Ei ''.'4.
v.;---
f;t)ITCIAL$
Happenings That Affects The Future
Although he has roamed across
the? n for a thousand years and more,
raan has always been a transient
trespasser on the rolling vastnesses of
rife Earth's great seas and oceans.
7 fherc have been maritime laws,
customs of behavior, "rules of the
road" and international treaties to
protect the interests of nations,
companies and individuals-except in
wartime who used the seas for
purpose of commerce, travel fjfr
adventure. But with the exception of
limited offshore areas, the waters of
the world's oceans, all the creatures
living in them and the minerals and
other resources from the sea beds and
beneath them have belonged to no
one. The high seas have been open to
all to use or not use for virtually any
purpose.
In the past 20 years, all this has
changed. Technology has progressed
by leaps and bounds and, combined
with the science of oceanography, is
rapidly bringing the treasures of the
seas within the reach of man. Vast oil
and gas deposits are being recovered
by drilling operations in hundreds of
feet of water. The capacity to explore
for such energy resources and recover
them from water depths of several
thousand feet may be just a round the
corner. Huge fishing fleets and factory
ships from such nations as Japan and
the Soviet Union, capable of staying
at sea for months at a time, are
"mining" the oceans of their fish
populations for protein supplies to
lul4: their people. Scientists are
actually living in ingenious habitats on
the oceanfloor in relatively shallow
waters to study plant and animal life
If and, among other things, develop
knowledge of how to work in this
watery environment to recover
mineral resources and perhaps
someday to carry on aquatic
"farming" to augment the world's
food supply.
When something attains value, the
question of access to it or ownership
of it becomes crucial. The question of
who owns the oceans is now a pressing
issue, and one which promises to
become one of the most
hotly-contended legal controversies
between nations in the history of the
world. The quarrels over fishing rights
have brought the matter to a head.
No Hack lean
MT MR, AGNEW IS
GETTING 0PFUGHTL
MICH IS MORE WAN
COULD BE SAW FOR THE
INMATES HE SC0RNEPAT
ATTICA,0R 7
RADICALS HE CHARACTER
IZED PI
TO BE SEPARATED mm
THE BARREL, OR THE
STREET KIDS GROWING
UP IN THE GHETTOS HE
AVOIDED, BECAUSE ONCE
HE SAn,IFYOvEPNEi
YOUvE SEEN TNENAUTi
k Recommendation Exercise Your Rights
The recent recommendation by the
city's superintendant of inspection
that court action be used to force a
resident or residents to clean up the
"automobiles and junk" from his yard
is a much needed step in the city. It
should also apply to the many
absentee owners, rental agencies and
in some instances, urban renewal
officials as well.
It is apparent that in many
instances land that has been so
designated for urban renewal or just
placed under their authority has
become the dumping ground for many
types of junk.
Vacant lots, undemolished houses
and empty spaces also often fall heir
as the spotfor dumpingfuse and
t'other unsanitary objacts, -
Environmental beauty, 1 pollution
control and elimination of health
hazards will be much improved and
better controlled if all these "junk
spots and dumping grounds" are
forced to be moved or cleared up by
such court edicts.
All citizens of Durham who have
been properly registered are urged to
mark November 6 as your important
day by going to the polls and casting
your vote for the individuals and
issues that you favor.
The right to cast your vote for your
choices is and should be the duty of
every person of voting age.
One cannot afford to allow the
shoddy, dishonest and very degrading
behavior and actions of a few
politicians, both in office and out of
office, cause you to forego this
important duty of your cherished
citizenship and right.
Remember that voteless people are
a hopeless people.
The time for action is now and you
must make your decisions and choices
known for an improved and
progressive Durham by casting your
vote on November 6.
rUUUUUUUUUUHTi I
. Urn .. . -u1.. BH .. BIWW 111 1 1 1 .HHE m$m
Utl
rail
The Agnew Case
All the glitter and ceremony of the White
House announcement of Gerald Ford's
appointment to the Vwe Presidency cannot
cover the deep shame the Agnew case has
brought to Washington, nor can it obscure the
serious questions it raises about current
political morality and the system of justice in
America. -
Coming on top of the Watergate scandals and
the continuing battle over the secret White
House tapes, the Agnew case is a terrible blow
to the country's self-confidence and to the
average citizen s faith in his leaders.
Black citizens can take no satisfaction from
Mr. Agnew.'s removal from office Although he -was
clearly one of the most unpopular national
leaden tire view of Mack communities, there
is no joy in a situation in which our national
leadership, which should be strong and just, is
instead shaken by corruption and greed.
From the time Mr. Agnew justified his refusal
to visit and campaign in black neighborhoods
by saying "once you've seen one shun you've
seen than all," and continuing through his hard
law and order stance and his position as a
symbol of negativism on a national scale, the
former Vice President has been a thorn in the
tide of people who hoped for policies of
reconciliation instead of further dhwveness.
Now, according to a meticulously detailed
MU of particulars compiled by the Justice
Department , it seems that this champion of law
and order was taking bribes not only a
Governor of Maryland, but while occupying the
second highest office in the land, one breath
away from the Presidency itself. In exchange
for bis resignation . the govern meat decided not
to press si of these charges, allowing hhn to
plea bargain his way out of jail by accepting one
of tax evasion, a felony Out would put
Why, so many people are asking today,
should a high official who has been on the take
get off with a lesser sentence than some poor
kid who took a joyride in someone else's
automobile? How many thousands upon
thousands of people are locked up in prison
today whose crimes are so much less than those
the former Vice President has been charged
with?
How many thousands upon thousands of
people are today on parole or probation and are
forced to inform correction officials of their
every movement while die former Vice
President was released on his
recognizance? And how many petty criminals
are caged up for months just until their trial
comes up and what is their reaction to a
betrayer of the public's trust getting off
without ever seeing the inside of a jailhouse?
I can My understand the government s
position that it is better to allow Mr. Agnew to
resign in humiliation rather than put the
country through the long ordeal of a trial and
the resultant verdict and sentencing, but very
few Hack Americans can readily accept the
two-tier system of criminal justice this reflects.
Hifh officials ought to be held to higher
standards of behavior than the rest of us Those
who would bad must be worthy of that
on' the wrists. Igsla taol that when
cnuaent office becomes a license to steal
ROY WHINS SAYS
Executive Secretary of NAACP
SOMETHING WRONG
Something is terribly, almost irretrievably
wrong when black ' teenage boys can look on
calmly, or gleefully, while a young white
woman, at their threats and direction, bums to
death practically before theireyes.
The country read with a sickening shock of
the vicious, hateful, horrible burning-to-death
of Evelyn Wagler , 24, on a Boston , Mass. , street.
It seems that the young woman had moved to
Boston only a few weeks ago to live with five
girl friends. She was returning to her stalled car
with two gallons of gasoline when she was
accosted by six teenage black youths.
Before sb died in a. Boston hospital, Miss
Wagler said she was maW to douse Herself with
gasoline by threats of bodily harm. Someone
tossed a lighted match at her and flames quickly
enveloped her body. She ran to a liquor store
and an ambulance was called, but she died with
multiple bums.
Miss Wagler told police that she had been
warned by the blacks to leave the
neighborhood.
She was fold "they" didn't want whites in the
Dorchester section along the borders of
Roxbury , a Negro slum area.
Police authorities were said to be
disappointed at the lack of cooperation they
were receiving from the public. "Her street ha
well-lighted one and it was early evening, not a
late hour. Somebody must have seen
something," said a city official.
As is usually the case, Negroes are being
interviewed by the media and are saying the
same old things. One man was talking about
how long the neighborhood has been trying to
get proper recreation for the isolated housing
project. .
No one, apparently, has impressed upon
these and other excuse-makers that a woman
has been murdered. Murder, except for morons,
changes everything It is no longer a threat of
bodily harm. It is bodily harm carried to the
death degree. It is no longer a prank , a smirking
joke. It is not even a racial hatred thing, for even
haters are sobered by murder.
As for the defenses (all to a degree true)
about racial discrimination, about slum living,
about being persecuted everywhere - none of
these warrants commit ting murder
Somebody ought to tell the young killers that
driving people out of neighborhoods does not
call for beating or killing. And who told these
young deadly city planners and sociologists
that whites were not wanted in the area? Who
told them to kill to enforce this ban?
Reverse racism is here with all the vengeance
of a lynching.
We can't be returning to that, and surely not
at the behest of young black hoodlums who
think killing is something one does perhaps as a
joke and then goes casually about his regular
business.
What kind of youngsters are these who can
watch a woman bum to death? Has our world,
whites as weU as blacks, built a monster that can
gloat as the flames spread? And we who tolerate
it -are we lost, too?
Horror upon horrors! A white fisherman was
stoned to death. Black teenagers threw the
stones. In Boston. The familiar litany begins
again: "We are discriminated against because
we are black..."
But did no one, your mother, your minister,
your priest, ever tell you that nothing,
absolutely nothing excuses deliberate
cold-blooded murder?
ffcm Will They Many?
I am the father of three daughters and one ion.
'Recently I have become increasingly aware of a
burgeoning problem which apparently is going to affect
not only my own daughters but the daughters of most, if
not all. of the black readers of this newspaper.
The question I have begun pondering has to do with
whom the black women in America will marry. We
naturally assume that they will marry - most of them -black
men.
But it appears to me that Mack America's domestic
tranquility is due for a rude shock which is bound to
come when the daughters of most of us make their
selections known.
WhatamI talking about?
How is it that we expose our daughters to ballet,
piano, cello, theater, Great Books, voice lessons, et
cetera, et ad infinitum and stand idly by while they
"take up" with die sons of our neighbors and friends
who care little or nothing, for the most part, for the art..,,
or sophisticated conversation on subjects directed to
high planes.
These are the boys that we see shooting basketballs
until nearly midnight in backyards and in community
centers. These are the black boys who play any kind of
ball and who do it well, but who find it difficult to
explain lucidly what the rules of the game are.
Some blacks excuse this phenomenon by saying this is
the "way of the world" - that it is not unique or peculiar
to the black bourgeoisie '
But I insist that while all boys may naturally be
inclined toward the out-of-doors, sports activities, and
physical activity, it seems to me that far, far, too many
black males, even those who achieve excellence in their
vocations and acidemia are short when one looks at their
overall competence as would-be intellectuals.
How can black women who have been oriented to
cultural activities as hobbies and avocations achieve
domestic harmony in their homes when their spouses
depreciate and condemn music unless it is rhythm and
blues, denigate drama unless it is "Super Fly" and decry
conversation unless it is directed towards the sports page
andor Saturday night at the club?
I have watched with some pain the way that black
women are cultivated, educated, and groomed into
articulate, sophisticated creatures while their male
counterparts are left to their own devices - in short to
"grow up like Topsy." And if they somehow manage to
"get over" the hump, they are certain that they were
1 right -In the first place fgqfaftfc tinsel ot
education not the substance. And that they exist for
little girls and women while they serve as corrupters of
little boys and are the fit pursuits for effeminate men
who may not be able to make it in the masculine world.
I have watched recently an artistic series in the black
community where, for every fifteen women who entered
the doors, one black man made his appearance.
And if it is true that the girls go where the boys are,
you can determine for yourselves what the status of the
performing arts is among our people.
Just as the charges against Mr. Agnew
corroded faith in the government, his light
sentence has corroded faith in the system of
criminal justice. I myself don't fed that
anything would be served by locking die man
up, but then justice is rarely served by locking
anyone up, except perhaps for the most
retrograde and violent criminals. If anything
good at all is to come out of this shameful story ,
it is for the country to learn to extend the
leniency given Mr. Agnew to the faceless
thousands of accused persons whose crimes
ware km than his and whose fate has been for,
far worse.
The 564,000 Question
What made Senator Stcnnis,
D Mississippi, who did not have the
moral courage to speak out in the
Emmett Till, Medgar Evers, Chancy,
Goodman, Schwerner murders, as well
as the Courts of his state, who made
such a mockery of justice in those
trials, to have come by suddenly such
unusual wisdom that he was better
qualified than the Federal District
Judges, the 7 Court of Appeals Judges
and the 9 U.S. Supreme Court Justices
to hear the president tapes?
Certainly he has no experience in
electronics and he is not even familiar
with the nature of the Prosecutor's
case by bis own admission.
Upon what meat has this our.
Stennis, fed that he has grown so great?
LETTER TO THE rlfS
EDITOR
For more than a week I
have been trying to decide
whether Governor Holshouser
desired my resignation from
the Secondary Roads Council
or whether in fact I had been
fired from that body. :
I had no idea until
Wednesday, October 10, that
anything was wrong. On that
date, I recieved a call from Mr.
Robert Vaughn, with whom 1
previously served on the
Highway Commission and who
is now a member of the Board
of transportation. I was
informed by Mr. Vaughn that
the Governor desired my
resignation because of my
support for Frank Reuse for
Chairman of the North
Carolina Republican Party. At
that time, I informed Mr.
Vaughn that I had not openly
supported Mr. Rouse but I had
originally told the Governor
before my appointment that I
intended to vote for Frank
Rouse for State Chapman if I
were a delegate to the State
Convention. Since I had not
violated any promises to the
Governor, I told Mr. Vaughn
that I did not Intend to resign
until evidence which the
Governor had considered in
asking for my resignation was
presented to me. Mr. Vaughn
called me again within
approximately one hour and
stated that he had talked to the
Governor and that the
Governor said he had been told
that I had been openly
supporting Frank Rouse and
that each of my county
advisors that I had appointed
(in my Highway Division) were
"hand-picked" Rouse people
and according to Mr. Vaughn,
the Governor said he had also
been told that I would be
Frank Rouse's Third District
Floor Manager at the State
Convention. I told Mr. Vaughn
that I was not guilty of these
rumors and that I would not
follow the footsteps of our
beloved Vice President and
plead nob contendere. My
final conversation on that date
was to say that I felt that if the
Governor appointed me to this
job that he should be the one
to relieve me.
For several days I attempted
to contact Mr. Bruce Lentz,
Secretary of Transportation,
by telephone, but he did not
return my calls nor did anyone
else in authority contact me.
Finally, on October 17, at
approximately 3:00 p.m., Mr.
Lentz accepted my call and I
talked to him at length I asked
to be appraised of the situation
and Mr. Lentz said that he was
not aware of my status.
However, at approximately
7:00 p.m. on the same date, I
was informed by the News &
Observer via telephone that my
successor had been named.
Even after all that had
transpired, it was somewhat of
a shock, but most of all, I was
embrassed and hurt because
the Governor, with whom I
have talked with so many
times, never bothered to call
me.
I still maintain that I am not
guilty of anything because I
have never violated any pledge
or promise to the Governor. I
wish my successor Godspeed
and good luck, and I wish to
thank all of my friends in
Johnston County, the Fourth
Highway Division, and the
Third Congressional District,
including Democrats, who have
called to express their concern,
confidence and support; also,
especially on the Secondary
Roads Council: Malcolm Ferry,
Goldsboro; Elbert Baulkam,
Wilson; Joe Grayiel, Tarboro;
JerreU Cobb, Nashville; T. A.
Merritt, Jr., Roanoke Rapids;
A. C. "Bo" House, Scotland
Neck; Wade Pridgen, Jackie
Murdock, Paul Anderson,
Creighton Overton, and Owen
Etheridge.
I certainly Iype that my
expression of appreciation will
not have any adverse affect on
any of these good people.
Rudolph Jones, Sr.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
I am following the mental
promptings and the dictates of
my heartfelt interest to write a
letter concerning a court trial
of a youth from Queens, New
York, charged with robbery,
etc., and given a one-year
sentence. Results of the trial
appeared in the Durham
Morning Herald Sept. 21.
To my delight, the young
man's lawyer, Kenneth
Spaulding, did not reprimand
the youth in the presence of
his grieving parents, but gave
wholesome advice, much
needed today.
Lawyer Spaulding told the
court "his client lost control
and got away from the way he
had been raised," as the young
man's parents wept.
Another point of interest,
the young man didn't want "a
trial to vindicate himself for
something he had done that he
knew was wrong, but wanted a
chance to rehabilitate himself."
I am convinced that Lawyer
Spaulding's advice helped this
young man to make the
decision, "he wanted a chance
to rehabilitate himself."
It Is up to all to adopt the
same philosophy by giving
words of hope to our youth
today.
I pray fervently that when
they are released from their
confinement they will not
enter a cold world, shunned by
society and all doors closed
when the attempt is made to
secure a job.
The words of the Blessed
Savior come to my mind when
He spoke to those who wished
to stone the woman because of
her sins. He said, "he who is
among you without sin cast the
first stone." All stones were
dropped to the ground.
It is true that people are
compensated when- they are
helping in the shaping of our
society and of tomorrow's
world.
Mrs. Parepa B. Wat kins
p. o. sox Ma
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Vm
L. & AUSTIN
1927-1171
V ,'1
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.
iturday at I
by United Publishers. Inc
Durham. N. C
I fLWOOO CARTER Advertiiinf Man
taoort Olaas PoetafS Paid jtt Durham. N. C. trm "o
Paid at Durham, N. C. iTJOgN
SB SS S 32: '.:::::;
Copy ..
;.:......&........ Tear mm
North Carolina 17701 : '"
Writers
By GEORGE B. RUSS
4
Forum
Mrs. Josephine E. Turner, the East Ends' Black "Joan of Arc,"
Durham's first black woman candidate for City Councilman-at-uurge;
takes a long, wide range, serious survey of her hometown; the
city of Durham
The city is many square miles of industries, schools and colleges,
churches and teeming thousands of people; the good, the bad and
the indifferent; builders-destroyers; the well-fed, the hungry; the
skilled and the unskilled; those who strive for survival and those
who find drifting from pillar to post a better way of life.
Therefore, like unto the individual, the city must strive
intelligently to survive regardless of the homogenous masses of
thinkers, vast handicaps-- onslaughts of every description; night
cries of misery; rape, dope, crime and a long list of retardants to
the overnight Utopia the city might become if there were no
poverty, crime, drug abuse problems, racial strife or ecology to
over-shadow the blueprint of a city without soul-scars. Nor would
there be any need for dedicated persons to push up their sleeves
and try with all their might to keep the heartbeat of the city on, at
MMM wj
iffj$. , ,
Bast End Community House
least, a hopeful, even-keel. , . - feSf .'
Mrs. Josephine E. Turner need no introduction to Forum.
readers. This black, first lady of the North Durham section is a city
dweller who not only senses the downbeat in the pulses of her
black people; but, she does what she can to alleviate misery when
an whereever she can. Her campaign slogan is a natural altruiasfgip
his candidate; "Dedicated To Those In Need."
Josephine was bom ' n bred, for the most part, in North
Durham; she knows the heartfelt of black people, but she has soul
all people: their hopes and fears, the causes and effects of their
indigence upon the city-she personally knows the "wantoness of
being on the wagon." There was a time when the lady was an
alcoholic. As she says it, "I was a wretched sinner but I am saved
by the grace of God." Experience is one of the greatest teachers
known to man, therefore, Mr& Turner can speak with confidence
that God is alive and will restore, to the fold offood citizenship, all
who are willing to pay the total price that the Law of
Compensation demands; and, only the stouthearted, faithful few
can reach a point of no return- and return "made new." She
returned to help those who have taken the wrong fork of the
crossroad in life. She personally knows the parents of many of
Durham's youth who have become victims of drugs, crimes, vices
and diseases. She has been a witness to the tearful outpourings of
parents begging help for their children who were seeking, and
eventually found, the road to moral destruction
"Miss Josephine" demonstrates her feelings through positive,
succint action. She is a Christian Civic leader, therefore, she will
pray with and for you in your hour of distress, but she enjoys most
of all moving with the action if it is designed and designated for the
good and well-being of those in need.
The East End Community House Project is no longer a blueprint
vividly sketched upon the heart and brain of Josephine Turner.
This Community House is no brick and tile structure, however, it is
a symbol of happiness, a sanctuary, a Friendship Club-- a light
house whose beacon will rescue those who have lost their way, and
oaA f ham in a niafta wham tliAir nan ha Vial rri clniallv cniritlialiv
j HU - ' ' mf l. '(Ml ' "VK1. .V VI IV. J VU11 ... ... ....... m. J ? .J... ..... . .
; physically and intellectually. The East End Community House is an
East End Council Project. The East End Council was organized in
1961. Since that time, the council has been involved in getting
street paved, housing improvements, traffic lights, side walks,
better jobs for many of its citizens; boycotting; Tot-lote for small
! children- improvements in the total Durham community.
Mrs. Turner is Head-Cashier at Giant Food Store, 9 1Q. North
Roxboro Street; her son, Thomas Allen, a senior' at Durham High
School, is a part time employee here at "Giant's". Beneath the
ill-business veneer, one discovers the heart of a Christian woman
md a wonderful mother; she has four fine children: Mrs.
Jackqueline Burch, Lawerence Lee, Thomas Allen and Alarm Ena, a
1th grader at Club Boulevard Elementary School. Our beautiful,
wrtly lady is a grandmother too- Sandra and Betsy Burch are a
pair of happy, well-adjusted grandchildren.
J. &, Holland has captured; in his poem, God Give Us Men, the
spirit of this candidate who is seeking election, November 6th, to a
seat in city government: Councilman at large. God give us men.
The time demands Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and willing
hands; Men whom the lust of office does not kill; Men who have
honor; men who will not lie; Men who can stand before a
demagogue And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking;
Tall men, sun crowned, who live above the fog In public duty and
in private thinking! For while they rabble with their thumb-worn
creeds, Their large professions and their little deeds Mingle in
selfish strife; lo! Freedom weeps! Wrong rules the land, and waiting
Justice sleeps!
Mrs. Josephine E. Turner lives at 1208 Hanover Street; she is an
active member of Union Baptist Church, Captain of U.B. Pastor's
Aide Society; Worship Chaplian of the Helping Hand Missionary
Circle; Worship Chairman of Kyhoo-division of the Y.W.C.A.; an
active member of the Progressive Mother's Club; also, Mrs. Turner
is a board member of P.A.C.; Policy Advisory Committee of
Operation Breakthrough.
Concert At NC Central
Not. 3, 1973 THE CAROLINA
Appear in
The Descendants of Mike
and Phoebe will appear in
concert at 8:15 p.m., Thursdav
October 25, in North Canlip
Central University's B.N. Duke
Auditorium, u
Mike .h Big Mike-and
Phoebe settled in Snow Hill,
Alabama, in 1817. Phoebe was
a slave. Big Mike had bought
his freedom. Consuela Lee
Moorehead, Bill Lee, and A.
Grace Lee Mims are lineal
descendants-through their
mother-seven generations
removed. s
The three are the children
of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold W. Lee
of Snow Hil, Alabama. Their
grandfather. William James
Edwards, was the founder of
Snow Hill Institute in that
Alabama town. The Lees are a
musical family, and the
material performed by the
Descendants spans the range of
African-American music-from
the spirituals to the blues, from
Coleridge Taylor to the current
jazz scene.
Included are the
compositions of William
Edwards "Bill" Lee-jazz and
selections from jazz-folk operas
he has written about life in and
around Show Hill.
And their repertoire also
includes compositions by
Consuela Lee Moorehead. Mrs.
Moorehead is currently
director of the Hampton
Institute Jazz Workshop.
There are similarities in the
biographies of the three. AB
are graduates of Snow Hill
Institute. Mrs. Moorehead is
also a graduate of Fisk
University.
She holds the master of
music degree from
Northwestern School of Music
and in the 1950s played jazz
professionally in New York.
She has been a teacher since
then.
Bill Lee graudated from
Moorehouse College, and is
founder and director of the
New York Bass Violin Choir.
He has appeared in concert and
on recordings with Josh White,
Leon Bibb, Odetta, Frank
Strozier, and Ray Bryant, and
has written to date five operas
and numerous jazz
compositions.
A. Grace Lee Mims majored
in English and minored in voice
at Hampton Institute. She
holds the Master of Science in
Library Science degree from
Western Reserve University,
and has sung with the
Cleveland Orchestra Chorus
and Chamber Chorus under the
direction of Robert Shaw. She
has also appeared in opera
production;-..
SOULTIW Hf.M'
I - m
Sat,
:: DON
Ill and
THE SOU TRAM DANCERS
starring
SPECIAL GUEST STARS
THE SYLVERS
At The RALEIGH MEMORIAL AW.
LISTEN Ki US there's going to be dance contestant
chosen from the audience. The winning couple w8l be given
a round trip expense paid vacation to Hollywood, where
they will appear on the nationally televised "Soul Train"
show. So don't forget and bring your partners. Must be at
least 14 yrs of age to enter contest.
SUNDAY NOV. 18
2 shows-4P. M. &8 P. M.
TICKETS. . . .S5.00 ADVANCE S6.00 DAY OF SHOW
Tickets on sale at Raleigh Mem. Aud k. T'kx. Also in
Raleigh at Hamlin Drugs, Sweet Pea Greens Record Shop &
Sam Goody's Record Shop. .In Durham at Snoopy '
Record Bar. For ticket information call 755-6237.
PRODUCED BY DICK GRIFFEY
Mitj't Workers' v""
Legal Rights
Spposium Set
North Carolina Central
University School of Law
presented a symposium on
November 1, 1973 at 2 p.m.
The program featured a
panel discussion around the
legal rights of migrant farm
workers in North Carolina.
Members of the panel will
include: Representative Robert
Wynne, Wake County member
of the North Carolina General
Assembly; Skip Easterly, Head
of the North Carolina State
Department of Labor Wages
and Hour Division; Beth Wells,
Director of Nursing for Migrant
Workers in North Carolina;
Denise Wilson, second year law
student who served as a
summer legal intern for the
South Carolina Commission on
Farm Workers; and Rick Miller,
second year law student who
will serve as program
moderator.
North Carolina is the largest
"user" state for migrant farm
workers in the south. More
migrant farm workers come
into the state than any other
state in the south.
The symposium is the first
step toward formation of a
Migrant Workers Legal Center
at North Carolina Central
University Law School. There
is no existing facility in the
state that addresses Itself to the
legal problems of migrant farm
workers.
The Center will work in
conjunction with the National
Migrant Legal Action Program
to provide legal assistance on
problems concerning
occupational health and safety,
housing conditions, schools
and wages.
The public is invited to
participate in the symposium
which will be held in the Law
School.
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