MANY ROLES—tyvll Burke, RN, (Ms many rain at a nurse at Duke Unhrenffy Medical Canter. Ska might ha pitching In an an Intensive cart unit, ei RyMf an a patlant transpart misslan, or just teaching advanced cardiac Mi Mppart at a cammunlty hospital. Ms. Burke hat a master’s dagraa In naming and —a staff nerka since 1981. Airman Completes Class Airman Jason D. Clay has graduated from the U.S. Air Force aircraft maintenance course at Shep pard Air Force Base, Texas. During the course, students were taught aircraft maintenance fun damentals to repair and service one and two-engine jet aircraft. Maintenance management and documentation was also taught to assess aircraft readiness capability. Graduates of the course earnec credits toward an associate degree through the Community College o the Air Vnrce. Clay is the son of David R. Clay o! 5000 Wallingford Drive and S. Gwer Clay of 12504 Waterman Drive, bott of Raleigh. He is a 1968 graduate of Millbrooi Senior High School. Raleigh. R G LAR S L OUR DOORS Hell glee up before bur door will! — tl«« aad oar doors don't glv* burglars tima. 2904 O’Kelly Street Raleigh, N.t. 27607 DIAL (919) 832-8293 THE EEOC Claims Record in Litigation Activities WASHINGTON, D.C.—The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission achieved record-setting : litigation activity on behalf of Job | discrimination victims in the first three quarters of fiscal year MM, , Chairman Clarence- -Thomas an I nounced last week. By June SO, a record 523 cases were recommended for litigation by field offices to EEOCs Office of General Counsel. In comparison, 4M cases were submitted for the same period in fiscal 1M8, a year in which EEOC | filed the most court actions in its I history. General Counsel Charles A. Shanor said that “Thorough investigations of charges provide agency attorneys i with better-prepared cases to go to court with in the event that concilia tion efforts fall to settle diacrimina-' tion claims.” With three months to go in the fiscal year, commissioners had authorised suit in 439 cases, up from 2M at that point in fiscal 1968. EEOC resolutions of lawsuits also are up from previous third quarters, 374 as compared with 346 last year. “The increased resolutions were due to substantive lawsuits filed on the merits of discrimination charges,” Shanor said. The 380 lawsuits filed through the third quarter, also a record, includes an unprecedented total of 86 suits fil ed under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Monetary benefits recovered through litigation on behalf of in dividuals affected by Job bias totaled 838.1 million. Of that total, 817.6 million were recovered under the ADEA. Third-quarter statistics on charges of discrimination and on monetary benefits obtained through ad ministrative enforcement have not yet been compiled. EEOC enforces Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which pro hibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin, the Age Discrimina tion in Employment Act, which pro hibits discrimination against workers age 40 and older, thd Equal Pay Act and prohibitions against discrimina tion affecting individuals with han dicaps in the federal sector. Hep. Lighthouse Speaks At Annual Indian Event CHAPEL HILL—In conjunction with Indian Heritage Week, Rep. Ben Lighthouse Campbell of Colorado's Third District will deliver the Carol Thompson Lecture. The lecture, which is sponsored byt he Volunteers of the North Carolina Botanical Gardens and the Carolina Indian Cir cle, will be held at 8 p.m. in Hamilton Hall on the UNC campus. Due to his mixed ancestry, three quarters Cheyenne Indian and one quarter Scottish, Campbell often found himself involved in many fights while growing up. In order to combat those encounters, Campbell (earned and mastered Judo, becoming a Judo gold medalist, as well as an award winning Jewelry designer, a rancher, a trainer of champion quarterborses, and above all, a well-respected legislator. “It seems like I was always fighting. So I took up Judo—legal fighting. I never dreamed it would open up the world for me and provide me with a ladder up and out of a typical half-breed childhood.” Campbell continued to Juggle prac ticing Judo while serving in the Air Force and-attending- rlatset at the University of California at San Jose. After graduating from college, he spent four years in Japan training as part of the first U.S. Judo team to enter the Olympics. In 1964, a knee injury brought Campbell’s retirement from Judo competitions. Carrying the UJS. flag into the national stadium in Tokyo at -r4-1 the head of the U.S. contingent of athletes in the closing ceremony of the Olympic Games brought that phase of his life to a fitting conclu sion. His interest in Judo continued, however, and he served on the Presi dent’s Council on Physical Fitness, and began developing Judo teams in Sacramento, and teaching self defense to young women, and physical education to the handicap ped In 1977, having come to terms with both his Indian and white ancestry, Campbell settled in Ignacio, an - enclave in the heart of the Southern Ute Reservation. Of Ignacio, Camp bell says, “We like it here, because it’s where the deserts meet the moun tains, and three cultures—Indian, white and Chicano—come together.” . His first foray into government was ■Us election to the Colorado State Legislature in 1963, where he served on the Agriculture and Natural Af fairs and Business and Labor com mittees. He was also appointed to the Colorado Commission on Interna tional Trade and the Colorado Com . mission on the Arts and Humanities. DELIVERING APDHEM-Jekn W. W11m. aweMaSHlIaURk daeabper and foriMr itati MMtar, and Waka Technical CammaaHy Map President Inca L Hawaii prapara far Hit eoNaga’s cemmencement exercises Aa|. 18. Tka caiege ■warded assedals In applad science degress, dramas and carMeatae ta 417 graduatai. Winters deNvsred the addran at tka 21th anneal eammaneamant, held In thaRaMgb Civic Canter. “By bah* hart as a gndaata, yea have aalscksd haw ta educate yenrsaNWinter* laid tka gradeates. Ha alaa advbad tkam ta “ht vour Rnht ta iNne that vaa wt aiwavi ba kaawn tar dalm a lab wel." Value Checking ••• FOR PEOPLE WHO PREFER A CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH NO MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIREMENT. Sf SAVES MONEY - Low monthly service charge of only $3.95. [?f MORE CONTROL - Write as many as 20 checks per statement cycle. 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