Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 6, 1969, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C„ SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER, 6, 1969 SIX JURORS (CCKT3NV2S nOK PAG* GNB O. Gupton, a secretary at Syd nor Hydrodynamics Inc.; and Kenneth D. Cottrell, Jr., a draftesman for the Westing house meter division, Allen is the only Negro among the six. A Negro woman was excused after she stated that she could not vote for a verdict that would result in the death penalty under any cir cumstances. Defense attorney Clarence Kirk made a motion Tuesday morning that a special venire of-prospective jurors be called trim outside Wake County be easue of the publicity given the case. The motion was deni ed by Judge Leo Carr. Rowland’s body was found on the morning of Feb. 3. He had been reported missing on the morning of Feb, 6, Rowland’s taxi, its seats bloodied, was found the morning after he dis appeared in a muddy field near Knightdale, east of Raleigh. Rowland disappeared on the night of Feb. 5 after he radioed the Lincoln Cab Co., his em ployer, that he was driving some passengers to Wendeli, * Jerry Wayne Ayscue, an 18 year-old Millbrook High School student, has been charged with l>eing ar, accessroy before the fact in the killing. OMEGA FEAT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON® towTi open and doing business. It is to bf> rempmberedthat Ev ers ran in to financial difficul ty when it was found that the out-going administration had used up the budget and there were no funds to meet the pay roll. Mr. Corbett was told that do nations were coming in nicely y i ! (too) DIAlt2M3!7Ftr Watch deg «ii heat Mr* Ivk*, Sise Stating «ti and «M burctt torvlc*. CAPITAI rUII 1C! t COAL CO. MOW. K*rg»t*st. Everything For... BUILDING REMODELING REPAIRING • LUMBER • MILLWORK ® ATHEY’S FAINTS % BUILDING MATERIALS At Our New Location On RALEIGH BELTLINE CAROLINA BUILDERS COIR. I Between U. S 1 and 64 If!i m-U-ll— Raieigh. N. C. IwaWWMMaBWiMIMWW!MMWI»gigaag|IBB. OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT On East Hargett Street GOOD LOCATION—CALL US ACME MALTY CO. Phone 832-0956 128 E. HARGETT STREET RALEIGH. N. C. rMounlatn -1 • i ' O W\. Mottled By PephCola Bottling Co. of Selma. Inc, I 'v*9Ut APPOINTMENT FKOSL PEPSICO., NEW YORK.J Mill>MWBWII«IIHIIIIIIIHWt<mn>WiHIHIIWWIIIIMIM BIIIIMIin—niIHHIWIIWIIWIIMMg and up to August 23, SBO,OOO had been received and much more was expected. Mr. Corbett told the mayor he would send an appeal to the more than 300 chapters and felt sure that they would respond in a tanglible way. The Omega president was ac companied to the Mississippi town by Felton Motley of Dela ware, who also serves as di rector public relations for the 2nd district of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. FSU GRAD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON* leading to careers in service to the nation anti the communi ty.. Gravely is a native of Poca hontas, Virginia. SEEK HEALTH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON* sessions. Since an ounce of pre vention is worth a pound of cure, maybe an hour ir. a medi cal advice center would be worth the time rather than having someone suffer for weeks with treatment for an ailment which should have been arrested in its primary stages.” said Fred Roberts, CRJ field worker. The Community Health As sociation also has plans for the organization of a Nurses Association for the purposes of training people in the Black community in first aid. Know ledge of first aid is almost a necessity within the Black com munity when one thinks of the many changes and miles of red tape which is standard proce dure at the health clinics. The clinics are overcrowded and many times treatment can be given in the home of minor ailments. A third part of the program consists of a general overall improvement of unsanitary con ditions existing in the Black communities of Raleigh. ‘•We also hope that the public will take part in and encour age our proposed personal hy giene seminars. These semi nars are being prepared now and will be open to the public,” Roberts stated. Stanley Myers, chairman of the Community Health Associa tion, said tne committee sent letters to forty doctors in the Raleigh area in an appeal for a little help. “We have not re ceived one reply!! If each one of these doctors would con tribute just one hour a week, we could have forty hours of medical service a week. We do not think that we are asking too much. These men who have taken the Hippocratice Oath and have dedicated their lives to help their fellow man could give just one free hour a week,” said Myers. “If thep? men of the medi cal profession cannot do this small thing, then we must use other means of establishing a medical center. I, as chairman of the CHA, am appealing to all fellowmen of this city to join in the fight against all in justices that are committed a gainst the people of Raleigh, Black and white,” lie conclud ed. Any information concerning the Community Health Associa tion may be obtained through the office of the North Carolina Committee for Racial Justice, 410 East Martin Street, Raleigh, North Caroling. « WARNS NIXON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE OKI “You knew, the people see these things. The political a wareness, the social-economic awareness in the black com munities across the country isn’t what it was three years ago. People are much more a ware of what is happening.” The Administration projects a “withdrawal” image in all aspects of civtl rights, Mr, Dean sam. He referred speci fically to the Administration’s position regarding extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, school desegregation guidelines and the Job Corps. Speaking about Attorney Gen eral Mitchell’s opposition to a simple extension of the Voting Rights Act, Mr. Dean said that “the best thing you can do to restrict voter registration, particularly amongblackpeople and other minorities, is either restrict or make more difficult the Voting Rights Act in the guise of improving it.” “As for the Administration's backing and filling on school desegregation, Mr, Dean ob served: “All deliberate speed in 15 years isn’t very rapid. And with the concern for law and order—yet our very law ful school districts in many parts of the country can’t seem to do anything about that. And now to draft guidelines that further modify it and slow it down, I think is just fright ening! It, frankly, is very frightening.” Commenting on the Admini stration’s shutdown of 58 Job Corps centers, Mr. Dean said: “I think that all it has done is turn out these young people, young people who had felt that the Job Corps center was some place where they could have at least some hope of being gain fully employed. And it is true that these people have not been given any breaks since being turned out of the Job Corps. “To the guy on the street, who has possibly viewed the Job Corps as maybe the last chance, it is going to be kind of hard to go back and say, ‘you know, bet’s stay within the system--you still got a chance,’ ” Mr. Dean said. Having served as an OEO administrator during the Poverty Agency’s formative years, Mr. Dean took special interest in the Administration’s announced reshaping of that or ganization. DR. WARD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON* Charles Allen Langston, church custodian told Officer Rusolph Felix Perry at 7:12 a.m„, that someone had broken into the church and taken all of the church’s financial donations, including all of the change and checks. “All of the stolen money was in cash. There was over SBO in silver which was not bother ed. All of the checks were left as far as we could determine,” Rev. Ward said. He also said that the loss sustained in the robbery has been made up by the officers and members of First Baptist. MRS. ALLEN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE agency. “Wake County Opportunities, Inc., is a program funded for all pei sonsneedingthe services and we welcome the participa tion of the white population. The cooperation of all is needed if this program is to be a suc cess and fulfill its Goals and Objectives,” she stated. “We aim to work closely with all citizen and would like to use to the fullest extent all available facilities and re sources such as schools, churches, playgrounds, librar ies, agencies, institutions and their personnel. “We are seeking better com munication from all rural poor and we are seeking coopera tion of all persons in the coun ty to help support these pro grams. Mrs. Allen went on to say, we wish to increase sympathet ic understanding of the prob lems and concerns of all peo ple, and to involve the entire community in the long-range planning for the realization of the ultimate goals; clean and attractive neighborhoods, em ployment, better streets, stop signs, and stop lights. These are a few, and the ultimate goals are to work with the com munity to elerninate some of the conditions that cause problems. “The people themselves must reeoginze their problems and must become involved in play ing their respective rules to help resolve some of these problems. They can do this through process of Leadership development, Community Or ganizer and Voter Right. We GLASSES 1 Complete Eyeglass Service Brins, your prescription to m for expert work, and ser vice which will please you. CONTACT LENSES OPTICIANS 111 A W, Hargett St. and 528 Wade Avenue t will always be ready to lend technical assistance to them when it is needed. “We are going to work very closely with local Industry and welcome their support and co operation in all of our Man power programs.” Robert, Mrs. Allen’s oldest son is teaching in the Detroit school system. Her daughter, is a senior at Saint Augustine’s College. Harold, another son, left Wednesday for McPhear son, Kansas to.attendMcPhear son College. HENDERSON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB tensive properties in this city. The slaying occurred shortly after noon in the rear of the Sports Bar, 1300 block of Pennsylvania Avenue, No mo tive was given by ponce. His funeral was held in Wen dell on Sunday, August 24. Wilson has been indicted, ar ranged and mysteriously spirit ed away from the Baltimore City Jail under heavy guard to some prison outside the city “for his own protection,” ac cording to officials. Henderson was in Raleigh, N. C. in June to settle an ac cident suit and, at this time, he told a CAROLINIAN news man that he was planning tore tire to Wake County and invest some of his money in busi nesses that would give the Ne gro a better chance in life. At the time, he was driving a Lin coln Continential and said he left another one in Baltimore. It seems that Henderson had a “feeling” that something was “going to happen to him,” He reportedly left some 25 tape recordings for police officials, containing notes and instruc tions on who to get and how to deal with his expected murder er or murderers. An offical of the State At torney General’s Office said last week, “We’re going to do what Henderson wanted us to do and God knows if there is more than one involved in this murd er, we will find out and bring every last one of them to jus tice.” Services where held here for Mr. Henderson on Friday, Au gust 22 at the Morton and Dyett Funeral Home in Baltimore., At the Wendell funeral, the Rev. John D. Lockley, pastor, officiated at the Pleasant Grove Baptist Church rites at 2 p.m. on August 24. Son of John Henderson and the late Mrs. Leila Morgan Henderson and Walter Hender son was born August 26, 1926. He spent his early youth In the Wendell area and later his family moved to Baltimore. Survivors other than his fath er include: one daughter Mrs. Earlene Abram of Baltimore; three sons, Larry of Baltimore; Walter, Jr. and Maurice Hend erson, both of Birmingham, Ala ; two grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs. Lenella Ruffin and Mrs. Nannie Gooch, both of Baltimore; and three brothers, York, Albert and Joe b-'lney Henderson, all of Baltimore. G. FRINKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Morgan investigate the activi ties of Mr. Frinks. “We, the black people of Hyde County are real con cerned about our problems and do not believe they can all be settled until the outside leader ship is removed. A group of us have signed the encolsed re quest in hope your department can help us with this prob lem,” Mr, Bryant’s letter stated. Frinks is to be remember ed as the leader of school children from Hyde and other counties who converged on Ra leigh during the early summer, demanding the release of a 17- year-old Negro girl convicted of murdering a white Rocky Mount grocer and sentenced to die. The group led by Frinks threatened to remain in the state’s Capital City until the death penalty was abolished. Some members of the group also pitched tents, one even on the lawn of the Governor’s Man sion. Mr. Frinks also led the year long boycott of schools in Hyde County, using Swan Quarter as his headquarters. According to a statement by the SCLC’s national headquart ers, state field secretaries who had heretofore been acting more or less on their own would be held in tighter rein. As Hyde schools opened for the current school year on Tuesday, all evidence of the previous boycott appeared to have diminished. BOYCOTT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON* lions emphasizes . . . that stu dents should be kept at home for safety. Parents and chil dren were advised not to go near the schools and not to become involved in picketing or sign carrying. “We are not rabble rousers,” the instruction read, “and will peacefully and patiently wait un til the meeting can be negotiat ed with the Cumberland County School Board, Person pointed out that present plans for the five schools of District 5 will mean the busing of many students past schools they formerly at tende. Schools in the district are Massey Hill High, Ashley, Camden. Road, Cumberland Road and Cashwell. A major problem apparently Brother James Thomas Will Observe Anniversary Sun. Brother James Thomas, well-known Raletgh-Wake area disc jockey and master of cere monies for religious programs, will observe his ninth anniver sary as a radio announcer on Sunday, September 7, with a program to be held at Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. Doors will open at 12 noon and the COMPUTERS CLICK AS HIGH SCHOOL STUDY SUBJECT More and more schocds are teaching the use of computers in order to add to student knowledge, subtract miscon ceptions about computers, mul tiply student creativity, and di vide the fundamentals of com puter operation into segments that students can readily un derstand. Just as girls studying to be come secretaries learn how to type and use other office ma chines, an increasing number 'of math and science students are learning about their most important tool the computer before they reach college. Many educators, in fact, are already predicting a data proc essing course in every high school by 1972. They point out that, while schools throughout the country have used computers to handle accounting, payroll, class sched uling, testing and grading chores, the one who stands to benefit most from the computer the student has been large ly neglected until recently. Just as business ha 3 brought us into what has been called the "computer age,” business is capable of helping teachers prepare today’s students for today’s world. Educators feel this can best be achieved by classroom instruction that stresses the concept approach the wliys and wherefores of computers and their uses —and just such a course has recently been developed by the Friden Division of The Singer Com pany. The course covers what a computer is, its role in our lives, how it works and, of course, how to work it. Stu dents get "hands-on” experi ence in the operation of a com puter using a Friden 5610 “Computyper” data processor, a low priced, desk sized com puter. To familiarize teachers with the computer and train them in how to administer the course. Friden offers them a three week training course in San Leandro, Calif., or Roch ester. N.Y, and pays for travel, food, lodging instruction ma terials and teaching aids. "For years, the creativity of our best mathematical minds (Ill) lights On Safety v / by UL Public Information Office Where It All Began Seventy five years ago, a rel atively somber America was awakened to a new and some what startling creation: Edi son’s incandescent light bulb Bursting upon a scene of reck less enthusiasm, the inherent dangers of the light bulb went unnoticed due to the mas: public excitement. Chicago’s Columbian Expo sition became the first rnajoi test for electricity as one* J si. • s. I. “ ■■ ' 1 ! J h] Edison's Incandescent Light Bulb dimmed midways and exnosi tions became illuminated However, resulting fire dam age initiated a concerned Chi cage: Board of Fire Underwrit ers to call in an electrical in vestigator from Boston Wil liam Llenry Merrill. Merrill’s intensive investigations led to the discovery of the abound ing hazards in electricity that were capable of not only de stroying property but life as well. Realization of these haz ards and the need to inform an unaware public prompted Merrill to remain in Chicago and found Underwriters’ Lab oratories. A desperate need by a bur geoning electrical industry for a set of safety standards re sulted in a ’wide acceptance of Underwriters’ testing pro cedures and the beginning of a long public service record. By 1900 the Laboratories had al ready expanded and were rec ognized as an authority on fire prevention. World War I, the war to end war, exploded up on the public scene and Un derwriters’ began its first steps into diversification. Test ing procedures were expanded centered around alt seventh and sight graders tn District 5 at the Ashley School and the bus ing of many of them consider able distances. program gets underway promptly at 1:30 p.m. Mr. Thomas has gone to all lengths to bring to Raleigh audi ences the very best In spiritual and gospel music in the past, and this occasion will be no different, A well-known an nouncer, Mr. Thomas is heard each morning from 6 a.m. until •f ■ •>’ I uvlfth gra<l«‘ stiirßiils in Tort W orth. Texas*, Irani how to operate and program the clok-xi/.cd 5610 “Gomputyper" data processor made by The Singer Company'* Friden Di\i*inn. I? can he used to teach the workings of a large computer and. in advanced math classes, can save students hours of tedious computing and memory work, freeing them for more creative, mind-stretching studies. has been limited at ihe high school level,” a Fort Worth, Tex., Independent School Dis trict Consultant in Mathemat ics recently said at the Confer ence for the Advancement of Science and Mathematics. "We fee) that with good teachers, good students, and good computer equipment we can take giant strides toward freeing the imaginative cre ativity of young and aggressive minds.” to include such items as un derwater acetylene torches and flame arrestors in am munition .plants. Since the beginning days of the first world war, the Lab oratories began to realize a tremendous . growth. Under writers’ engineers became in voiced in testing of every con ceivable product from air planes and safes to shatter proof glass. No longer was it necessary to convince industry of the Laboratories’ service. Indus! r y and government came to Underwriters’, for they realized the essentia! part Ul* plays in safety. In looking toward the fu ture, Underwriters’ Labora tories knows that public safe tv is a serious business. Pro gressing complexities of a A WELCOME TO YOU From RALEIGH’S NEWEST HOLDEN’S QLamDbaMA ! CLEANING CENTER 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD DRY CLEANERS OPEN: 7 A. M. to 9 P M. MON.-SAT. CLOSED SUNDAY’ COIN LAUNDRY OPEN 7 A. M. to 10 P. M. ' MON.-SAT. 1 to 9 SUN. 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD 700 K. MARTIN ST. 401 E. DAVIE ST. Eyeglasses CONTACT LENSES HEARING ASPS Bring- Your Prescription to flldgcwaij'a OPTICIANS, Inc. FIRST IN THECAROUNAS JBALElGH—Professional Building RALEIGH—*BO4 St. Marys St. Other Offices: GJB3SEMVILLE GREENSBOSIO-CHARLOTTE «niiii!iiiii.viinfiiiiii!imiwiutuNmiMtiujmHMiMtjuiMiif<tWK. 7:30 a.m, and from 12 noon until 2 p.m, on Station WLLE here. Groups which will appear in clude: The Dixie Hummingbirds of Philadelphia, Pa ; All-Star Singers, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Har monizing Four, Richmond. Van Angelic Gosepl Singers, pnila delphia; Liz and The C-ospelet The computer course is used in the Fort Worth District. The school board thcwi recently purchased three 5610’s which are now used in three high school classes and one adult evening class. As computer courses become more common, parents may learn from their offspring a “computer age” language in which "two bits” does not mean a quarter, a "pass” doesn’t get you into a movie free, and a "position" is a space, not a job. L space have a:! contributed to the creation of the most sig nificant hazards to human ’ life in history. They have also created the greatest challenge for a "safety sentinel” to test, establish and maintain the highest level of standards pos sible in order that accidental loss of life can be held to a minimum. Underwriters’ Laboratories, a non-profit organization test ing for public safety, has been f accepting that' challenge for pTiNCCfra Raleigh, N. C. STARTS SUNDAY. SEPT. 7 THE CONQUER” OR WORM Starring VINCENT PRICE —pus— 2ND FEATURE VENOM STARTS THTJKS.. SEPT. 11 THE GHOST & MR CHICKEN Starring JOAN STALEY —plus— SON OF A GUN FIG HER Starring V: RUSS TAMBLYN J | John W Winters j & Company I Exclusive Sales Agent for Southgate Homes and Cedarwood Country Estates CALL US NOW! J. Samuel Hewitt—Joseph Winters—Alfouza Thorpe JOHN W. WINTERS & CO. 507 E. Maftin Street Dial 828-5786 §III^I^tCWB»96S^aS3SSS3«aCaaBS!BS^^ brownFs 1 PROPERTY MANAGEMENT f AND INVESTMENT COMPANY f Building For The Future" WHO’S BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE? Attorney and Mrs. George R. Greene—2loo Lyndhursi X Drive .Raleigh, N V. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond K. Callaway—Beachwood-Park jg •Subdivision Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Jefferies—Beaehwood Park Sub- g division Mr, and Mrs, James Paul Perry 7OB Sherry Brook S Drive, Raleigh. N. C. | H.A. GOODSOK - BUILDER Call 882-1811 cr 832-1814—231 South East Street. J. HENRY BROWN, President Agent tor Southgate Apartments -B tes, Baltimore, Md.; the High way Q. C.’s, Chicago, 111.; and the Sensational Nightingales, Philadelphia. Serving as master of cere- i monies for this gigantic gospel ’ test will be Charles (Chuck Blake) Blalock. Tickets may be purchased at Hamlin Drug Store and the other usual places around the city and county. SPORTSMAN’S I CORNER^ by Clark Webster, Remington Wild Life Expert Why Do Men Hunt? One obvious answer is that they enjoy it. But exactly what do they enjoy about it? The shoot ing' of a firearm? That can be done at ciav targets or on the rifle range. The taking of game? Then how do you explain the deer hunters who return empty handed year after year, yet keep going hack? Perhaps then, it’s the companionship of fellow hunters. The escape from a desk or business pres sure:-, from air-polluted cities. All of this is part of it. \\ e at Remington Arms Com pany believe that it’s also the challenge of hunting that men enjoy. Bui even more than that is the basic need and desire for a close association with nature. Man can never be completely separated from land and forests he will always try to retrieve, or retain part of them. In the largest cities, he will set aside land for parks. Others will com mute for miles and hours from their jobs to maintain a small plot of grass and trees. Still others wili drive an hour to roach their favorite grouse cover, or all day to reach the domain of the white-tail deer, or ily across a continent to reach a particular spot in the Rockies. Man will continue to visit his <”ty parks. To tend his patch of grass, to seek the solitude of the fm'osi ... to hunt. Why hunt? the past 75 years and will con tinue to do so as long as there remains a potential in any product for property damage and personal injury or death. In maintaining its policies as a public service organiza tion, the Laboratories is ini tiating a series of informative articles Every article will be directed at enlightening the reader of the many aspects of safety and the part UL plays therein. Underwriters’.also ex tends an invitation for sug gested safety topics of interest to the reader. Requests having greatest significance will be selected and ultimately ap pear as an article. Address re quests to: Public Information Office. V ruler writer s’ Labora tories 277 F. Ohio St.. Chica go. Illinois 11. FOR REPAIRS TO ANY TV PHONOGRAPH TAPE RECORDER TRANSISTOR RADIO ANY SMALL APPLIANCE CALL TE 2-3950 -OR YA 8-2343 TAYLOR RADIO & Electrical Co. "The House That Service” Built” 224 E. MARTIN ST.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 6, 1969, edition 1
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