Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 19, 1969, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 THfc CAMULIMIAW RALEIGH. N. C . SATURDAY. JULY 19. 1969 FIRE DEPT. (CONTJNUISB FROM PA6R ONE) presently employed by Wake Opportunities, the Rev. Ben jamin Foust, pastor o t St. Paul AME Church; and Attorney Ro~ mallus O. Murphy, former head of a race relation group here, now associated with Shaw ti nt versity. The issue of discrimination was discussed at several open meetings before a previous committee, chaired by Coun cilman Bill Law, took it be hind closed doors. Ligh t n er emphasized t o newsmen yesterday that all in formation received by the com mittee will be released to the public when a report Is made. Lightner indicate the com mittee report may make re commendations for changes in fire department policy. •‘Out of this whole thing might come new procedures to keep this type of thing from coming up again.” He did not elaborate before the committee, or when asked to do so during a. break in the meeting. One complaint of the black delegation was that no blacks had been hired by the depart ment in the past six years although qualified blacks had applied. Since that time the de partment has employed one black, Ray S.Debnam, 219 Walk er Street. SWEEPSTAKES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) them over. Visit these mer chants as well as other CAR OLINIAN advertisers, and be sure to tell them that, you saw their ads in this newspaper. END WAR (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) sense ofin that country. "Secondly, the United States Government should press for an early negotiated settlement of the war in hopes of soon achieving what Cyrus Vance has termed a ‘stand-still cease fire,” "Since America has pursued both foreign and domestic po licy for the last few years with the theory that we cannot have both ‘gun and butter’, we must end the war in Vietnam and block the deployment of the latest trinket of the military industrial complex—the ABM, so that we can deal with our massive domestic problems,” said Conyers. "We cannot afford the esca lation of the arms race by the ABM because tt will weaken, not strengthen, the common de [Everything For... BUILDING REMODELING REPAIRING LUMBER MILLWORK \ v ATHEY’S PAINTS # BUILDING MATERIALS At Our New Location On RALEIGH BELTLINE CAROLINA E IUUMERS COir. SfjßHren U. S 1 and 64 h. MI-1471 Raleigh, N. C. OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT On East Hargett Street GOOD LOCATION—CALI. US ACM REALTY CO. Phone 832-0956 129 E. HARGETT STREET RALEIGH. X. C. IMKi pKShil iMK^i I Bottled By Pepsi-Cola Bottling' Co, of Selma, Inc. UMMK APPOINTMENT FROM. PEPSICO.. NEW YORK sense,” added Conyers. "We must rectify the long economic neglect of the blacks and the Indians and the Mexican-A rnericans and the white people crushed in poverty’s grinding mill of Inhumanity.” FLIM-FLAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) at this time. He said the two other men made trips to the bank, than Mr. Hicks was told to go to the First Union National Bank and wait by the elevator for a man who would meet him at this spot, He went to the bank and waited, Mr Hicks informed po lice officers, but no one ever came. He then returned to the spot of the original meeting several times. It was at this point he realiz ed that he had been duped and called "the law”. MANIFESTO (CONTINUED FROM PAGF. ONE.) church structure,” the Mani festo declared. "It should, in stead, be given to correct so cial injustices blamed on or ganized religions in the United States” by Forman when the activist issued his own Mani festo three months ago in De troit, Michigan. Ac this time, Forman de manded SSOO million from "racist American religions as repatriations for what he termed past, injustices to black peopie in this country. The 46-year-old Father Boyd said that the Black Manifesto could now be seen as "An ac tion of the Holy Spirit” at work within American Christianity. "Religious authority must be sharply redefined,” his Mani festo stated. "Changes cannot occur at the top, where leaders ties and bound by the establishment, are simply not free to act responsi bly or creatively, but must in stead take place at the middle and bottom levels where ordin ary people exist,” ended. DRAWS 1,000 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB) the International Union of Oper ating Engineers, AFL-CIO. Washington, D. C„ and Dr. John P. Walsh, president, Dun woody Industrial Institute, Min neapolis, Minn. * Other speakers during the week-long conference will in clude U. S. Senator Jennings Randolph of W. Va. and the host state’s Secretary of State John B. Rockefeller, IV. During the conference, the A WELCOME TO YOU From RALEIGH’S NEWEST .HOLDEN’S. OLamQraMA I CLEANING CENTER 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD DRY CLEANERS i OPEN: 7A.M.t09 P. 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. delegates are participating in more than a score of panels aimed at increasing apprentice ship opportunities in nearly every major industry and serv ice. Panels also will discuss equal employment opportunity, vocational education, and other topics leading to fuller develop ment of the nation’s manpower resources. The conference ends July 18 The conference is sponsored by labor and mangement in co operation with the U.S.Depart ment of Labor’s Bureau of Ap prenticeship and Training and State Apprenticeship Councils. LAWYERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tour of the North Carolina Mu tual Insurance Company and a visit to the Village Barn Theater. The National Barristers’ Wives, the auxiliary organiza tion, will meet during the con vention. MRS. KING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) was presented to two recipi ents "tor leadership in the a dvancement of inter-group un do) standing within the educa tion profession.” Receiving the awards were Margaret Steven son, executive secretary of the NEA’s Association of Class room Teachers, and Elizabeth Koontz, former NEA president and now director of the Wo men’s Bureau, U. S. Depart ment of Labor. The NEA Human Rights A wards, presented for “crea tive leadership in the educa tion profession,” was receiv ed by Mrs. LaDonna Harris, chairman of the National Wo men's Advisory Council on Pov erty. U. S. Office of Economic Opportunity, and State Sen. Joseph Bernal of Texas. Mrs. Harris, a full-blooded Co manche Indian, and Senator Bernal is a Mexican-American teacher turned politican. Mrs. Harris is the wife of Sen. Fred Harris, D-Okla., chairman of the Democratic National Com mittee, who attended the affair. Two Coahoma county, Miss., teachers received the Abraham Lincoln Award on behalf of the 71 educators who continued to teach when they were terminat ed from their jobs last Febru ary after federal aid to their schools was cut off. The award is ‘ for courageous action in pursuit of educational oopor tunity.” Federal aid to Coa homa County schools was cut off because the county refused to comply with desegregation guidelines. Since that time, the NEA and its affiliate, the- Mississippi Teachers Associa tion, have supported legal ac tion on behalf of the teachers and have contributed more than $40,000 in subsistence grants from the DuShane Emergency Fund arid voluntary gifts, ACTIVIST (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! application for conscientious objector status. Collins did not receive the first induction notice until as- LINCOLN Raleigh, N C. STARTS SUNDAY. JULY 20 SEX CIRCUS Starring all-star cast Pius STAGE COACH Starring JOHN SMITH STARTS THURS.. JULY >4 3 FEATURES HOT ROD GIRL Starring LORIN NELSON ASTOUNDING SHE MONSTER Starring ROBERT CLARKE ITARZANS 3 CHALLENGES Starring JACK MAHONEY Alexander Bldg. P■ O- & 0 * 292 SUITE 50? T & T Associates DISTRIBUTORS OF EDUCATIONAL MATERIAL 133 Fayetteville St. Raleigh, North Carolina 27601 Also T & T Travel Service We Are Now Making Last M inute Reservations For Planned Tours To New York Canada Ole Mexico The Southwest Nassau- California and The Golden West. Every item that needs to he looked alter is carefully planner! from the time you leave until you return. INFORMATION FREELY GIVEN Write, Come by or Call V J. TURNER But. (919) 828 3916 (919) 833-1871 SELASSIE ESCORTED iA PRO TOCO I CHIEF-WashittgfcOli: Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, escorted by Emil Mosbacher, U. S. chief of protocol, (L), arrives at the Blair House following his arrival in the U. S. July 7. The Emperor is her for a four-day state visit. Official welcom ing ceremonies for Selassie will be held at the White House July 8. (UPI). Black Americans Ttile Os Technical Confab WASHINGTON', D. C. - How technically trained black A mericans can meaningfully par ticipate in the development of black countries in Africa. South America, and the Caribbean will be the focus of the forty-first annual convention of tire Na tion Technical Association, 27- 30 August 27-30, in Washing ton, D. C., according to George Worthy, Washington chapter president. The NT A, with active chap ters throughout the United States, is a professional or ganization of black architects, engineers, scientists, builders, and technicians. Guyana. Trini dad and Tobago, Cameroons, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Senegal, Lesotho, Swaziland, Tanzania, and Uganda will send delegates. Embassies of other invited black nations have tentatively expressed positive intentions while awaiting final instruc tions from their home govern ments. "We are interested in initi ating dialogue, establishing rapport, and catalyzing em pathy with black countries that might utilize our skills to their fullest potential,” Thomas N. Cornish, Washington chapter secretary, explained the pur ter the day he was to have been drafted. On the next two in duction dates, the officers in charge told him to leave the induction center because he was passing out anti-war literature. On the fourth induction date, Collins voluntarily left the cen ter after being insulted with racial slurs by the medical officer. He never received the last two induction notices. Collins has been active in the Southern freedom movement since he helped organized the early sit-ins to desegregate public accomodations in Louisi ana. He worked with the Student. Nonviolent Coordinating Com mittee (SNCC) in voter-regi stration drives in Mississippi and Louisiana, from 1964 through 1966. Most recently he has beer, active in anti-war work, with SNCC projects in New Orleans, and with the SCEF project in Mississippi. Afer he was sentenced, Col lins said; "If I am guilty of a crime, it is the crime of think ing. The draft is a totalitarian instrument used to practice genocide against black people. Poor and working-class peo ple are drafted to fight, not for American ideas, but for the interests of a few capital ists who control this country.” The conviction and the travel restrictions on his bail will be appealed. pose of the convention. "We black Americans, have contri buted our talents, without due recognition, to building this (U. S.) world power. Why should we not use our training to fur ther the development of black nation?” Ruling By Judge May Affect Many CHICAGO - (NPT) - A federal judge has ordered the Chicago Housing authority to build 75 per cent of all new public hous ing in white areas of the city. The U. S. government formal ly backed the court order. The ruling by U. S. Dis trict Court Judge Richard B. Austin was likely to have a major impact on segregated housing patterns in cities all over the country. Court suits in other cities are expected to seek similar desegregation ofpubiic housing. Most public housing in Chica go has been located in Black areas. From now on, three out of four new CHA housing units must Ire built or leased in white areas. The judge also ruled that new CHA family projects must be small in size, no more than three stories high and accom - modating no more than 120 pe rsons, except in unusual cir cumstances, when 240 persons may be allowed. The main reason for delays in receiving checks from the VA is that necessary papers are not received, or are im properly completed. (fssjy DIAL 821-9317 Hr Watch ail heat •**- vift, SaM banting nii | and nit ’»vrn*r Mrvlc*. j CAPITAL FUEL OIL ICE & COAL CO. 1 <foo W. Hargett St. John W. Winters & Company Exclusive Sales Agent for Southgate Homes and Cedarwood Country Estates CALL US NOW! J. Samuel Hewitt—Joseph Winters—Alfonza Thorpe JOHN W. WINTERS & CO. 507 E. Martin Street Dial 828-5786 IMpWMjYQUR FAVORITE PICTURES Mr I||| Black/White or Color jt ill WEDDINGS if l|f HOME PORTRAITS P s I V BANQUETS k | SCHOOL PHOTOGRAPHY J|! | j COMMERCIALS \ * For Appointments Call 1 L J.D.HiNTON ■ |k STUDIO j|L Jgg 505 ROCK QUARRY RD i®*®- PHONE: 83b-«0!Q Sammy Davis 1 Gun Grounded By Customs LONDON - (N PI)-Custom of ficials at Heathrow airport last week would not permit enter tainer Sammy Davis, Jr,, to enter the country until he de posited his revolver and am munition with them for safe keeping. Sammy, in England for a nine-week film duty with Pe ter Lawford in the film "Salt and Pepper II,” said he car ried the gun to protest his family and himself. "The last time I was here, my family and I were threat ened,’ he said. He added, "I have a permit to carry the gun in America, but the customs in formed me that the laws are different in Britian.” After relinquishing the wea pon to custom officials, who assured him he would get it back when he left the coun try, Sammy immediately went to his suite at the Playboy Club in Park Lane, and showed up two days later with a new $23,040 Rolls Royce Silver Cloud automobile. Princeton News BY GOLDIE HARDY PRINCETON - Mrs. Howard Whitley has returned home af ter her two week vacation with Mrs. Lillie Harris of St. Mary, Georgia, and visited friends. Mrs. Inell Rawling of New York City is spending her va cation with her children and visting relatives and friends. Mrs. and Mrs. Thomas Best and daughter accompanied Mrs. Goldie Hardy and Mrs. Nancy Howell to visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Newsome and daughters, Rebecca and Rernatha, of Eu reka Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Locus and daughters oi Goldsboro, HELP WANTED Production Worker Food Processing Male Only Ist or 2nd Shift $1.95 per hour to start plus Shift Differential Needs own transportation APPLY IN PERSON Employment Secur ity Commission 321 W. Hargett St. Raleigh, N. C. RALEIGH MAN MISSING Mrs, Margaret Sledge, 9.H. Rock Quarry Road, is seeking her brother who has been miss ing from her home since about 1 p.m. Wednesday, July 9. Mrs. Sledge said her brother, Walter Dunn, 65, had been mak ing his home with her for the past two years, following his re lease from Saint Elizatetl’s Mental Hospital, Washington, D. C., where lie was confined some 30 years. Although released two Tabor City News TABOR CITY - Services were held at Spring Green M. B. C. on July 13. Sunday School be gan at 10 a.m. with the supt., in charge. Prayer services were led by the missionaries. The prelude was by the mini ster and choir. Mt. Pisgah M, B. C.’s senior c'noii of Con way rendered the music. The first hymn followed the re sponsive reading and prayer. The second hymn followed mis sion and prayer. A song was rendered by the spiritual choir followed by announcements. The offering was lifted by the of ficers. A sermonett, was given by the minister for the child ren. A message in song fol lowed by the choir. The pastor’s text was found in James 2:14-26. Using as his subject "Faith and Works, Faith with out works, Woiks without Faith.” It was enjoyed b; all. Elder and M rs. Rufus Rogers spent the first of the week with Rev. 3iid Mrs. V. S. Singletary. Mrs. Rogers is the sister of Rev. Singletary. Mrs. Locus sister, Mrs. Alma Mack of Washington, D. C. visit ed Mr. and Mrs. Kalp Stevers and grandchildren Sunday even ing. Mrs. Ain a Mack spent Sun day night with her brother, Mr. Thomas Best and family. WANT Toi Late To Classify TARECi-iO oTEE£i D R A F I! R SH.O*. — a’c speeiui./.c in dr.. - ies. slipcovers, bedsprevuu. vie . >- rated pillows. Workman :p and materials guarantee cl. Di.»i 2458. Master Char :e invited. IM. NeJ.l Wilder, owner. iiiimiHiiiumiimmiimmiiHmmimimimiHmiimmMimnimii Eyeglasses ! CONTACT LENSES | HEARING AIDS Bring Your Prescription to Rldgeutatj’B ; OPTICIANS, Inc. • FIRST IN THE CAROLINAS RALEIGH —Professional Building RALEIGH—BO4 St. Marvs St. ’ Other Offices: GREENVILLE GREENSBORO-CHARLOTTE mi inn PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT COMPANY "Building For The Future" WHO’S BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE? Attorney and Mrv George K. Greene-—MOO I.yndhurst Drive .Raleigh. V C. Mr. and Mr Raymond l\. Ga!iatva> -Beaelnvood Park Subdivision Mr. and Mr . i.enn Jefferies—Beaelnvood Park Sub di\ ision Air. and Airs. Janies Paul Perry —7O S Brook | Drive. Raleigh. V C. H.A. GOODSON - BUILDER Cali 832-1811 cr 832-18M —231 South East Street .1. Hi Alt A BROWN. President Agent tor Southgati Apartments^ ADDITIONS - REPAIRS NEW HOMES ROMUEL JONES BUILDER ROUTE I—BOX 97 WENDELL, N. C. Telephone 266-2650 Night Phone Only 266-2005 AT YOl R *" v SERVICE UNITED CAB CO. tins TARHORO ST. DANIEL I. HOOKER Prop. For Courteous. Prompt Drivers Cull from Q A iy lT O A I^HOUR 6 a.m.-12 p.m. O O TT“A SERVICE years ago, Mr. Dunn received his official discharge papers from the hospital on March 18 of this year. Mrs. Sledge said she gotW and went inside to prepare a meal last Wednesday and left tier brothei on the porch. When she returned sometime later, however, he had disappeared. Upon asking neighborhood children if they had seen him, she was told that he was seen going toward the grocery store up the street. She further stat ed that r.e usually goes to me store and returns immediately, and had teen doing this since coming to live with tier. When last seen, Mr. Dunn was wearing a short green tweed coat, gray work pants, gray hat, black loafer shoes and tan socks. His sister said he had a brown paper bag in one of his pockets, containing letters which tie re ceived from tier in Washington, identification papers and oiher material Sl.e said anyone have infor mation as to his whereabouts* - should call the Raleigh Police Department and someone would come and get him. Legal Notice NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA v WAKK COUNTY IN THE M.TFRIOR COURT WILLIE .VAL Ni.i.LY. Pi.mdifi vs. JO’iN K! ELY U, ic nrtant 1 * n,i ic-u dcundent. Jr .:. K< i,\ ■ i.l take notice that me ueiiou entitled as above nas In el cr . ieuecd in l a Supctiut - C- Ur. : .■! \V„, e c i: No, 1i: Carolina, be '. ... plani'nl to sc ene an ab - - :t • donee front the defend, nt upon the (. ound- that tile plaintiff lived n ntinuousic I a'e and ■: 1 : Iro n defen der fui C ; nan m j ear pro ved; Me le.nrin of tnis action .in! the dolenclan! will further ■ ak. no lev :.. ' ,e . rvqur. ed to appeal at the office oi the Civile of In.- Superior Court c>f Wake Count), it: Me Courthouse ju l.a'enn N rill C re.lata on or before the 15th day of August, 'fit) raid answer 'o '.ic complaint in tani action, o. the plaintiff will apple to tlie Ce... t for the relief demanded in .-aid Cu.nplaim. Tim L'4 da. of June, liJtiU. GR ETCH UN DICKSON, A.-.-1 Co rk Supt! tor Court Wake Cuun‘ \ W. FI\AXK BTfOWER, Aitorne\ Juno 28, Jul.N 5- .2-19. 1969 f FOR REPAIRS TO ANY TV PHONOGRAPH TAPE RECORDER TRANSISTOR RADIO ANY SMALL APPLIANCE CALL TE 2-3950 —OR— VA 8-2343 " TAYLOR RADIO & Electrical Co. "The House That Service" Built” 224 R MARTIN ST.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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July 19, 1969, edition 1
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