Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 31, 1971, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
100 YEARS OF NAAC'P SFR\ ICE-The two persons shown on the left and right ot this picture, Alexander Barnes and \V. Manee Gilliam, have given 50 years o! serviee each to the NAACP. They joined as students at Livingstone College in 1921. They are shown holding p’aques given at the recent national convention, held in Minneapolis. Thomas Royster, center, is holding a plaque given the Durham Branch for its monthly newsletter. Ba rues is president 0 f the Durham Branch. Royster i s i one ol the vice presidents and Gilliam is membership chairnvn. Visit Os Blacks Returned As Japanese Youth Team Visits NEW YORK-A mixed Koroan- Japanese youth team ha s a i r ived in the United States to study mi nority communities and civil rights programs in Chicago and Newark. The team’s two-m nth trip is sponsored jointly by the Nation al Christian Council of Japan, the Urban Ministry Association of Chicago, the Presbyterian Community Center of Newark, and the United Presbytei ian Of fice of Interchurch Action-- a unit of the Commission on I cu , menical Mission and Relations J (COEMAR). The team of t’oui' young Ko reans and Japanese is lead ho stile Rev. Hyung Kvu Hong, chap late of Ohmi-Kyodai-Sha school of Ohimi-Hachimon City, Japan. Their visit to Chicago ana New ark is the result of a trip last year by five young Black people from Chicago who wen* to Japan for the purpose of discussions with ethnic minorities there. The Korean-Japanese team is being hosted throughout July by the Rev. Virgil Patterson, di rector of the Urban Ministry Association of Chicago; Mrs. Veronica Wade, director of Housing on the Southside; and the Rev. Caroline Hampton, U nited Presbyterian chaplain for Cook County Jail. Assisting Mr. Patterson -.vd. lie the Rev. Aki Makino, a Nisei pastor assign ed to the night stree ministry on Chicago’s southside. The team will hold discus sions with organized groups in Black and Spanish communi ties, Including such programs as ’’operation Bread Basket’’ headed by the Rev. Jess-' Jack son. ” In August, team metiers will be guests of the United Pres byterian Com 11111 ity Center of Newark. In addition to get tins - , acquainted with community projects, they will meet with Mayor Kenneth Gibson, first T In an emergency, the first thing yon reach for is a telephone. You take it for granted that there will always be someone at the phone company y to help you get through to the right people. You can take it for granted because we don’t. ■ (2) Southern Befi Black mayor to be elected in that city. Last summer, five Black y oung people from Chicago vi ited Japan under the leader shin of the Rev. Leon Fan niel (now on the staff of the Southern California Synod of the United Presbyterian Church). They went by invita tion of the Japanese National Christian Council for discus sions with minority groups in that country. Japan has more than 000,000 Koreans, most of them laborers or engaged in Rea! Estate Profiteering The council report discusses the problems of neighborhood organizations in dealing with the harrussing techniques of prof iteering real estate dealers. More than twenty-five such or ganizations exist in the South. “T.i ■ long range success of any neighborhood organization de pends on the degre > of coopera tion it receives from local poli tical and business leadership in helping reshape tho directions in which Black expansion is per mitted to develop. ” White panic is not necessarily an automatic response to the en try of Blacks into a previously all white neighborhood, the re port declares. “Some whites may decide to stay in their communities be cause they like where they live and its convenience within the city, because they might al ready have paid off their mort gage and do not want to incur another elsewhere on a higher interest market.” The report cites the bitter ness that whites in such neigh i erhoods feel toward blockbust ing real estate agents. “I have been harrassed,” one resident reports, ‘-until it has been det rimental to mv health.” The SRC report tells of an other socially low occupation who were brought to Japan dur ing the Japanese occupation of Korea. Mainly due to social preju dice, and also because ofcer t tin aspects of the Japanese immigration law, Koreans in Japan have been discriminated against, particularly in the areas of employment opportuni ties and housing, Japan has other ethnic minority groups such as the "Buraku-min’* (social out casts for many centuries), Tai wanese residents and o a cer tain degree Okii avails. incident in which a real - state company brought pressure to bear on a neighborhood news paper which was doing research for an expose of blockbusting tactics. The story was sup pressed when threats were made to withdraw real estate adver tising and legal notices. for Hi lest Living Ii Raleigh Buy in Off SANDERFORD ROAD LAWSON-- 3 or 4 Bedrooms, Wall-to-Wall Carpet, 1 and \/ z Baths. Range. No Carport. $17,400.00-520,200.00. CRESTBROOKE - Split Level, 3 Bedrooms. No Carport. Downstairs may be finished. $19,450.00. Mi IME BY KINGSBERRY HOMES hmmmmmm l pAi T r\ Charlie Grant Jack Reed Neil Pearce V-/.rii_,i_ l U,/ 876-0887 787-9047 876-3954 VA OR FHA FINANCING Alcoholism Gets Provtnfivo Attention Under authority of public law M-GIG, the Civil Service Com mission has instructed Federal agencies to establish programs for the prevention and treatment of alcholism by December 1. Guidelines for such programs have been provided In Federal agencies. Proposed guidelines wore circulated for comment in April, and all suggestions were ji . i'ii careful consideration. Agency programs must contain the following policy elements: Ucohollsin is recognized as a t i eatable illness. Ucoholism is defined asan ill ness in which the employee’s joti performance is impaired as a dii ect consequence of the abuse ol alcohol, \n employee having an illness or othei problems related tothe use of alcohol will receive the same careful consideration and offer of assistance that is pre sently extended to employees having any other illness. The employing agency is not concerned with an employee’s use of alcohol except as it may affect his job performance of the efficiency of the service. No employee to whom the pro heducg, summer! tCOOUNG C^j|p GET THE MOST FROM’nEW AND OLD AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS.., PROTECT YOUR ROOF with n«ar VENT-A-MATIC ROOF MOUNTED AUTOMATIC POWER VENTILATOR FOR MORE INFORMATION, PHONE: 832-6661 - <d\foiwood, Oil Co, PETROtIUM PRODUCTS AND ACCESSORIES HEATING AND COOLING SERVICE 661 N. Went St. 32 Years In Raleigh gram applies will have his job security jeopardized by his re quest for counseling or referral assistance. Medical records of employees with drinking problems will ’be preserved in the same degree of confidence as all other medical records. Sick leave will be granted for treatment or rehabilitation on the same basis that it is grant ed In anv other Illness. Priests Say Give Moral NOTRE DAME, IND.-Thirty wmte priests completing a workshop here on ministering to the Black com iiunity have is sued a statement urging the Catholic Church “to give ade quate moral and financial sup port to the National Office for Black Catholics (NOBC).” NOBC and its executive di rector, Marlst Brother Joseph M. Davis, sponsored the “White Priest, Black Parish” program for participants representing 21 dioceses and six religious com "’unities from 15 states. i»R of Black leadership with Black Catholics.'’ h cent li-u< i, “We believe that tin- ork of Christ Is prlmarih .vithtlrdis- r " ' * V / TOWMTOWtT / "A CAMERON VILLAGE! Iff Cy NARIH. HILLS O i ; ©ur* have . ~ \\if ■ Wfp thi-' VfcoK. Q 1| Up ■ AH : t&rn? Wf/h *a®w ■ wf// | 2 ||| 5 DANFORTH— 3 Bedrooms, Wall-to-Wall Carpet. Range. No Carport $17,400.00. ni liJi K 1 JJ ■f W H i S» *si, ' feM!-::' > i . . !?!! I HANOVER - ! Bedrooms, 1 1 / 2 Baths, Carport, Large Storage Room. $19,450 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C , SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1971 Th'» statement said the priests ‘ accept and support the Vatican II prlnicple of like to like and fullv endorse the work enfranchised In their efforts toward liberation, that Is, as suring self-determination, self sufficiency. I yUMfill eUI|UIIM fkmm f FEATIfIES» I the comings lsttPßctionßi jef FAIL Ttj Bia all® wm*mm fiSw If stores tel 9
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 31, 1971, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75