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CAROLINA TIMES JgjbPi t, 2A THE EDITORIALS & COMMENT 0mI mv Tlkww Bve PP Wc4i people who loe5tod now UasOGolof 4Lbw4 eSasdrbrta !! errsansStte,' Tata Is ear MMJ sanaaisalai -seeeaBtfty." - ev. Martm UtW Kin. Jr. .! OKI WAT TOU US HHP UNICEF Helps Children Help The Whole World Children helping children- that's the happy UNICEF story behind the witches, ghosts and goblins who'll be ringing doorbells across the country this Halloween. When costumed youngsters extend their orange and black collection containers to welcoming citizens in thousands of U. S. communities, they'll ask for help for the millions of Third World' children now growing up without the proper food, health care or educational opportunities that children in the developed nations consider a basic right. Through the help of these youngsters here at home, and the millions of adults whoU fill their cartons, many of those far away in the developing nations of Asia. Africa! ' Latin America and the Middle East will know better lives. From the nickels, dimes, quarters, and dollars and ycviffven the pennies- will come eased suffering, expanded opportunities, brighter hopes for the future. Thanks to these Trick or Treaters, 15 fmllion Bangledesh children will be projected against a widespread form of child blindness through regular high-potency doses of Vitamin-A provided by the United Nations Children's Fund. Through their efforts, 72.000 malnourished infants in Mauritania and the five other drought-and- famine-stricken. countries of West Africa will receive Hailv rations of high-protein innlements. And UNICEF fSl1 able to supply clean water wells for Indian vUlages which have previously depended upon parasite-infested ponds for their water supply. This Holloween, once again, children in our town and in towns and cities across the country will gather to :k Survival By Alan Douglas make magic for the millions of other children whose world contains more than its share of poverty, ignorance and despair. As they collect coins and currency for the United Nations Children's Fund our youngsters will offer us the opportunity to help UNICEF provide mtidwal care, improved nutrition and education assistance for other children in 1 1 1 countries of the Third World a world where .nearly half the population is under 15. where the average per capita income is less than $200. where three out of every ten babies don't survive their first five years. In the developing areas of Africa. Asia. Latin America and the Middle East just one of our pennies caffopotect a child against tuberculosis, a. dime can provide enough dry milk to make fifty glasses of liquid milk, and a quarter can buy a baby chick for an applied nutrition program. But the magic doesn't end there. When you help UNICEF help a child, that child's government helps too. For every $1 the Children's Fund spends in a developing country, that country provides an average $2.50 in local resources. And when a UNICEF-assisted youngster grows up healthy, literate, hopeful and productive, he in turn can contribute to the development of his family and his nation. By assisting their children, TJNtCEfi helps these countries help 3ti" '..mWlmv' 1 iLk.r il National UNICEF my by Presidential proclamation. On or about that day each one of us can in effect take out "World Insurance" by dedicating our pennies' and quarters, dimes and dollars to children in need of a better future. It's not only the children's world well be improving, but our own as well. j sj ngh Family Strength "The Black family has been a bulwark of Black achievement; it has proved a flexible instrument of Black survival." V . That partial quotation from Vernon Jordan, executive director of the National Urban League, sets the tone of a research report- that rejects the impression of black family deterioration left by the much publicized Moynihan report of 1965. The Moynihan report and its negative view of black families has dominated discussion of the subject since its pub In the preface to the Urban League report, called "The Strengths of Black Families," Jordan writes: "The reader will find that despite tremendous odds, the Black family has been a bulwark of Black achievement, that it has proved a flexible and adaptable instrument of Black survi va 1 , and that it has been a nourishing foundation of positive aspects of the Black experience." This is in contrast to the earlier report prepared by Daniel P. Moynihan, a white Harvard professor, for a federal policy planning agency. He noted: "At the heart of the deterioration of Negro society is the deterioration of the Negro family ... The family structure of lower-class Negroes is highly unstable, and in many urban centers is approaching complete breakdown " The Urban League Report, written by Robert Hill, director of its research department, does not deny the existence of problems within black families. However, it avoids what it calls the " 'pathological' approach" taken by Moynihan and most other sociologists since. "Examining the strengths of Black families can contribute as much to the understanding and ameliorating of some social problems at examining their weaknesses," the Hill report states. The HID report identifies and discusses five specific areas of strength: strong kinship bonds, strong work orientation, adap tability of family roles, high achievement orientation and . lented with ernment and statistics. it states. "Low in- have stronger ne families tend to be unong Duo until wmie and mints out that 90 per Dorn oui-oi- whip than iriirrTT -$ retained compared to only seven per cent for whites. In the area of work, the report says that, "Although their earnings fall far below their husbands' the additional income contributed by is essential for the survival and stability of many black families. And in the overwhelming majority of black families, whether poor or not, the husband retains the primary responsibility of breadwinner. "Role flexibility helps to stabilize the family in the event of an unan ticipated separation (because of death, divorce, separation or a sustained illness) of the husband, wife or other key family members. In most black families there is much sharing of decisions and tasks." The report mentions the strong achievement orientation of low income black families: "While 64 percent of the white students said that their parents wanted them to finish college, a significantly higher proportion of black students (80 per cent) said their parents wanted them to finish Many of the discrepancies bet ween the Moynihan and Hill reports arise from differing interpretations of similar or identical data. In one instance, the Urban League report referred specifically to a study in the Moynihan report which concluded that "Negro husbands have 'unusually low power' within uu v group Hill points out that although there was slightly greater wife dominance in black families, the data for both black and white families was within i ange that the resea defined as showing properly balanced responsibility. Hill attacks other Moynihan conclusions using new information. For example, using data gathered between 1940 and 1963, Moynihan concluded that the rates of illegitimate births for both blacks and whites were increasing. He said the rate for blacks was growing "drastically" faster. Using 1971 Census Bureau statistics, Hill concludes: "Illegitimacy is no longer a 'growing' problem among Hacks. For the illegitimacy rates among Blacks has been steadily declining while the rates among whites has been steadily rising in recent years. The Urban League report la not without omissions. For example, Hill cites statistics thatshow suicide rates among blacks are far lower tham among whites. He omits however, any discussion of the appalling homicide rate among blacks, cited by Moynihan. Minimum Wage Veto Is Outrage To All Blacks By BAYARD RUSTIN The President's recent ef die minimum wage bill is an outrage to all black Amer icans and a tragic blow to the working poor. It it particularly galling mat the President acts against the minimum wage at a nine when his own policies have made a shambles of the economy, with the poor as the main victims. Food prices alone have risen by 38 percent. since 1968; the cur rent minimum wage, $1.60 an hour, forces a family of four to devote half its budget to food. For many families mis means that macaroni replaces meat at dinner. Nor is this a fact Just a handful of at is widely are nearly IS earning Jess man era, garment workers mr. apu mm oi merer -mineoiy Americans. AeforeTV minion wanasrssnmis in m-essim; smphyssi of government. Ironically, the level of wel fare payments in nearly half . the slates is higher than the federal minimum wage. Thus to increase the minimum SflsjS to $2.20 an hour as is pro posed would have the effect of trimming welfare roils, an objective sought by liberals and conservatives alike. 4 There is a lesson in all mis for blacks. That lesson is that while the revelations of wide spread scandal and deceit with in the Nixon Administration may tarnish the President's image, they are not likely to jmflnence the course of social me president is as deter- conservative as he was atereate broke into the lie He may not be as zeal- Bead with the off social pro grams, but he is using the MS whenever possible to cut' back fhinrjs Too SkooH Know mswpsur 1500 b.c. FmE GREATEST FEMAl E RULER OF ALL j TIME, SHE RULED TOR THIRTY THREE YEARS, SO YEARS BEFORE KING TOT SHE GAWK) POW ER THRU' SLY INTFIGUE,OUSTINQ HER HAL BROTHER THOTMES JSL COUNTLESS PLOTS FO MENTED AC ALL ENEMIES TO IUERAOED AS A MANTO AND DECLARING THAT SHEWS THESJgLQf Ogfi SHE MOSNEO UNCHALLENGED UNTIt HER DEATH eOWSHE im&Stl VANQUISHED PREJUDICE SHE W w f f M Tan Ebpics on liberal initiatives. I do not mean to minimize the importance of Watergate,, for Watergate may lead to cam paign reforms that would sub stantially democratize the elec toral process. But we cannot depend on the nation's moral outrage over Watergate to cre ate more jobs, raise the living standards of the poor, and bring Justice to working people. Ba sic economic and social change will only come through political organizations. Our most immediate goal Is to elect candidates committed to social change to Congress aezt year. The House of Rep resentatives failed by 2) votes to override the minimum wage veto. Thus a minimum goal should be the election of 29 candidates who would have sup ported the minimum wage bill to replace those who opposed it. Blacks can play a pivotal role here. Many of those who op posed the minimum wage are southerners, representing dis tricts with sizable numbers of black voters. If blacks regis ter to vote, and then join with the labor movement and other progressive forces to Support liberal candidates, the process of remaking southern politics could be immeasurably en hanced. The vote on the minimum wage bill, while certainly not triumph, did suggest that the influence of the black voter has already been felt in the South. Many southern congressmen voted to override the President. A few years ago, when blacks were disenfranchised and po litically quiescent, some of them probably would have sup ported the President. They can no longer do this with the as surance of the past because of the presence of black voters and because of the increasing political consciousness dis played by blacks. Thus I do not see the recent series of presidential vetoes as cause for despair, there are clear opportunities for political gain because of Watergate, because of toe economy, be cause o' the growing lack of confidence in the policies of die Nixon Administration. The sentiment of the nation is not, as some say, opposed to the programs which blacks need. There is strong congres sional Wage, for health care measures, for housing and education leg islation and other measures which would benefit blacks dis proportionate to other seg ments of society. Our job is to make certain the nation under stands that die moral failings of the Nixon Administration em brace poverty and economic in justice, as well as political by existing Mack families, not must be judged by their rather then stated il,... WTi m mt i m, n ,., iLi 1 mt arHsW' "ma DOES HECOMPJAJN t&StS?yWt ABOUT 24 HOURS A DAY f to be mm EQUAL IS By VERNON JORDAN Busing: Watergate's Scapegoat The President's mid-September message to Congress, billed I aa second State of the Union message, was disappointing nough in lu failure to propose new measures to end joblessness and deal with ,mg burdens d poverty, but one raises the frightening prospect that black American! jd as scapegoats to divert national attention from the Watergate of renewed interest this fall is busing," the ie continued. - - our schools ITS ALL THERE, all the code words that have parioa lesJlytoflamedracial tensions point out all over again that busing la not "compolsory" but has been used as a last resort, not to achieve '-racial balance, but to desegregate unconstitutionally segregated schools. Busing is "another area of renewed interest this fall,' the President states. But whatever Interest there is in the busing issue is due precisely to the speed with which anti-busing agitation has died down. The really extraordinary event this fall has been the calm with which the schools across the country have re-opened their doors. Many school systems started busing on a wider scale this year and inaugurated expanded desegregation programs. BUSING. A PHONY, politicized issue from the start, loaned to have disappeared as a source of friction. Now. the President s message has revived it as an issue, and his inclusion of an appeal for ami-busing action among his legislative priorities could help bring that deadly, dormant issue back to life, with resultant strains on race relations. Why did the President choose this time to revive an issue best left buried? There is a growing fear in the black community that it waa a trial balloon, a test to see whether, by inflaming public passions against busing, the issue might be used as a lightning rod to attract attention away from the continuing exposures of the Watergate scandal. IT WOULD BE EASY TO dismiss this idea if the busing issue had not been used in the past to distract public attention from the real issues facing the nation. So it is possible that it is being picked up and dusted off for use in the future, despite the tragic consequences it holds. With the help of busing, desegregation has become a fact of lift in the nation's schools, especially those in the South. The experience has been a healthy one, both in terms of education and in racial attitudes. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights recently issued a report that concluded the Integration had improved education, and a Gallup Poll found that where 61 per cent of southern white parents eajSeted to their children's attending school with blacks in 1963, only 16 per cent still hold these racist attitudes. THIS KIND OF PROGRESS IS a heartening indication that old rigidities can be changed and that the next generation may be freer of the racist attitudes that have so damaged America's past. The proper role of government is to assist in extending desegregation and to provide moral leadership the nation needs as it changes old, outworn and disproved concepts. Instead of raising busing from the dead, the Congress ought to leave it where it belongs to the courts. And the Administration, winch has been so vocal in backing decentralization, should leave busing to its role aa a local issue in some communities and not try once again to elevate it to the status of a national Issue that will create more problems than it will solve. SANFORD MAN SEN TENCED FOR THREATENING IRS OFFICER . GREENSBORO - Paul Cameron Godwin of Sanford recently was handed a six-month suspended sentence and placed on probation for three years by a federal court in Durham for threatening an IRS officer during the conduct of official government business. Godwin, 69, of 209 Birch St., Sanford, also was directed by U. S. District Judge Eugene Gordon to file and pay all future Income taxes on a timely basis. He was arrested last March by Inspector John Larabee of the IRS's Greensboro Office of the Southeast Regional Inspector after twice threatening a revenue officer with violence during a routine tax investigation. Congressman Hawkins Column By REP. AUGUSTUS F. HAWKINS Race And Sex Prejudice 1 1 The yardstick by which success is measured in America, is based on the amount of money one brings home-especially after taxes. Inherent in this yardstick, is the value Americans place on status of the person who earns the biggest salary. It should not be too surprising then, to note mat the take-home pay of the average American woman, Black or White, is paltry in comparison to the salaries of their male counterparts. hi mo, the median income f v fully employed men and women was as follows: White Men $9,373 Minority Men $8,598 White Women $6,590 Minority Women $4,674 Although It is obvious that race is a significant factor in these income figures, women still manage to appear at the low end of the salary scale. This secondary position held by women in this country continues into practically every sphere of American life. TO COUNTERACT THE DAMAGING mythology of inferiority surrounding women. Patsy Mink (D-Hawaii) a member of the House Subcommittee on Equal Opportunities, of which Tarn Chairman, has introduced the Women's Educational Equity Act, H.R. 106. This BUI would provide funds for special education programs including development or curriculum materials, training programs for counselors, and other educational personnel, community education programs and other programs designed to achieve educational equity for all students, men and women. A major aspect of the BUI is to provide a denned way of dealing with the unrealistic and rigid sex roles impacting upon the educational development of young children. HEARING8 WERE HELD July 25,26 and September 12.13. 1973. around the issues that the Bill hopes to revolve. The purpose of these hearings was to allow Members of Congress to testify, and to allow witnesses to discuss sex stereotyping and discriminate!? treatment of girls and women la children's books and text bopks. Mrs. Mink's Bill, if it becomes law, will go a king way in providing the opportunity for all Americans to experienoe a broadened range of educational endeavors, freeing our institutions from the pall of sex stereotyping andsex discrimination. TOO OFTEN. A PRIME FACTOR In influencing childrep to follow conforming patterns in relationship to their sex roles, are the educational institutions of this country. American Children grow up exposed to educational experiences, which emphasize male superiority and female inferiority. Boys are encoura. -xl to pursue sports, the physical sciences, and to major In medicine, architecture, engineering, and law; girls are counseled to become nurses, home economists, teachers and dental technicians. School literature emphasizes the stereot ype of little girls as being frivolous, weak and submissive; boys are pictured: aa adventuresome, daring, strong and competent. These false concepts are dangerous to healthy, developing self images and must certainly impair the potential for creative growth, needed by all youngsters. p. O. BOX Ml! DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA vm I B. AUSTIN Edltor-PublUher 1927-1071 Ished every Saturday at Durham, N. C. by United PubUabers, inc. . MBS. VTVTAN AUSTIN EDMONDS, Publisher ONCE BONNCITE BusmeM WOOD CARTER Advertising Second OUus Postage Paid at IXurham, N. C. 27701 SUBSCRIPTION RATES United States and Canada 1 Year J .00 United States and Canada S Years Su.00 Principal Office Located at 496 Bast Pettigrcw btreet Norta Carolina anus 10CALS IN THE SERVICE mWBm ' MWM- I sslsslssssssssfl bbbbwR Amm Wu WW TBsl RF BSSSSSSSF flB Br'"" JRF ''v"" mWm fBsBBBsiii Hg Pp gggF gggj yimmm ggggTx'- -: iww.v 'JKk - 'bbbbbbbI m gg?""Bsv V BSV BSSsli- SSSSST Am mm RSSV BSSSSBbk. .MmmW SfBB :iiis:-. 'igjSKj Iff aSSSzfrto Jkm Ikw gSSJ ,.asiBk.SJ BBJBk .ddSSSB BSl BJJse SB ' Bm BSx. SHBShSP mm zB iissjaiBBl Bza. jiSBjBBzH SSI mwk ROBERTS - SAN ANTONIO - Airman Claude L. Roberts Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude L. Roberts, Sr. of 7-C Wabash St., Durham, has completed Air Force basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. During his six weeks training, he studied the Air Force mission, organization and customs and received special instruction in human relations! The airman is remaining at the Air Training Command base for specialized training in the security police field. Airman Roberts attended Durham High School. FAYETTE VILLE Airman First Class Donald L. Streeter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Streeter, Rt. 3 Durham, has arrived for duty at Pope AFB, N. C. Airman Streeter, a fuel system mechanic, is assigned to a unit of the Tactical Air Command. He previously served at Myrtle Beach AFB, S.C. The airman, a 1971 graduate . of Jordan High School, entered the Air Force in October of that year. HAMM , SAN ANTONIO - Airman Debra J. Hamm, daughter of Mrs. Elva T. Hess of 2403 Taylor Street, Durham, has been assigned to Keesler AFB, Miss., after completing Air Force basic training. During her six weeks at the Air Training Command's Lackland AFB, Tex., she studied the Air Force mission, organization and customs and received special instruction in human relations. The airman has been assigned to the Technical Training Center at Keesler for specialized training as a. communications systems operator. Airman Hamm, a 1970 graduate of Durham High School, attended Croft Business College. MONTGOMERY, Ala. -Captain Edward L. Burton, son of Mrs. Emma C. Nichols, 1016 Onslow St., Durham, has graduated from the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Maxwell AFB, Ala. Captain' Burton was specially selected for the 14-week professional officer course in recognition of his 1 WEEKS SAN ANTONIO - Airman Wayne L. Weeks, whose guardian, Mrs. Louise T. Chouch, resides on Rt. 1, Durham, has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., after completing Air Force basic training. During his six weeks at the Air Training Command's Lackland AFB, Tex., he studied the Air Force mission, organization and customs and received special instruction in human relations. The airman has been assigned to the Technical Training Center at Sheppard for specialized training in the communications fled. - Airman Weeks attended Orange High School, Hillsborough. potential as a leader in the aerospace force. The captain is assigned to Vance AFB, Okla., as a T-37 pilot instructor with a unit of the Air Training Command. A 1965 graduate of Hillside High School, he received his bachelor's degree in mathematics in 1969 from North Carolina A & T State University and was commissioned there through the Reserve Officers Training Corps program. Captain Burton's wife, Harriet, is the daughter of Mrs. Gloria S. Williams, 1710 Riddle Road, Durham. a Jj i DENVER "- Airman Sherman O. Hinson, son of Mrs. Cleopatria T. Hinson, 574 Liberty St., Durham, has graduated at Lowry AFB, Colo, from the U. S. Air Force weapons mechanic course conducted by the Air Training Command. The air mar, who was trained to load and inspect the weapons used in Air Fort e jet aircraft, is being assigned to Seymour Johnson AFB, N. C. for duty with a unit of the Tactical Air Command. Airman Hinson is a 1972 graduate of Durham High School. His father, Leroy Hinson, resides at 1119 Gurley St., Durham. WICHITA FALLS; Tex -U. S. Air Force Technical Sergeant Rogers Johnson, son of Mrs. Made P. Johnson, 1006 S. Roxboro St, Durham, has been selected Outstanding Instructor in his Air Training Command unit at Sheppard AFB, Tex. Sergeant Johnson was honored for his effective teaching techniques and exemplary devotion to duty. He is assigned to the department of communications and missile training of the 3760th Instructor Squadron. The sergeant attended Hillside High School and earned his associate degree earlier this year at Cooke County Junior College in Gainesville, Tex. With UNICEF's help, the death rate from malaria among children has been lowered from 3.5 million in the fifties to less than one million per year. Raleigh Moles Chapter to Ho$l petirr t. 12 Representatives of Moles, pgjfijnom 24 cities across the country are expected to convene at Raleigh, North Carolina, October 12-13, in their Annual Board Meeting. The activities will take place at the recently built Sheraton-Crabtree Motor Inn. In addition to business sessions, several social functions have been planned for the Moles and their guests. Moles, Inc. was organized at Norfolk, Virginia in 1950 and is comprised of twenty four chapters, with a total membership of more than 500 women. Although it is fundamentally a social organization," community services and scholarships are its primary civic projects. National officers are: Mrs. L Bernice Plummer, Portsmouth, Virginia, President; Miss Vergial S. Webb, Baltimore, Maryland, Vice-President; Miss Madeline T. Peters, Richmond, Virginia, Secretary; Mrs. Laura M. Booton, Charlotte, North Carolina, Treasurer; Miss Geraldine H. Coleman, Washington, D.C., Publicity Chairman; Mrs. Marion P. Capps, Norfolk, Virginia, Registered Agent; Mrs. Mable BRIDGE STONE 40,000-MILE TIRE & Ashe, Cofambta, SftJtV Carolina, Chaplain, and Mrs Sarah Ashe, Norfolk, Virginia, Auditor. Co-chairman of Use local mHStg committee sJfp Wetonah M. Williams and Mrs. Ruby R Stroud. Added Volunteer Selective Service Registrars Named Mdney Booth, Chairman of Selective Service System Local Board No. 32, Durham County, announced recently the appointment of 'five additional . volunteer registrars in Durham County to assist young men in registering with the Selective Service System. The new appointees include the guidance counselors at the county senior high schools. Guidance counselors in the city senior high schools were appointed as volunteer registrars in July 1973. Now students at each senior high school in the city or county may register with their guidance counselor. Another new appointee is Mr. Harry Demik, at Duke University, to assist students enrolled at the university. To assist other young men in the county, non-students as well as students, in registering with Selective Service, George Lee Suggs, Jr., was appointed at North Carolina Central University. Employees of the Durham County Veterans Service Office were appointed Sat. Oct. 1 3, 1 973 THE CAROLINA in Jury 1973 and. Booth said are to Be commended for the outstanding services thejr Bsav rendered in addition to their regular responsibilities. Booth also pointed out that 18 year-olds may also register at the local board office in Raleigh, which located in the Federal Building. 3tO New Kern Avenue. The appointment of volunteer registrars is to enable young men to register locally rather than trawl to Raleigh. Booth emphasized that even though Selective Service is not inducting any registrants at this time, the law still requires that all male persons register with Selective Service within 30 days before, or 30 days after, their 1 8th birthday. I. ii. Home Security An Affiliate of Capital Holding! Watte Hill, Jr., Chairman of the Board, and Arthur W. Clark, President of Home Security Life Insurance Company of Durham and Homer D. Parker, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Capital Holding Corporation, an insurance holding company based in Louisville. Kentucky, announced recently that their companies have signed a letter of intent setting UmWiW proposal whereby Security wSi affBkste of Capital Co rp i ration . Tka proposal, which HoWinf of Home Hecwfty wW metre stack of Capital IMeBng Urn each share of Home itecsnrity. has been approved by the Boards of IXrerUwx of Both companies and will bw submitted to the shareholders of Home Security for approval The transaction witpjisea thr approval of the holders of two-thirds of the outstanding stock of Home Security, and subject to the approval of the I n sura nee Commissioner of North Carolina and other regulatory authorities. it is anticipated that the transaction will be completed within the calendar year. No changes are planned m the management of Home Security and the headquarters of Home Security will remain in Durham. Mr. Clark will continue as President and Chief Executive Officer and Mr. Hill as Chairman of the Hoard of Home Security, and upon completion of the transaction, both will become Directors of Capitol Holding. 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Oct. 13, 1973, edition 1
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