2A -THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1171 EDITOR I A LS Ike Edacitioi Cancer, A Familiar Story The fears and prejudices of man often seem cancerous when one looks at our process of school de segregation patterns. The purposes of all Supreme Court decisions are aimed at wiping out segregation in our public schools. Is this really true? Are leadership and power roles being gerrymandered as has often been the case in other situations? It appears that the majority group, north, south, east or west are deter mined that desegregation will re main minimal. Rulings will come from the Supreme Court, but those rulings will not stop the white flight to suburbia or stop those who will place their children in private schools. The majority group in U.S. cannot stand to be in a school, any school, or for that matter any board or com mission where blacks are in the majority. A part of the strategy of the majority group may be seen in the many elusive plans to prevent desegregation and true compliance with the law of the land. A. good example can be seen in Durham with the re-arrangement of the once powerful M e r r i c k-Moore High School and now in Raleigh with Ligon High School. The athletes and others from these schools have gone on to provide and bring many laurels to our city and state. Merrick- MoOre is now an elementary school and, Ligon High is in the process of being made into a junior high if cur rent plans are carried out. High school is the place and time when, the greatest leadership poten tial \is developed. By reducing the former high schools to elementary and junior high school levels helps only to give added strength to the majority group 'as they consolidate ana work hard to keep all leadership rol«s jP°wer continued. Migrant Camps And Sanitatation Facilities The defeat of a bill in the Senate toj|upgrade sanitation standards in migrant camps is an insult to com mon cleanliness, possible pollution, ecological damages and environ mental health by the North Carolina eaitern legislators. simple measure that would have limited the use of toilet facili ties to 15 persons (that is one toilet for every 15 persons instead of one toilet for 20 persons) was opposed by Senator George Woods, Demo crat of Camden, and joined in by Sehator John Burney of New Han over. .Senator Woods, who operates a migrant camp on his potato farm, has been quoted as saying that the increased regulations on migrant housing and other hardships farmers A Giant Of The Music World The passing of Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong leaves a void in the world of Jazz as well as a loss of one of America's greatest ambassadors of goodwill around the world. His trail of musical legacy, provided by his golden trumpet, spanned from the ghettos of New Orleans to the top show pinnacles of the world. "Satchmo," as his friends called him, and his golden horn fascinated millions on five of the earth's con tinents including the Iron Curtain. As an ambassador of goodwill, with the touch of his lips to his trumpet, he has left his imprint on jazz music in the annals of history, and most CRUM/WBLL^mJ OF PURE NEGRO BLOOI}/tIT WAS DUE TO HIM AND H.H. GARNET THAT THE ACADEMY AT CANAAN, N.H. WAS CLOSED IN 1834/ EDUCATED IN THEOLOGY AND CLASSICS AT CAMBRIDGE U.„ENGLAND All educators know this and it has purposely been directed at many black principals and black coaches as well. These fears and prejudices are carried even further when one realizes that the top sportsmen in athletics are in most instances black. Is this a calculated and coldly plan ned game to dilute the black leader ship role of power and model image? Many suburbanites complain that they're not racists; they just don't want an influx of school kids from low income projects that will result in property tax increases. Special impact funds, such as those received by the military or other type sub sidies could be ear-marked for those communities which accept public housing developments or take posi tive steps to end economic and racial segregation. The addition of extra green power has been changing many minds. It is anticipated that such grants will provide the incentive for im proved educational advancement for all with leadership being developed at all levels of training. With the rising costs of building new facilities, ecology and pollution damages and much needed renovation in others for our spiralling school population, honest thought should be given to the use of all school facilities with black and white personnel being utilized at all levels. Blacks must be able to participate at leadership and power levels with other future leaders of America. It is indeed a matter of some urgency that this pattern be changed. Other wise, how can blacks and other un der-represented minority group stu dents look forward to any significant and major leadership roles in the mainstream of American intitutional life. face are driving them to mechaniza tion of their farms. Senator Burney, who also assailed the bill, urged the Senate not to put the blueberry peo ple out of business. So once again the economic property considerations were placed above the standards of human decency, privacy and environ mental health. Common cleanliness, possible pol lution, ecological damages and en vironmental health will play a great er part now that some Congressmen have put forth bills to urge big city slum dwellers to return to rural farm areas. If mechanization is the price that has to be paid for the basic societal values of human worth, dignity pri vacy and environmental health; so be it. assuredly, in the music history of our country and around the world. A small man by physical stature, he was truly a great man in the art of jazz. His songs often tried to tell us in many ways the joys and rigors he faced as he travelled across the the country and around the world. "Satchmo" Armstrong was not a ranting, rhetorical militant, but hfe gave generously of his finances and talents to aid the forward press for "human dignity and black equality. The world has lost a friend in the passing of Louis "Satchmo" Arm strong; but his musical legacy will remain forever in the hearts of men. They Will Be Rescued From Poverty? U HURRICANE SWEEPS ACROSS THE LUSH LAND OF THE GULF COAST AND IT BECOMES A DISASTER AREA. A DROUGHT DRAGS ON IN THE MID-WEST, AND A DISASTER IS DECLARED. AND BLACK UNEMPLOYMENT FLIES UP TO 35% IN SOME CITIES AND IT IS DESCRIBED AS A RESULT OF A TURNDOWN IN THE ECONOMY AND GOVERNMENT DOES NOTHING: * ■ _ SAID HAROLD R. SIMS ACTING EXECUTIVE if NO HELP PlD£CWßoF the UßoA nleague ■—-—■" from the black house , pK Madness and Men li In the Blue Suits - awvHF In speaking of the recent double murder of two Harlem patrolmen, New York City Police Commis sioner Patrick V. Murphy said that the shootings were the "plan ned" and "organized" work of "madmen." The Commissioner further described the killings as "deliberate, unprovoked and mani acal." "Not a citizen In New York is safe," Mr. Murphy warned, "while these madmen are loose." The double murder was the cli max of a week's hostilities agaiiwt the police. Earlier two police officers had been critically wounded by machine gun Are, two other patrolmen escaped in jury when the weapon of a would be gunman misfired, and a bus dispatcher who was mistakenly identified by assailants as a police officer had lye thrown in his face. There Is, of course, a madness in all this. But the maniacal madness runs deeper than at tacks upon policemen. Recent word from Seattle, Washington, and Chattanooga, Tennessee, shows clearly that police them selves are involved in "planned, organized and deliberate" insani ty. Take, for example, the case of returned Vietnam war veteran Larry E. Ward, a black soldier who came bade home to the ghetto with two Purple Hearts and an Army commendation medal. He came back March 27, 1970, after having successfully survived the.gunfire of the so called "enemy" in the jungles of Southeast Asia for fifteen months. May IS, 1970, Larry Ward lay dead in the street of his hometown, the victim of wounds inflicted by the Seattle police. Los Angeles Times reporter Richard T. Cooper has unraveled a terrible tale which shows that Larry ' Ward was also the victim of the peculiar planned, organized, maniacal madness that pervades the American system. Larry Ward was allegedly lighting a bomb at the offices of Morris Hardcastle Real Estate in Seattle when he met his death. How he happened to be there is a sickening study in law and order. A series of 60 bombings in Seattle over a two year period had placed the police under in tense public and political pres sure. The Seattle police and the FBI were working hand-in-hand when word came from a 36-year old convict named Alfred R. 8., in prison for robbery and parole violation. B. said he had infor- Philadelphia Lags Behind Many Large Southern Cities According to statistics from the U. S. Government's Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the state of Pennsylvania ranks behind Mississippi in school de segregation and the City of Phil adelphia lags behind not only that state but large Southern cities as well. The figures are contained in the department's second national survey of racial and ethnic en rollment in the public schools. The survey compared the 1968-'69 and 1970-'7l school years state by state and also included com parative data on the nation's 100 largest school districts. HEW listed schools with 0-49 percent Black enrollment as in tegrated. In this category, Mis sissippi led the Commonwealth by 28.4 to 28.3 according to the 1970 figures. Pt'i*jjg|vsnla's num ber of lntegratenKools actually declined from the .1908 listing, when 27.5 percent of its schools - by dick gregory^ matlon concerning who wai doing the bombing in the Seattle ghetto (Central Area). Two monthi be fore Larry Ward waa discharged from the Army, B. waa released from prison on 15,000 ball. B. began giving the police tips about expected bombings, stake outs were arranged, but none of the tips paid off. In a sworn statement to his family lawyer, B. tells how he made sure one tip would work. B. began planting bombing ideas in the mind of Jimmy Davis, a former Black Panther and a friend of Larry Ward's. The Hardcastle bombing was set up for the night of May 14, 1970, with a police stakeout carefully arranged by B. B. had expected Jimmy Davis to be the bomber, but when the time came, Davis was nowhere to be found. So B. made an offer to Larry Ward, an offer which included a $75 pay off. (Larry Ward, incidentally, had not found work since his re turn home, though he had made several applications.) So Larry Ward took his $75 and the sticks of dynamite and was driven by B. to the scene of the crime. He was unarmed. On the way to the site of the bombing. B. made an excuse to stop and he secretly made a phone call. B. told the police that the would be bomber was Larry Ward in stead of Jimmy Davis and that Ward was unarmed. B. also de scribed the year, make, model and color of the car he was driv ing. The trap waa set When Larry Ward struck the match to light the dynamite, he Ignited a volley of police fire from the stakeout. Supposedly the police did not fire until Ward started running away and refused to halt, but police experts testified that there were some bullet marks in the doorway of Hardcastle. So the young blade decorated Vietnam veteran, already trapped in the unemployment syndrome of the ghetto, became the fatal victim of the system's most visi bly brutal form of entrapment. TTien there's the more recent case in Chattanooga, Tennessee, of the police shooting of a young 22-year-okl black man by the name of Leon Anderson. Leon Anderson was shot on the fourth night of community conflict which had placed the black community of Chattanooga under virtual seige by the police and National Guard. The initial outbreak of violence occurred when dis gruntled members of a concert were considered integrated. In the same period, Mississippi re ported only 8.7 percent of her schools integrated. Slightly over 73 percent of Penn sylvania schools attended by .Blacks are between 50 and 100 percent Black (73.7). That is an other rise over 1968 when 72.5 percent of the schools were listed in this category. Mississippi, in 196& had N. 3 percent of its schools listed as half to 100 percent Black. The 1970 total was 73.6. As the percentage of segregated schools rises, so does the gap be tween the two states. Pennsylvania had 58.2 percent of ils schools luted as 80-100 per cent Black. In 1970, the figure was 58 percent. Mississippi, on the other hand, had 92.7 percent of its schools in this category in 1968. By 1970. they had cut that figure to 48.4. Over half (50.4 in '6B and 50.5 in '7O) of Pennsylvania schools audience began to react to the last-minute cancellation of a scheduled appearance by a popu lar black entertainer. The police claim that Leon An derson was out after curfew, was fleeing from them and ignoring their orders to halt, was climb ing a wire fence to escape, and had turned menacingly towards them before shots were fired. Community witnesses, however, tell a far different tale. It seems indisputable that Anderson was very, very intoxicated. TTie au topsy report shows It; Anderson's friends who were drinking with him tell that the drinking had gone on all day; and a neighbor, Will Ernest Hart, described the youth's condition: "Leon was just stumbling along, didn't know moonlight from sweet milk, and right at the comer they (the po lice) just opened up on him." Mr. Hart insisted that there had been no warning calls or shots and that the police fired out through the car windows. All of this is to say that there is maniacal madness on both sides—citizens who shoot police and police who shoot citizens. Both types of killings represent the kind of magnitude which ought to be the concern of the federal government. To borrow Commissioner Murphy's words, no citizen is safe while either kind of mad killer is on the loose. I personally believe that any one who kills a policeman in the line of duty should be guilty of a federal crime I further believe that a policeman who wantonly, and unnecessarily kills a citizen should also be guilty of a federal crime. The widows and families of po licemen killed in the line of duty should also become the respon sibility of the federal govern ment. Such families should be given $50,000 from the govern ment, as well as the compensa tions which they now receive from other sources. Finally, the government should provide reward money for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those who com mit such federal crimes—s2s,ooo reward for information concern ing the killing of a policeman ana SIO,OOO reward for informa tion concerning the unlawful kill ing of a private citizen by the police. The maniacal madness is mag nified, you see, by public offic ials who mourn such acts but re fuse to match their tears with strong legislation attended by Blacks had enroll ments of 90-100 percent Black. The figures for Mississippi were 92.7 in '6B and 35.5 percent in 1970. Forty-four percent of Pennayl vania schools had enrollment of 95-100 Black. Mississippi has gone from 92.7 three years ago to, again lead this stale with only 29.9 percent of its schools in this category. In both terms covered by the survey, 32 percent of Black stu dents in Pennsylvania attended schools which were 99 to 100 per cent Black, while their counter parts in Mississippi saw the num ber of almost totally segregated schools cut from 92.4 to 19 per cent. In 1988, 88 percent of Missis sippi's public schools were totally segregated. By 1971, they had cut that number to only 10 per cent. Pennsylvania's all Black schools TAKIH6 A CLOSER LOOK By JOHN MYERS . I On July 16 and 17 thirty thousand people are expected to converge on Durham for the first Pan Africa-USA Track and Field Meet. What can thirty thousand people mean to this industrial, educational center? It can mean traffic jams be yond belief, shortages of hotel accommodations, and streets crowded beyond walking space. Or it can mean one of the greatest opportunities for im provements of international relations ever to be offered. Durham will receive guests froni the entire continent of Africa, diplomatic corps from Washington, and visiting sports telecasters and enthusiasts from every corner of the globe. North Carolina has two Preventatives in the meet. Ron Draper and Larry Black from North Carolina Central Uni versity. With their perform ances in this meet these two young men may take success ful steps towards the next Olympic Games; as the winners of this event will star In the largest sports event in the world, the World Olympic Games. With the event of this meet, Durham will be host to the -Area (Continued from, front page) Allen, Dowd St. He is a grad uate of Durham High School and also attended North Caro lina Central University. The Johnston Awards were established In 1970 by Chair man Norman B. Frost of Washington, D. C. t and other trustees of James M. Johnston Trust for Charitable and Edu cational Purposes. The Scholar ships range up to $2,100 annually for North Carolinians and up to $2,900 for out of State residents who are enroll ed in Nursing Education. Hie purpose of the program is to provide resources for able students to prepare themselves for professional practice in nursing with a baccalaureate degree in the School of Nurs ing. These awards are also available to enable registered nurses to improve their pro fessional and ability in the field of nursing by courses of study in the Evening College or through special short courses. -Speaks (Continued from front page) He received his A.B. Degree from Drake University, The Bachelor of Divinity Degree from Drew University, and the Master of Sacred Theology De gree from Temple University. Other speakers appearing for the week are: Monday night, Rev. James Shumake, of Duke Divinity School and As sociate pastor of West Durham Baptist Church. Tuesday night, Rev. Z.D. Harris and Oak Grove Free Will Baptist were 4.4 percent of the total in 1968 and was listed at 4.7 in 1970. PHILA. FIGURES A study of Philadelphia figures shows a complete increase in the number of segregated schools at tended by Blacks in every cate gory and percentage. While seg regation marched ever upward in Philadelphia, the number of integrated schools attended by Blacks went from only 9.6 in *6B to 7.4 in 1970. The number of all Black schools rose by almost a full percentage point. The entire state of Mississippi, long called the bastion of racism in America, ranks ahead of the Philadelphia public schools in ef forts to integrate. The city of Baltimore, accord ing to the government, achieved total integration in 1968 and these psssimm i r :L E. AUSTIN Editor-Publisher, 1037-1071 ————4 , Publljhed every Saturday at Durham, N. C. by United Publisheri, Inc. CLARENCE BONNETTE Buiinw ManagT' J. ELWOOD CARTER AdvttUttXf, Manas or Second Clau Postage Paid at Durham, N. C. >7701 i. - SUBSCRIPTION BATES United States and Canada 1 Year 96.00 . United States and Canada a Yean f 11.00 i , foreign Countries 1 Year $7.50 Single Copy 30 Cents' Principal Office Located at 436 East Pettigrsw Street, Durham, North Carolina 37708 i>... ■ n athletic competition that is one step below the Olympics. I urge that each resident in Durham take it upon himself to be an unofficial host to the visitors expected to arrive in the city July 15. Residents of Durham have the power to make or break this highly important event. The city and state governments will doubtlessly be the perfect hosts, but this is expected What might not be expected is the cooperation I ask of you. I ask for congenial and helpful attitudes to almost thirty thousand strangers. It is a tremendous request. I ask you to go out of your way to be friendly, helpful, and to show the people of the world that the United States is not all that the headlines of the world papers crack it up to be. I ask you to show the world that the United States, as a whole has something to be very proud of, Southern Hos pitality. This is your chance Dur ham. The city now has the opportunity to become a world famous attraction or an infamous zone of the U.S. It's all up to the people. Church, Wednesday night, Rev. L. A. Miller and St. Mark A.M.E. Zion Church. Thursday night, Dc A.D. Moseley and Mt. Gilead Baptist Church, Friday night, Dr. V. E. Brown and Gethsemane Baptist Church. Rev. J. C. Gray and the Union Grove Zion Church of Pittsboro will be guest of Sun day, July 18, at 3:00 PJVf. -Hauser (Continued from front page) Teenage group of the Winston Salem Chapter of Jack and Jill of America, and is presently serving as secretary of,the Mid- Atlantic Teenage Regional of Jack and Jill. She is assistant pianist of the junior depart ment of her Sunday School. Her ambition is to become a pediatrician. -Alexander (Continued from front page) Valley State College, where he was also director of public re lations. A native of Macon, Georgia, he holds the B. S. Degree from the Fort Valley sitate College and the M. A. Degree, with further study, from the State University df lowa. -Investigate (Continued from front page) collection and to assist in the establishment of a central re cord of the holdings and later acquisitions. A full-time librarian, who will serve as assistant director of the project, will be em ployed for the furation of the project. figures have not changed. One hundred percent of all Black stu dents in that city attend schools which have attendance figures of between 0-49 percent Blacks. SOUTHERN STYLES Deeper .in the South, Green ville, S. C., has managed to place 98.5 percent of its Black students in integrated schools. That city has no all Black schools or schools with minority rates of. 90 percent and up. While Philadelphia is bad, it has company. The city is Jisted as the fifth largest school dis trict in the nation. Of the four cities preceding it (New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and De troit) only Los Angeles has shown any slight increase in the num ber of integrated schools at tended by Black students.