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SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1972 Section B ?B Pages TOUK.PfCIVBUfKWB WILT local, State and National News of Interest to All PRICE : 20 CKNTB REV. ABERNAIHY CHALLENGES DEMOCRATIC PARTY ATLANTA, GA -In a "ch- allenge to action," Dr. Ralph Abernathy has warned the Democratic Party that "the" progressive voting forces of this nation will not support any candidate for local, state or federal office who does not respond clearly to the issues." Beach next month. Dr. Abernathy reminded the committee that poor people will be encamped in Miami Beach in "Resurrection City II" during the convention, for the purpose of challenging the party and its Presidential tic- ket to speak to the issues. He also stated that SCLC, as a nation-wide organization, will be active in voter regis- tration and political education throughout the 1972 election campaign. "We have young and vibrant forces strategically located around the nation in 16 major cities," he said. "We have strategically placed about the country 300 affiliate or- ganizations, served by 56 na- tional staff members." These forces, along with millions of others, the SCLC leader said, have joined in a "counter-campaign" to place the political issues before na- tional parties. "We want this platform committee to know and understand that in Miami Beach this summer, our chall- enge must be heard and met if a new President is to be elected," Dr. Abernathy said. of the Saigon regime; corn- plate health care for all; sharp reduction in military spending and the arms race, rebuilding of the cities; decent housing and transportation for all; an end to hunger; and end to special tax privileges and sub- sidies for the rich; a guaran- teed income for all; protection of the right of all workers to organize unions; outlawing ra- cist policies of the government quality education for all; and jobs for all. "Mr. Chairman, to what welfare mess are these Presi- dential contenders referring," Dr. Abemathy asked, "Is it to the welfare meis of the rich, like Senator Eastland of Missi- ssippi, who has been paid $13,000 a month in tax money not to grow cotton on his Dlantation?" Dr. Abemathy cited the following statistics on the re- alities of welfare: 55.5% goes to children under 16 years of age; 18.6% goes to mothers with children under the age of six; 15.6% goes to people over 65; 9.4% goes to the blind and disabled; and leas Continued on p. 6B K V nvMP77(VI Vva/\ v'AAJ Vy\u25a0 * # The President of the Sou- thern Christian Leadership Con- ference cited issues of vital concern to poor people, mi- norities, the young, and wor- kers, in testimony before the National Democratic Party Con- vention Platform Committee. This committee will draft the platform for the party's na- tional convention in Miami A major point made by Dr. Abernathy was that "lead- ing Democratic contenders for the Presidency have recently referred to a 'welfare mess' in our nation and have refused to deal specifically with this issue. He testified in detail on the issues, including the need for the following action*: An immediate end to the war in Vietnam by withdrawing all U.S. troops and ending support «ABERNATHY Compliance Officer Finds NASHVILLE Being a woman has proven to be a real job asset for Carol Daniels Carter, but she's not in a tradi- tionally female occupation. Mrs. Carter is the first black and the first woman to be hired as a compliance officer by the local office of the U.S. Depart- ment of Labor's Labor-Manage- ment Services Administration (LMSA). "Perhaps it is because I am a woman, and in some instances because I am black," she says, "but I feel there are times when I make investigations?- particularly in a home?that I get better treatment and co- operation than the men on our staff. During her four years as a compliance officer, Mr s. Carter has successfully carried out a variety of difficult assignments in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Mississippi. She investigated the 1969 national election of the United Mine Workers in some of the most mountainous sections of Appalachia and "did an excel- lent job" says her supervisor, Area Director Homer E. Krog. As an LMSA compliance of- ficer, Mrs. Carter is a combina- tion enforcement officer and technical assistance advisor for three federal laws and a Presi- dential Executive Order. These federal statutes are: Labor Management Reporting and Dis- closure Act; the Welfare and Pension Plans Disclosure Act; the Military Selective Service Act of 1967, and Executive Order 11491 which regulates federal labor-management rela- tions. Former Times City-Editor Receives Appointmentj Mrs. Carter is currently working on a special assignment to speed the receipt and im- prove the accuracy of financial reports from labor organiza- tions. James Vaughan, former city-editor with The Carolina Times newspaper has been appointed promotion supervi- sor for local television station WTVD-TV. The appointment was announced this week by Mike Thompson, general mana- ger of the station. Vaughan, 29, is a graduate of North Carolina Central Uni- versity and was a Frederick Douglass Journalism graduate fellow. A native North CaroC linean, he served as a reporter and editor in New York City prior to returning to North Carolina. "in house" agency for adver-> tising and focusing on the station's programming. Vaughan will be joining the station June 26 proceeding a heavy fall season of premiering programs. Continued on p. 6B * W Hit MRS. FLORENCE HUDSON Central Graduate Gets Degree From Southern University Krog points out that Mrs. Carter is given exactly the same type of assignment as the men on the staff. He predicts that she will someday hold a posi- tion in Washington's "top eche- lon." An honor student at Fort Valley State College in Fort Valley, Ga., Mrs. Carter origin- ally planned on a teaching ca- reer. Three months of student teaching, however, changed her mind. The day after graduation, Continued on p. 6B CARBONDALE, 111. - One of 300 Southern Illinois Uni- versity at Carbondale students receiving a master's degree this month in Florence Hud- son, a former graduate of North Carolina Central Univer- sity in Durham. After two years of study of migrant worker conditions, Mrs. Hudson will receive her master of science in com* munity development degree at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. She received her bachelor's degree in sociology. A native of Oxford, Mrs. Hudson now plans to work with the educational compo- nent of migrants. When asked whether or not she would study for a doctorate degree, Mrs. Hudson replied, "A Ph. D. is not the ultimate. What I want is broader informa- tion on my topic of interest. I would like to become an expert. If I get a Ph.D. in the prooess of becoming an expert, it will be incidental." Mrs. Hudson will also be celebrating her sixteenth wed- ding ainiversary this June to Dr. Gossie Harold Hudson, a history professor at SIU. In the same month, he will leave Carbondale to become chair- man of the history department at Lincoln University in Jef- ferson, Mo. According to Thompson, the promotion department of the station functions as an VAUGHAN Blacks To Bring Says A&T Champlain In Paper Mrs. Hudson said that in their earlier married years she spent mo6t of her time con- cerned with her husband's ambitions and their two chil- dren. GREENSBORO, N. C. - Chaplains on predominantly black college campuses are faced with special problems which their white counterparts don't have, according to the director of religious activities at A&T State Unviersity. "The black chaplain or cam- pus minister shares the prob- lems of professional identity of his white colleagues," said the Rev. Cleo M. McCoy, "but white racism, the molder of American social philosophy and structure, has added dimensions to the crisis for blacks." published by the organization. "The black chaplain," said McCoy, "must use three criteria for determining his role in the academic community. He must possess a knowledge of the ministry of Jesus and its impli- cations for meeting human need. He must also know the history of black religious ex- perience and the social role of institutionalized black religiou." Just as important, added McCoy, is the fact that black chaplains must be able to "in- terpret the signs of the times as he contributes to the libera- tion of black folk." "The task of the black cam- pus minister is to teach and Continued on p. 6B "Now that the children have grown up and my hus- band is well on his way, I can get a chance to do some of the things that I enjoy doing most." According to Mrs. Hudson, once the family moves to Missouri, she will do the same kind of work concerning mi- grants that was done in Illinois. McCoy, who has been named to the board of directors of the Ministries to Blacks in Higher Education, had his views Tenant Steering Supports Commission Change The Tenant Steering Comm- ittee is an officially recognized boyd of the Durham Housing Authority. It is because the Durham Housing Authority has a direct effect on our lives, that we feel it necessary to state our position at this time in relationship to the action taken by the comm- issioners of the Durham Hou- sing Authority. The Tenant Steering Com- mittee views the recent policy change made by the Housing commissioners as a milestone in the history of Durham Pub- lic housing. We therefore strongly support and endorse the action taken by the Com- missioners. Despite the fact that the resigning staff con- tends that the action taken by the Commissioners was dis- criminatory, it should be noted that the policy action was voted unanimously by both black and white commissioners It has been long overdue for the decision-making body to make policy changes in the interest of the tenant and to respond to problems that are sensitive to us. As a Tenant Committee,we want to make it clear that for many years, we have fought the injustices and intimadating practices used by the manage- ment of the Durham Housing Authority. For years, tenants have been victimized by underhanded tac- tics continually used by the administration. We can now and have in the past pinpointed instance after instance where management has exercised poor and improper judgement and Continued on p. 6B j <4 K. 4 i^k v LOS ANGELES: With a security guard at her side Angela Davis makes her first major speech since being freed In the San Jose murder-kldnap-conspiracy case. The former UCLA philosophy Instructor told her audience that the time has come for an end to prisons in the United States. An audience of 1800 overflowed the Embassy Auditorium and repeatedly cheered and raised the symbolic clenched fist salute of Black Power advocates. (UPI) Applauses Angela's Freedom The following statement was released today by the United Presbyterian Council on Church and Race: The acquittal of Angela Da- vis on June 4 was an occasion for quiet jubilation and sober reflection by the United Pres- byterian Council on Church and Race which made a grant of SIO,OOO to the Angela Da- vis Defense Fund on March 15, 1971. The COCAR grant, made to help assure a fair trial, was widely interpreted across the church as unwise. It triggered a protracted con- troversy among United Pres- byterians concerning the use of denominational funds for legal assistance to a Black radi- cal. Despite the subsequent opp- osition of many Presbyterians a considerable segment of the Continued on p. 6B NCCU Project Is Model For Library-Faculty Collaboration North Carolina Central Uni- versity's five-year, SIOO,OOO program use in the humanities is seen as a model for "colla- boration between?library staff and teaching faculty" by the Council on Library Resources and the National Endowment for the Humanities, which are jointly providing $50,000 in matching funds for the pro- gram. university is the ninth under the joint College Library Pro- gram of the two agencies. Pre- vious matching grants totaling $490,000 have gone to Brown, Dillard, Eastern Michigan, Ho- ward and Washington and Lee universities, and to Hampshire, Jackson State, and Swarthmore colleges. The academic "collabora- tion" will occur during actual planning for classroom instruc- tion and will be made possible through the employment of a fulltime reference librarian, a parttime subject specialist, a parttime secretary, and varied student assistants affiliated with the university's graduate scho- ol. the result of "lack of interest on the part of faculty and library staff. Nor is it due to absence of communication between the two groups. This condition seems to exist in many instances because no time is provided for adequate planning that includes both groups." Miss Pennie E. Perry, chief librarian at the university, will direct the project, whose pur- pose is "to help the under- graduate student realize opti- mum benefit from the re- sources of the campus and motivate him to consider these resources essential in the pur- suit of his educational goals." The two agencies, the Coun- cil on Library Resources a pri- vate nonprofit organization es- tablished at the instance of the Ford Foundation and the Na- tional Endowment for the Humanities an independent Federal agency, described the collaborative effort of NCCU in a release sent today to college and university libraries throughout the nation. The $50,000 grant to the According to the univer- sity's original proposal for the matching funds, the present "lack, of collaboration" is not LONDON . Schools are being built with closed windows to keep out traffic noise, and many pupils are sweltering be- cause there is no money to buy blinds, education officials said. 3} %. \ |A AwtJ ** jI tm \\ National Block Citizens I the Reelection \u25a0L | *| H KA |J IHIHh McKissick Highlights Nixon Campaign Dinner WASHINGTON - "It's a new day, brothers and sisters," Floyd McKissick, former di- rector of CORE and Developer of Saul City, told more than 2,000 Black leaders gathered at a fund-raising dinner for President Nixon's campaign Saturday in the Nation's capi- tal. In this photo, taken at the dinner, McKissick is joined in conversation by Special As- sistant to the President Robert Brown (1), Nixon Campaign Director John N. Mitchell (2nd from right) and Rev. Dr. William Holmes Borders, Pas- tor of the Wheat St. Baptist Church, Atlanta, Ga. (r). Mc- Kissick said, "President Nixon didnt create the war in Viet- nam, but he's tried to get us out." Wflkins Gets Louis G. Gregory Service To Human WILMETTE, Illinois Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the NAACP will be presented with the Louis G. Gregory Award for Service to Humani- ty on June 24 in Wilmette Illinois. observance of the United Na- tions International Year for Action to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination and in particular for his contributions to the cause of human rights in America over many years. The presentation program will be chaired by Glenford E. Mitchell, former associate editor of "Africa Report" and presently secretary of the Na- tional Baha'i Assembly. He will also talk on the life of Louis G. Gregory. Dr. Kazemzadeh will speak on "Human Rights are God-Given Rights." A musical interlude will be pro- vided by Donna Kime, re- cording artists, whose voice is the trade-mark of many singing radio and television commer- cials and who has appeared with the Brass Impact Orches- tra since 1957. The award will be presented at 8 p.m. in Foundation Hall of the world-famous Baha'i House of Worship, Linden Avenue and Sheridan Road, Wilmette. The program is open to the public. Making the award will be Dr. Firuz Kazemzadeh, professor of his- tory at Yale University and chairman of the National Baha'i Assembly. Named in honor of a black American, Louis G. Gregory, the award is given by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States through its North American Baha'i Office for Human Rights (NABOHR) to persons and organizations whose humanitarian services have contributed kignificantly to the rights and unity of man. Louis G. Gregory was a member of the first national administrative institution of the Baha'i Faith in the U. S. and for over four decades, he worked to advance the cause of racial unity and human rights. The award is being pre- sented to Wilkins as part of the Accompanying Mrs. Kine will be Tom Pautz from Ar- lington Heights; Hank Drake, Glencoe; and Warren Kime, Wilmette. Mrs. Gandhi Given Welcome In Prague PRAGUE - Prime Minister Indira Gandhi of India arrived Saturday tor a ls« ti|i visit to Czechoslovakia. Dressed in a black and white sari, she stepped from her plane to a ai-gun salute and greetings from Premier Lubo- nur Strougal. Che Car|li|a Cim^s DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA

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Page 1: JUNE Che Car|li|a Cim^s local, News Interest Allnewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1972-06-24/ed-1/seq-9.pdf · SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1972 Section B ?B Pages TOUK.PfCIVBUfKWB WILT

SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1972

Section B ?B Pages

TOUK.PfCIVBUfKWB WILT

local, State and NationalNews of Interest to All

PRICE : 20 CKNTB

REV. ABERNAIHY CHALLENGES DEMOCRATIC PARTYATLANTA, GA -In a "ch-

allenge to action," Dr. RalphAbernathy has warned theDemocratic Party that "the"progressive voting forces ofthis nation will not supportany candidate for local, stateor federal office who does not

respond clearly to the issues."

Beach next month.Dr. Abernathy reminded the

committee that poor peoplewill be encamped in MiamiBeach in "Resurrection CityII" during the convention, forthe purpose of challenging theparty and its Presidential tic-ket to speak to the issues.

He also stated that SCLC,as a nation-wide organization,will be active in voter regis-tration and political educationthroughout the 1972 electioncampaign. "We have youngand vibrant forces strategicallylocated around the nation in16 major cities," he said. "Wehave strategically placed aboutthe country 300 affiliate or-

ganizations, served by 56 na-tional staff members."

These forces, along withmillions of others, the SCLCleader said, have joined in a

"counter-campaign" to placethe political issues before na-tional parties. "We want thisplatform committee to knowand understand that in MiamiBeach this summer, our chall-enge must be heard and metif a new President is to beelected," Dr. Abernathy said.

of the Saigon regime; corn-plate health care for all; sharpreduction in military spending

and the arms race, rebuildingof the cities; decent housingand transportation for all; anend to hunger; and end tospecial tax privileges and sub-

sidies for the rich; a guaran-teed income for all; protectionof the right of all workers toorganize unions; outlawing ra-cist policies of the governmentquality education for all; andjobs for all.

"Mr. Chairman, to what

welfare mess are these Presi-dential contenders referring,"Dr. Abemathy asked, "Is itto the welfare meis of the rich,like Senator Eastland of Missi-ssippi, who has been paid$13,000 a month in tax moneynot to grow cotton on his

Dlantation?"Dr. Abemathy cited the

following statistics on the re-

alities of welfare: 55.5% goesto children under 16 yearsof age; 18.6% goes to mothers

with children under the age

of six; 15.6% goes to peopleover 65; 9.4% goes to the

blind and disabled; and leasContinued on p. 6B

K

VnvMP77(VIVva/\ v'AAJ Vy\u25a0

* #

The President of the Sou-thern Christian Leadership Con-ference cited issues of vitalconcern to poor people, mi-norities, the young, and wor-kers, in testimony before the

National Democratic Party Con-vention Platform Committee.This committee will draft theplatform for the party's na-tional convention in Miami

A major point made byDr. Abernathy was that "lead-ing Democratic contenders forthe Presidency have recentlyreferred to a 'welfare mess'in our nation and have refusedto deal specifically with thisissue.

He testified in detail onthe issues, including the needfor the following action*: Animmediate end to the war inVietnam by withdrawing allU.S. troops and ending support «ABERNATHY

Compliance Officer FindsNASHVILLE Being a

woman has proven to be a realjob asset for Carol DanielsCarter, but she's not in a tradi-

tionally female occupation.Mrs. Carter is the first black

and the first woman to be hiredas a compliance officer by the

local office of the U.S. Depart-ment of Labor's Labor-Manage-ment Services Administration(LMSA).

"Perhaps it is because Iam awoman, and in some instancesbecause I am black," she says,"but I feel there are times

when I make investigations?-particularly in a home?that Iget better treatment and co-

operation than the men on ourstaff.

During her four years as acompliance officer, Mr s. Carterhas successfully carried out a

variety of difficult assignmentsin Kentucky, Tennessee, andMississippi.

She investigated the 1969national election of the UnitedMine Workers in some of themost mountainous sections ofAppalachia and "did an excel-lent job" says her supervisor,Area Director Homer E. Krog.

As an LMSA compliance of-ficer, Mrs. Carter is a combina-tion enforcement officer andtechnical assistance advisor forthree federal laws and a Presi-dential Executive Order. Thesefederal statutes are: LaborManagement Reporting and Dis-closure Act; the Welfare and

Pension Plans Disclosure Act;the Military Selective ServiceAct of 1967, and ExecutiveOrder 11491 which regulatesfederal labor-management rela-tions.Former Times City-Editor Receives Appointmentj Mrs. Carter is currentlyworking on a special assignmentto speed the receipt and im-prove the accuracy of financialreports from labor organiza-tions.

James Vaughan, formercity-editor with The Carolina

Times newspaper has beenappointed promotion supervi-sor for local television stationWTVD-TV. The appointmentwas announced this week byMike Thompson, general mana-ger of the station.

Vaughan, 29, is a graduateof North Carolina Central Uni-versity and was a FrederickDouglass Journalism graduatefellow. A native North CaroClinean, he served as a reporterand editor in New York Cityprior to returning to NorthCarolina.

"in house" agency for adver->tising and focusing on thestation's programming.

Vaughan will be joining the

station June 26 proceeding aheavy fall season of premieringprograms.

Continued on p. 6B

* W

Hit

MRS. FLORENCE HUDSON

Central Graduate Gets DegreeFrom Southern University

Krog points out that Mrs.Carter is given exactly the sametype of assignment as the menon the staff. He predicts thatshe will someday hold a posi-tion in Washington's "top eche-lon."

An honor student at FortValley State College in FortValley, Ga., Mrs. Carter origin-ally planned on a teaching ca-reer. Three months of studentteaching, however, changed hermind. The day after graduation,

Continued on p. 6B

CARBONDALE, 111. - Oneof 300 Southern Illinois Uni-versity at Carbondale studentsreceiving a master's degreethis month in Florence Hud-son, a former graduate ofNorth Carolina Central Univer-sity in Durham.

After two years of study ofmigrant worker conditions,Mrs. Hudson will receive her

master of science in com*

munity development degree at

Southern Illinois University at

Carbondale. She received her

bachelor's degree in sociology.A native of Oxford, Mrs.

Hudson now plans to work

with the educational compo-nent of migrants. When askedwhether or not she wouldstudy for a doctorate degree,Mrs. Hudson replied, "A Ph.D. is not the ultimate. WhatI want is broader informa-tion on my topic of interest.I would like to become an

expert. If I get a Ph.D. in

the prooess of becoming an

expert, it will be incidental."Mrs. Hudson will also be

celebrating her sixteenth wed-ding ainiversary this June to

Dr. Gossie Harold Hudson, ahistory professor at SIU. Inthe same month, he will leaveCarbondale to become chair-man of the history departmentat Lincoln University in Jef-ferson, Mo.

According to Thompson,the promotion department ofthe station functions as anVAUGHAN

Blacks To BringSays A&TChamplain In Paper

Mrs. Hudson said that in

their earlier married years shespent mo6t of her time con-cerned with her husband'sambitions and their two chil-dren.

GREENSBORO, N. C. -

Chaplains on predominantlyblack college campuses are facedwith special problems whichtheir white counterparts don'thave, according to the directorof religious activities at A&TState Unviersity.

"The black chaplain or cam-

pus minister shares the prob-lems of professional identity ofhis white colleagues," said theRev. Cleo M. McCoy, "butwhite racism, the molder ofAmerican social philosophy andstructure, has added dimensionsto the crisis for blacks."

published by the organization."The black chaplain," said

McCoy, "must use three criteriafor determining his role in theacademic community. He must

possess a knowledge of theministry of Jesus and its impli-cations for meeting humanneed. He must also know thehistory of black religious ex-

perience and the social role ofinstitutionalized black religiou."

Just as important, addedMcCoy, is the fact that blackchaplains must be able to "in-terpret the signs of the timesas he contributes to the libera-tion of black folk."

"The task of the black cam-

pus minister is to teach andContinued on p. 6B

"Now that the childrenhave grown up and my hus-band is well on his way, Ican get a chance to do someof the things that I enjoydoing most."

According to Mrs. Hudson,once the family moves toMissouri, she will do the samekind of work concerning mi-

grants that was done inIllinois.

McCoy, who has been namedto the board of directors ofthe Ministries to Blacks inHigher Education, had his views

Tenant SteeringSupports Commission Change

The Tenant Steering Comm-ittee is an officially recognized

boyd of the Durham Housing

Authority. It is because the

Durham Housing Authorityhas a direct effect on our

lives, that we feel it necessary

to state our position at thistime in relationship to theaction taken by the comm-

issioners of the Durham Hou-sing Authority.

The Tenant Steering Com-mittee views the recent policychange made by the Housingcommissioners as a milestonein the history of Durham Pub-lic housing. We thereforestrongly support and endorse

the action taken by the Com-missioners. Despite the factthat the resigning staff con-

tends that the action takenby the Commissioners was dis-

criminatory, it should be noted

that the policy action was

voted unanimously by bothblack and white commissionersIt has been long overdue for

the decision-making body tomake policy changes in the

interest of the tenant and torespond to problems that aresensitive to us.

As a Tenant Committee,wewant to make it clear that for

many years, we have foughtthe injustices and intimadatingpractices used by the manage-ment of the Durham HousingAuthority.

For years, tenants have beenvictimized by underhanded tac-tics continually used by theadministration. We can nowand have in the past pinpointedinstance after instance wheremanagement has exercised poorand improper judgement and

Continued on p. 6B

j

<4K. 4

i^kv

LOS ANGELES: With a security guard at her side Angela Davismakes her first major speech since being freed In the San Josemurder-kldnap-conspiracy case. The former UCLA philosophyInstructor told her audience that the time has come for an endto prisons in the United States. An audience of 1800 overflowedthe Embassy Auditorium and repeatedly cheered and raised thesymbolic clenched fist salute of Black Power advocates. (UPI)

Applauses Angela's FreedomThe following statement was

released today by the UnitedPresbyterian Council on Churchand Race:

The acquittal of Angela Da-vis on June 4 was an occasion

for quiet jubilation and sober

reflection by the United Pres-

byterian Council on Churchand Race which made a grantof SIO,OOO to the Angela Da-vis Defense Fund on March15, 1971. The COCAR grant,made to help assure a fairtrial, was widely interpreted

across the church as unwise.It triggered a protracted con-troversy among United Pres-byterians concerning the useof denominational funds forlegal assistance to a Black radi-

cal.

Despite the subsequent opp-osition of many Presbyteriansa considerable segment of the

Continued on p. 6B

NCCU Project Is Model ForLibrary-Faculty Collaboration

North Carolina Central Uni-versity's five-year, SIOO,OOOprogram use in the humanitiesis seen as a model for "colla-boration between?library staffand teaching faculty" by theCouncil on Library Resourcesand the National Endowmentfor the Humanities, which arejointly providing $50,000 inmatching funds for the pro-

gram.

university is the ninth underthe joint College Library Pro-gram of the two agencies. Pre-vious matching grants totaling$490,000 have gone to Brown,Dillard, Eastern Michigan, Ho-ward and Washington and Leeuniversities, and to Hampshire,Jackson State, and Swarthmorecolleges.

The academic "collabora-tion" will occur during actualplanning for classroom instruc-tion and will be made possiblethrough the employment of afulltime reference librarian, aparttime subject specialist, aparttime secretary, and variedstudent assistants affiliated withthe university's graduate scho-ol.

the result of "lack of intereston the part of faculty andlibrary staff. Nor is it dueto absence of communicationbetween the two groups. Thiscondition seems to exist inmany instances because notime is provided for adequateplanning that includes bothgroups."

Miss Pennie E. Perry, chieflibrarian at the university, willdirect the project, whose pur-pose is "to help the under-graduate student realize opti-mum benefit from the re-sources of the campus andmotivate him to consider theseresources essential in the pur-

suit of his educational goals."

The two agencies, the Coun-cil on Library Resources a pri-vate nonprofit organization es-tablished at the instance of the

Ford Foundation and the Na-tional Endowment for theHumanities an independentFederal agency, described thecollaborative effort of NCCUin a release sent today to

college and university librariesthroughout the nation.

The $50,000 grant to the

According to the univer-sity's original proposal for thematching funds, the present"lack, of collaboration" is not

LONDON . Schools arebeing built with closed windowsto keep out traffic noise, andmany pupils are sweltering be-cause there is no money to buyblinds, education officials said.

3} %.\ |A

AwtJ ** jI tm\\ National Block CitizensI the Reelection

\u25a0L | *|H

KA |J

IHIHhMcKissick Highlights Nixon Campaign Dinner

WASHINGTON - "It's anew day, brothers and sisters,"Floyd McKissick, former di-rector of CORE and Developerof Saul City, told more than2,000 Black leaders gatheredat a fund-raising dinner forPresident Nixon's campaign

Saturday in the Nation's capi-tal. In this photo, taken at thedinner, McKissick is joined inconversation by Special As-sistant to the President RobertBrown (1), Nixon CampaignDirector John N. Mitchell(2nd from right) and Rev. Dr.

William Holmes Borders, Pas-tor of the Wheat St. BaptistChurch, Atlanta, Ga. (r). Mc-Kissick said, "President Nixondidnt create the war in Viet-nam, but he's tried to get usout."

Wflkins Gets Louis G. GregoryService To Human

WILMETTE, Illinois RoyWilkins, executive secretary ofthe NAACP will be presentedwith the Louis G. GregoryAward for Service to Humani-ty on June 24 in WilmetteIllinois.

observance of the United Na-tions International Year forAction to Combat Racism and

Racial Discrimination and inparticular for his contributionsto the cause of human rightsin America over many years.

The presentation programwill be chaired by GlenfordE. Mitchell, former associateeditor of "Africa Report" andpresently secretary of the Na-tional Baha'i Assembly. He willalso talk on the life of LouisG. Gregory. Dr. Kazemzadehwill speak on "Human Rightsare God-Given Rights." Amusical interlude will be pro-vided by Donna Kime, re-cording artists, whose voice isthe trade-mark of many singingradio and television commer-cials and who has appearedwith the Brass Impact Orches-tra since 1957.

The award will be presentedat 8 p.m. in Foundation Hallof the world-famous Baha'iHouse of Worship, LindenAvenue and Sheridan Road,Wilmette. The program is opento the public. Making the

award will be Dr. FiruzKazemzadeh, professor of his-tory at Yale University andchairman of the NationalBaha'i Assembly.

Named in honor of a blackAmerican, Louis G. Gregory,the award is given by theNational Spiritual Assembly ofthe Baha'is of the UnitedStates through its NorthAmerican Baha'i Office forHuman Rights (NABOHR) topersons and organizationswhose humanitarian serviceshave contributed kignificantlyto the rights and unity of

man. Louis G. Gregory was a

member of the first nationaladministrative institution ofthe Baha'i Faith in the U. S.and for over four decades, he

worked to advance the causeof racial unity and humanrights.

The award is being pre-sented to Wilkins as part of the

Accompanying Mrs. Kinewill be Tom Pautz from Ar-lington Heights; Hank Drake,Glencoe; and Warren Kime,Wilmette.

Mrs. Gandhi GivenWelcome In Prague

PRAGUE - PrimeMinister Indira Gandhi of Indiaarrived Saturday tor a ls« ti|ivisit to Czechoslovakia.

Dressed in a black and whitesari, she stepped from herplane to a ai-gun salute andgreetings from Premier Lubo-nur Strougal.

Che Car|li|a Cim^sDURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA