Death Takes No HoMay Darina Yale Season Girl, 16, Dies Os Poison As Car tins Wake County medical examiner, Dr. Wil liam Hedrick, reported Tuesday that the death of a 16-year-old Fuquay girl was caused by carbon monoxide poisoning. The victim. Miss Brenda Powell Herndon Rt 3, Fuquay- Varlne, was found by friends in a closed automobile early Sun day morning. She had remain ed to the car while nor friends went into the home of Miss Thelma Williams, Rt. 1, Gar ner. Miss Herndon and several other youngsters had been au tomobile-riding all night, The group then decided to go to a friend’s house. However, Miss Herndon remained in the park , eti auto. * Several hours later, he.- body F@nf Gives m Over $3.5 Mifiim NEW YORK. N. Y.-The Na tional Urban League has re ceived a grant of 53.63C.000 from the For ' Foundation to expand and Initiate a varietj of innovative programs aimed at improving the quality of life in the nation’s ghettos and up grading the economic strength of blacks and other minorities. The grant, along wttj those of several other foundations, will assure second-year financ ing of the program activities under the League’s new thrust as well as initiating a number of new programs directed at "un leashing the neglected po tential” of the biack ghettos. 1 In accepting the Ford grant, Whitney M. Young, Jr., League executive director, said: "We are deeply grateful to the Ford Foundation for this expiession of confidence in our efforts in the ghettos of America. This is a recognition of the unique ability of the League to org anize constructive programs in housing, education, economic welfare and social action. This gives us more determination to work with ghetto residents to get tangible and realistic goals, to speak for themselves and to constructively represent them selves as no one else can.’ Mitchell .Sviridoff, Vice President in charge of the Ford Foundations’s National Affairs Division said: "The Urban Lea . gue plays an important role in providing leadership for the black community as it seeks to take its rightful place in the mainstream of American life. "The League, through its programs, and with skills and K experience acquired in almost .v • - %.:•» /*.; •' .J: ■ '**•«•'“ '*"> o* .* r. T h' Xftfs-i -" vv. ' dpPaHt MWHERIGXW Shot In 111. Native Os City Dies In Chicago Funeral services were con ducted Tuesday of this week at Martin Street Baptist Cfcurer. at 2:30 p.m. tor Bm&mto Loan Johnson, Jr., 30, formerly of HO jljliiisHfee N. Tarboroßoad As tjj| here, who j allegedly shot to Wr*** death last Wed- J nesday to Chica •go, 111 inotg, where he nadei his home, dmr* & ||g|g ing a holdup atgf *\T wim a liquor store 3SH9MOM where he was employed. A native of Raleigh, Mr. John son -was born June 14, 1639 He joined the Martin Street Baptist Church at an early age ana served as a junior usher for several years. The Rev. Dr. Paul H. Johnson, pastor, officiated at the rites and burial was in Carolina Biblical Gardens. Johnson attended the local public school and graduate from, the John Ligon High School to 1957 He then attended North Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, and was graduated from the School of Clothing and Textiles in i 960. He served with the United States Army in Germany for two years. Married to the former Miss Phyllis Holland of Durham, the Johnsons were the parents of two daughters, Misses Adrienne and Rosalyn Johnson. Other survivors include his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Benjam in Johnson, Sr„ Raleigh; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Augusta Johnson Byrd song, Los Angel es, California; and Mrs, An nie Ruth Johnson Young, Chica go; one brother, Mr. Napoiecsn Johnson, Hampton, Va., and a <*ee JN CHICAGO. P. i ) WEATHER Tenroeretisares tosr&ag «se yw ried, Thursday through SSciidsv. vrtii average h*l 7 - 4 Hl' cteCU, charged v«th assault with Intent to commit murder at My Lai, South Vietnam, arrives at the Pentagon De cember 27 to testify before the Pentagon Board of in vestigating the alleged My Lai massacre. Sgt. Mitchell is now- stationed at Ft. Hood, Texas. (DPI). hind JOhnson-Lambe Sporting Goods. A witness, William Henry Worth, 141" E. Jones Street, told the jury that he had gone down near the beauty, salon to pick up a trasl receptacle be longing to the State Theatre, where he is employed part time. Worth stated that he saw the (•Sec MAS SHUT e at trims Cm It £mhd : ’ X H&ever WASHINGTON-The nead of tht nation’s crime-fighting or ganittation, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said last week that tne possibility of reducing crime in the IPJP’s “is cer tainly not hopeless.” J. Edgar Hoover, the only man to head this law enforce ment agency, remarked, “Bas ed upon past statistics, there is ever; indication that violent crimes, In particular, will con (S« ROBIiKRfRS P 21 Maritime Cf Actwa The establishment of an Of fice of Civil Rights within the Maritime Administration was announced last Wednesday by A. E. Gibson Maritime Adminis trator, L\ R. Department of Commerce. This action will Improve the agency’s capabili ty to meet its Civil right® responsibilities, and in accord ance with the policy of Sec retary of Commerce Stans, will provide for more vigorous ef forts to promote equality of op portunity . A principal function of the new office will be the surveil lance of the equal employment opportunity programs of gov fS*e Ctvn RIGHTS. ** 2) PRINCIPAL ATTACKED Marrion Grant Batey, 2525 Western Boulevard, principal of an elementary school in Gar ner, reported to Officer J. W. Rogers at 11:0' p.m. last Mon day, that he was walking out of the front door at the new YWCA, COO block of E. Hargett Street, when Cecil Glenn, 17, started hitting him with nis hands, fists and also a soft drink bottle. Mr. Batey said there were also about five other colored males who struck him. He said he did not know any of the subjects. Batey said he would sign an assault with a deadly weapon warrant against young Glenn. fßa* CftiW wwx V. *>