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v- African Spotlight j
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?- Everyone Is In Jail
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South Africa, the most segregated country in the world is
again making her usual noises-at the United Nations where the
racist country is fighting to keep her seat in the world assembly.
By now, the racist regime in South Africa should be use tio
issolation. South Africa was .expelled from the British
Commonwealth long ago. The reason for that expulsion was
because the regime in South Africa practices race segregation
that is worse than being in jail. Black people in South Africa do
not have the vote, must carry pass to be allowed Into the cities
and must leave the cities by or before six p.m.
Black people must ride at the back of the buses, must seat'
separately in public places and must not dine in restaurant with
white people. In short, all the black people in South Africa are in
an open prison.
Majority of United Nations member nations are demanding
expulsion of the racist regime in South Africa from the UN.
They say that the regime in South Africa has abused all human
decency by the brutality of their repressive laws on the black
people in South Africa. The regime in-South Africa is expert in
the use of large dogs to brutalize black people in that country. .
The regime is also an expert - in passing repressive laws
designed to degrade humanity by degrading all black people all
over the world. To be educated in South Africa is to he vast in
theories that show black people inferior to white people. Almost
all the institutions in the South African regime is a vehicle of
repression and suppression. What with the 90 day law which
gives the police the power to arrest any black person and others
(but mostly blacks) and imprison him to 90 days without reason.
It is not uncommon in South Africa for the police to re-arrest the
person at the end of the first 90 days for another 90 days
imprisonment.
The population of the racist state of South Africa is 22 million
and black people are 18 million yet the black people in that
country do not have the vote and do not own property in the
cities. What black people do in South Africa is to work in the
mines (mainly gold mines that arc plentiful in that country).
The black country of South Africa is forcefully ruled by white
racists who see black people as servants and brutes who must
only work at menial jobs.
Since it takes slaves to be a slavemaster and since nobody will
be contented to be slave for long, many people believe that the
days will come when black people in South Africa will no longer
be slaves for the racist regime. The land which rightfully
belongs to the black people in that country will one day be given
back to the black people.
There are many other reasons for hope in South Africa. Even
though it is a crime of the highest order in South Africa for a
black person and a white person to associate. South Africa has
the largest number of people of mix blood than any other place
in the world. The reason is say to be because white South
African men like black women. For sonic white South African
men who cannot get it in South Africa, the clubs of neighboring
^African countries to South Africa arc usually filled on weekends
wttn south African white men on sex hunt. A visitor to South
Africa is always struck by the tention and restlessness that fill
the air of that racist country. *
* Because of the abundant gold and other minerals found in the
African country of South Africa, that racist country is one of the
richest countries in Africa. Yet that country is the only country
in Africa that does not have TV station. The reasoning behind
not having TV in the country is said to be that the racist regime
feels that TV program night show blacks and whites together
and that that will be breaking the law. Also in South Afrtea, the
^ books that one can read are so few because almost all the good
books are banned in that country. All books written by black
Americans are banned in South Africa and any positive
reference to black people is banned over the radio.
The attention of the world will be on South Africa in the very
near future. The normalization of tension in the Middle East will
probably leave the racist state of South Africa as one of the
hdftest race area of tension in Africa and it is hoped that the
/people of the world will unify their voices in protest about South
...
*5=X
E WINSTON-SALEM CHKONICL)
Rural Arer
The pressing need for more
transportation In rural areas?
was outlined by an A&T State
University researcher last
Saturday.? ? ;
"For those who can afford
and are capable of operating al
car, transportation presents
no serious problem," said
"However, for those who are
poor and unable- to afford an
automobile or who are too
young or too old to operate'an
Governors
Annointments
Governor Jim Holshouser
announced the appointment of
three members to the John
Motley Morehead Memorial
Commission.
The new members are Mrs.
Margaret T. Craig of Tryon,
Mrs. Elaine Stoops of
Greensboro and Ms. Judy
Beaver of Higlr Point.
The appointees will serve
five-year terms on the
nine-member Commission.
Mrs. Craig graduated from
Winthrop College with a
degree in English and History.
She has served as vice-chairman
of the Polk County
Republican Club and as vice
president of the Polk County
and J^ryon Federated Women^s
Club. She has also been
active in the Polk County Red
Cross, League of Women
Voters, St. Luke's Hospital
Auxiliary, Cub Scouts, Gay
Blades Garden Gub, N.C.
Women's Golf Association,
and Tryson United Methodist
Church. She is married to S.J.
Craig, Jr.
Mrs. Stoops, a Pennsylvania
native, received her B.S.
degree in nursing education at
Duke University. She serves
as a board member of the
Greensboro Chapter of the
American Red Cross, board
member of the Greensboro
vvuiivii ui uai ucil v>iudsf
deacon in the Starmount
Presbyterian Church, and past
president of the Gate City
service league of the N.C.
Federation of Women's Clubs.
She has also served* as vice
president of the Greater
Greensboro Republican Women's
Club, She and her
husband, William Nelson
Stoops, have one son and
three daughters.
Mrs. Beaver received her
B.S. degree in home economics
and her Master's degree
in interior design from the
University of North Carolina at
Greensboro. A South Carolina
native, she is currently
employed as an interior
designer with Hospitality
Interiors, Inc. in WinstonSalem.
She has been active in
volunteer work in the High
Point community and is a
member of the Junior League
of High Point, Inc. She and
her husband, Thomas Joseph
Beaver, have two sons and one
daughter.
E
as Need Ti
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automobile,' public transporMrs.
Johnson is a project
director for the A&T Tran.
spoliation Institute, a regional
teaching and research center.
She presented her paper to
the 15th annual meeting of the
national Transportation ReBased
on research in 12
rural transportation systems
of the state, the paper was
authored by Mrs. Johnson and
her associates, Arthur Saltzman,
Dr. Marion R. Blair, and
Jon E. Burkhardt.
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OCTOBER 31, 1974
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"The development of effecflve
public traasportation"
systems Is vety important to
the increased service delivery
in . the rural areas of -
America," said Mrs. Johnson.
"The problems of compare*
tively lower economic, , social,
health and recreation advanseveral
instances t<j> be directly related
to mobility."
She said there is a need for
more coordination of existing
programs and for a new
federal demonstration pro*
ke of unr
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