2A —' THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, I JUNE IS, IMB The Human Carnage on Our Highways are satisfied that a majority of our readers will agree with us that the time has arrived in North Caro lina when some definite steps should be taken to halt the human carnage that is presently taking place on the public highways and city streets of this state. Whether it is within the province of the legislature to enact a law or laws that will prohibit the manufacturers of automobiles, that have a speed range up to 120 miles per hour, from selling such products in this state, is a matter that prob abliy involves legal processes which may or may not be achievable. We think, however, that such a possi bility needs to be explored, and that immediately. Frankly, we can see no need of an automobile having a speed range of over 75 miles per hour which is 10 miles in excess of that allowed on the average highway of the state, unless such an automobile is go ing to be placed on a race track, where those who desire to risk their lives in competing with one another in excessive speed races may do so at their own choosing. Certainly it must be agreed, therefore, that a privately owned car, whether for business or family use, has no need or reason to exercise speed beyond that allowed on the public highways of the state which, at the highest, is limited to 65 miles per hour. Proposed Hospital A Big Order Recommendations of the special Hospital Study Committee to the Durham County Commissoners that a new sl6 million general hospital be provided, along with renovations of Watts and Lincoln hospitals into "sub-acute and extended care facili ties" at an additional cost of $2.5 mil lion, or a total cost of $18.5 million, to say the least, is a big order. W helher the action of the commis sion will in the end prove to be one of wisdom, in the face of the pend ing changes in its membership that appears a certainty in the General JSlggtion. in November, may need con siderable study before it is approved. The results of the recent Primary appears to this newspaper to prove beyond a doubt that there is con Chapel Hill School Board Points the Way A letter to the CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY, appearing in the Wednes day, June 5, issue of that newspaper and written by one Mrs Jim Greene, which we are taking the liberty to reprint below, tells in more forcible terms than it is possibe for us to express the very advanced position Chapel Hill has achieved in the mat ter of integrating its public schools. As a matter of explanation, we think it well that we point out that th? tep.-h— Mr?. Mnry T Phelley's uH-niiua HI .Viia. Giceiio letter, is white while the principal of the school, Mr. Edmonds, to whom Mrs. Greene referred,. Is a Negro. Thus, as far as we have been able to ascer tain, Chapel Hill is pointing the way in North Carolina to honest integra tion of its public schools in that it Dear Sin: The end of Another school year rolls ■round ... a year during which I hare heard the Chapel HOI school* and their teachers severely criticized and condemned many times. I've even done my share of it, for I began the year with fear and trembling far all the bad experiences I had heard my child might have. I had grave misgivings and could musUr only slight optimism for the posiibility of her getting a good teacher. Now I would like to aay a few words of praise. Maybe it hasn't all been a bed of roses, and maybe you have felt that your child hasnt learned a thing, but look again at the achievements of our schools and teachers. Within the same 9 months which have brought teacher strikes and racial troubles to other parts of the nation, our schools have succeeded in the almost insurmountable task of total Integration! While last August's sun still burned hot, our teachers were attending special orientation sessions to help them In doing this job which "couldnt be done." And we did it! I've been many times this year to Frank Porter Graham School to pick up my fkst grader; I've stood there at the top of the hill when the doors opened and all those little bodies of "whoop and holler" come bounding up the hill toward home or ova. And I have yet to see this sight without feeling a thrU-and without hearing in my mind the words, "Black and white together, we shall overcome!" i This could not have happened in Chapel Hill without our teachers. Yes, aa you have surmised, my chHd has had a good year... and this brings me to my second word of praise. Publicly I exprees appreciation for Mrs. Mary T. ftOajr's creative and aensitive work and for Mr. We are satisfied! however, that there are those who will argue that there are extenuating circumstances or extreme instances, involving life and death, when the highest speed ob tainable of an automobile may be necessary. In reply to such persons we hold that no case involving the protection or safety of one's own life can become so extreme, that in the pursuit of such, he or she should be given the right to en danger the lives of others of their fellowmen. Add to the 120 miles per hour obtainable by most of the automo biles manufactured and sold with out restrictions in this and other states, the awesome problems of the speeding drunken driver on the public highways, and it must be agreed that the present situation de mands positive and immediate ac tion. In the case of drunken drivers, it is our feeling that more stringent laws against such should be enacted and more diligently enforced by those into whose hands such respon sibilities fall. Drunken drivers, when apprehended, should be made to feel the heavy hand of the law to the point of having their license per manently revoked, as well as suffer the heaviest fines and longest terms of imprisonment, possible under the law siderable disatisfaction within the ranks of the constituency of the pres ent Board of County Commissioners, which to some degree may be attri buted to such action over the years as that taken by the Board in the matter of the recommendations of the special Hospital Study Commit tee; actions to our way of thinking which do not presently represent the sentiment of a majority of the voters of the city and county of Durham. Thus, it already appears that an- bond issue that is badly needed for the improvement of hospital fa cilities for Durham is headed for cer tain defeat when it could be assured if only fair, proper and just proce dures were pursued. is the firat city of the state to have a Negro as the principal of a pre dominantly white public school both student and faculty-wise. So it is with a degree of pride that we point to our neighboring little city of Chapel Hill, in the operation of its public schools as setting an ex ample of interracial goodwill and co operation. By so doing, the Board of Education of Chapel Hill has proved beyond a doubt that where there is a will to do what is -right there is a way. Likewise we extend our con gratulations to the principal, faculty and students of the Frank Porter Graham School for the high plane on which they have conducted them selves and without which such could not have been achieved. Edmonds, the principal under whom she teaches. I suppose the success or failure of any given school year for a given rhiiH is influenced the most by the kidividual teaebw. If your year has been a had one because of a teacher, remember year is coming up. I know IH lave the opposite experience somewhere sometkne before all three of our children are through school, but for this year I want to say "thanks," and suggest that maybe ■ll of us could be an encouragement to teachers who face untold problems in these days just by "giving praise where praise is due" Lest my motive for wrttti* be miainderstood, I must mention the fact that we are moving away from Clwpei Hill. And one of the things well miss the most will be the Chapel Hill schools! Mrs. Jim Greene Flag Day Affirms Our Faith in U.S. "Flag Week" was proclaimed in Phila delphia last Tuesday to begin June 7th and to conclude with the observance of Flag Day on June 14. It is traditionally accepted that Betsy Ross, then living at 239 Arch at., was the maker of the first American flag. It waa in Philadelphia, Mayor Tate has re minded us in his proclamation, that the "Continental Congress resolved that the Stars and Stripes be adopted as the flag of the United States." The Outcry Against 'Crime In The Streets' I'm not too sure that you would write this in the paper but if you can write a lie, you can also write the truth. Yes, I worked at Watts and was fired, but I am proud of what I have done because I'm not afraid. But I would like to inform you that this is only the beginning. John Moulton has blamed the employees for endangering the health of the patients, but that is untrue, because we have written him and asked him to sit down and talk with us as a group, but all our letters were disregarded. So I will say that he is to blame for the patients' health being endangered. Moulton says that 19 of the employees walked off their jobs, but that is untrue, be cause out of the 88 dietetics employees there were only six there Tuesday to carry on. He said that he could not immediately determine how many were on vacation or on their day off, but that is very untrue because there are time sheets, vacation sheets, and a day-off sheet. If he's going to write something in the paper, why not the truth? He also said that the meals were served without difficulty and without additional help but that is also untrue, be cause Watts Hospital is the only hospital in North Carolina that doesn't have the help they should. If there are two people out sick, they don't have any one to take their place. So what do you think when there are 50 or 60 of their employ ees out of work? There was only one thing that we were asking for and that is every other weekend off to be with our families and to be able to go to church. Yes, I knew that to work in a hospital you would have to work on Sunday, but at the time I was hired we only worked two Sundays out of a month. So why can't they give It back to us? Yes, we are non professional, but we are not too nonprofessional to do their job and keep the patients din ing. And without these non professional employees, what Is a hospital? Okay, so we are out of a job. But, J. Moulton, Holt, and Miss F. Monroe— how well did you deep last night? And how do you feel to know that you have taken the food out of some child's mouth, and that moat of the people you have find wen the sole support of their families? So let me close by saying this: We an not afraid We shall overcome What will you tell your friends, your families and most of all youraehre*? Yea, you can be, and you can steal, but God is an equal God and He la not an unjust God. He la for us all. So I want you to nmem- ber always that you are to blame for what is happening, and you are taking a lot of lives Into your hands, because you could have sat down and talked with us just as well as you flred 19 of us. So may God bless you, but the same people you have walked on will be the same place you meet Him. Donethel Thomas, Watts Worker STATEMENT BY ASA T. SPAULDING, ON SENATOR KENNEDY'S ASSASSINATION v The assassination of Sena tor Robert F. Kennedy is an other tragic blot on our coun try, and is indicative of the cancer of bitterness, hatred, and lawlessness gnawling at the vitals of our nation. How we best respond to and treat this malady is of great concern to me. I am convinced that we must find a better way to settle our differences; other wise, they will destroy our democratic way of life. I shudder to think of the possibility of the future course of our government being chart ed more by the bullet than by the ballot. To the Kennedy family, I extend my heartfelt sympathy and my prayers. AM T. Spaulding It is the responsibility of the free press to persuade Car dinal Cushing to persuade Sen ator Ted Kennedy to run for President. Many political or ganizations have the visible re sources to lead our country. But only the Kennedy family and organization have the true understanding of tragedy nec essary to bring Martin Luther King's Dream down from Hea ven to this Earth. Only Cardi nal Cushing can certify that now is God's time for this to happen. Only the power of the press can give the American people the chance to vote their acceptance and approval of a politics of courage to overcome tragedy. F. E. SATTERTHWAITE 8 Fuller Road Wellesley, Massachusetts 02121 Housework Something a wife does that nobody notices tmlsss she doesn't do It. FvMkhtd tvtty Saturday at Durham, N. C. by Unltad Pubkthan, Inc. L. E. AUSTIN, fMUhm SAMUEL L. BRICCS Umrngtrng Editor J. ELWOOD CARTER. AdomtUn Seoond Class Postage Paid at Durham, N. C. 27708 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ff.oo par year plus (10c ta in N. C.) aaywlwie in the UJ., mi Canada and to aawrteaman Overseas; Foreign, $7.50 par year, Single copy 20a huuriL Own Loans AT 430 E. hnicaw Smnr, Dsaux, Noam Canorwa 27701 Assassins Kill John And Robert Older Brother Died In War; Spotlight Now On Edward Ted is the only one left. Of Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy's four sons, his hopes for whom were unlim ited, only the youngst Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. survives. TWO IUVK been murder ed assassifls and the third"' died a hero in World War 11. Now it falls to Tod to pick- " up the torch so tragical 1 y knocked from the handa oof his three older brothers. Be ing a Kennedy, 9nd the eon of a man who expects nothing less, he is sure to try. TED, WHO hates to be call ed "Teddy," turned 36 on George Washangt on't last birthday. He is a respect e d and liked member of the U. S. • Senate. * He was elected to the Sen ate in 1962 to fill the same aeat his brother, John, had given up for the presidency. In 1964, despite a close brush with death in a plane crash, he won reelection for a full term by an overwhelm in g margin. IN THE Senate, he has be haved as the establishment thinks a freshman senat or should quietly and dif fidently. Because erf this and his diligent work, he is more popular than Sen. Robert F. Kennedy ever was on Capitol Hill. Regarded as a team play er (Bobby was a loner) Ted heads judiciary subcommit tees on the aging and.oa ref ugees. He has made the prob lems of the refugees of the war in Vietnam his maj or concern. ALTHOUGH affable, smil ing and ensy-manncred in the Senate more so than either ef his broothers Ted has a voided the limelight. At th e beginning he was very con scious of being the Presidents younger brother. He is still the youngest member o the Senate and remembers. Like Roobert, Edward went to Harvard and then to the University of Virginia Law School. Ted had to work harder to get good grades than his brothers did. HE PROBABLY is a better athlete than they were. Of the four sons, Ted w a a probacy closest to the par ents, especially to Ma moth er, Rose. It was Ted who told them ef the aasasslnatloon in Del las. And it was Ted who had to tell them of the assassina tion in Los Angeles. • I V To Be Equal By WHITNEY M. YOUNG, JR. Teaching Negro History BLACK STUDENTS who have- been sitting-in and demon strating on many college campuses in recent months have many legitimate demands, but few are so obviously right as their demands for courses in Negro history and culture. • • ... find it hard to imagine how the intellectuals and J*. scholars who run our universities can resist instituting such courses. They aren't just for Negro students —they are for ,K all students since blacks and whites in America share a' com mon history. Because schools at all levels have refused to teach Negro history,. Americans of all races are ignorant about their own country's past. I'm convinced that pert of the problems HK we face today are directly related to the ■ way tihe school texts have erased the Ne gro contribution to America,' H People are always talking about the R. Pilgrims and the landing of the Mayflower. But how many know that Negroes weve »n. America long before the English? In W f ac t j g Relieved that a navigator in Co lumbus' little fleet that discovered America Mr. Young in 1492 was a black man. Neoroes Jn American History Negroes were with the Spanish explorers who discov ered the Pacific Ocean, Mexico, South America, and .the American West Esteban, a black man, was the first non- Indian to set foot on present-day Arizona and New Mexico. And he was just the first great Negro explorer. Closer to our own day,. Matt Henson was the first explorer to reach bhe North Pole, although he doesn't figure in the history books which give all the credit to Admiral Peary. Nor do the textbooks mention that the first settlers in what is now Chicago, was a Negro Jean Baptiste due Sable. From the way the newspapers play up the Negro fight ing man in Vietnam (quite rightly too) you would think that Negroes never fought in America's other wars. But black men took part in every single war America ever fought. Crispus Attucks, a runaway slave, was the first casualty in what became the American Revolution, killed by a British bullet in the Boston Massacre. Black men fought at Lexing ton, Concord, and Bunker Hill. They were with Ethan Allen's Green Mountain Boys, and were among the Minute men who responded to Paul Revere's famous midnight ride. And they were at Washington's side at Valley Forge. Aibout 200,000 Negroes fought in the Union Armies dur ing the Civil War, figihting for their own freedom. Black units were with Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Or leans, with Teddy Roosevelt at San Juan Hill, and with Pershing in World War I. Benjamin Benneker, a famous Negro mathematician, was on the Commission that drew up the pJans for the city of Washington, D. C., and the poems of Phillis Wheatley, a slave, were read and admired in America and London. Even the shoes on our feet were made possible by th.e indention of a shoe-lasting machine by Jan Matzeliger, black man. Stop Teachina Such Lies Next time your kids come home from school and say they learned that slaves were relatively content with their lot, tell your local school authorities to stop teaching lies. In little ways, like damaging machines and playing dumb, and in big ones, like the Nat Turner revolt and the nearly 2250 other recorded rebillions, Negroes, resisted the slave system. The whole South was in terror of slave revolts, and even the defenders of slavery admitted that Negroes would take every opportunity to run away or to fight for their freedom. t . . »i • . ' flniW 11s way into American class rooms, but it should be taught. Negroes helped to build this country. Our blood was shed in its wars, our sweat was shed in the unpaid labor that its prosperity depended on, and our tears were shed in the countless brutalities of racism For good or ill, the history of America is a history of the relations between blacks and whites, and no amount of falsified teaching or censorship of the past can erase the glorious contributions of Negroes to the American past and present. TF HTWTOKK BANKET* W YOU CAN PROVE YDU PONY NEED IT/ ?O>A/T/A,4iUTAL T ~" Wf\% RAKMfrOWWS T&IWKtt)S/% ; S| wtty ponV You IHVITB hA Vol*. FKI6WS T> .*_ An Interest In Their Friends