THE CABOLDilAN
KAI.KIGH, N.C . SATUKDAY. FKBRUAKY 10. 1070
was her mother I didn't talk to
her at that lime because I was
too nervous."
Mrs. Robinson arrived at the
hospital around 6pm. and went
in and talked to her daughter.
“She was in full consciousness
and I asked her what happened.
She told me she was shot by a
boy and I asked her if she knew
the boy and she said yes. he was
in her class Then 1 asked her if
they had been fighting and she
never gave me an answer. Ry
that lime the doctors were there
to take her up to the operating
room "
While Mrs. Robinson was still
at the hospital, she said she
received a call from one of the
parents of the bo\ who is
believed to have done the
shooting ”1 didn't talk to the
parent but instead by sister in
law. Mrs. Shirley Jarnigan.
look the telephone call She
went by the parents' home and
they told her they didn't know
where or how he got the guii noi
did Ihev know where he was
now. They said they didn t know
anything of his whereabouts
They told her how sorr> lhe\
were that the incident had
happ«‘ned
Mrs Robinson visited her
daughter earl> Wednesday
morning but at the advise ot the
nurse did not ladher to talk to
her daughter about the incident
any more
Howevei. Mrs. Robin.^oii did
talk to the doctors at the
hospital and they told her it
would be some lime before they
were able to determine whether
the operation was a success or
not • But at this time. I would
have to say she is doing about as
well as can be expected. ' Mrs
Robinson slated
APPRECIATION
ifontmui-d from pago li
vini- advertisement on page 12
of The CAKfll-IMAN Iasi week
and came in and properU
identified herself to win $in
LOCAL GIRI-
(t^ontiniied from page 1)
l..aiigston reported that both
students were in EMR classes
together. He stated that he
checked with all teachers
Wednesday morning and no
type of incident was reported to
have occurred at anytime
Tuesday while the students
were in class.
A CAROLINIAN reporter
talked to the members of the
Robinson family Wednesday
about the incident and they
were unable to pinpoint a
reason for the shooting. They
told ihis reporter that the time
the incident occurred was a
normal lime for Diane to be
coming home frnm school
“I asked Diane to come
straight home from school but
normally she slops at the store
and talks to her friends before
coming^ome." .Mrs Robinson
said. "She would normally he on
her way home froi.. school
about the time the incident
happened"
"1 don't know anything about
the boy who did the shooting or
his family." Mrs. Robinson
stated. "As far as I know Diane
didn't have any dealings with
him Of course she is not dating
age and no boys come to the
house to see her But before this
incident I have not heard
anvihing about this boy
Mrs Roberta Durham.
Diane’s aunt who also lives at
the same address, was the first
one in the family to learn of the
accident She reports she
received a telephone call about
five minutes after three from a
girl who described herself as a
friend of Diane and told her
about the shooting.
While she was getting ready
to go to the hospital. Raleigh
police came by the house and
told her to get to the hospital as
quick as possible. Between
intervals. Mrs. Durham report
ed she received several other
phone calls from persons trying Heilig-Levi
to tell her about how the '
shooting happened and each
telephone call produced another
version of the incident.
When Mrs. Durham arrived
at the hospital she learned that
Diane was in the emergency
room "When I went in to see
her. she was asking me where
located at the
corner nt Wilmingloii and
Hargett Streets, has a prc-in-
venlorv ot room groups ol
furniture as low as Whti.M
The ad lor Wareliousc of lire.
Inc . 32,1 S I’crson Sired al the
corner ol K ' Davic
carried the name ol .Mr.
Rhodes Rhodes resides at l(l.ifi
(f'onlinueo Irom page 1'
Malone Place. Warehouse of
Tires guarantees recapped tires
w ith no trade in required. Also
they have a complete line of
new and used tires at low
prices.
remember that the deadline for
claiming your money is noon on
the Monday following the
appearance of your name in the
paper. Ihis week on page 12.
The CAROLINIAN WILL
NOT PAY Appreciation Money
to survivors of deceased
persons whose names happen to
be chosen out of the City
Directory as are all of the
names
COLLEGE HEAD
iContiniipH from page 1)
college.
College officials admitted
earlier this week the existence
of a present cumulative deficit
nt $:n2.t>00. Student sources
claim the situation is so serious
that Voorhees may have to
A i.Mjnr complaint against
the presei'it administration is
that the present deficit has not
been erased.
Trustees point out that all
predominantly black colleges
are having financial problems,
ri.ey say the outlook to reduce
the deficit is good, but they
admit they have not specific
plans tn raise the money.
Voorhees is a 76 year old
predominantly black college
supported by the Episcopal
Church,
WHICH WAY?.
.Ciiniimicd trnm page 1)
lilack pow er . " He quit SNCC in
liHi7 and for a time was prime
minister of the Black Panthers,
liul left that group in 1%9 when
they expressed willingness to
ally themselves with white
radicals In the ensuing years
he has taken up residence in the
West .African country of Guinea.
He returned to the U.S. in
November. 1972, as exponent of
a "Pan Africanism" philosophy
which calls for increased
awareness and acceptance by
American blacks of the culture,
heritage and ideals of Africans.
f’harlayne Hunter Galt
s[iarked a national cause
celebre as the first black
woman to attend the University
of Georgia, from which she was
graduated in June, ' •63. She is
currenllv on leave oi absence as
chief of' the New York Times
Harlem Bureau
loiind "about" a pound" ol
marijuana in a raid yesterday
at the home of Charles James
Barker, HI, 19, al 903 Ferncrest
Drive.
“We recovered most of this
from a commode in the
bathroom. It wouldn't flush
away,” Officer R. L. Ray said,
pointing to a large bag of
marijuana allegedly belonging
to Barker.
Barker, a native of Rhode
Island and listed as "unemploy
ed," was jailed in lieu of bail for
his appearance in District Court
on Feb 22 for a preliminary
hearing.
Four men were charged with
“manufacturing marijuana"
and possession of marijuana
with intent to distribute when
vice squad agents, assisted by
County ABC officers, raided
Apt, ll-H Charlestown Apart
ments at 8 p.m. Friday, reports
stated.
Placed under $5,000 bond each
were Robert Waldron Driver,
19; Gregory Lee Brown, 18;
Robin Derrick Willins. 20; and
Frnest Lance Dickinson. 21. all
listed as residents of the
apartment.
HHH ASKS
‘Continued from page 1)
population size or between
public and private nonprofit
agencies," he explained.
“It also sets a level of
authorization that meets the
test of fiscal responsibility.
Funds are to be allocated fairly
among and within the states
’ ith assistance that is directly
proportional to local needs. But
no state shall receive less than
$1.5 million in any fiscal year."
The Employment Opportuni
ties Act requires that special
consideratio.T will be given to
the job needs of Vietnam-era
veterans, a priority that Hum
phrey regards as “essential ’
“But the immediate and
central goal of this program."
he said “is the provision of
badly needed jobs that are also
of critical Importance to our
communities in their efforts to
maintain and improve public
services."
Finally, the Humphrey em
ployment bill draws upon
provisions in the Employment
and Manpower Act, vetoed by
President Nixon in 1970, to
authorize the establishment of a
National Council of Manpower
Advisors.
POLICE
C<>«>n«vio»d Co.
Nr*
».-• Co.
Ko'oigh
Ret.o>OA Co.
«e V V- •
r , <
Ven-O Co.
He--*’' Co
TCrAii
749 7?.»
?05
iM A" a
14$ 44.6
4’ 70 1
9
04 3S.9
1«3 25.0
213 93.6
222 ’I.I
109 IIJ
no 39.0
1S.4
4SJ
ir 59a
236 20X
7j£ 9«.2
'/ 2i.'
U- 440
’3 32J
P6 23.1
P6 34.6
2»» 22.5
98 IBJ)
*04 34.9
30 13.7
ISO 46 9
11’
1,503 606? M.6I4
A. 10?
SOUTHERN FURNITURE
GIVES ffl - THEIR CUSTOMER
• BBAND NAAAE FURNITURE.
• LOWEST PRICES.
• tJQ HIGH PRESSURE.
• EBE£ PARKING—BESIDE STORE.
• EBEE DELIVERY & SET UP.
»TERAHST0(3)YEARS.
*68 YEARS IN SAAAE AREA.
» OPEN DAILY & FRIDAY NIIEL
IT ALWAYS PAYS TO:
SHOP & COMPARE
BEFORE YOU
BUY ANYWHERE
SOUTHERN FURNITURE
Since 1905
113 S. Wilmington — Raleigh — 832-3252
into a utility polo
He was taken to North
Carolina Memorial Hospital,
where he sutcumbed six hours
later.
Hargraves was an employee
of the Chapel Hill Post Office
and was a member of the
Chapel Hill Recreation Com
mission.
Surviving are his widow. Mrs.
Glenda Hargraves of the home;
one daughter. Miss Varnita
Hargraves; one son, Malcolm
Hargraves of the home, and a
stepson Myles Perry of Chapel
Hill; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Hargraves of Chapel
Hill; one sister, Mrs. Alice
Geraldine Bynum of Durham.
GRANDOi. ane-c-i tifcrtni nr i.iv irxGSTONE - Al recent Livingstone College Day Observance at
Soldier's Memorial AME Zion Church. Salisburv. N.C.. Miss Julia B. Duncan (R), long-time Registar
at the college, is presented a plaque bv Mrs. Lula B. Holloway, secretary in the Office of the
Registrar in appreciation for her nearlv 50 years of dedicated service to her Alma Mater. < Photo by
LINCOLN
tinuea from paj
'< intinued trom cage 1)
A North Carolina Central
University student, Craig Ber
nard Parker, 20, of Rt. 1,
Jacksonville, N.C., who was
named in a drug warrant
following a raid in December,
surrendered to vice squad Sgt.
J. C. Fuller at the Durham
County Courthouse at 10:45 p.m.
Friday, reports stated.
Lassister said two other
youths were arrested during the
raid, but Parker was not at
home at the time and had been
sought for several weeks.
Vice Squad Lt. Talmadge
Lassister said uniformed police
and vice agents observed one of
the three men pick up a quantity
of marijuana which had bMn
left at the drop zone by
unidentified persons.
The car, allegedly driven by
McGill, was stopped at the
intersection of Umstead and
Sawyer Streets at 6:30 p.m. and
an emergency search report
edly uncovered 15 grams of
marijuana, according to of
ficers.
■JcGiH’s 1965 car was confis-
I >i'i d ind the three were jailed
in Leu if bond for appearance at
aprtli inay hearing Feb. 28 in
District Cour'
Vice agent*- '■epQ.rted _they
(Continued from page 1) .
be completed Monday when the
trustees will sign the deed.
The last vestige is not on the
horizon. Even though Lincoln
becomes a part of a central
county hospital, joining witl;.
Watts in a $18 million dollar
project, the conditions of the
contract, set out the fact that
the Lincoln Community Health
Center, a federally supported
clinic, serving the predomi
nantly black, low-income com
munity in southeast Durham,
would be permitted to continue
at Lincoln with the privilege of
free housing, after the corpora
tion took control of the hospital.
The trustees of the County
Hospital Corporation agreed to
this stipulation until such time
as the new hospital was opened.
DR. HOLLAND
(Continued from page 1)
of North Carolina, Kaieign.
A 1970 Pulitzer Prize Play,
“No Place to Be Somebody,”
will be presented on Thursiiay
evening, February 15, at 8:00
p.m. also in Emery.
Friday, February 16, there
will be a bonfire on the Athletic
Field from 6:00 p.m. to 7 p.m,
followed by a student dance and
show featuring the Bar-Kays
Band, in Emery.
The Homecoming Parade will
leave the campus. Saturday,
February 17, at 10:00 a m. and
will end at 12 noon.
The Board of Governors
Meeting of the Alumni Associa
tion win held at 2 p.m. in the
College Union, Room 218.
The Homecoming Basketball
Game between ^int Augus
tine’s Falcons and the Shaw
Bears will be played Feb. 17. at
8:00 p.m. in the Dorton Arena.
Following the game an alumni
dance will take place at 10 p.m.
in the downtown Holiday Inn
Ballroom, and a student dance
will be held at the same hour In
Emery,
On Sunday, February 18. a
Founders' Day Worship Service
at 11:30 a m. in the College
Chapel, will conclude the 106th
Founders’ Day Celebration
0. C. ^APER
(Continued from page 1)
address the mayor made to the
Metropolitan Board of Trade.
In his address the mayor said
Washington had "the opportun
ity not to become great, but the
greatest of all cities in America
And if we can’t do it. no city in
America can do it.”
The Post’s accolade to Mr.
Washington concluded editor
ially... ”ln the days leading up to
the start of his new term, Mayor
Washington has shown signs
that he is eager to reinvigorate
the government and the com
munity. His speeches have been
lively, his mood confident dnd
his agenda more ambitious. We
are pleased by the prospects for
unprecedent^ personal leader
ship on the part of Mayor
Washington and hope that he
will make the most of it.”
(Continued from page 1)
speed of 80 to 90 miles per hour.
It w-as reported that Hargraves
lost control of the car, causing it
to leave the road and crashing
NKW APPOINTEE - Walter A.
Walker. Administrative Officer
at Hampton Institute was
recently appointed by (Jov.
I.inwood Holton to the Virginia
Equal Employment Opportuni
ty Committee. The committee
will hold its first meeting in
Kichmond on or about February
16.
U. S. &AT&T
(Continued from page 1)
have been denied promotions,
transfers or higher salaries
because of discrimination.
The agreement also includes
an unprecendented new restitu
tion feature that gives about $4
million to employees who would
have had faster promotions and
higher salaries had they been
covered by the new agreement
up to two years ago.
The agreement was signed for
ATiT and its 24 operating
companies. Vice President
David Easlick said the agree
ment represented ”a more
precise understanding” of the
new anti-discrimination laws.
It also prohibited companies
from using the results ()f
pre-employment tests as justi
fication for failing to meet the
CLUB NEWS
LETTERS PROTESTING REDUCTIONS - CHICAGO: Othello R. Ellis, executive director of the
Abraham Lincoln Center, in Chicago sorts through hundreds of letters being readied for mailing to
President Nixon. Ellis said the letters protest the proposed reductions in federal funding to Head
Start and day care programs. (I'PI)
agreed goals in elimination of
discrimination.
The telephone company has
promised to establish “goals"
for hiring and promoting
minorities and women in 700
corpoiation facilities across the
nation
— Mi III '
’’Prohibition may be a dii-
puted theory, but none can
complain that it doesn’t
hold water. ”fTom Masson)
WARRENTON - The Frank-
linton Branch of the National
Association of College Women
held its regular session in the
Warrenton Baptist Church Sun
day.
Devotions were led by Mrs. G.
P. Davis. The president, Mrs.
Peggie Kearney, presided over
uie business session. Various
committees made their reports.
Plans were made for visiting
the various centers which
receive support from the
CONTRIBUTIONS FOR DAY CARE CENTER — Drifters
Beatrice McWilliams. Nancy Iredell and Ruby Greene hold pari of
the items thev gathered for the New Bern Avenue Day Care Center.
Conlributing’these items to the New BErn Avenue Day Care Center
was one of the projects the club undertook this year
“A miracle is an honest,
jeweler. car*mechanic, or
T.V, repairman." (Hyman
Maxwell Berstnni
r
1
Irt thi "WATCHDOG" [
Kmp you Wmth *11 Whrttr I
Correspondence was reac
from the sectional director,
Mrs. Bessie Richards. The
N.A.C.W. camper will be
selected from Wake Co' .ty for
1973.
After the business session, the
hostess served cheese straws,
miniture sandwiches, cookies,
candy, nuts and hot chocolate.
Members attending were
Mesdames A. B. Branch, G. P.
Davis, M. H. Davis, V. C.
Henderson. L. T. Holt, B. L.
^rgailzation^XrisittoMurdiik Ingram, E. F. Johnson M. L.
Center and the John Umstead ^
Center will be made on March 4
ACMCREAITYCO.
neai eCTATC MOTALS-BUILDINO
REAL ESTATE ajjd repairs-
PROPERTY management
FIRE—HOME—AUTOMOBOC
INSURANCE AND WINDSTORM
Call Us For Information
ACK RCALJYCO.
If you’re
{looking for low
I monthly
1 payments, you
I should look at
Ikingwood
I Coll 828-0538
tSJ
Kvorvthing For...
mii-DiNr.
rkmodklinc
•I I.IMItt It
t « .Mil I.W.ORK
• ATIIKV’K I’XIVTS
• III II.DINfi MXThRI.\L>
• HI SSWIN IIXRDW.XRC
\l thir Ne« I oration On
R M.FIGII BKI.TI.INI
Carolina
Buildors Corp.
Between 1'. I
rh. 8‘>H-7471~Ral^l8h. >• ‘
Phone 832-0956
129 E HARGETT STREET
RALEICH. N. n
Duisn-nu
W«*ch rH (M«t wrr*c9. luM
—4 OB Bawk*
CAPITAL FUELOIL
ICE & COAL CO.
Eyeglasses
CONTAainSB
HEARING AIDS
Bring Your
Prescription to
HlJgiuiay
OPTICIANS, Ine.
FIRST IN THE CAROLINAS
MUIQH—PrafMriMBl
MIW<ai..l9l BtMnnwM.
WMr OlfiMH oKEinnux
OURNSaORO-CBARLOTtR,
arrangements
I
... w* welcom* yowr
inquiries. So often
people are faceil with
their lack of knowledge
at a time when making
decisions is necossary.
It's wise to be aware
of whot has to be
done, before death
Jlayww? Funeral Home,
Over a hall century of service to Raleigh and cSBM
Raleigli Mutual Burial AssociaUii
Low Cool Funeral Insurant AvatoMa
322 E. CABARRUSS]^^H^iSM^^M