SAT., APRIL 9, 1977 THE Dr. Spdigncr Texas Dr. Theodore R. Speigne,r, Chairman of the; Durham. City Board of Education' and : (inVersify rroiessor,- fcmmtustonGeo. V'' closing session was graphy at- North, Carolina presided over : by -Dr.- Ken Central University, was west Ineth 'A Jordan, ' Associate lecturer at Prairie View A&M University, -Prairie iView; Texas, March 28. The subject of his lecture . was "The Impact of the Commission of Geography and Afro-America Upon Minority Geographers." Dr. Speigner was intro duced to the convocation by one of his former majors of NCCU Department of Geo graphy. Dr. Phillip E. Kith cart is serving as Chairman of the Department, of Geogra:. phy and Economics at Prairie View A&M University. Dr. Kithcart earned his Ph.D. degree in Geography from the University of Cincinnati. He succeeded another man who majored in Geography at NCCU, Dr. Walter C. Farrell, Jr., who is, currently serving as Associate Profes- ' . Support The Durham College Educational Improvement Fund mm &wm A We II w Mono Sold To Other Dealers or OUR 11 (irffjQi 24-oz. LOAF TENDER i6.i?i. WHOLE, LB. ' -''" ' J,;'" '" ,; - ""' '' - '' ' ; : .. 1 . ' ' '' CAROLINA TIMES - 7 V Spoofis M ot,'-' Department of Studies, - Cheyoey College, Cheyney Pa Urbaa Stale Professor :? of Geographical Research,-; Department -of Geography and Economics at Prairie View A&M. After. 'T"'8 urTrW,: " m wvvV"y 'iii: JUlUdJl COlllCU IU9 , 114, degree in Geography from . the University of California at -Berkeley. Dr. Speigner reported a happy reunion with his former students. While in Houston, Dr. Speigner $ served , as . Chair-. v person for-NSB A Clinic on "Accountability: The School Role", Tuesday, March 29. Over 1000 board members were present the occasion being the 37th annual con- vention of the National School Boards Association which met at the Rice Wittenhouse Hotel. . " liVVS )-J '- ': CASH PEIZES! ITS FUN! FREE! EASY! Get a Free Bingo Magic Collector Card at your checkout counter or store office. No purchase necessary. Each card contains 5 Bingo Magic Games worth $2, $5. $10, $100 and $1,000. Save You More! : Pricts Good Thri s Satirday, April 9, 1977- Qoaitity Rights Roiorvod Restaurants PRIDE LEAN kMalf lb. 87 (0 caldo::ia Continued From Front Page, trom a guard tower. It is com- A ' m - - - --- pletely enclosed by a fifteen foot fence topped with barbed wire that is hooked up to large electrical generators. Visitors enter through I two different locked eates, but at present they must be locked and un locked by hand. Under both old and new visiting rules in mates are made to strip and submit to a thorough body search ! both before and after ' visit. T "ft V;-. ., V '. " "Another consideration" : Sanders said, "is of course the w and the additional search tag that bringing food cringing tood ui presents.' The prison popula tion is 144 persons greater than last spring he stated. "Check-, tag the boxes and the like for contraband taxes an already stretched pattern of opera tion." ' Assistant Director of Pri sons Kip Kautsky echoed San ders' remarks. He said the food privilege at Caledonia was "the by product of exceptional physical area" but that "We are not going to be able to do it with the present facility." Kautsky emphasized that checking food "required addi tional staff which ve can not provide on a continuing basis." Kautsky declined. to say how many new staff Would be re quired in order to do a proper search of the food brought in. Kautsky and Sanders said they did not think the revo- o mm PICK - OF - LARGE SDML TROPICAtlA or KRAFT II fl I C II) I jicn Half Gallon VIRGINIA BRAND or HICKORY MOUNTAIN ;0UN!R fin IfU Wbolo; $ lb: I ..i i i x. x . cation of the privilege would cauM tniirh 'concern. But one inmate at Caledonia reported, UI . T . Tl Nearly every man in my' cell block has filed a grievance with the Inmates K Grievance Commission. There are appro ximately 25 men in the cell block. The Inmate went on to. say, vwe wui nave to wau iwoiri --. . -- D weeks for our forms to even Continued From Front Page reach the Commission, and. nothing to indicate the civil then they' can only make rights of the Wilmington 10 had recommendations." been violated. That same day Another inmate said, " T wire reports stated Edmisten think the reaction of the men .' would not oppose new trials here will be very negative be-' for the Wilmington 10. When cause one of the - main rea- sons people like the visits, is ; for the food purposes." "People have been looking for ward all winter to eating food on the outside with their families," said another pri soner, "and now that has been ' taken away from us." Families of jnmates also expressed some displeasure over the new rules. "These men have so little to do and to look forward to on the inside. This really hurts," said the mother of one inmate. "I cannot be lieve with what happened at Odom only a few weeks ago -that they have adopted a . policy here that is bound to raise tensions and cause anger," said another visitor. Kautsky said that allow ing food into the prison was a "real inconvenience to those that do not bring it in". He explained that' they would be delayed standing in line while the food was searched. Asked whether there was not enough ms ODDS CHART Odds vary dapmdmg on number of gam hcki you vbtmn Tht mow ttckni vou cotitcl the brim your charter olwnng ' ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE APfUt .i7T . , , . QDOSFOR 26 GAME 4UMBER OOOSFOK OOOSfOH TICKETS' PRIZES Of ONE GAME 13 GAME PLUSIO VALUE PRIZES TICKET TICKETS MAGIC DISCS tlOOO 65 I Hi 105,000 IB 8077 I m 2917 100 600 li 11.375 lin 75 Im 316 10 1.000 la 6.825 In 5Z5 Im 110 5 ' Z.OOO li 3413 li 263 li 95 2 7 OOP Im 975 lm 75 Im 27 In.unill 43.066 Im 158 Im 12 Im 3,4 toim r wt 53.751 I 127 I 1 m 10 1 I m 3.5 SchfduW Mmwumon o Ihit pvomonon n Mr 2. 1977 Howfva BmD MafC oHtcwIy W ifcilnbuHd ThM Glw H being pbytd m 64 pwllcipaimg Bis Star and Colonial Slom loaMd m North Canilma ChmCay & So HI Vmjma. K Man m Hockv Mourn and Cook m Gnmlbnro. Newri Caroana THE - IIEST. U. S. Grade A DOZEN 43$ 67$ u. s. Grade A DOZEN n il Half, Lb. $1.28 II iv. 1 personnel to have two lines, one for those bringing food and one for those who do not, he said,'! am afraid you don't understand. It will be impossi ble to bring food into the pri son: CHAYIS he got back to North Carolina, the staff attorney was muffled and "a claim that he was mis quoted earlier was given. Now Edmisten says if evidence from the FBI and SB1 investigations warrant new trials he will not be in opposition. Dr. Charles Cobb, Executive Director of the Commission for Racial Justice of the United Church of Christ called on Edmisten in a Raleigh press conference to not oppose the bail for Rev. Chavis and the othr defendants saying, "This is the only just and moral direction for the state to take. We also call upon the Attorney General to 'confess error before the court and pave the way for an immediate new trial." Whatever position Edmisten takes he will surely be walking a tightrope with the conserva tives and racists on one hand and blacks and liberals and revolutionaries Gh the other. If his role is to gain some type of face saving solution (which he" denies) al most any decision is certain to affect his candicacy for the U. S. Senate. HEN IN THE SERVICE r JAMES RILEY, JR. Navy Seaman Apprentice James C. Riley, Jr. son of Mrs. Jewel G. Riley of 2221 Fitz gerald Ave., Durham has com pleted recruit training at the Naval Training Center, Orlan do, Fla. During the eight week train ing cycle, trainees studied general military subjects de signed to prepare them for further academic and on-the- job training in one of the wwv muu.., Navy's 85 basic occupations Yvonne Perkins, Ralph Shaw, fields Sharon Smith, Rosalyn Waldo, Ira Wiggins, Ava Best, Jose Included in their studies phine Denard, James McKoy, were seamanship, close order drill, Naval history and first aid. A High graduate of Hillside School, he joined the Navy in September 1976. ROYCE R. OSBORN ' Navy Seasifiao Recruit Royce R. Osborn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Royce L. Osborn, Jr. of 200 Seven Oaks Rd., Dur ham has completed recruit training 'at the Naval Train ing Center, San Diego. During the eight week train ing cycle, he studied general military .'subjects designed to prepare -him for further aca demic .and Jon-the-job train ing intoriS,)f-the. Navy's 85 basic occupation fields' - ; "' Included in his studies were ; seamanship, close-order drill. Naval history and first aid. A 1976 graduate of Northern High " School, he attened Akron University, Ohio, and joined the Navy in January, 1977. 1 n 4, . . THE TTP.TiT MM C 0) lrvjVViGii By Dr. G.E.A. Toot E A BLACK PROBLEM Life has become so burden some to black youth, that daOy death is flirted with In the use of drugs and involvement in crime. Poverty, and unemployment are the principle causa ting fac tors for black crime. A look at a major city like New York, re veals how tragic and perva sive the problem can be. NOT ENOUGH POLICE . - As a result of New York Cities fiscal crises, 2,600 po licemen were laid off. Two thousand four hundred va cancies created by retirement were not filled. Major crime in the city in creased at the fastest rate of the decade. During the first six months c' last year, there were 50,000 more felony crimes. RACIST ARGUMENT Black involvement in crime in New York City is so oppres sive that racist arguments were used at the end of last year to defend whites who criminally assaulted or intimidated blacks. Examples: A gang of white youths used bats, axes and knives to ramsack the home of a black art dealer, who lived in a white community; Thirty five young whites, screaming racial slurs, attacked blacks and hispanics in the park. Weilding chains and nailed bats, 12 minority youths KCCU Continued From Front Page Wayne Pickett, John Price, Carl Baker, Arthur Bauldwin, Alice Cunningham, Louis Deberry, Alfred Dixon, Robin Peaks, and James Shipman. Department of history and social science: Brenda J. Mc Cormick, Anita Davis, Angela Squires, Patricia Wilson, John Greene, Ella Murray, Carlton Wilson, Joyce Little, and Ste phanie Shaw. Department of home eco-' nomics: Willa Currie, Juanita Tumer . and -Marie Koonce. James E. Shepard Memorial Library: Dorothea Bullock, Gregory Currie, Christopher Evans, Rosalind Lenoir, Doris Morgan, Queen Southern, Nancy White and Willie Williams. School of Library Science awards went to Theresa Byrd and Esther Stewart. Department of mathematics honored Eldner J. Arrington, Karen J. Henson, Deborah A. Staton, Patricia Wagstaff, Henry Whitlow. Department of music: Fer nando Davis, Anthony Dixon, Sharon Dula, James Kearns, Brenda Burnev. Barbara RteRS, Cunthia King, Frank P. Cockerham, Victor Ford, Carolyn Henderson, 1 nomas JUes, Regina Marrow, Danny Meacnum, James raciwoy, Joanna Monk, Jerome Powers, Gail Sharpe, Phillip Simmons, Shelia Sloan, Melvin Tolbert, Joyce Saunders and Anita Wilson. Department of naval science honored LeRoy S. Evans, Michael Vanderhurst, William E. Gorham, Alexander Bland, Jerry L. Poteat, Erik B. Ayers, Ronald A. Fletcher, Dana A. Fletcher, Claude Davis, William;. Gray, Kenneth Scott, Elliott Powell, Kenneth Wilson, Joseph Whiting, David A. Donnelly, Norman Alston, Timothy McMillian, Charles Bostic, Ralph Haile, and Anthony Harrison. Department of nursing: Veronica Jones, Maude. Williams, Wanda Kearns, Laura Smith, Phyllis Campbell, Bar bara Dermody, Lauretta Hayes, Lucille Jones, Shirley Moore, Wilma Yellock and Brenda Thompson. Department" of political science: Ernest Howell, Martha Lawson, Karl Leathers and James Kearns. Public administration pro? gram honored Evelyn M. Whv ston. Sociology department ho nored Montina Swift, Margaret Williams, Audrey Crawford, Barbara ' CnimweB, Angela Herring, Delilah Foreman, Colegge Clemons, and Billia Faye Wilson. Other honors were given by the Divison of Student Affairs, the . Student Government Association and other groups. Dr. Octavia B. Knight served as chairman of the uni versity's awards day committee. THE;' -. 3 were injured, land ,pnewa killed; ' ' , ; r Three ' white teenagerii wert arf ested for a wecklotig cam paign of terror . against ' a racially mixed family. "Die Natter was scrawled on the driveway; a black doll hung in effigy; pellet guns -were fired; windows smashed; and sugar placed in the family car's gas tank. - WHY These reports are shocking and senseless.' The reason why U even more incredulous. . One out of every eight Americans; 12 per cent of the -population, fall within thepo- verty categroy, . with incomes of $5,500 or less. The largest proportional po verty increase has occurred among white families with a male head of household; and the white elderly. Black Americans still do- BUSINESS Lfi CTANOirA&fTS wis?? m Mtnfe k, IMaf fflfttt 17 D RESIDENTIAL. COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL WIRINO iit-t-rrtae D MOTC E. tl. TOOLE a sons PHONE. 682-3486 - NIGHT 682-6506 GENERAL ELECTRICAL ENGINEER AND CONTRACTOR. ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL REPAIRS LIGHTING FIXTURES AND ELECTRIC SUPPLIES WIRING FOR LIGHT. HEAT AND POWER REFRIGERATION AND AIR-CONDITION SERVICE D D 0 8 D 0 fl HcCaU's Scnch Da & Grocery 1912S, Alston Av. .:(Bro3Ml1t Wine; Ber, Magazintand Gasoline Plenty of Parking Space Specializing in Ordering Foods and Beverages for Clubs, Churches, Fraternities, Sororities, or Any Group at Cut-Rate Prices We Deliver- Phone 688-5373 Lanzer J. McCall, Jr. Owner WeGMExpwt IVitfSSgFor PROGRAMS & BOOKLETS WEDDING INVITATIONS' TICKETS, FLYERS, ; . POSTERS' BUSINESS FORMS . smvici FQCITO ,$04E.PEtTIGREWST. Durham, N.C. ' 688-2334 : ALSO TRYOUR QUICK COPY SERVICE BEST BUYS See Us First For The Best Buys On Rings, Watches. Musical Instru ments, Shotguns. Pistols, Bicycles. And Other Valuables. Dinnvn PAViil SISO? 339 W. Main St. 688-8491 Heed Quick Cash? We Can Help You Meet T mfcniencies With Cash ; r or ltim Not In Use. ;; !l Fl CrltTFf ReCSCPETTIGREWST. af Mie evOLiljU DURHAM, N.C II ftinat the poverty level, and constitute 31 per cent of t.e poor. EiCRLASLDSTSXZS Hick crime even thcui frequently ' practiced ' irpon blacks reinforces racial fears and myths. .' Invohemest in crime does not improve (he family ecov flomy. In fact the cost of legal counsel has bankrupt many a family. It does confirm that sock-ecorwmtc lfanttationj' pro duce minority psychclogical stress. Twenty eight per ' cent of white Americans stiQ object to having' a black at their home for dinner. God knows how many resent blacks holding jobs while whites are unem ployed. INFECTS INTERRELATION- SHIPS ' Black crime is a black pro blem. In. many cities, 50 to 80 per cent of crime is drug related. The black cornmunity has the responsibility to com bat this dilemma that infects and infests our youths, and social economic relationships. SUPERFLY made the life of crime glamorous. Black America must label such con duct unacceptable, and beyond the limits of tolerance. We must rid our streets of the vendors, couriers, and buyers of crime. This is our obliga tion. ! DIRECTORY Subscribe To The Carolina Times Today $8.84 Per Year wrw We Specilize In r U ilts ed 6tsti AITTUT10CS4 $TYU"3 sons fiASE to omi Pnu XXU Ya TJcH scon TAU0RS 104 Morris Street Phone 688-1917 terras CCwPCmChI Sets We Loan The Most SAf.l'S PAlal SHOP Phone 682-257S ' , J 22 East Main St Durham, N.C CLU ICM175 mmum MtMt m ..'1

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