Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 19, 1969, edition 1 / Page 1
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L ‘ f W- i'C'd!: ni'U.'K M itji )h j;> j it‘Vision in Raleigh at large is much n relations among ; i black and white. or no time left ing, prejudice, dis ci justice for these o. - - - o.i :; i over have erip - for security, broth - erh » . ; love. !•: p . like any other ole to the above n mr-.i evils, there are many who v <« $3 at sßSjßisggpPy. SZSu „•. jPg- .^S™bSSK^, , ftjraSwggfapS T! ' ■ : -IN - New Orleans: Police Captain Clarence Giarmssc . scratches his head as he looks over singing members of I* • ration of Teachers holding a sit-in’’in the School Boa: I .1-4 as a part of their strike to obtain collective bargaining, mb two detectives stand alongside Giarrusso. who r a : arrested about 14 of 50 AFT members he asked :o .•i ii-i not resist arrest. (UPI). A A aid Action Eases TwmoilAtNCSU !(j' ell, clian •' ("a : olina State ! ,! unotincea ■ t ■.a t Nerrn , : e attests a ' 1 to ■ ork in me; ’ <- t < camp ’i! si ■ - T ■ •i.it or ial ■ i i- • ■ was dis cos a- ■ ut“!.. til t : . key d.e itiati : ‘-r-dty’s non ■:! < a '' Sting black -of v.-’.om wore si* st* refusing "’ID office, 1 om for the* t i.'i ■ ■ .tii.i t l ,t* dis it idv.no re ■ ' i! fi:t- men’s dorms ' ! .ml that the litis oi dis jt t e hands <s speeded t>* i. <• switch nts clean -a been un der .id ‘ration for sometime more than 150 students from Saint Augustine’s College and Sh iw ilniver sity ' wno converged on the residence of Dr. John T. Caldwell, chancel- J lor of N. C. State University, Monday night us a mark of sympathy for the a our maids fired from their Jobs and the sixteen persons arrested earlier r tri the day. (UPI). • " and would have been made in two or three months anvway. Black students at State, after meeting with the chancellor I uesday, declared a morato rium on all demonstrations by both the workers and students until an investigation into oth er key demands has been com plete by Dr. Caldwell. (See NCSt MAIDS. P. 2) rtOMRA^IGH’s'oFnCL Al'pOLl ""TV]' FS^ I SAYS WIFE STABBED HIM William Lawrence Wiggins, 2". 201 Cooke Street, told Of ficer Norman Artis at 12:40 a.m. Thursday, that he and his wife, Mrs. Hazel Carol Wig gins, 20, had a “fuss" and she "stabbed me with something. Ne tt he i party would sign a war rant, but Mr, Wiggins said they were "going to talk with the people at the Domestic Rela are Christian and peace :ble as well as just to their fellovrn m. fi * these may also suffer the evils of today’s challenges by the militants and the unconventional multi 'tides who daily play upon the con- •>.. aee of the Congress, legist;: ur - churches, schools and univcrs as well as the entrench-. 1 *•••-• lishments” throughout Am. . only too well known. This weekend, Raleigh b. . _ ponstble for its sister cities - ’..e (See WELCOME. P. 2, 11 Mothers’ Will Be in C ity hi. GREEENSBORO n: walking Poor ; -o er arrived in Gn'or. t» ; Mon day afternoon for . ..T and an overnight stop- .ft- mi an unscheduled trip u he boro. However, suddmil Tues day morning, the marc! - •!:- (Set- MARCH! Its 'I ii p tions Court u. Dm age.” The altercation v. . - • ort ediy a result of V. >. m my a misunderstanding n :,is step-father. He \va- id; Pted to Wake Memorial Hospital it!, a puncture wound in t: - ■ er part of the chest. The incident occur c m ti„. street at the corner of , and Cooke. title..- CKtMS HI 11 I li On Negro Administrators NCTA BACKS BIAS REPORT Vk T-'t w *»/! K-. ♦ _ » ♦ _ K r f^r V-A>X>X> # «£<*<£ #l*## ###<£ Sliaw L. Adopts 8222 Million Program THE CAROLINIAN North Carolina s Leading Weekly VOL. 28. NO. 25 RALEIGH. X. C.. SATURDAY APRIL 1~9 ;Qn, SINGLE COPY 13c Angry Alter fuss' AA-iJ-iJ 53-23-23-23- 23-23-23-23- Blame Block Obession ’Pike Killing Explained H *ar*.. MISS FOWLER fetchifs Son's Acts 'Explained’ PHILADELPHIA-What drove Donald Lambright, 31-year-old son of comedian Stepir. Fet cl.it, to kill his wife, Annette, himself, and two other moto rists on the Pennsylvania turn pike? According toLambright’s un cle, Howard E. Johnson, a psy chiatrist had told die young man that he was a potential suicide and needed psychiatric help. Another explanation was that i acial oppression had gotten Lambright down. However, Lambright’s fath er, the comedian, was at a loss to explain the turnpike slay ings. "He did all that?" Fetchtt asked. "1 can’t understand it. He was always a good boy. * ve never heard oi him doing a vicious or radical thing like that." . Another view of Lambright"' was offered by the family who lives in the same West Phil adelphia apartment where Lam bright lived two years ago. The family remembers him a■- a young man who was in lore wit: the color black. Mrs. Barbara Bruno said that when she moved into the apart ment, she found everything painted black - the walls, ceil ings, window sills, even the bathroom. Lambright’s sports car was also black, According to Mrs. Bruno, Lambright appeared to be per fectly normal, aside from the fact that he painted his entire apartment black. "He seemed to lx* very in telligent, and liked people very much He was a real gentle man," she said. Still another view of the slay ings was presented by Pr. War ren E. Smith, a psychiatrist and lorme; president, Lincoln A lunmi association, (Lam bright had attended Lincoln V nherstty.) More attention should be giv en to the fact that all the peo ple Lambright shot were white, Dr. Smith said, "He was confused, tie was In a state of despair,’’ the psy chiatrist added. "Any black man *> could be in the same situa- s *’ I could very well have been c on-, there on the turnpike myself p if I wasn’t on an even keel." By President’s Committee Stevie WonderToße Cited DETROIT, Mich. - Stevie bonder, blind since birth, and a lot own singing star since the ge of 12, has been chosen to eceive the President’s Cotn liltee on Employment of The [anriicapped’s Highest honor, Boy, 2, Injured By Mom A 24 -year-old Raleigh wo man with a previous record of twenty-one citations to either Raleigh City Court o: a high er one, added another offense to her long record here Sunday when she tossed her two-year old son into the street. Sam Ingram, who lives at 10? Kirkman Lane (off E, Hargett Street, between S. Haywood and Camden), told Officer Ralph Clavborne at 8:47 p.m. Sunday, that during an argument with Miss Jane; Louise Fowler, 903 E. Hargett Street, she got angry and threw her sou, Mitchell Angelose F owler, on the street, causing cuts and bruises on the child’s forehead. A warrant, charging assault on a minor, was signed against the woman and she was arrested. The child was treated at Wake M ern oria 1 Hospital, then re leased into the custody of George McGregory, 310 Idle wild Avenue. The child was tossed to the ground on Kirk niari Street, from its mother’s arm. A check with the City-Coun ty Identification Bureau reveal ed that Miss Fowler’s first "brush" with the law occur red on February 1, 1960, when site war charged with false pretense. This charge was followed, at fairly regular intervals by the following raps: (Set THROWS BABY V X) Convocation On Hunger Set In D. C NEW YORK - A national con vocation on hunger in the United States will he held in New York City on Monday, May 26 and Tuesday, May 2?, under the auspices of the National Coun cil of Negro Women, NCNW National President Dorothy 1. Height has announced. Four convocation co-chair man - Georgia State Legislator (See HUNGER, P. 2) SWEEPS 1 5515 4385 3 SBO $lO $5.00 Anyone having current BJ.Df tickets, dated April V: 1% viti proper numbers present same to Tin ( AROMMAN . ’ „„f receive amounts listed above from the SAKi s Vei No Sweepstakes W inners There were no winners ir. The CAROLINIAN'S Sweep stakes Promotion last week, in creasing each of the three prizes in value. The previous week saw two "The Distinguished Service A ward.” Stevie will accept (lie award on Thursday, May 1, at the International Banquet of the President’s Committee Annual Meeting tn Washington, D. C» KILLS OVER FOUNTAIN PEN - Miami, Fla.: Eighteen yea r old Blanche Patricia Ward (1) is taken into Circuit Court April 15 by a matron for sentencing in the shooting death oi a 16-y. ar-old girl over an argu ment about a fountain o-n. Miss Ward was sentenced to eight years in the State Prison for Women. (CPI). St. Aug. Students Facing Theft Raps On Mondaj night, tiiree stu dents of St. Augr ■ duo's Col lege here were arrested Ra leigh police in Conner!ion if the burglar, of a hardwan store in Goldsboro on Mari;! 2. Prentiss A. Laesitei, 19, of Severn, N. c., Herbert A. I ad son, 21, of Mi. Pleasant, and Herman Smith, 20, of Golo ■ boro, were arre st ed an d charged wit! breaking, entering and larceny and are being held in the Wayne Count; Jail, Gold. - persons claim second and thlrc: prizes, but the big one, first prize, has not been claimed for tne past seven weeks, and it has now risen in value to the amount (Sec SWBEPSTAKhn. I* 2} Among the first to congrai ulate Stevie was Michigan Gov ernor William G. Millikan, who wrote the Motown star, “we tn Michigan are proud of you. May I join the many who are t>' STrvii vrovnrit p boro under SI,OOO bonds ior hearings scheduled Wednesday in Wayne District Court, The Smith Hardware Store was i ipped of Cl rifles and siiot ,r mis and an undetermined a mount of ammunition. In connection with the theft, (but SAINT AUG.. |» 2) PANTHERS BLAME POLICE - Des Moines: Des Moines Black Panther leaders E. C. Smith (1), the Panther’s Deputy Minister of Defense, and Mike Harris (r) deputy chair man, are surrounded by their assistants at a p ress conference April 14 in which they blamed police for a disturbance April 13. There were 15 persons arrested in the disturbance. (UPI). Campuses Proposed In Plan President Jan.es E. Cheek of Shaw University revealed Mon day- plans of the Trustee Board to launch a nation vide Deve lopment Program in November oi this year to raise 5222 Mil lion during the decade 1970-79 for Shaw’s total redevelqp for Shaw’s total redevelop ment. The ten years develop ment program, to be called 'T! e Seventy Decade Pro gram, was approved by the trustees during their Annual Meeting on the Raleigh campus on April 14. Shav.’s development program, which has been in the planning stages for the past four 3 ears, will seek funds totalling this amount for three specific ope rations; (!) the continued de velopment of the campus lo cated in downtown Ra: eigh which will t>e the center of programs ir. urban sciences and profes sional teacher education; (2) the creation of a second campus in the Raleigh area to provide facilities for the University’s programs in General Studies, Communications, and the Hu manities and Arts; and (3) the creation oi' Metropolitan Col leges in six metropolitan areas. Cheek stated that during the past four years, the Shaw trustees, adnrinistrniion and faculty have been engaged in comprehensive studies relating to the educational needs of the nation to which Shaw should (See fiAW ADOPTS P Z) Mm Crow Sopor! Is Indorsed The North Carolina Teach ers. Association has unanimous ly endorsed the following re solution presented by its Di vision of Administrators and Supervisors in session at the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. <f We the members of the Di vision of Administrators and Supervisors of the North Caro lina Teachers Association de plore the actions r>eing taken by many board oi education, wherein roost cases involving the desegregation of schools, Negro administrators and Sup ervisors are l>eing dismissed, demoted, and/or “promoted” without recognition of prepara tion, ability, oi term of serv ice. We know that there are many Negroes who are letter qualified so; administrative positions, such as superinten dentships, assistant superin tendents, supervisorships, and principalshtps than rn an y of their wiiite counterparts being arbitrarily placed above them, “It appears to be a continu ation of “the system” to which Negroes have been subjected for the past two hundred years. In our opinion the present plan of replacing Negroes with whites is completely undemo cratic, unpatriotic and unaccep table. It is therefore our in tention to actively resist these forces. We feel compelled to (See BiAM REPORT »• Z)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1969, edition 1
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