?THE - CAROLINA TIMES SATUKDAY. SEPT. 30. 1967
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MICHIGAN GOVERNOR VISITSHARLEM (New York)? Mic-higan's Governor George Rom-ney shoots pool with voung-
? sters in Harlem during a visit |to the office of Camp Youth De-1
j velopment. Inc., September 16. jI Romnev noted that the nation's \u25a0
I ghettos contain tinder "thatwill make Vietnam look likechild's play."
(UPI Photo)
Over 300 Negro Office Holders to Stage MeetCHICAGO More than 300 ,
Negroes who hold elective of |fice from Congressman toBoard of Education members ithroughout the country will jparticipate in a three-day, non- jpartisan, hard-working educa- jtional conference to seek an- tswers and methods on how the INegro can better participate in |the total economic and political ilife of the nation, from Sep- |tember 29 through October 1, ,at the University of Chicago's iCenter for Continuing Educa- jtion. at 1307 East 60th Street,
Chicago. Illinois.
This historic meeting will jbe strictly educational in na- jture with no political structure !or elections, and no political '
resolutions are expected," de-cla re d Manhattan Borough
President Percy E. Sutton, ofNew York City, and State Sen-ator Mervyn M. Dymally of LosAngeles. Conference Co-Chair-men.
State Representative A. JuneFranklin, a democrat of DesMoines. lowa, is ConferenceSecretary, and State Represen-
tative Woodrow Wilson, a Re-
publican, of Las Vagas, Nevada,
is Conference Coordinator.The Conference, agreed upon
by a group of 28 elected offi-cials from 11 states at a plan-
July 29, will open on Friday
evening. September 29 andwill continue at the Centerthrough Sunday afternoon,
October 1. Center officials are
assisting the Conference offi-
i cers in arranging final details.Discussion papers have been
prepared in specific areas by
j experts in various fields anda panel of distinguflhed Negro
and white government, privateand civic leaders will presenttheir views on them to the Con-ference delegates in a series ofclosed workshop and panel ses-sions. In addition, study ses-
sions will be held to assist theelected officials on where andhow to get government, founda-tion, and civic assistance fortheir respective communities.
'*
The purpose of the Confer-ence is to assist the elected
I Negro public officials in ful-filling his role as an elected
' official by exploring positions
and building a dialogue on va-
I rious issues designed to helpj secure greater participation in! the decision-making processes
| of the political power structurej of both parties.(Tonight's
easy^ck-upBUCKET OF CHICKEN A7C15 Pieces Tender, Tarty Oilrlten i1 Pint Delicious Cracklin' GravyMelt-in-your-mouth(serves 5 to 7 people)
Take itfrom the Colonel... "h*ifinger Bclcfn*goodly Take home Kentucky Fried Chickentonight Allyou do iipick ittip. The tervicot> sudden.
We fx Sunday dinnerseven days a week
colonel uMomtrmsm
K«t»A( fned (Jkiikw.
RIHALDI'S ME HOME. V
Ml MIAMIBLVD. 806 tTH STREETDURHAM. N. C.
ROSEMARY AND FRANKLIN STS. CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
History GroupTo Meet AtA&T State U.
GREENSBORO More than500 persons are expected to at-tend the 52nd annual meeting
of the Association For TheStudy of Negro Life and His-tory here October 12-15.
The opening session of theconference will he held October12 at 8 p.m. in the HarrisonAuditorium of A&T State Uni-versity. All other sessions willbe held at the Statler-HiltonVoyager Inn.
Special presentations planned jfor the conference this year are ja memorial service honoring jthe memory of the late Negro jpoet Langston Hughes and a jsymposium on the teaching of INegro history in the schools.
Arthur P Davis of Howard IUniversity and Samuel Ailen, Ipoet and general counsel of the jDepartment of Justice's Com- imunity Relations Service will |present papers honoring Lang-
ston Hughes.Allan D Pierson of Yale Uni- '
versity will be in charge of the |session of the teaching of Ne- |gro history.
Noted scholars who will par-
ticipate in the program includeKenneth B. Clark, professor of Ipsychology at City College ofNew York: John Hope Frank- jJin of the University of Chica jgo; Tiobort M Calhoon, andf'"r.mk Melton of the Universityof North Carolina at Greens-boro; and Samuel Dußois Cook |of Duke University; and C. H. |Wesley, executive director of Ithe Asosciation for the Study of 'Negro Life and History.
J Reuben Sheelcr of TexasSouthern University is presi-dent of the Association and F.IE. White and Dr. Darwin T.
Turner of A&T arc chairmanand co-chairman ot the con- |ferenee I
Young DurhamWoman NamedTo Peace Corps
WASHINGTON. D. C. MissJudith C. Grandy, daughter ofDr. and Mrs. Grandy, 1005Crete St., Durham, has recentlybeen named a Peace Corps
Volunteer after completing ten
weeks of training at the PeaceCorps Training Center in Hilo,Hawaii.
She is one of the 171 newVolunteers who will teach in
I Philippine elementary schools.I The Volunteers will work withFilipino co-teachers to broadenthe base of education in thecommunities and introduce jmodern methods of teachingEnglish, science and mathe- 'matics. Volunteers will also'participate in extracurricular Jactivities such as community'!action and rice demonstration Iprojects.
During .their training, theVolunteers studied three Philip-pine dialects: Tagalog, Ilocanoand Cebuano. They also studiedPhilippine history and cultureand practice taught. Their ar-1rival on September 16 bringsthe number of Peace CorpsVolunteers in the Philippines |to over 725, engaged in educa-tion, community development, jsecretarial work and occupa- Jtional therapy.
Some species of flounders jcan charge their color to blendwith the background.
ANGRY GROUP? (Washington)?An angry group of poor Ne-gro mothers conduct a sit-inat a Senate hearing room, de-
I manding that the entire FinanceI Committee membership heartheir protest against House-
| passed welfare curbs. Chairmanj Russell B. Long, D-La. and Sen.j Fred Harris, D-okla., listened
Jto the protest for a while.Shortly thereafter, Long left,
i telling newsmen it was up to] Capitol Police to clear the
; hearing room.(UPI Telephoto)
With Our Men in the Service
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DOVE
Airman Burley J. Dove,grandson of Mrs. Mina D. Nich-ols of 304 Mineral Springs Rd.,Durham, has completed basictraining at Lackland AFB, Tex.He has been assigned to theAir Force Technical TrainingCenter at Goodfellow AFB,Tex., for specialized schoolingas an intelligence specialist.
Airman Dove is a 1967 gradu-ate of Southern High School.
MORTON
Airman Ronald S. Horton, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Horton,Sr. of Rt. 6. Lenoir, has com-pleted basic training at Lack-land AFB, Tex. He has beenassigned to the Air Force Tech-nical Training Center at Ama-rillo AFB, Tex. Horton is a 1967graduate of Gamewell-Colletts-ville High School.
FRIDAY
Airman James E. Friday, Jr.,son of Mr. and Mrs. James E.Erid*yT Sr. Booker Ava.,
training at Tex.He has been assigned to the AirSorce Technical Training Cen-ter at Amarillo AFB, Tex., forspecialized schooling as an ad-ministrative specialist. AirmanFriday is a 1967 graduate ofDunbar High School.
\u25a0\u25a0LBJOHNSON
BEGIN GRADUATE STUDIES?
Nine students from severalstates were recently awardedgraduate assistantships forstudy in the Graduate School ofA&.T State University. Fromleft to right (back row) areJames H. Boykin, Raleigh;Shepherd Scott, Fairmont;Charles Henson, Mobile, Ala.;(second row) William T. Brown,
Jr., Gr*«ntbero; Mln Lug«ni*
Rochelle, Hill;t Miss MaeFrances » Crawford '
MtArthur
Airman First Class WillieJohnson, son of Mrs. Ruby M.Johnson of 127 Haywood St.,Red Springs, on duty at TanSon Nhut AB, Vietnam. AirmanJohnson, an administrative spe-cialist, is a member of the Pa-cific Air Forces. Before his ad-rival in Southeast Asia, he wasassigned to Seymour JohnsonAFB, N. C. The airman is agraduate of Peterson HighSchool. His wife, Brenda, is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Go-litha Hill of 908 A Carver Dr.,Goldsboro
j Airman Bobby G. Russell,| grandson of Mr. and Mrs. A. B.I Cates of 809 Jackson St., Dur-| ham, has completed basic train-ing at Amarillo AFB, Tex. Hehas been assigned to the AirForce Technical Training Cen-ter at Sheppard AFB, Tex., forspecialized school as a trans-poration specialist.
Airman Russell attended| Hallsboro High School.
The Milton House Museum is
the oldest cement building inthe United States; it was a
station used by slaves escapingon the Underground railway.
101 PROOF - 8 YEARS OLD-
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Haile Selassie became Empe
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