, Oklaho;na-U. S. Jaycee President Wendell E. Smith charged, last Friday that as long as government, industry and pollution contra: -.-ere l«otr, achieved by tie* sugs:« stion that the waste be neutralized with ammonia to produce an atn monlun: sulfate-nitrate ; erti lizer, Unis establishing a new product for vale 1 Nort ; Caro lina industry. and pi 1 v ate groups r err. ai n “hung up’' on unique ap proaches, instead of com inn ing resources to eliminate pre sent povortv conditions, the na tion’s ii;s;id\ imaged will con tinue to Sliffl : . ‘‘Fed' r*' programs alone cannot : it, nor can the multi approaches bv volunteer groups. Neither will generous moneta contrihutions by in dusti; solve the problem,” states, smith who recently spent three weeks touring a cross section of America’s poverty areas, T solution recommended b\ the 34-year-old Jaycee ex ecutive is a comprehensive, centralized plan of action which v ill eliminate overlapping func tions of governmental program* and created local volunteer citizen centers operating on a "people-to-people” approach. referring to the many priv ately sponsored organizations seemingly mote concerned about the "uniqueness” of their efforts than program objectives and result, Smith stated; ‘‘There are three Fos Angeles groups within the same area Lots of luck. \ mmm \ \ X -''-^TTn*Q How? By being gentle. By softly er make washday a Good Luck day for tumbling your clothes as they dry in elec- you. trically warmed air. Perfect drying. No Get one soon, fading. No dust. No birds. „ Permanent press clothes are dried pich U P hee co P\ of he new looking almost new —shape and creases booklet "Weather or not, the do s and J&j&L restored —ready-to-wear. Little or no donTs of electric drying, at an electric ironing is needed. appliance store, ,„ d SicX k Carotin® Power & Light Company working toward vocational de velopment of disadvantaged Negroes. Geared toward rais ing the level of the underem ployed and training the unem ployed, each seeks its own identity. And all oper ate separately v ith no coordina tion between one another and little cooperation with local and state employment agencies.” Critical of present participa tion by industry, Smith said that ‘representation on advisory boards and donations of out-dated equipment bybusi nessed do not by any means complete the role that industry can and must play in this do mestic v/ar.” ‘‘More positive results can be gained by volunteer groups and industry working with es tablished agencies. Red tape must be minimized in order to achieve the maximum ef fectiveness of such combined efforts.” Go To Chords Sunday A&T Will Train Teacher-Aides To Work Ist Ghetto Communities GREENSBORO - Two grants totaling SII,OOO have been ap proved for A&T State University to operate a pilot program to train aides for work with eco nomically disadvantaged pre school children. Jn announcing the grants, Dr. Lewis C. Dowdy, president of A&T, said the university will receive $6,500 from the U. S. Department of Health, Educa tion, and Welfare under the Edu cation Professions Develop ment Act and $4,500 from the Southern Education Foundation. The new A&T project will get underway next summer and will be directed by Dr. LaMyra Davis, associate director ofthe Institute for Research and Hu man Resources. The program will continue during the fall and following spring. She said that 40 cersons will be selected from the community to receive training in such areas as ch ild - rearing practices, child development and child ren’s games. These partici pants will also spend a great deal of time observing child ren of A&T’s demonstration classes at play. "We know that there is a great need for trained persons to work with Headstart pro grams and other pre-school programs,’’ said Dr. Davis. “The A&T project is the out growth of a three-year study made by the Southern Educa tion Foundation.” The participants selected for the project, will attend study ■anHDNMMBMHBMHMMaaMRMBmnQ warned .. smm was izsxsassasuammt&iiis^ Announcing Raleigh's fewest , . j Fl'N STUDIO, j f ,i> . : J J SPECIAL PRICES FUN STUDIO Us£ E. HARGETT ST. HOURS: 10:00 A.M.-6:3© P.M | DIAL 832-591* FOR APPOINTMENT sessions at the University each Saturday morning. The HEW funds will be used to conduct a week-long seminar for the trainees during the summer. Instruction for the project will bo provided by teachers at A&T and outside consultants. Leaves 'Nice Looking People, Slacks Alone’ MIAMI-(NPI)-“He took noth ing from nice-looking people and Negroes.” That yvas National Airlines stewardess Marianne Thomss son's decription oi a modern “Robin Hood” hijacker who robbed the rich and not the poor while diverting an air liner to Cuba. The jet, which had been bound foi tids city, was returned to the United States a few hours later. The bearded Black man, identified as Anthony Garnet Fir; arrt, was arrested. He re portedly rob.«d one of the pas sengers of $1,700, but Cuban officials returned the money. James Tucker, j a Black soldier on leave from Ft. Dir, N. J., said the hijacker asked him” “Are you a rich man or a poor man?’’ “I said, ‘Poor man,' so he didn't bother me,” Tucker re lated.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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March 22, 1969, edition 1
6
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