SAT., JULY 2 1T77 CS rCU" V,' "$ - 5 WW tef TOJ WCK GAt.;;? Cater Urzzi'Cczlzzto Dy 1H ir:::c!:j President Carter has urged all heads of federal execu tive departments and agencies to be certain that no federal funds go for programs which discriminate. .. . - -; , In v a memorandum, the President repeated the Ad ministrative's strong commit-, ment to enforcing Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, support ing the concept "thai the government of all the people should not support pro grams which discriminate on the grounds of race, color of national origin. i Title VI 'provides for stopping funds for programs , found to be discriminatory. . , , The effective use of the sanctions provided by Thle VI is an essential element of the Administration's effort to guarantee that federal funds do not flow to discriminatory , programs, the President said. President Carter said that the U. S. Attorney General , ' ' has responsibility for "central guidelines and oversight of Title VI enforcement. He told ' the department and agency heads the Department of Jus tice will be contacting t..em soon to determine the level of compliance with Title VI; !fM' Doctors find many corns and calluses can be removed medically without surgery. The same medical ingredient doc tors find so effective is now available without prescription tn DERMASOFT Creme. Use only as directed. Show ad Suggist; CZZZIA'StifT . K ' .toft M, WAM-nfPi? . ? BY LAURA fARKs: cotmnunity' had pledged to Nineiy ,two countries, had, '- ' imilliofls of Africans stiU ' come to Maputo, Atobt 'ndei: colonial rule support fat , que, ioaffirrrr their struggle .(-their struggle." A promise has -to free .the other oppressed' been made tp them; U will be- - m Ainca.A-massrayy - tuUuiea.' ... Mras held on the'afterrioorf of'. the )96b Declaration of . 21 st .May at the Sports. Pavil "the UnfteJ Nal6ns on the lion of Maputo in'observance of Solidarity for Africa WeeV Kwy - 19 D ooservea veryyearv'.' v; , , this Was thjS 6ftheal bf .: tht ObsefVahciij. Five, '.vnatik fteveThAYe; - beeh heldr- MiputQ.'iheo.'-.stfllurfder , Portugese; colonialism while" FRELIMO conducted . Its' ferocious struggle to; end that ; there ' were only , three inr colonialism. And thanks, to depehdent states, today there the struggle of the liberation': .. are 47; . About '.10 million movementi, today the! people .; people, twothirds of which of Mozambique ) ire' freej,".,were -in southern Africa, v tajcmg; their rightful: .place in the world, Freedom has not yet come V to. ' '. Zimbabwe and . arnibia(,''bttt. 'it 'wfll,,. and soort.. -Today, :,'d2.-:fOJmtrie''Wett'linS4t'-thai i4'(rhy.'e have -pledged themselves to bring - about v that freedom. The racist regimes have been warned that their time is rapidly running out. Today was a watershed in the march of liberation in southern Afri ca. - The international hu:it Continued From Page 1 J Hunt said that he would study the sentences to see if they were in line with other sentences for the same crime. He could commute the sen tences to time served or to an amount which would allow the Wilmington 10 to be paroled. A two hour rally followed the march at the capitol grounds under the : watchful eyes of more than a dozen Raleigh' uniformed policemen and many other plainsclothes officers. There were no arrests and only one incident iwhen one white woman, alledged by some bystanders, to have been a member of the American Socialist Party better, known as the Nazi Party displayed a placard opposing "a pardon for the Wilmington 10. ' ' She was told that she could not demonstrate with out a'perrnit, and wasgryen." . couple of licks from Evange- ' line Grant Redding's towel before she left. ' r , Speakers at the' rally, called for a change in the approach of black: to get" freedom for the Wihningtdn- 10. . . -V .'. ' "There is nb'harm.'ih going to jail. Jail is built for . . people ' when y0u: go for . a .. cause.1 And until we start ' marching ' and boycotting, closing down some of the-, businesses; we are not going : to accomplish very . much,!' said Rev. Charles Kirk of Fayetteville. Kirk was critical of black leaders in the state for not supporting the march. "Out of all the people that we have -in elected office across the state, I dare say that one has -put one dollar in this march to make it a success." Kirk continued saying that ' after the elected officials got ' elected they "forget from"' 'which they Cometh" tarry little, a candidate for the Winston-Salem City Council and former Black Panther Party leader said the ' 'Democratic Party hid a tot1 to do with the Wilmington 10 being convicted. "Sehator -Robert Morgan", he charged, . '"helped beef up the pro- secutors staff. v . s Little said that perhaps-non-violent cMcl' disobe v dience used by Dr Martin' ' Luther King, Jr. is needed 1 in the Case,' He said .that may- - bp we need to chain vr selves ) 'to' , ' the Governor's ' ' mansion or somewhere else ; but' we. 'cant ' allow, ,those ; . i, i- -i, . t. t-.to con- ft'loue. tO ignore' .the-, case or : act as' if things should go on. ' as usual.' We have got to' be able to inflict some sort of (demand . on- them ot some -.; .'ending pf' coloniahsro 'had given. :impeluV to he - world decotoriialism. One . bf the rnost significant 'recoKb of 'the W to itsf v3Q yejmrwas that" of :4ecoloniaIism.'. In 1545 there were 5rmembets. theiUnlted .Nations, today. there' 'art 147 . the"1, over- . whelming' iriajority r newly independent states. In 1945 still, had 'to .exercise self dev terminatipn. The job. was not yet c'ornpleied, ' . The Struggles of alt the peoples of ''southern Africa DecolOniallzation- Cbrruiu'ttfee' The Council for Namibia, and the ' . . Special . . Committee . Against Apartheid worked so closely together. The people of southern Africa had inten sified ' their armed struggle vand - were indicating severe . kind of consequences for the injustices that have occured." . Another rally speaker, Irhani Kaxani, Chairperson of the National Wilmington 10 defense committee, said that her organization, if requested from Frinks, would initiate a petition drive In the state . Reminding the 1 50 rally . participants that Governor . Hunt won the last fall election with solid black support, Ms. Kazani said, ''we have to let him know from today on, that we will actively work Sgainst him. Whether he gets ' the succession bill or not, he will never sit up there again if v. he does not pardon the Wil mington 10." We were so completely 1 shocked at Judge fountain." Fountain ruled in May following - a two-week post conviction hearing that the original- testimonies of the ' state's ' witnesses were true ; and that he found no viola tions of the constitutional - rights of the Wilmington 10. Fountain's denial of the WW trial for the Wilmington . 10 came just seconds after the last evidence was pre sented for his consideration. "It, impressed, .upon our rnihds,, you know, In that court- room oft that day when he ruled on a decision in less than a half minute, that there is something drastically wrong," Mrs. Moore said. A- Wilmington school teacher during the time of the racial distrubance out of which .the convictions ; resulted . gave . Hunt some ; WENDELL, HAVNES iiayhis i:imvxt SUFIRfMET : ALL KINDi OF INSURANCE l 'IT IS BETTER TO HAVE AND NOf NEED " THAN-TO NEED AND NOT HAVE", ' PHONE (91 9) 682-0287 ' P. O. Box 8774 . blows on . the racists. The ; racist sought to counter attack . by attacking indepen dent states-of Africa, such as Mozambique, Botswana, and -..Zambia. : -Maputo -was the battle front against apartheid. No Afncan; no black man in the .world was free until all black ,. men were free. Africa belongs .-.to '; Africans. South Africa belongs to Africa and is not fin appendage of Europe. . '. The ' struggle will con , finue, Imperialism bad never .been destroyed . by words. The Mau-Mau drove the British from Kenya. The liberation movements drove out the Portugese. Now the Patriotic . Front . and SWAPQ would drive but the racists and the colonialists from Zimbabwe and Namibia. : The -.souls of the -children imurdfired.in Swetto would march . on to freedom. The struggle would w on in the fields, in the mines, in the factories of South . Africa. - Two schools of thought existed on achieving African liberation. One advocated a negotiated settlement. The Organization . - of . African Unity was not against this. But; if all other means failed, i background on the problems of desegregation of schools. .Mrs. Mary Sharpless said following court -ordered dese gregation of public schools by cross town busing, "there was unrest because, some of the childred, blacks, were aot . wanted . in; school", - The retired school . teacher said that - many black, students were not allowed to ride to. . school inUhe buses. . (J A 1971 boycott of schools in Wilmington ;. by. - black students drew criticisms and .physical attacks upon . boycotting ' students .by - paramilitary whites led by Leroy Gibson; head of the Rights of White People (ROWP). Golden Fnnks, wet with perspiration, and his feet a little sore, from a 120 mile march from Wilmington to Raleigh in which he drummed . up publicity for the meeting, told Hunt "to send us out of here and say! have got to wait for th. courts to ex haust itself: js . saddening, it hurts me,- 4nd-1 know that you want to Jdo .the Tight thing." ' Several : other mothers pleaded to Hunt asking for their sons back. Wtille making ; no commitments, Hunt said that he; 1 would meet with attorneys of the Wilmington 10. next month and dicuss the request for. pardon of the Wilmington 1Q . Several .bjlack elected officials have spoken out in . support of the Wilmington 10 many saying that the sen-; : fences were, too long. WE OFFER YOU COMPLETE INSURANCE f COVERAGE cAuto- Business'..'. Final Expenies , Insured Savings Account. . .- Renter's . Annuities . Homeowners - Fire : . Life - Liability . Hospitalization . Mortgage - Cancer : ' A. Death Burial B. Disability v Retirement . Senior Cttizent to Age 80 Sickness and Accident " 'I :,,v',-,;.-' ' '!'.' " "'"trf.'1. '" '--: CHILDREN EDUCATION , Durhim, U, C. 2770T then Africans would have to kfll to be free. The tree of liberty was watered by the blood of martyrs. Five years . ago it was said that the Portu gese colonialism struggle would take 25 years. Believ ers in a negotiated settlement should go ahead. But African skepticism was understand able. Africans would not be lulled into false hopes; their guns would not be silenced -until the flags of freedom were hoisted in Southern Africa. ' . The year of 1978 was promised as the Vear of Decision, but Africa would not wait with arms folded. They would wait with guns thundering. If the western initiatives for a negotiated settlement failed it was hoped that the western countries would do the logical thing and give freedom fighters the guns to finish the job. Maputo women shared 5 the determination and the passion for freedom of their men. Women did not like warfare but when their chil dren were machine-gunned, when all , they sought was bread, they r fought side by side with their men in the Portugese colonies. The spirit of Maputo was perhaps best expressed by' Robert Mugabe of the Continued On Page 13) At Central Carolina Bank you can fill up your cupboard with beautiful stoneware, in your choice of "Desert Sand" or "Spring Flower" patterns. . Fktwar not included. Just dqwsit $ 50 or more in a new or existing CCB regular savings account. Check the chart below for the introduc- , tory offer of your choice. THREE WAYS TO SAVE AND START r ; COLLECTING BEAUTIFUL STONEWARE YOU REGULAR YOUPAy' DEPOSIT RECEIVE PRICE ONLY $50 4-Piece Place Setting 16-Piece S500 Starter Set (including i tm place setting) r $1,000 32-P.iece $34.65 Servtrt for 8 (including I free place Mtting) Pricts do not mcludiN.C. sales lax. After you've started your service, you can easily add to it. Because each additional deposit of $25 allows you to purchase another place setting or a, completer piece at a special low price. So come to CCB and save.Wfe're dishing out stoneware. CCB STONEWARE PIECES YOUR PRICE 4-Pc. 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