4,501 Rate Relations Center Declares Thirty-Five Black Colleges Are Losing Staffs '•' ■ | S|ii n J 1 * 1 ’ T; ' K| S TC * LI ; -- Here are some of the remains of Dove Music Co., and Eddie’s Third <• of Tim Most Exquisite In Low-Priced Appliances ) Sweepstakes Hold on to your valuable Sweepstakes numbers which will be worth a lot of money when the Sweepstakes Promo tion is resumed. The award ing of prize money has been temporarily halted, but con l Inue to patronize the fine mer chants who liave continued to ven in the organization and op eration of the North Carolina State Bar, which has com plete authority and control over all licensed attorneys in the State, Black attorneys are ex cluded from active participation in the functioning of the North Carolina State Bar: And where General Motors Gives 75GsToTheUNCF New York, N. Y. - Genera M otors Corporat ion has donut - ed $75,000 to the 1071 cam paign of the United Negro Col lege Fund, a 25 r ,' increase fl yer last year, it was announc ed this week. Vernon E. Jordan, Jr,, ex ecutive director of the UNCF, expressed the Fund’s gratitude for the gift which, Mr. Jor- make this page possible. The sweepstakes Spotlight this week falls on Thompson- Lynch Co., at 20 West Har gett St., which Is open even ings by appointment. All ad vertisers appreciate your business. as the members of the Associa tion are. keenly aware of the im portance of the judicial system in every undertaking to elimin ate race as a basis of relation ships and human endeavors in our society. Now, therefore, be it resol ved *bit the members ofthe.As (See ASSOCIATION, P. 2) dan says, brings GM's contri butions over the years to the UNCF, to $1,200,000. * , ; ‘Wo are tremendously in-- spired b\ this support from one of the greatest corpora tions in the world,*' Mr. Jor dan said. Richard C. Gerstenberg, vice chariman of GM and vice chairman of the UNCF's Na tional Corporations Commit tee, said his company feels its contributions to the UNCF are “more of an investment than (See GM GIVES. P 2) Zion Church Holds NX. Conference SALISBURY - Delegates from Connecticut to South Caro lina were on hand at I.ivinstone’s Hood Theological Seminary for the two-dav planning conference or evangelism which end ed Friday, June 25. And if all goes according to plan, theAME Zion Church will witness many Innovative ways of serving hu manity over the next several years. Purpose of the planning con ference was to engage In in depth study of means of making (flee ZION CHURCH, P. 2) 4 rea Residents Say Apollo Heights Needs Hay Areas 1.. 1 '.'i.mi .•.••"*•• ■•• - v.'Ay- 1 11. 1 ,' ■ 1 pwpp—WWP—PMPPP— WM ,mMQhmit\M vol. an. no. as kalfigh. n c. week ending Saturday,July 3, 1971 single copy ls c Owner Notifies Cops After Man Y \ 5V* d .' I - 5\ j,cA „r ’ •■•”■ -:. /($ 5 ;Av '■'■•wA <&••; $ ijtr t \•• Y Wi f \i Jin i\r iiiiiii f :: UrLIiIIIWL 1 jn.i \ :• ,M - L‘W A t L-4' • sy ‘ai-.V 5i '■ * V Arson Noted As Fire Destroys Dove’s Music Co. Goes l Ip In Flames A fire gutted the Dove Music Company ;tt 12 W V Unit:i rrjs St. last Friday morning to the tune of about $124, 000, Arthur Dove had been in the location adjacent to the Lincoln Theater for more than 35 years. He said he was home asleep when he heard (See MUSIC CO., p. t) Unique Portrayal Concluded Thq Reading Institute at Saint Augustine’s College presented a student teacher demonstra tion Monday, June 28, when Dr. Minnie T. Forte, associate professor of education, sixteen institute participants, and nine children wore involved in the input session. “Helping Chil dren With Reading D i s a b i 1 i ties” was the topic that was demonstrated at this session. Mrs. Ruth &. Boyd from Dur ham read ‘‘Teacher, If you Was Me," by Ka\ Blagney. Miss Barbara 1 arp of Clay ton ;-ead ‘‘l run Proud I’m a Teacher.” Miss VirginiaMc- Latiring oi Bladen County read (s.. UNItOUE. I*. Z) Tf.ACHFU CONFRONTS WALLACE - Montgompr)', A U.: Governor George c. Wallace (r) met with key legislators and officials of the Alabama Education Association behind closed doors June 2f* to discuss a possible reduction in state support for the teachers' retirement system. Af ter the meet ing Gov. Wallace held a hallway news conference where he praised withholding hall of the state’s contribution from the teachers’ retirement system to pump money into the mental health program, a plan which is denounced by teachers. During the news conference Gov. Wallace was confronted in a black toacher, Irvin Smith, vice president of the Birmingham chapter of the* American Federation of Teachers(l), who asked the Governor why he was using the retirement funds as a ‘‘political football.” (UPI). North Carolina's Leading Weekly JSlWl| w -ii 1 ’ -w W- Mjplf if' v # ’ 'ijjnsyJ »’ , n \a ; * Made I l liik s.#> ; |5 ~ PEARLIE P. WILLIAMS Say Man Killed In Miss. MISSISSIPPI - The FBI has turned over to Mississippi authorities evidence that a Sumner, Miss., black, who the Tallahatchie County sheriff said had died of “natural caus es," was actually shot to death. The evidence will be presented to the Tallahatchie County (Sec SAY MAN, p. 2) ’YM’ Boys Going To Washington The Bloodwortn Strain Y.MCA Boys Day Camp has scheduled a chartered bus trip to Washing ton, D. C, for Friday, July 16 after spending a night in the AM' BOYS. P 21 Say Two Dressed As Women Pearlie Purcell Will iams, 42, whose last known address was Garner, died after hav ing received injuries all over his head and chest early Sunday night, believed to have been inflicted by a two by two stick of wood. James Edward Plummer, owner of the Crossroads Inn, fSoe SLAIN BEHIND, P. 2) Treatment Centers For Vets Set DURHAM-Stanley D. Morse, Director of the Durham Ve terans Administration Hospi tal, said the VA plans to open 27 drug treatment centers within the next two months. Fourteen centers are sche duled for opening next month, and 13 more are planned for opening by Oct. 1, he said. Five specializing drug centers have been in operation for about six months, one of them, at the Washington, D.C., VA Hospital, since October 3970. The other four are located at New York City, Houston, Bat tle Creek, Mich., and Sepul veda, Calif. (Kit CENTER EOR *». 2> pia "nil— - —» ANGELA’S CO-DEFENDANT ARRESTED FOR MURDER - San Rafael: Rucholl Magee is chained to his chair after ar riving in the cortroom in the Marin Cann t y Courthouse where he and co-defendant An gela Davis are standing trial on charges of niurdei and kid napping. (UPI) Radiothon Gets Good Support BY uJRETON LEE JOHNSON The members of the Apollo Heights Hornobuyers Associa tion aren’t the type to sit by idly and wait Tor someone elso to hold their hand. Last weekend, the association sponsored a radiothon which netted funds and pledges foi the children’s educational smnrnei program. But the group hasn’t Drive At Tuttle is Underway The public phase of the $165,- 000 Tuttle Community Center Survival Fund began with a kick off meeting Tuesday ovenim in the amphitheatre at St. Augus tine’s College. The special gifts phase, chaired by Clarence Lightner, is the second and final segment of the drive to raise $165,000. Volunteer workers in this divi sion will lie responsible for the solicitation of small business firms and individuals in the Ra leigh area. The money will be used to build a new building, including 6 pre-school classrooms and a multi-purpose community ac tivities center at 310 N. Tar boro Road. Tuttle Community Center, a United Fund agency, is operating a child day care and community center in an anti quated wooden frame structure (flee T vmJt, P. a) f»| * . •> Iflixing, Stains A it Reasons NASHVILLE, Tetm.- I’lie 55 public colleges and universities which were created to serve black Americans “are in imminent danger ot v losing their identity thro ug ii integration, merger, reduced status or outright abolition, according to a report just released by the Hace Relations Infor mation Center (RRIC) in Nashville, Tenn. The black colleges, the re port says, “wpre designed to be separate and proclaimed to be equal, but none of them ever has been provided with the re sources or the support to a ohieve true parity with the col leges and universities created to serve whites.” The RRIC report, complied In John Egerton and Pat lira den, says ‘‘there is practical ly nothing to indicate that any of the states is committed to a guarantee of actual equality for any Hack college or university. A few of the institutions may have moved closer Jo that ideal, and some of the states have achieved substantial desegrega tion both ui their formerly all black and their previously all white colleges and universities, but tire prevailing pattern is one of racially separate and quali tatively unequal higher educa tion.'’ Three of the institutions - West Virginia State College, Bluefield, W. Va. State Col lege and I incoln University of Missouri - now have a ma jority of white students, and three others - Delaware State, Bowie (Md) State and Kentucky State - have white enrollments of over 30 per cent. Three s chool-M aryl an v State, Prairie View AvM (Tex.) and Arkansas A MAN - have been absorbed by larger and older niversities. 111 addition, 14 of the black institutions have direct com pet it ion from predominantly white state institutions located in the same cities and towns and 'at h ast (lire*- others are within easy commuting dis tance of a white college. In case studies of two black institutions Tennessee State (See 35 BLACK, P 2) Top Student Succeeding In Raleigh BY CUR ETON JOHNSON A lot can happen to a man in eight years, especially the eight years right after one leaves high school. \ young man who served as tlie presidqpt qf his senior class anil is chosen “most business like” by his peers is generally personable and a leader by ex ample. Wiliam i . Manuel, while go ing through the halls of Ligon High School like so maiiv other black Raleigh youths have done, served both nl these capacities. He was also a member of the drama gqlld, football team, track club and I squires Social order. But since leaving the hallow ,s,'e ■lor' s/imij.sr. p. 21 to IMF BEAT From RalcichA Official I'd.oe File* EDI Tim s NOTE: Tills coinal* or feat lire is produced in the pub lic interest with an aim towards eliminating its contents. Numer ous individuals have requested that they be given the considera tion of overlooking their listing on the police blotter. This we would like to do. However, it is not our position to be Judge or Ju ry. We merely' publish the facts as we find them reported by the arresting officers. To keep out of The Crime Beat Columns, merely means not being registered by a police officer in reporting his findings while on duty. So'sim ply keep off the “Blotter" and you won’t be in The Crime Beat. punched in nose Jimmy Brown, 26, 1107 S. Wtlmingtori Street, told Officer C.S, Carter at 9:45 p.m. Sun day, that he was walking in the 500 block of Bragg Street when he was attacked by a large Ne gro male. Brown said he was unable to see the man and could not give the officer a descrip tion. He was taken to Wake Memorial Hospital for treat ment of lacerations of the nose. <»<•* CHIME ©EAT, P. Sj