a
u
a
D
a
a
a
a
a
a
o
D
a
D
a
n
D
a
n
o
a
o
a
3 - T1? CAROLINA TIMES " SAT., MARCH 26, 1977
c::o3 Qofofos Prof Doll's School Integration Attacks
Nl.w YORK- In a stout
defense of the kgal appioach
to -;- school
NAACP Gene;.l
descn-cgation
Nathaniel R.' Janes declared
Counsel that repeated attacks uih n I he
daoDaoDiQ
436 V.. Pcttign-w Sircet
Durham. N.C. 27702
Pitoncs688-.5K7 & 682-2913
SU3SCM2Z KOVJM
and have The Carolina Times
mailed to you each week.
. SUBSCRIPTION APPLICATION
Please enter my subscription (payable in advance) for I year -
2 years - $17.68 (tax included); or Out of State - $8.50 and $17.00.
Mr.
Ms.
$8.84:
Address.
Cily.
.State.
.Zip.
II litis is n (lift, the card should read "From
Make all checks and money orders payable to The
Carolina Times and forward to the above address.
B
1
B
I
B
1
fl
fl
fl
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
fl
I
I
I
civil : rights v :xanizat ion's
upproa:h to improving educa
tion for minorities by a noted
Harvard scholar failed to take
into consideration the proved
fact that segregation creates
the greatest harm in school
children because it is based
on a caste system.
. - Desegregation, Jones said,
can he!;- considerably in eli
minating the educational
damages about which the
NAACPs detractors are alleg
edly concerned. This is so, he
said, because: "With integrat
ed schools it is much more
difficult to subordinate blacks
as a group tl ough unequal or
inadequate school resources.
Blacks have lcar.ned that 'green
follows white."
Jones' defense of the 1954
Supicroe Court's Brown deci
sion was presented in the
December issue of The Yale
Law Joun ;t' as a rebuttal to
an CHilier article by Der ick
Bell, Jr., a Harvaid Univer
sity Law f rvfessor.
Dr. Bell, is a former staff
member of the Legal Defense
and Educational Fund Inc.,
which was once the legal anil,
"of the- NAACP." The wik.
Fund." as' that legal firm is
popularly known, was separat
ed from the parent NAACP
.. in 1955 ami i. now . totally
' independent entity. . ,
Subsequently, a new cor
porate entity known i: the
NAACP. Special Conviibution
Fund - was created as the
Association's arm for receiving
tax.: deductible 'donations.
Jones presep e'y argues cases for
the. NAACP as . did former
Special Counsel Thurgood
Marshall, who als headed the
NAACP, Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, Inc.
It was Thurgood Marshall,
now an Associate Justice on
the U. S. Supreme Court, who
masterminded the legal
strategy that led to the land
njrk Supreme Court's deci
sion in Brown that outlawed
the "separate but equal" dic
tum that had govemi (" race
relations sirxe 1896.
As one of the leading
attackers upon the Brown
concepts of integration, Bell
has been arguing that the tie
segregation objectives of that
case re not achievable. So he
maint ains, minorities should
bargain for quality education
as alternatives and trade-offs
to school rrtcgrationf; -. -
: Jones- n-jd-that Prof.'Bell
"totally ignores" the political
and raci ! nature of the attack
vpon Brown. These attacks , he
said, are based upon the deter
mination " of- opponents of ;
change to maintain $5hooI se-:.
gregation. -
Opponents, he continues, ,
also fail ' to recognize, "that".
: there is rc cause of action for
educational quality per se." '
Continuing:; Jones, emphasizes-'
' thot, "The only constitutional
violation . for 'vMch judicial
remedies will lie, therefore, is
racial segegation.",
Only when civil rights
lawyers prove that there is a
violation of the equal protec
tion clauses of the Fourteenth
Amendment can the Federal
Courts .step in to order reme
dial action to eliminate segre
gation. It is at this time tf at
opportunities are opened up
for the courts to consider edu
cational quality' as part of the
remedy for c i reeling con
stitutional violations.
-Even this is. under attack
in . the Supreme Court. On
March 22, that Court will hear
oral arguments on the question.
4.
REED LARSON
"SITUS" THROUGH;
THE LOOKING GLASS
By Reed Larson
-TV ' v.v.vv. .
1 I
Each of these advertised Items Is required to
be readily available for sals at or below the
advartlaad nrica In aach Afi-P Stora. artant
as ipecrflcally noted In this ad. J(
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. MARCH 26 AT MP M DU RHAM
CkrrTrrrm inooo winner
11 rfyrrmi PRIZES
SHRIFT H. HUNT
tUMTU.t.C
ISIOO WINNERSI
$117,159 TOTAL PRIZES
6t6S CHART EFFECfive MArch ft 197?
UNAS- OOM OOM OOM
DCSMCD IS M
qamcs matM wit vwre vttm
tiMt " ik ituft "TSTujm TU iu
mm m i m mm iaj m iia m
m mm i m ua i is m t w
m jm its mm ik m i u
. urn lis m itm . its Ks
W tsjss 1 la m m 1 ai tsi ai M
1 mm Ilia m I ia ilits i
..!. mhh:mmT ""!!' !"-"
Tht Supar Cash Bingo oanw I avallablt In 79 Graat
AUantle a Pacific Taa Co. Stoma locatad In North
Carolina. South Carolina. Fannin Cty. Qa..
Abingdon, Va. area. This promotion la achadulad to
and on AorU 23. 1977. 8upar Cash Bingo will offi
cially and, howevtr. whan ail game
OMtrwutad.
WEXFORD CRYSTAL
;, BY ANCHOR HOCKWQ
I FEATURE OF THE WEEK!
I 1 vN. JUL
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS
VWV FIHM FRESH . H If H
cin: 1 u (vfi
l T
FRESH TENDER
r7 .
kiAWU LB.
"CALtiOHNiAfiffl
b WKTAMI
nMNraMfMa
Large r
,88SIZEi f r.i
EACH
ONLY
,ruTT'
FOR YOUR FUWTWa NEEDS LOFT8 ASSORTED FlOWEft AND
OTTi::3SGl Ik,- 99: GACBBI SEEDS 8 -W
vmpaP fmmAt . FULL OF FLAVOR PERFECT TO TOP OFF 8ALAD8
RED RIPE, SWEET .Mfji ntjefJPif P LARGE ttlt
AND FULLOF JUICE LBg) E I TIIIIbUNCH
U.S. 1 EASTERN
UClJfS
TO
Sl'JiiTS
LIMIT ONE
PLEASE
4 LB.
CAN
Ik.
'AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN ORAM FEO BEEF
STRIP UJL STEAKS
BONELESS
LB.
MP QUALITY TENDER
Ci!Ml!S,
SLIUtU
LB.
IVY WESTERN ORAM
RAWS
I FED BEEF
lb.
A&P QUALITY TENDER
At P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF WHOLE OR HALF
Cm SI LI? 03K3
(0
PK.
J
CUT FREE WTO STEAKS
LB.
I
n
SLICED
THICK OR
REGULAR 1 LB.
PKQ.
A4P QUALfTY QRAiN Fen
5- V
5KT-
h J j A I.' 1 9. UiiSlffMtmJlXt
If I
MP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN ORAM FED BEEF BOTTI
BONELESS
LB.
I
My
U.S.OA MSPECTEO FRESH
DEI-O-CCOTEa
ieoin hi n wtf
FROZEN
FL0U
ir
iHl
atnr
LB.
5 LB. BOX 4
HEADLESS AND DRESSED
ITMIIV.lTrG
CAPTI JOHN'S
RDZBIFBH STICKS
I) LB P
U BOX la
1 lb. nnc
93
PKG.
tatiorNI
9j
KRAFT'S IMITATION
mm IHMimi M !
QUART
jar r n
A&P
64 OZ.
BTL
(o)(o)?
(2X2)
4IICHT
0 CLOCK
COFFEf
I LIMIT ONE WITH
I THIS COUPON AND
I ADDITIONAL 7.50
I ORDER
I
m . A& P CO UPON M aa aa 1
A SUPERB BLEND RICH M BRAZLIAN COFFEES
SAVE
5 806
1 LB.
BAG
O
l-aaTri r Lwrr unt wjui'un. uuuu cmhu sai. mamuh a ai w wj
aai wm aaaaaaiHaA&p COUPON I
663
JANE PARKER BAKE H SERVE
JANE PARKER SOUR RYE OR
JANE PARKER y-
r?f?i cr i save 20c
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
312CT.
11 OZ. J
PK6& L
18 OZ.
LOAF J
32 OZ
PKQ.
REQULAR : '
REOULAR AND EXTRA BODY 306 OFF LABEL
11 oz. rnt
Zl CAN U J
.Ieach Uw
3 .
8"
SIZE
B.JiAal W4 k-.m-.
(QALVANIZED STEEL)
. EACH
ANN PAGE
loi!
5)
k 16 OZ.
JCANS
:. A&P
TEXAS PETE ft
cim se1
VilaiwaMI WamnWlBlMi.'..
fR HOT DOGS
I( 10 oz. I ,JIJJ)
CANS Jq
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES
c::rroxijcai
ocaf 10OZ v9
MP NONFAT
r.EI b
QUARTS
BOX
L anuia X
twrr ONE WITH
THIS COUPON AND
ADDITIONAL 7.50
ORDER
5 LB. fT) x Ok
LMIT ONE COUPON. QOOO THRU SAT. MARCH 26 AT MP 664
I 1
Eta
jAg.
MFRS.COUPON-aai J
MAXWELL HOUSE I I
ALL GRINDS . I I
I
I
I
I
J
Iumtoni
with ma
COUMMANO
MFRS. COUPON1
MAXWELL HOUSE I
ALL GRINDS
flOSD-l
'SAvarC. . .... . .. . I
LWirONS ,
WITHIN '
coukih '
AND ADOfTDNAL CAN,
7MOHOU iimi . a
' 1
i mmt amb ivuianM DIAL 4TV7
0000 THRU SAT. MARCH flt AT AftP 628 1
1 LB
VACUUM WV
CAN ' l
I TJaOROfR , , I I"
I ' 1 uirroRf oowo " oat -'S !
la to'iffiawaBaBiaBSBBl awi
2 LB. p J!
VACUUM U t
BORDEN'S ELSS ' . PIX8BURY SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK
i. Aa a i k ' , . M faJ fc,
1" CT. . r 10 CT,
CANS
ts9
MRS. FLBERT8 (M QTR8) (LMIT 2)
t fl P" '..1LB
4P CRINKLE OR REOULAR CUT-' ai KRAFT lrVlXJAU.Y WRAPPED '
ecALieoi v A - ' -"' Z flfl
r-pM'ip-Ctr t p.-.fP-- 1 LB. VTJ
12
OUR OWN
10 OZ.
JAR
Otitic , , JCTf14llCc3 2
lath thepurcheseof these rvxj6erldneeds .
ciiin Jo 2 '
OaJtoWtIWtMtSSSaT
t Ojnw Sa T Ja. f a W Saw and ai 4 iaaff Ciae . iRaaiie'ie
I
' "When I use a word,' Humpty pumpty said, in
rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it
to mean ! neither more nor less.' :
'The question is," said Alice, 'can words mean
all those different things." .
Lwis CarroU's Through The Looking Class
Had Alice attended recent Congressional hearings
on the controversial "common situs" picketing bifi,
.her question would have been answered. Words can
mean whatever you want them to mean when you're a
spokesman for Big Labor trying to shove one of your;
special interest measures through the 95th Congress.
A casual reading of the sleight of tongue testimony
offered by union officials would have provided Alice
with several examples.; ; f '. ?. ' J "
The AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades
Department president, Robert A. Georgine, told legis
lators the bill embodies the "fundamental principle of
equal justice under law." ., K
And that sounds very noble. Until you read the bill
and find out that what is being passed off as "equal
justice" is really a nasty new privilege that would give
hardhat union officials the power to blockade any con
struction job where non-union craftsmen arc
employed.
Peter G. Nash, a lawyer and former General
Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, does
an effective job of unmasking the intent and the effects
of the Big Labor proposal (HR 3500) in Common Situs
Picketing - "Here We Go Again," a paper published
in February.
"The overall effect, intent and purpose of HR
3500 has nothing to do with equal treatment for con
struction unions it has everything to do with grant
ing total control of the construction industry and its
employees to the Building and Construction Trades
Department of the AFL-CIO," Nash argues.
"Indeed, a more accurate title for HR 3500 would
be a Bill 'To secretly deprive construction workers of
free choice and to secretly transfer this nation's largest
industry to the AFL-CIO'," he maintains.
"The initial analysis of HR 3500 should quite
clearly establish that its advertised 'equal treatment' is
but a smokescreen for legislation which seeks massive
changes in our nation's basic labor law . . ," says
Nash.
HR 3500 gives construction unions the power to
require employer assistance in mandating that all con
struction employees be union-represented whether
those employees wish to be or not. "
And the bill would undermine the protection of a
Right to Work law for construction workers in the 20
states which have enacted such statutes against forced
unionism.
"The union's problems ... in 'Right to Work'
states are specifically remedied by HR 3500 "which
allows a construction union $irikfe.ajr'Qt;tdii
struction project if :mplOyee -on hatite;fjKrnot
union dues payers and to expand that construction
strike area-wide by merely coupling that issue with a
non-working condition demand,"-Nash explains.
So, with the help of Mr. Nash, w& see that the
so-called "equal treatment" bill actually provides
special treatment and privileges for union officials, no
one else!
And, unlike Alice, there can be no confusion
about what will happen if the common situs measure is
passed. Hardhats who belong to a union will have
work, union officials will have even more power and
those who refuse to join or are not permitted to join
labor unions will have problems.
GCES
teckgMaraimfce
With CCB's regular and Golden statement
savings plans, you'll receive the highest interest
rates allowed by law.
And since we compound your daily interest
, quarterly, you'll get back more and more money.
So open a savings account at CCB today.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Central Carolina Bank
Member FDIC
Tho "OKI"
for Spring!
More than 90 first class businesses com
bine to make Northgate the ONE to shop
for Spring! Northgate has two department
stores and dozens of specialty shops,
plenty of places to dine or snack, repair
and service stops, entertainment , and
community events. When you shop North
gate, it only takes one to get it all done.
And this spring, Northgate is THE ONE!
1
1-85, Greg son St. Exit, Durham