Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 12, 1969, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C . SATURDAY. JULY 12. 1969 WIVES LEARN tCOWTJm>BB Rsosa PAfil OKS) Os foor), the organization said. 'KWRO also demands an end to restrictions in the use of food stamps and the rights of food stamp recipients be respected. NV.RO also announced that twenty thousand demonstrators participated in protests in over 12 state capitols to demand a Guaranteed Adequate Income. The actions were part of NW RO’s June 30th "birthday in the streets’* celebration of its third anniversary. The actions focused on the failure of state government to implement Section 402 (a) 23 of the 1067 Social Security A mendrr.ents which requires that states raise their assistance le vies to conform iwht the raise in cost of living, of living. Some of the actions included a protest rally by 30,000 people in Boston Commons, a meeting between the governor of the state of Louisiana and 270 de monstrators, and the removal of WRO protestors irom the Georgia State Capitol under orders of Governor Lestor Maddox in spite of the fact that they had teen invited into the office of the Assistant Attorney General, Frank Blankenship. On June 30th, the National Wel fare Rights Organization was three years old. It has been three years of dynamic growth and vigorous activity. In that time the movement has evolved The Kind of Wom en That Black Men Go For! Exclusive survey tells you hairstyles, body types, and fashions the guys dig most! CLOWN POWER Two black acts take over the Circus center-ring. LOU RAWLS . . TRADE UNION BIGOTS . . RACIAL STRIFE IN ENGLAND . . . BLACK HISTORY POSTER—FREE! . . IN JULY ISSUE OF SEPIA A r Your Newsstand Now! Everything For... BUILDING REMODELING REPAIRING 1 ® LUMBER ® MELLWORK • ATHEY’S PAINTS ® BUILDING MATERIALS At Our Nw Location On RALEIGH BELTLINE CAROLINA BUILDERS CORF. Bafwsen U. S 1 and 64 Ph. sßP?4U~Ra!elsh, N. C. OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT On East Hargett Street I GOOD LOCATION—CALL VS ACm RCAITY CO. I Phone 832-0956 | 129 E. HARGETT STREET RALEIGH. V ('. fMounlSti: Bottled By Pepsi «Cola Bottling Co. of Selma, Inc. 4 AFSPOSNTWTENT FROM PEPSICO.. NEW YORK 1 the forma! structure of NWFO which is now in its second year of operation, NWRO is the only grass-roots poor organization in this coun try. ft has a memtershipof 30,- 000 families organized in 230 affiLated groups in 45 states. NWRO, founded in August 1967 by and for poor people has grown geometrically in its 2- year history, doubling its mem bership every six months since its founding convention. ‘LET’S STOP' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON*) comprehensive program in communication skills for black people. (This agency has al ready piloted two communica tion workshops, one in New York and another in St. Louis, Mo.) In response to the "reform or die” stance of black and white ministers, the General Synod urged its Executive Coun cil "to take the initiative in mobilizing the Christian people of this nation, through their re spect'ive communions and through the National Council of Churches, in an all-oui-ef fort to persuade the U. S. gov ernment to undertake a massive program ("Domestic Marshall Pain) directed toward the eli mination of the crisis in the na tion." The subject of racism as a national and an international moral blight came under analy sis. While some white delegates objected to being "manipulat ed" or “hit over the head,” others called for an end to mere words and a beginning of ef fective action. The General Sy nod finally recommended that "all investments and funds be withdrawn from financial in stitutions doing business with South Africa.” It was noted that The United Methodist Church and the Epi scopal Church have withdrawn $lO-million and $2-million, re spectively, from banks which participate in a revolving loan arrangementfwith the apartheid (racist) government of South Africa The United Church of Christ has investments of more than $l5O-million. While some of the approxi mately 36 blacks attending the biennial meeting (eight times as many as attended the 1967 meeting in Cincinnati) ex pressed the feeling of "what did you expect from the church which hasn’t implemented the gospel in 2000 years?” Others echoed the attack bv the Rev. Albert B. Cleage, Jr., of De troit’s United Church "Shrine of 'to' “ From RALEIGH’S NEWEST JIOLDHTS. GLam-OraMA CLEANING CENTER 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD DRY CLEANERS OPEN: 7 A. M. to 9 F M. MON.-SAT. CLOSED SUNDAY COIN LAUNDRY OPEN 7 A. M. to 10 P. M MON.-SAT. 1 to 9 SUN. 5 SHIRTS SI.OO MON.-TUES. ONLY 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD 700 E. MARTIN ST. 401 E. DAVIE ST jUMganMHmuai j ma «■— ii if" 11 in the Black Maddonna” -- "We struck a blow for Jesus but the Devil was very much in the room.” The Rev. Dr. Robert V. Moss, Jr., president of Lancaster Theological Seminary, Lan caster, Pa., was elected presi dent of the two-miiiion-mem ber church. Reflecting how whites are up-tight at this point on the Black Manifesto and James Forman, Dr, Moss de clared: SAY NIXON (CONTINUED rBOM PAGE ONIi replace the act with a voting right law that applies nation wide. The .administration aiso wants all literacy tests abol shed, but Mitchell has charg ed that this is just "a purely political attempt to kill the existing Voting Rsgts act. •The administration's in tention is to try to secure this beachhead they have in the South for the Republican par ty' Mitchell said. Meanwhile, the Nixon ad ministration's school-desegre gation decision was attacked by Rov Wilkins. NAACP exec utive director, who said, “It's almost enough tc make you vomit.” Wilkins, who is not known for making caustic state ments, changed his tune some what, as he accused President Nixon of sanctioning “the breaking of the law." “It is not tco little, but nothing, and much too late," Wilkins said of the decision. “It has been 15 years since ad school districts were put on notice to be desegigated.” Joining in the attack on the administration's school-deseg regation decision was Charles Evers. Mississippi NAACr' field director and recently e lected mayor or! Fayette.. Miss. Calling the decision “almost unbelievable," Evers said he wondered what Nixon would answe- when “young Black militants say to Roy Wilkins and Charles Evers: ‘We -told you it wouldn't work. We told you they didn’t give a damn about you, but you kept say ing the system would work' “ One person who. not sur prisingly, was happy with the decision was Sen. Strom Thur mond 'R.-S.C. I , who said the new policy was "an improve ment . . . but it does not go as far toward a true freedom of-choice plan as I would like." Thurmond had promised, while campaigning for Presi dent Nixon in the South last tali, that Nixon would relax the “gudelines of the Johnson administration." While Thurmond was hail ing the decision. Wilkins had another bone to pick with the Nixon administration. Wikins suggested that the administration was trying to gel. Southern support for ex tension of the federal surtax by adopting a softer line on school desegregation. “It begins to look like some kind of deal." said Wilkins, who noted that the adminis tration is admittedly “in trou ble on the surtax extension." PROSECUTOR • (CONTINUED FROM PAGE OKB) W illiam Clark. M rs. Allen, who grew up in the British West Indies, received her undergraduate degree at Chestnut Hill College, Phila delphia, Pa. In 1942, slip moved to Fay etteville with, her husband, Dr. G Westley Allen. They are the parents of eight children. Mrs. Allen received her law degree in 1062 at the University of Xortl Carolina, Chapel Hill. She served a brief internship with Attorney Elreta Alexander of Greensboro, now a judge in the district court system there. Mrs. Allen has set up a private practice here. MAN SHOT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) fences. However, he has also been arrested for inadequate sup port. This occurred on Sep tember 25. 1963 and was re solved in Domestic Relations Court When on March 20, 1964, he was picked up on a drunk driving rap. he received a sen tence of six months on the roads According to files of the Cny - County Identification Bureau, he has had at least two encounters with agents o' the Federal Bureau of-Inves tigation. On February 19. 1966. no Finccln Raleigh, N. C. STARTS SUNDAY. JULY 13 SMOKY Starring • •>S PARKER —plus— LUST WEEKEND ADULTS ONLY STARTS THURS . JULY 17 3 FEATURES VIKING WOMEN ATTACK OF THE PUPPET PEOPLE A BUCKET OF HI ODD not only was charged with public drunkenness, but also faced a rap of carrying a con cealed weapon Malory's Jim 1 arrest prior to the current one was April 24, 1967, when he was charg ed with failure to comply with a court order. This case is expected to be tried in Wake District Court as soon as Avery is appre hended. BROWN BLASTS (CONTWUFD FROM FAG* OMS) support bioadscale affirmative action in employment of mi nority groups, Brown said that “The very companies who should be the leaders in achie ving true equality of employ ment opportunity have lived up to neither their illusory public promises nor their fun damental public responsibili ties. This is the real power in society—the power to improve the lives of the people, and at the same time, unfortunately, to withhold from the people the means through which to improve their situations them selves ... It is safe to say i hat every one cf these corpo rations advertises itself prom inently as ‘an equal oppoitun ty employer,' yet the number of black people on their pay rolls does little to the claim.” Brown described the t'.sk of EEOC—to eliminate discrim ination in employment on the basis of race, color, religion, sex. or national origin as “formidable, for the system has long and smoothly func tioned to the- disadvantage of minorities and of women." In spite of the statutory lim itations under which EEOC operates, se said, “there has been a general improvement over the three years <of its existence) in the response of the Commission to the people it was created to serve. In fis cal year 1968, more people than ever before were benefic iaries of .h Commission's au thority to investigate alleged discriminatory practices and to conciliate violations of Ti tle VII. Over the course of the year, there was more than a doubling of completed investi gations and a tripling of suc cessful conciliations above the 1967 levels. “At the same time, howev er." he continued, "our expe rience in achieving compli ance through individual char ges serves only to confirm the Commission's belief that a broader effort is necessary to get at the roots of employ ment discrimination." To do this, EEOC intends, among other things, to work for greater inter-agency coopera tion within the Government and to hold private conferen ces with leaders of national industries. FR. GROPPI (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE* 9th and 10th “to make sure the new council does not get into the same rut that you have gotten this one in.” Mayor Thompson ‘kept his cool’ and thanked the group and Groppi for coming and express ed appreciation for living in a land where citizens could speak their minds; and that he felt the visitors were sincere in what they said. Earlier, he re portedly told Groppi he was not going to allow him to tear up Jackson as he had done in Mil waukee. Charles Evers was inaugu rated as the Negro mayor of Fayette, Miss., July 7 with much fanfare since many of his admirers had come from afar that day. Evers had been overworked and had to be hospitalized just as the NAACP convention was coming to town. He was releas ed Weneday and appeared on a television interview where he sounded off much to the dis pleasure of many NAACP visi tors. Evers charged the dele gates with taking it too easy and of "Lying around when they should have been out exposing Mississippi.” He added, “We’ve been here since Sunday and all we’ve done is praise the police; the convention came here at our request, to expose Mississippi, not praise it," as he complained of the lack of employment of Negroes in high way, welfare, justice depart ment and draft board offices. Evers demanded that the dele gates go back home and write letters to their congressmen and senators - after seeing Ne gro conditions here first-hand and demand improvement. It’s Camp To Camp High camp or low can.p. you have to keep house even on the roar! To keep you camping more than cleaning, here are a few suggestions: furnishings and equipment should he kept to a minimum. Use neatness props wherever possible drawstring hags for toiletries, net hags for laundry, plastic hags for just about everything, and hang these up for order and safety's sake. For cleaning gear use n tote-able softdrink carton and keep the contents as simple and general purpose as possible: sponges, lots of paper towels, a scrub brush and a triple-duty pine oil cleaner disinfectant to clean, disinfect and deodorize all at oner So whether you fake the high road or the low road, don't let house keeping keep Mm from ramp mg. HKP. FR\ E \ I SITS TUSK EG EE-Guidance and counseling services for the non-college bound student were discussed recently during a three day conference sponsored by Tuskegee Institute’s School of Education in cooperation with the International Paper Company Foundation. Henry Frye (center), North Carolina’s fisrt Negro state legislator, urged the conferees to “acquaint students with the nature of change and how change takes place in the social order.” Frye pursues a point here with (left to right): Richard Milleti, a vice preisent of Education; Dr. Fannie R. Cooley, associate professor in the School of Education at Tuskegee and Guy Crawford, principal of Nichols Junior High in Tuskegee, Ala bama. ■I JEZj Of 1 T 1 RADIATION HAZARDS DISCUSSED - ' High school science teachers, studying at Saint Au gustine’s College, discuss radiation hazards with lecturer. Left to right: Mrs. Joyce P, Huey Oi .Tripolis, Md.; L. F. Coruthers, speaker, from X. C. State University, and Bill Lawson of Ra leigh. Coruthers spoke on July 2, in the Penick IFHI of Science amphitheater at Saint Augustine’s College. Tobacco Growers Aierted To Increase In Hornworms Tar Heel tobacco growers mav want to keep their crop checked extra close this year for hornworms. R. L. Robertson, extension entomologist at North Caro lina State University, said that more early season hornworms have been noticed this year than have been seen of the last several years. "We don't expect a serious infestation of hornworms, but' we are seeing some increase,” Robertson commented. Hornworms were once a major problem for to ba cc o growers. The problem began I Q ssS) 8 !ni At m-nw hr Welch >5 «>1 ne«t **f- j| vie*, tm hunting eil ond eil tournee terylce. CAPITAL RJILOII ICE A COAL CO. *OO W. Hargett St. ' John W. Winters & Company f Exclusive Sale s Agent for Southgate Homes and Cedarwood Country Estates CALL US NOW! J. Samuel Hewitt—Joseph Winters—Mi'onza Thorpe I JOHN W. WINTERS & CO. 507 E. Martin Streep j Dial 828-5786 j jpumnfTiiniinffri^rwTnTTiiirri^TiTtiriT** 1 ' ■ -I.—■■ ~t m ■ ... ■ jipMYOUR FAVORITE j Wf Vn Black/White or Color > AWj WEDDINGS '■fr | HOME PORTRAITS |, * I | SCHOOL PHOTOGRAPHY |H J.ITHIN^N to decrease, however, when farmers started using MH-30 and other sucker control chemi cals. The chemicals generally do a better job of controlling ANY MAKE OR MODEL World's Largest — Uncon ditional guarantee protect ed by 560 AAMCO Shops Coast to Coast. NO DOWN PAYMENT ONE-DAY SERVICE Free Tow, Road Test and Multi-Check. 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The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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July 12, 1969, edition 1
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