* jSajjSteiSa?*’! MR. AND MRS. WILEY JACOB LATHAM, 111 V.J, weds ored Jh Re, en tion The home of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Latham, Jr. was the setting of a reception honor ing Mr. and Mrs. W. J La tham 111, on Saturday, Sep tember 5. from 6 to 8 p.m. Mrs. George Debnam and Mrs. J. W. Eaton received guests at the door and pre sented them to Mrs. W. A. Mann and Mrs. Nellie K. Boy i'ins who then introduced the guests to the receiving line. In the receiving line were: Mrs. M. J. Latham, Jr., moth er of the groom, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley J. Latham, III; and Mr. C. C. Grant, father of the bride Also receiving in the living room was the father of the groom, Mr. W. J. Latham, Jr. Mrs. W. A. Fei’-y, Mrs. C. L. Hunt, and Mrs W. L. Greene presided over the guest book. Mrs. Robert Clark and Miss Verona Sue Vick, cousin of the groom received the gifts. Oiga Knows Your Weekly Horoscope September 10 through September 16 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Trailblazer Aries, you are the first of the fire-signs. But your fire is more than t’ust a few candiepower. it is more likely to resemble a >onfire. Hot, high and dramatic. And just as difficult to ignore. You attract not only moths but butterflies as well. Week ahead will be one of much attracting on your part. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The first of the earth children, Taurus, you love the iand. It gives you not only a sense of financial security, but owning land answers an emotional need as well. When going into the market place, you instinctively know the value of what is being offered. You very often know the yalue of people on first meeting. Somtime during week ahead you should en counter one who will have something which you want. Desperately. Don’t haggle about price. Pay what is asked. Then enjoy to the fullest. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Candor is in order for days coming up, Gem. Take off your mask and get ready to meet important new contact face to face. And stop fussfng. Your facade isn’t ail that important for survival. be rather fun. Try before you cry. CANCER (June 21-July 22): After emotional week which has just passed, Moonlover, you are no doubt some what beaten. Well, you have to go into the valley of fatigue from time to time you know. After which you very often climb an exhilarating mountain. Before fifth day go to the mountain. For cne thing is certain. The moun tain will NOT come to you. And the view is SO lovely. You hadn't forgotten, had you? LEO (July 23-August 22): Air of qay insouciance should engulf you before third day, Leo baby. It will no doubt be as a direct result of activity which transpired last week. Enjoy it while it lasts, for there are not too many weeks like it left in 1970. Kick all negative thoughts out and savor every moment. VIRGO (August 23-Sepiemher 22): Did vou get yourseif in gear and take that beachhead last week, Virg? Good. Now build. For the future, that is. However, since beachheads are very often sandy, you would be wise to go further inland. But old Olga needn't worry about Virg. Smarty pants Virg would never build on shifting sands. Well, hardly ever. LIBRA (September 23-October 22): Weather a bit „choppy last week, Libra baby? Perhaps it is time for you i to rethink. Just remember that the human mind is a very * complicated bit of machinery. And often ever pro grammed. So that very often when we think a thing, the thing we think is not the thing we think we think, but only the thing we think we think. Mull THAT over. «|k SCORPIO (October 23 November 21); Ycu should mbe getting feedback in week ahead, Scorp, concerning , tHe deluge of last week. If you kept your waterwings sfljiSandy, everything should be just peachy. On the other Mrs. Johnnie Burke and Me, M. H. Crockett directed the guests to the serving area. From a beautifully appointed table, covered with an im ]-o i lace cloth, carrying out a Pink and green color scheme, ■ nests were served punch and e.ther dainties from each end cf the tab'.e. Presiding over the punch bowls were Miss I.loydine Perry and Miss Lynn Renee Vick, cousins of the •room and Mrs. D P. Lane and Mrs D. H. Keck. Also, as sisting with the serving were Mrs. N. L. Perry. Mrs. Cay enne Quick, Miss Docemia Hammond. Miss Ru’h Pope. (Jcodbyes were said to the 125 guests who called during the evening by Miss Louise T a them and other hostesses assisting at the reception. The honored couple are both medical students at Me lin rry Medical College, Nash ville. Term. the bride is a native of Richmond, Va. PERSONALS The Jones Street Bryants, Miss Betsy J. and her mother, Mrs. Josephine A, Bryant, ex perienced and enjoyed a wond erful non-stop plane trip to Los Angeles, Calif., attending the BMC Conference of the UO of OF and Househould of Ruth. While there, they toured such interesting places as Disney land, Watts, Farmers’ Market, Chinatown, Hollywood, Beverly Hills and many other places of interest. The roomed in the luxurious Ambassador Hotel, enjoying the beautiful floral surroundings and being entertained by Miss Diana Ross. They reported a most delightful trip. Miss "Al” Boykin, E. Davie St. spent a portion of her vaca tion in the nation’s capital She left the capital “looking back,’' I wonder what she meant! Mrs. Hattie Branch, Wash ington, D. C., who has been visiting her sister, Miss Hattie Jones, Kindley St. returned to her home following a very en joyable vacation. Miss Almarie Jones, Com mercial Instructor at Nottoway Senior High School, Blackstone, Va., visited her parents, Rev. and Mrs. Millard Jones, Louis burg Road. Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Hall and mother, Mrs. Mary Hall, and nephew, Jimmy Jones, jour neyed to Halifax, Va. over the weekend. Miss Ledeli Flynn, a 1970 graduate of N. C. Central Uni versity, is now Art Resource Instructor in the Public School system, of Baltimore, Md. Miss Flynn is the daughter of Mrs. Margaret Smith Flynn, 912 E Edenton St. Mrs. Viola Pearson left the city last week to join her sister in High Point. Thence to journey to Boston, Mass, to visit rela tives and friends. Mrs. Pearson now resides on Cannister St. Anyone interested in morn ing sewing classes for be ginners should call the Jaycee Park Center or Lions Park Center, me instructor for the classes Is Mrs. Rosemary Falik. RECEIVE HAMPTON ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIPS - The two Hampton Institute students, shown above at the right, are the recipients of this year’s scholarship awards, presented by the Raleigh Chapter, National Hampton Alumni Association. The students, Miss Earnestine Robinson and Charles Flowers, were chosen to receive the awards because of their excellent scholarship and leadership roles at Hampton. Both students, returning as sophomores this year, maintained a scholastic point average of better than 3.5 during their freshman year. Prese nting the awards are Mrs. Millard Peebles and David Spaugh, recruitment chairman and president of the local chapter, respectively. hand, if you were careless, may heaven have mercy cn your soul. As week winds up, money and other goodies fake top billing. Gather in the sheaves, love. SAGITTARIUS (November 22-December 21): Within you Saj, is a deep untapped reserve of strength and health. And good will. Put these three qualities together and you are unbeatable However, Saj, you may have been keepinq these wonderful traits concealed from your, friends and family. Why? Why block that which is the best within you with phoney reserve? in week ahead you will want to let it all hang out. Do it. CAPRICORN (December 22-January 19): You are about to make a discovery concerning yourself, Cap, which could have you doing emotional cartwheels. The impact of it all may leave you a bit dizzy. But trust your inner voice, Cap. And your heart. It may have hardened lately, but it has NOT atrophied. AQUARIUS (January 20-February 18): O.K. Aquar ius, week ahead is one for less thinking and more "feel ing.’ 1 You are the strongest of the intellectual signs but that is no reason for you to assume the role of "The Thinker" day in and day out. You are a product of Na ture, baby, not the sculptor Auguste Rodin. And thank heaven you are. For tho you are as cool as marble on the outside, inside a fire rages! Heh. Heh. Heh. PISCES (February 19-March 20): No need to tell you Pisceans to stop thinking and start feeling. Heck, you spend most of you- time, as it is, experiencing either ecsfacy or despair. You are terribly aware that you have a body below your neck and senses other than sight and hearing. And week coming up will be one of more than just average peaks and valleys. Just keep the survival rope securely tied around your waist. One who loves you is close at hand. Feel better now? MR. AND MRS. HARVEY C. STEADMAN ■///,,, 8„ rues ijs>e comes (Jd> rule OflHr. Stead,nan The First Church of God was the setting on Aug. 15 for the wedding of Miss Emily Jeanet te Barnes and Mr. Harvey Co lumbus Steadman. The Rev. Mrs. N. A. Ford, pastor, of ficiated. Given in marriage by her brother, the bride is the daugh ter of Mr. James Barnes. The bridegroom is the grandson of Mrs. Meater A. Winston. Mrs. Ann McFadden was ma tron of honor and Mr. Wil liam Hartsfield, Jr. was best man. Following a reception in the church's social hall, the couple departed on a wedding trip to Atlantic City, N. J. They will make their home in Raleigh. The bride a graduate of St. Augustine’s College and teacher in the Raleigh Public Schools. She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Her husband is an officer with the North Carolina Depart ment of Corrections. Obituaries MR. NORMAN GILES Funeral services for Mr. Norman Giles, 42, who died Saturday, Aug. 29 in Brooklyn, New York were held at 3 p.rn. Thursday, Sept. 3, at the Wake Baptist Grove Church in Gar ner. Rev. c. P. Briley officiat ed. Surviving are one daughter, Miss Norman Jean Giles; one son, Norman, Jr.; both of Ra leigh; three sisters, Miss Am iri ie Giles, Mrs. Charlotte Brooks and Mrs. Mabel P.uffin all of Raleigh; four brothers, Zollie, of Auburn, John Giles, of Raleigh, Jean Giles of Vir ginia Beach, Va.; Louis Giles, of Durham, and one grandchild. * * * MRS. TEMPIE LINDSEY Funeral services for Mrs. Temple Lindsey, 64, who died Monday, August 31, were held at 4 p.m., Friday at the First Cosmopolitan Church, Raleigh. Rev. W. R. Lewis officiated. Burial was in the Carolina Biblical Gardens. Surviving are her husband, Mr, Otto Lindsey; one daughter, Miss Janie Lind sey, Brooklyn, N. Y«; one brother, Mr. Willie Davis of Newport News, Va. * * * MRS. MARIE ROBERTSON Graveside services for Mrs. Marie Robertson, whcdiedSept. 2, 1970 were held Saturday at 11 a.m. at Oberlin Cemetery, by Rev. J, H. Clanton. !RS Accused Os Deception WASHINGTON D.C,-Senator Walter F. Mondale (D-Minn.L Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Equal Educa tional Opportunity, last week said, “The Internal Revenue Service has embarked upon a policy of deliberate public de ception and circumvention of a federal court order requiring the suspension of tax exemp tions granted to 41 Mississippi private segregation academies. “Last June,’’ Mondale said, “the Federal District Court in the District of Columbia in Green v. Kennedy ordered the Internal Revenue Service to suspend the tax exemptions of 41 Mississippi segregation aca demies and to determine wheth er these academies are 'a part of a system of private schools operated on a racially segre gated basis as an alternative to white students seeking to a void desegregated Public school.’ Thus, IRS is* under court order to suspend first and then to investigate and af firmatively determine whether the 41 private academies in volved the Green v. Kennedy are in fact racially segregat ed and operated to aid the flight of white citizens who seek toa void public school desegrega tion. “Upon such a finding the IRS was ordered to deny income tax exemptions to such schools and deny tax deductions to those who contribute to their capital build ing funds or endowments. Yet the IRS has not only failed to follow this procedure, it has im posed its own weak standard in determining whether these schools are discriminatory.ln stead of determining as the court ordered, whether these schools are in fact operated on a racially segregared basis to permit white students to a void public school desegrega tion, the IRS has asked them simply to announce an open ad missions policy. It waited until Sept, school enrollments were closed and classes were filled without a single black admis sion and then suspended exemp tions of only those 11 schools which refused to promise they could open their doors to black students. “Both the timing of the IRS actions and the substitution of its own freedom-of-choice o pen-admissions criteria for those ordered by the court have assured 30 Mississippi segregation academies that they will be able to operate all-white schools without ad mitting black students during the coming school year. “IRS has pending before it 136 applications for tax exemp tion from private academies in school districts required to de segregate their oublic schools, up as a result of a freeze on exemption rulings imposed af ter the court’s order in Green v. Kennedy. On July 10, IRS announced it would proceed im mediately to end this freeze and grant tax exempt status to every school willing to announce an open admissions policy. It has since granted 4 exemptions solely on the basis of oral promises that the 4 schools would publish a statement that black students could apply for admission. None of the 4 schools has published such an announce ment. IRS granted exemptions to 3 additional schools which submitted newspaper articles which stated they were open to black students. None ofthese seven schools has admitted a single black child. None plan to do so. “Not one of the 136 pending anplications has been denied despite the fact that 2 schools have told IRS they will not ad mit black students. 1 CENTRAL Dears AIR CONDITIONING “Beat the HEAT” Salt |gp| CALL 483-2671 497-6141 USE SEARS EASY EXT. 341 IN PAYMENT PLAN. FAYETTEVILLE SPRING LAKE C •*♦*-> j FAYETTEVILLE SPRING LAKE r%, a vr t frears emmha lODAV I tit** ntt RALEIGH. N. C„ SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 12. 1870 MRS. A! * lO'.V GIL MORE . . .formerly Miss Beryl Vivian Sansom Vjilmoresansom V / ( ou'S jjjohen Miss Beryl Vivian Sansom, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Sansom, Jr. of Raleigh, ex changed marriage vows with Mr. Al Tony Gilmore on the 29th of August in a ceremony performed by Father Gerald Lewis in Saint Mary’s Roman Catholic Church in Garner. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of candlelight color. Laced silk organza covered the basic heavy taffeta gown with sca 11 oped laced neck and long-sleeves with laced cuffs. A double row of pearls traveled down the full front of the dress beginning from its bodice. Scattered pearls and lace outlining ac cented the front design. Her train was detachable at the up per part of the gown in the back. Her veil of silk illusion was of mantilla effect and was lace trimmed. She carried a cascade bouquet of baby carnations cen tered with an orchid. Her bridesmaids wore flame and candlelight crepe evening culottes. Miss Sara Genevieve Sansom was maid of honor and Mrs. Sarah Smith Sansom was matron of honor. Bridesmaides were Miss Sherrill McMillan of Raleigh, Mrs. Mildred C. Christmas of Raleigh, Miss Donna T. Winters of Raleigh, Mrs. Carolyn H. Bryant of Baltimore, Md., Miss Wonza Williamson of New York. N. Y. and Miss Rosaenne Waters of Washington, D. C. ‘‘lt’w Lasier to Pa thi CuMBcm.ANC Way'' CUMBERLAND FURNITURE CO. "The Friendly Stoke" Everything for the. Home JACK MENDELSOHN, Manager, 210-212 Person St. Phone 484-6196 107 Person Street Phone 483-4775 Fayetteville, N. C. 28301 Mr. Tyrone Gilmore of Spar tanburg, S. C., the groom’s brother, was the best man. Ush ers were Messers Leon Black, Jr., of Fuquay-Varina, Walter Farrell of Raleigh, Gerald Roper of New York, N. Y„ Ronald Jones of Durham, Frank Turner of Raleigh, Charles Clinton of Washington, D. C. and Joseph Sansom of Raleigh. The flower girl was LaShauna Bryant and Tyrone Gilmore, Jr. was the ring bearer. James E. Sansom and Benjamin John son served as acolytes. Mrs. Jacquelyn M. Burton played for the ceremony and Mr. Rol>ert White rendered a few songs. The reception was held at the Meadowhrook Country Club in Garner. Mr. Bill Walton pro vided organ music for the oc casion. The bride received her B. A, degree in 1967 from Hampton In stitute in Math. She received her Juris Doctor Law Degree from North Carolina Central Univer sity this past year. She is a member of the Raleigh Alumni Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Mr. Gilmore did his under graduate and graduate work in History at North Carolina Cen tral University. He is present ly recruiting for the Universi ty of Toledo, in Toledo, Ohio, where the couple now resides.. Go To Church Sunday 9