18
THE CAROLINIAN
RALEIGH. N C SATURDAY. JANUARY 1,197 S
fe ■■■
. c -'•'•• 5%
NO l-'OOI ; !.\ 111- I' l- ]■; N DAYS - Murpur, Bang
la D«.-sh: A mother and her child wait for
food nert* I -•■ ■ *nivr 23, 14 miles west of Dac
ca, wher<- th<- .op of Baharis has been with
out food for 13 di>.-. Local Bengalis are re
portedly starvo.-y the people to death in the
towns of Muroui' o . Mohammedpur, near Dac
ca. The in "a R; Desh government issued
a formal D ■■ernher 27 asking Bengalis
not to take revenge igainst Fast Pakistani col
laborators. (DPI).
UNCF Official Given Last
Rites !n New York City
NEW YOPK. N.Y. - !■' <1
services fro Wil 1
Spearman, i ircctoi of !' ■-
search for th< United N.-l : c
College Fund, who ■■■ ■ • <■. :a
turda' , Decern her b c U, •• •
held on Tucsd.v •. •:>!• ; , I',
comber 21st, - p t, ,
the Si loam iv-'-sby-erla;
Church, 260 Jefforsc*: 'venue
Brooklyn, New Y ,rk
Mr. Spearma.-, was born
in Lawrence, Knusn-. H.» re
ceived a Bachelor : de
gree from the University of
Kansas in Lawrence, a;.a a
Master of Arts decree iron, In
diana University in Blooming
ton. He taught high school in
Chicago, Illinois, and New York
VETERANS!....
j WHO HAVE HONORABLY
SERVED THEIR COUNTRY IN
TIME OF PEACE OR WAR
B SPACE
use or
ISTRIC
CEME-
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FUE OF
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a o\nt:-
EE OF
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ARMEi)
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r REG
-SLE TO
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any gov
rial pru
srans
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City, before joining the United
u college Fund as Assis-
Director of Educational
■or vices in 1965. He was a
Mason, and a member of the
honors > educational fraterni
t Phi Delta Kappa.
Mr. Spearman is survived by
his son, William L. Spearman,
J... of Denver, Colo.; his sis
ters: M;s. Mendota Mosley of
Omaha, Nebraska; Mrs. Mar
. a ret carr, of Kansas City,
Missouri. Mes. Marian Lind
set of Chicago, 111.;'Mrs. Bar
bara Anderson of Chicago; Miss
Mildred Spearman of Borden
Town, New Jersey; and one bro
ther, John H. Spearman, St.,
of Lawrence Kansas.
NCCUGiven $5,000 Grout
DURHAM, N.C. - North Ca
rolina Central University's
Criminal Justice Program has
received a supplementary $5,-
000 grant for the current aca
demic year from the Law En
forcement Education Program
of the U.S. Justice Department,
according to Jess J. Bowe, di
rector of the program.
Bowe said 50 students were
enrolled during the fall semes
er in two three - hour courses,
Criminal Law Procedure and
Introduction to Law Enforce
ment. Among the students en
rolled were two representatives
of the Durham County Sheriff’s
Department and Lieutenant J, B.
Samuels of the Durham City Po
lice Department.
The grant provides aid to the
students enrolled in the pro
gram, which is offered in the
university's department of po
litical science. A grant of
$3,750 was awarded by the
LEEP this fall.
Bowe, a veteran West
Virginia policeman himself,
was particularly pleased to give
the Durham police lieutenant in
in his classes. ‘‘This is a man
with almost 30 years of serv
ice on the Durham police'force,
and I think it’s an outstand
ing thing that he would parti
cipate in these classes.’’
Bowe said an additional three
hour course in Police Admin
istration will be added for the
spring semester beginning Jan
uary 6. “We are authorized
to offer up to 20coursehours,”
Bowe said. “If we receive the
funds we have requested from
the federal government, we will
be able to add additional fa
culty members and offer the full
20 hours by next September.”
Bowe said he has received
inquiries from community col
leges In and out of North Ca
rolina which offer two years of
work in police science. “They
will probably be sending us
some of their graduates for
work toward the bachelor's de
gree.”
The Criminal Justice Pro
gram of 20 hours is offered
as a specialty program within
say YOUR
I 2 Locations To Serve You , t jJ-f f
| N© Money Down t , JyAwt ( |
| No Payments 'til Feb. 1972 New Furniture At 01(1 IViees |
II ' 1 i i
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II *l9 || *9 BS | | S4B 11
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I | sconces, superb shed In take-wrth carton. | s woods. Packed for gifting; easy to assemble. S f maximum storage ir. minim m space. White. g g
jI . ' | j *I :
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| La-Z-Boy®Cont. Reclina-Rocker! | | £ j!; our gilt-framed jewels and save! | |
| | s l5B || *66 |I £ 22 ||
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I « A. Save 561, reg. $239 Colonial ......... $l7B $ $ with styrene accents. Drop front for easy ac- plate glass mirrors in gold frames. Choice of
|| 8. Save ssl,’ rag. $229 Traditional $l7B $1 fj cess. 30-inches wide, holds 150 albums. | | four assorted sizes and shapes, by Bassett! s|-
I 10 , n., 5920 Glenwood Ave. 782-5223 301 S. Wilmington St. 833-554' £
the department of political sci
ence, with students working to
ward a degree in that field.
Hudbond-Wife
Team Appointed
At Harvard U.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - A hus
band and wife team of scholars,
both of whom have studied and
worked in Africa and the United
States, have received term ap
pointments to the faculty of
Harvard Univdr
Harvard University as lectur
ers on Afro-American Stud
ies.
Stanlake Samkange, an Afri
can-born historian who did
graduate work in Indiana, comes
to Harvard from Fisk Univer
sity, where he was Professor of
African history.
Tommie Marie Samkange, a
Mississippi born authority on
child development, comes to
Harvard from Tennessee A&T
State University, where she was
Professor of Psychology.
They met as graduate students
at Indiana University, where
Stanlake received the M. S.
degree in Education and Tommie
Marie received the Ph. D. in
Educational Psychology in 1958.
Stanlake later returned to In
diana, and received the Ph. D.
in American History in 1968.
Meanwhile, together they spent
six years as editor-owner and
market research analyst in a
public relationsna d
public relations and advertis
ing firm in Rhodesia, where
Stanlake also owned a news
paper, the African Business
man, and corresponded for
publications in South Africa,
Central Africa, and London.
When they returned to the U
riited States in 1965, Stanlake
resumed his graduate studies
at Indian University and Tom
mie Marie joined the faculty
first of Tuskegee Institute and
then of Tennessee State.
Together, ghd
Together, the Samkanges have
traveled extensively in Africa,
Western Europe, and the United
l. v - v 4 -
NEW OFFICERS AND INCUMBENTS OF ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA SORORITY - rhese
an d incumbent officers of the Alpha Theta Omega Chaptei of the Alpha Kappa \b ’
installed on December 18, at the North Hills’ K and W Cafeteria. Seated, left to r ght; Mes
dames Delores Revis, basileus; Mary H. Hooker, anti-basileus (new); Miss Joyce Cn. _
mateus; Mesdames Joan Spencer, aSiti-grammateus; Omeata Jackson, tamioclius, (incumbents
Standing, left to right: Miss Marion Hayes, epistoleus; Mrs. Ethel Greene, parliament a min
(new); Mesdames Susie Perry, and Thelma Keck, public relations (incumbents)- Mr= Jackie
Kallund, adviser to the Beta Rho Chapter of Shaw University; Mesdames \nn Washimrtom a d
Mae Frances Haywood, advisers to Gamma Xi Chapter of St. Augustine’s College.
States. Togher and separately,
they have contributed to confer
ences on Africa, on education,
on the Afro-American Exper
ience, and on child development.
Stanlake Samkange was born in
Rhodesia on March 11, 1922, the
son of one of the first African
Methodist ministers in Rhodes
ia. He received the B. A. in His
tory and English from the Uni
versity of South Africa in 1947
and the B. A. with Honors in
History in 1950.
He taught history in Rhodesia
for five years and then for four
years served as organizing sec
retary and fund -raiser for Ry
atsime College, founded to give
Africans academic, commercial
and technical education of a
high standard. He spent the year
1957-58 at Indiana University,
earning his M. S. degree, and
then returned to .Africa, with
his wife, to engage in newspaper
publishing and public relations.
36 Courses For Evening Classes Set
FAYETTEVILLE - Fayette
ville State University will of
fer 36 courses in its Even
ing College during the second
semester of the 1971-72 aca
demic. year, Dr. R.L. Fields,
Dean of the Universitv; an
nounced recently. g
FSU’s Evening College is o
pen to persons in f erested in
strengthening themselves for
professional advancement, pur
suing and undergraduate de
gree, regularly enrolled stu
dents desiring to accelerate
their academic pace, inci
viduals and in-service teach
ers seeking course work for
certification.
registration for FSU’s li
vening College will beheld Fri
day, January 7 and classes be
gin on Monday, January 10.
Persons interested in FSU’s
Evening College are urged t<
contact their departmental
chairman for academic coun
sel. Twenty-two courses will
be offered at the FSU campus
and the remainder will be held
at the Fayetteville State-North
Carolina State -- Fort Bragg
Branch.
Courses arc being offered in
Business Administration, Early
Childhood Education, Chemis
try, Art, English, Education,
History and Government, For
eign Languages, Music Educa
tion, Health and Physical Ed
ucation. Mathematics, Biology,
Computer Science, and Philo
sophy.
According to Dean Fields, E
veiling College classes re Quire
a. minimum enrollment of 10-
persons and if that number is
not enrolled the class v ill lie
discontinued from the schedule.
Also, he stated that pers-ns
enrolled in Evening College may
take up to 19 credit hours.
HCCU Grad Is
College Prexy
DURHAM, N.C. - Dr. Wilium
DeTlomer Waller, a native of
Durham and a graduate of North
Carolina Central University,
was Inaugurated as the second
president of South Central Com
munity College, New Haven,
t inn., on December 12.
Dr. Waller has taught at Ho
ward University, and has serv
ed a professor and head of the
chemistry section of the United
States Coast Guard Academy
arid as visiting professor at
several colleges. He was for
merly dean of Mohegan Com
munity College, and has served
a consultant to Columbia
University, the U.S. Department
of Health, Education, and Wel
, and the U.S. Department
cf Justice. .
: r. Waller holds a Master of
science degree from Howard
University and a Master of Arts
in Community Development and
Doctor of Education degree
fw pi Columbia University.
lie is .arried to tbe former
Eunice McLean, and is the fa
tin’; of ,i son and a daughter.
ecu criminal justice
i rogram receives ad
ditional funding
l-’ersons interested in addi-
J -onrt information about Fay
etteville State University’s E
vmiing College should contact
the Ivan i-f the University’s Of
fice.
Deadline tor W-2 Forms Is
January 31, IRS Reminds
Employees
: . • >o* • The dead--
; : employers to give
- , v, their 1971 W-2
ion-os is Monday, Jan. 31,
r; j. K Wall, District
D ; o’’ Internal Revenue
for North Carolina, said to
day.
Tin:- form should show
.an ngs income tax with
and Social Security in-