Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / May 10, 1969, edition 1 / Page 20
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ST. AUG. STI i'-!-:v rs HKAR FAMED PIANIST - These students of Saint Augustin- ' . ■ v ire complimenting James Dick, pianist on his present-i ! the Emery Health and Fine Arts Center. Left to right are 'Cry Machen, junior of Klizabethton, Term.; Dr. Albert Gr m. apartment; Marie Bryant, senior of Raleigh, » and Peggy 1 ■ of Durham, all music majors. Raleigh Student Wins Presidency Os AST State Student Government GREENSBOR' • - - f McSwain of Kings a ris>: '’ ■ ntai:., climaxed a most tical scienc .r it ■• ■ 1 student election in leigh, last v.--. !■ a r cord 1,217 votes were dency of the Stub C Association at •• • • T: < othei top student office, versify. ‘ > tide of ,! Miss A&T State McCullough's nar University,” was won by at •' ST M ! BE M E i ‘. v > : \\ i) t'OSMETOLO GISTS ASSOGI 11< .VINNER - Mrs. Irene Bailey Thom - ■>t f.'hapter 35, Raleigh, won third pri ■ styling at the State COjivent ion, vo - h. !-i in Durham at the Jack Tar Hot.- : - k. She received a trophy. Her mo r M•> Beatrice Hall, right. Other r.,n> Chapter 35 at tending the Cm ..ere: the president, Miss Vivian Bar:. mes Mattie Hawes, Rosetta Rand. Gl ris. Estelle Brvce, Sal lie Mills. E/ i tolnnson, Mzoria Rob erts and Chris : a iUMs. FSC Has Space For Enrollees In College's Prepartory Institute FAYETTEVIi JU-. •. f ev spaces remain a-mm Fayetteville State C'-lWe’s College Preparatoi • 1 ••■ itun which opens June 0. Miss Dorcas rua 4 A SUCCESS IN SPIT!-. OI SELF - New York; Lonnie . .Pi - er las become a succe- ,ful off-’ Broadwa; playwrietit in spite of himself. Althoug' Eldgr wasn’t looking for a i it, He came up with one the season’s gerns when his '•( • < monies in Dark Old Man*' was performed as part of tiic- Ne gro Ensemble Company’ re pertory season. The tiief run was so successful that another ” protiticei has put the play on for an unlimited ena agora •hit. (t T PI\ • 1 ctor, of CPI, reports that applications for the Institute an running ahead of last year •fid final screening is expect - d to be completed in May. '■' ' institute is designed to ■ - i as a “1 •ridge” or ‘'head s'.-n” program for "0 high .st ooi graduates from the a.’ • *ttoville- Cumberland area 1 a 1 Teen accepted by the ( : 1. : • for admission in the fall. mds foi the institute are provided h the N. C. Board ■•MI,. •*»■ education’s so-call e . “cate! -up” program. In ad d'tion. a grant lias also been ' a rued i the Rohm and Haas Company. The institute will bear the cost of instructional supplies, Mine'! and transportation for l ean.mg exper fences. Included in the curriculum an 1 nglish, mathematics and reading. Interested persons desiring further information may con tac Director, College Prepara to; ;• Institute, FayettevilleStatg College. Fayetteville, North Carolina 28301. Unstoppable WASHINGTON - (NPI) - Clif ford L. Alexander, outgoing chairman, U. S. Equal Employ ment. Opportunity commission, has asserted that attack on him won’t stop him from blast ing away at job discrimina tion. Alexander, a Black man, has been under fire from the Nixon administration, for tak ing too strong a stand against tractive Miss Lillian Campbell of Charlotte. The newly - elected vice president who ran on a ticket with McCullough is Nelson Johnson, Fayetteville. He de feated football star Merl Code, Seneca, S. C. For his victory, McCullough polled 534 votes to 454 for Mc- Swain, who is also the first black student to be elected president of the North Carolina Student Legislature. Other presidential candi dates were Fletcher Harris and Harold Glover. Joyce Lindsay vas elected secretary of the SGA and Reginald Morton, Treasurer. Class presidents elected for next year axe Kermit Waddell, senior; Matthew Simpson, junior; and Eric Cox, sopho more. Conviction For Rape Is Thrown Out WASHINGTON - (NPI) - A Black Mississippi teenager’s rape conviction has been re versed by the U. S, Supreme court on grounds he was de tained and fingerprinted by au thorities in violation of his Constitutional rights. The court ruled that the 19(55 arrest and detention of John Davis, then aged 14, were bas ed on “neither a. warrant nor probable cause and were there fore Constitutionally invalid.” The teenager had been sen tenced to life imprisonment for 'the rape of an 85-vear-old wo man in her Meridian, (Miss.) home. The Mississippi Supreme court had upheld the Constitu tionality of his detention for obtaining fingerprints. But the U. S. Supreme court, in a 6-2 decision, said this was prohi bited by the U. S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment, banning il legal searches and seizures. N.CSchool Os Arts Sets Summer Term WINSTON-SALEM - Summer School courses in dance, drama and music will be offered at the North Carolina School of the Arts. Application should be made immediately to The Di rector of Summer Sessions, who will sup p1 y application material. Music and drama courses will be held for six weeks, June 23 through August 1. Dance courses will be for five weeks, June 23 through July 24. Auditions are not required for dance and drama summer sessions. In music, voice and piano will be offered. Auditions (to be arranged by individual ap pointment) or tapes are re quired. Costs for summer school are, for drama and music 5125 for tuition for North Carolina resi dents and $230 for out-of-state residents. Room, board and ac tivity fees are $lB5. For dance, tuition is $lO5 for North Caro lina residents and $2lO for out of-state. Room, board and ac - tivlty fees are $155, The dance division is open to junior high school, high school and college level students. Sum mer courses do not carry credit. discriminatory practices. That he is a Democrat working with a Republican administration doesn’t help any. Accused of ''ineffective leadership” by Jerris Leonard, chief of the IJ. S. Justice department’s civil- rights division, Alexander says he won’t let “threats from any source” stop hisn from speaking out for “equal em ployment opportunity for all A mer leans.” CURRENT EVENTS BAFFLERS BY NEGRO PRESS INTERNA TIONAL In today’s Baffler, tell what news personality is being re ferred to. You’li find names to choose from in the Grab Rag. Scoring: 8-10: excellent; 6-7; good; 4-5; fair; 0-3:poor. Bonus Questions count a total of two points. Other questions count one point each, Heie’s the quiz; 1. The list of Black mayoral candidates has grown oven longer, as the mayor of a lai ge city announced his decision to run for re-election. Who is lie? 2. Name the Black civil - rights leader who was arrested during demonstrations in Charleston, S, C., accompany ing a strike by hospital workers. 3. ( 1, newly named director, Office of Eco nomic Opportunity, denies his office is about to be disbanded. “I wouldn’t be accepting the position if I didn’t feel it would be a challenging one and an im portant one,’’ he says. 4. Name the outgoing chair man of the U, S. Equal Employ ment Opportunity commission ington: Elijah C. Boyd, Jr,, executive officer of Balti more, Md., Black Panther Par ty chapter, after he had been sprayed in the face by a priv ate police officer after a fracas in a bus terminal, Fri day, May 2. (UPI). Yes, We All Talk BY MARCUS H. BCULWARE AFRO TALK AND SLANG A young man passed me on the street and said, “The shadow knows, do you ’’ In reply, I said “1 dor’, quite understand v.i..r you mean?” “That’s Afro Jive,” he re marked. Then in our conversation he called mt attention to the s bolic meaning of “The Shadow knows, do you?” The shadow means “black uprising, and riotous confronta tion” designed “nag, nag, and nag,” as well as won-;.', worry, the administrai i v e power structure-cold o presi dents and deans, police depart ments, school officials in dif ferent. counties, and so on. A show-down is like a shadow, full of uneasy forebodings, sub ject to breaking loose ai any time, ( Instead of “loving ‘em to death”, the new toting Mili tant wants to “worry them to death.'' READERS: For rn; booklet on Afro Slang anti Vocabula rv, send one dollar to defray pro duction and postage costs to M. H. Boulware, Box 310-A, Florida AAM University. Box 310-A. Tallahassee, Florida - —-32307. * * * The Veterans Administration administers laws authorizing benefits for veterans, their de pendents and beneficiaries. H God grants liberty only to 1 those who love it, and are 1 always ready to guard and I defend it." I Speech (June 3, 1834) J WARREN AUTO PARTS S. Main —Warrenton, N.C. I DIAL 257-3013 DIAMOND DISCOUNT STORES Shoes and Clothing For ail the family, at I Low - Low Prices | Wnrrcnton and Weldon, N, C. who has asserted that attacks on him won’t stop him from Wasting away at job discrimi nation. 5. Zambia’s president has warned that a war between Blacks and whites is in the cffir.g throughout the continent, particularly in that portion south of the Sahara still under colonial rule. Who is he? 6. Name the nation’s only Black mayor who is appointed by the President? 7. Who is the Black enter tainer--renowned for her role on Broadway in “Hello, Dolly” --who will return to motion pictures in June after almost 10 years’ absence, to co-star as a slum tenant in the United Artists’ “The Landlord?” 8. Name the president of the National Medical association who has urged a crash recruit ment program for Black phy sicians. A resident of St. Louis, he is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons. GRAB BAG: (Some names don’t go with any questions.) A. Pearl Bailey, B. Thomas Bradley, C, The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, D. Bayard Rustin, E. Clifford L. Alex ander, F. Rep. Donald Rums feld, G. Repp John Conyers, H. Richard G. Hatcher, I. Lena Horne, J, Dr. T. K. Lawless, K, Carl Rowan, L. Walter Wash ington, M. Carl B. Stokes, N. Kenneth D, Kaunda, O, Dr. James M. Whittico, Jr. and P, lan Smith. * * * BONUS QUESTIONS: (Each count one point.) 1 What stands have psycho logist Dr. Kenneth B. Clark and civil-rights leader Bayard Rustin taken on the armed oc cupation of a Cornell university building? 2. “Free( ),”de monstrators chanted at several May Day rallies across the na tion behalf of the convicted Black Panther leader. * * * ANSWERS: 1. M; 2. C; 3. F; 4. E; 5. N; 6. L; 7. A; 8. Q. * * * BONUS ANSWERS: —l. They oppose the not so non-violent actions. --2. Huey Newton. Johnson's BARBER SHOP FRONT ST.—Dial 257-3801 Warrenton, N. C. HAWAIIAN INN W FRANKLIN ST. Dial 257-3692 Warrenton, N. C. WARRENTON FURNITURE EXCHANGE Complete Household Furnishings • PHILCO • ZENITH • GIBSON •CARPET • DRAPERY Dial 257-3693. Warrenton \ ' ■ / ' ( >tj I / * l’/t i -/fe:- ‘, '/ yT f °X?so Sf ** Sn n I I * %/ 0/ >A | <Po/- s p a ’ , ? / NX\V | j; m / ■ll Ste:.?, i / % pipJi pi.- t : LIW | astiS|iiy : I ®||# ‘llfi ■ (■US# 'v THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH N. C SATURDAY. MAY 10, 1969 19
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 10, 1969, edition 1
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