Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 29, 1977, edition 1 / Page 1
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, IM, . c. 277CS Duks University Library Kawspaper Department: rurham, N. C. 27706 l Tb Dhdi Pre::-' VJcfdQolVJlzCzzi ' J Better to be despised for too anxious appre hensions, than ruined by too . confident t Ocr Frccdoa Dcrtls On III security. 2?aris Vol UME 65 -NUMBER 43 "READ BV OVER 30,000 DURHAMITES" DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1877 TELEPHONS (9141 1 M . MIC I: S K t 1 4 . ' . .; . - .-Mil-; THE PEOPLE. SPEAK : . PCNS 1 Public Opinion Column! Have you ever known an event was about to happen fore it actually occured? Do your dreams come true days or , sometimes ; years after being dreamed? Accord ing to the Guinness Book of World ; Recores, Pavel Stepanek of Czechoslovakia from May' 1967 to Mafyc 1968 correctly guessed enough hidden green and white cards to . defy . the odds by 100 ; octillion C la one against it happening by chance. One of the two appointed referees recom mended that , the "results should not be published. Extrasensory perception -is it real, a gift to a few or an unrecognized resource to us all? MARY DRUMMOND sKeypunph Operator, Durham,' N,' C..W, 'I believe, there "is that ' certain people have, , strong mental powers. How , ever, others may hear or see images but do not conscious ,ly know what they are. I've had dreams that have come true. For instance, I dreamed about a person six months -before I met that person. But . now, my dreams don't make as much sense anymore." ; THOMAS JOYNER, Site Supervisor, Security, Dur ham, N. C. -MI feel I have had an ESP experience but never have been able to substantiate - it. I . relate' ESP strongly! to dreams than any other thing. A dream, in itself, is one per cent of ESP. Dreams sometimes come true or you may see a part of life you have lived prior to that dream. I do have a belief in it, but I don't know to what degree my belief may go- " G00DLETT WASHINGTON (NNPA) - Dr, Carlton B. Goodlett, president of the National Newspaper Publishers Asso ciations (NNA) - Black Press of America, called on. black people last week to save themselves from the results of American racism. He was speaking here before the 62nd ' annual meeting of the Association for the Study . of Afro .American Life and History at the Sheraton Park Hotel. Goodlett launched into American racism saying, "To1 an audience with vour historic I i urn- nrmwo i ' DEBORAH SOWELL, 25 -teacher, Durham 't "i don't think I have ESP but I know some people who are ex tremely perceptive and come up with things before they are told. I , don't know whether they are like that with everybody. It may grow from knowing someone very well and its being intuned to them that allows one tb have that extra feeling." : ; GARY PEfTIFORD, U. S. Navy, Durham, N. C. -"I won't say I believe in ESP, but I won't4 complete ly dismiss the idea. I have had premonitions, small in cidents from some dreams come . true. For example I can dream about a man walking towards me. Later 111 really see him walking towards me. Sometimes I want to tell somebody but they wouldn't believe me." II TIIIS WEEK'S ISSUZ HHS Class of 23 Pkns 50Sh Reunioa PAGE 3 Bakke Case Up Fcr Decision FA6I 4 Harassment of Blacks Charged b Report FAGS 2 c ii i n- ii 8r Tun r fir . . U CALLS 0J BLACt Af.lERICA TO SAVE cal concern, I need not dwell on the marshaling of argu ments which would establish the fact that the USA is a racist nation" " Continuing, he added "We live in a sick society The avaricious greed of the early pioneers , was , joined r in struggle by those seeking special privilege and favors in the founding conventions of the young nation, in which the supporters of materialis- ' tic values won the day against those of humanistic values. "As we look back, in this w 201st year , of the founding Qf mm TinrirWot ' Scared Any MRS; LUCILLE PULUAH GETS HEW APARTMENT ; By KELVIN A. BELL On July 1 6, The Carolina Times printed an' article en titled "Satisfactory Housing - Is It Too Much To Ask?" We carried pictures showing 1 the deploring conditions in which Mrs, .Lucille Pulliam was living. . ' . Following that expose, an agent of the realty agency which rented the apartment where Mrs. Pulliam . lived, painted the porch. When it became known to the agency that Mrs. Pulliam .niight.be moving, the rental agency asked if, she 1 would stay if they were tb fix up the apartment. , This was the same apart ment ' in Which the ; water City Gov't Uses 5 WCOf Public Admin Twelve students in North Carolina Central University's , Public Administration PrO- Sjram have begun semester ong senior internships in governmental, agencies and . Kovernmenfcreiated programs. "..fivewW'piCity. Of Durham under a municipal grant. ' The five students em ployed by the City of Durham are Branda Garner of Hope MUX Mbert Kittrell of Oxford, Francine Small of Plymouth, Juanita Simms of Gastonia, and Kenneth Thompson of Concord. The seven other students in Public Administration internships,- their hometowns, and their agencies are Charles Williams of , Newton Grove and James Harris of Carrboro, Durham Housing Authority; Phyllis Allred, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; Reginald Autry, Elizabethtown, Town 1 t s i 1 A) A .mfmm Iff H- f I I s I j "'T7fl TYRONE BAINES, front row left, director of North Carolina Central University's Public Administration Program, poses with the five students who are em ployed as interns with the Durham City Government. They are front row, center to right, Brenda Garner and Francine Small; back row, left to right, Junaita Sims, Ken Thompson, and Al Kittrell. the nation, its history makes mockery of the American Jaean, 'Freedom, Liberty, ustice and Equality!' For 201 years, property rights have been inviolate when in contest with human rights. "From the landing at Plymouth, the activities of the white, settlers and now j the white majority began and ; sustained a ravenous, plunder- i ing i march of physical and . human exploitation which i nearly destroyed, the Red ; Man and, for more than 249 years, dehumanizing blacks l in horrendous slavery." - pipes had frozen last Wmter, ' forcing Mrs. Pulliam to try to get food sent in; the same apartment that had holes in the wall; insecticide in pans U on the. floor; which had a leaky roof and rodents. They , were asking that she stay in '-J-such; a place because, after- -s some pressure from the outi ", side they were finally going to do what should have been - done Ions before. - W M We are most happy to announce that Mrs. Pulliam has been relocated. Of htt new life in her new apart-! ment, Mrs. Pulliam says: "J feel good now .... I'm not scared any more." i We feel good, too, ani we're glad that we could be of assistance! (See related pictures, Page 2 ) g Interns f of Chapel Hill ; Vivian Mackey- of High Point, St. Joseph's AME Church; Lavelle Wall.t Rockingham, Town of Carr boro; and Michael Bridges, Oak City, Army Research OrH ganization.' . ,4, . Ml t -The internshio jWrr.rJWong, 'professional whwh involves two full dav of ?gency employment each' week, is a major component of the Public Administration concentration in political science at NCCU..?,'' f ' The internship program and other facets of the Administration Program are funded through a grant1 from the Kellogg Foundation. Directing me internship program and supervising the students and their placement are Dr. Tyrone Baines, direc tor of the Public Administra tion Program, and two faculty members . of the Public Administration Pro gram, Art Williams and Mrs. Cheryl Colbert. , , ' "An even today," he continued, "all the judicial, legislative and executive machinations have not per manantly freed blacks from the status of second-class citi zens. "The truth is that all of the landmark political vic tories, the Supreme Court judicial victories, and the legislative victories have dis turbed very little the rela tionship' between the white masters and the black slaves who endured two and a half centuries of hell, as well as til mwwmmm&wi'fi w-..M .,:;,- i ni mi i i -;..;-rir"'"" mini.. I mi ii'nn i TTtf MRS PULLIAM Doints to . . . : J . IDk.t. k.,' 1 a Year of Emphasis on Instructional, Professional Development Begins t -CHAPEL HILL - A year ! ofemphasis" on instructional ; and professional development has begun for the North s Carolina Association of 'h Educators Under the gui- dance of President Linda I. ,Rade. r L Mrs. Rader, a classroom teahcer on . leave of absence for one year from Gaston County to serve full-time JCE presiderjt, will speak puring a general session at a con- Terence Tor" educators "af uiapei, hui senior Hign scnooi on wovemoer 4. - I "I believe teachers and other : professionals in our public schools are - under paid, under-appreciated, and under-utilized," she says. "I. feel that for too long we have turned to businessmen, law yers, doctors and farmers for expert advice on schools." ; "Meanwhile the real ex Gov. Hunt To SdqqIi M fJ.C. Central University Governor James B. Hunt, Jr., of North Carolina will be the principal speaker Friday, November 4, as North . Carolina Central University celebrates Founder's Day. The Governor will speak GOVERNOR HUNT i in. i uiiii 1 mi I. I ii i. .miiinmiiji, :l, ITSELF AT HISTORY f.lEET between the white majority and the present day blacks who inhabit the core cities of America 114 years after Lincoln's Emancipation Pro clamation. "Can a Black America be saved?" he asked, "Who will save black America? Yes, Black America can be saved, but only black America can and must save itself! Little help can be expected' from any other quarter!" Dr. Goodlett . called on black schools, the black family, the black church, More her new curtains over sa- l.i in Palll perts ' the teachers in the classrooms and the pro fessional educators have been ignored. Or worse, they have been patted on the head and told to be patient until community leaders made the decision." "Teacher deal with the problems of education and discipline every day," Mrs. Rader says. "They have many good ideas and they certainly : know what won't work. All,. we have to da to tkae ad- ask them." Mrs. Rader has pledged to concentrate on instruc tional and ( professional v, development during her year as NCAE president. The Chapel Hill con- ference is for, educators in NCAE District Nine, which includes NCAE members , in the counties of Alamance, Caswell, Chatham,' Durham, in R. L. McDougald Gym nasium in a program be ginning at 10:30 a jn. Founder's Day honors the memory of Dr. James T. Shepard, who founded in 1910 a school called the National . Religious Training School and Chautauqua. Dr. Shepard remained head of the institution as it became a state-supported institution, first as a normal -school for teacher preparation, and later, in 1925, the first state supported college whose prin cipal mission was liberal arts education for black people. By the time of Dr. Shepard's; death in 1947, his school - then North Carolina College at Durham -included an undergraduate school, a graduate school, a school of law, and a school of library science. North Carolina Central University today includes those schools and a School of Business, established after the univer sity was renamed in 1969. the black press, black sorori ties and fraternities, .black financial institutions, and black political leaders to join in a concerted, dedicated effort to save black America. . "I say" to you students of Afro-American life and history," the publisher charged, "do you dare to venture, to use all of your mental, physical and spiritual resources, to be a catalyst in humanity's eternal struggle against all forms of social, political, and economic tyranny?" A' u1 KNOT Asks That Interim Fcoall Coccb Do Appdnlcd to Flfj Yc:r North Carolina Central University's Willie S. Smith, Jr., has resigned his post as head football coach and asked that an interim football coach be appointed to finish the season. NCCU Chancellor Albert N. Whiting announced Smith's resignation Wednesday night at a meeting called by alumni who were expressing concern, over the athletic fortunes of the university. NCCU's record seven games into the season is one win and six losses. That record means that Smith wis certain of his first losing season since joining the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference school in 1973, when the Eagles were picked for a fourth-place league finish and won the championship in a 7 4 season. Smith-coached Eagle teams had an overall winning record of 26-2 1-3 up to this week. Smith is the only head footb'all coach in the history of NCCU to win a conference championship in his first year st the helm. Smith had been head football coach at the University of Maryland-Eastern Shore before coming to NCCU, and had previously served as acting head coach at Norfolk State Orange and Person. This conference is the 14th of 15 such conferences to be held across the state this fall. An estimated 3,000 teachers, principals, curriculum directors, superin tendents, and other educa tors will attend each con ference. The Chapel Hill con ference will open with a 9 a jn general session. Herman Gcntrv of iRoxbor. District nine ricaiucui, .: wui preside. -Ci-C.". Other NCAE leader par ticipating include: j: Alton Cheek of . Durham, ' district vice president; Mrs. Marian Jones, Durham, district secre tary; Dr. Barbara Topscott of , Burlington,; district director; Mrs. Rader; Mrs.; Ruth Jones, I Rocky Mount" and .Mrs. Nancy- Johnson, Winston Salem, each a North Carolina representative on the National Education Associa tion Board of directors; Dr. A. C. Dawson, Raleigh, NC AE executive secretary; and E. B. Palmer, NCAE associate executive secretary. Nineteen workshops wiH be held at 10: 10 ajn. and each wul, be repeated at 11:10 ajn. ' r . .. v . v.. , : . " . L.,: .r..,..-. - .ml.:::... nL .,,, .1 -CONTRACT" KILLER TO DIE - A Chic:: rr.:n conwfcted In the contract' klUIni of two phrr.? cists was formally sentenced on October II, to !' 3 In the electric chair undir Illinois new ccpHtl cur.!. ment law. Criminal Judst John Moran htd:i f:v. the sentence on William HUI who wxs convlctt d cn t o counts of murder on Au;ust 18. Hill laths ir. r :i to be sentenced to death undsr tha nsw tlit.'S. (J; I ' J ' CMITST " - Coflege ' - :-' Smith's-team set three school records last year-Most Rushing Attempts-568, Most Rushing Yards-2082 and Most Total Offensive Plays 777. Smith, a native of Ports mouth, Virginia, has been appointed to the ''American Football Coaches Association Selection Committee for the. College Division AD-American, Teams. ; , - '.. x : f He and George'L. Quiett , were the only NCCU Coaches to win in their first four years as head coach.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1977, edition 1
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