n-T?"5 CAROLINA TIMES SAT..' JAN. 18. 197S rwo smaii vrofvviiio EDITORIALS AND.; COM M EMERGEUCY JOB PROGRAM The Emergency Job Program which President Ford signed into legislation in late December U in process of being administered in Durham by the Durham-Orange County Manpower Consortium and should help to give some public sen jobs to currently unemployed persons. It h important to remember that requirements have been set up for those individuals who can participate in such public works programs. Individuals must have been unemployed for 30 calendar days and roust be residents of the Durham-Orange County Area. Preference will be given to those persons who have exhausted or used up their unemployment insurance benefits, to those unemployed persons who are not eligible fpr unemployment insurance benefits and to those who have been unemployed for 1 5 or more weeks. Special consideration will be given to the most severely disadvantaged persons, veterans, welfare recipients and former manpower trainees. It is hoped that many of those persons who have been unemployed and are actively seeking work will make all efforts to become a part of the Emergency Jobs Program. With the high cost of living and with the rapidly growing unemployment at all levels, we hope that those who meet the criteria and who have been unemployed for some time will be able to share and participate in this program. Durham's economy is in dire need of an assist from such a program and it is hoped that all who qualify can become a part of the new Emergency Jobs Program. -s 'In : . . ' 1 idim ''3$hXS. v CRUCIAL SESSION The 1975 General Assembly convened this past Wednesday and observers and legislators alike agree that it should be an interesting session, one that very likely could extend into late June or early July. t But because the times are so uncertain we think the word 1nteresting" does not clearly define the importance of ' this legislative gathering. "Crucial" is a much more appropriate term, for in a sense, the General Assembly has the opportunity to deal with measures that could dramatically improve the lot of many North Carolinians, especially in the areas of economic and consumer natters. We hope the legislature will act swiftly in approving some kind of tax reform package, while at the same approving measures to limit the power publictutUities have in imposing higher ,rl0T&aniMes already exert too much control over our lives and purses. - The General Assembly should also act favorably in approving a law that would protect renters in their relationship with landlords, and the Equal Rights Amendment that would tit effect, bestow full citizenship rights upon women. Repeal of the sales tax on food is another matter that has attracted considerable attention of those advocating consumer reform, and repeal of the death penalty deserves the closest of attention from those in Raleigh. The matter of allocating funds for the NCCU Law School is an issue that can stand no equivocation. The school must be supported and the General Assembly must come up with the funds needed to construct a new building for the school. The only pro f essional . school at a predominantly black college in the" University of North Carolina system must be saved, and in order for the school to maintain its accreditation, a new building will have to be constructed. Positive action on any allocationi of funds for NCCU is imperative. ' The GeneVai Assembly will' also be ': watched closely to sec if the members exercise economy in government. In this day and time of rising costs, etc., there can do no malarky and hanky panky in Raleigh. The people's representatives must work - and work hard at arriving at the solutions to the problems of the people of the state. It is time to get down to business. FIRST III HYPOCRISPY The,: sloean.. ambarrassment '4 1975 license plate with its u ui i iwvuuiih . la . an to the those North Carolinians who are aware of the restrictive and repressive actions and attitudes of many in this state. 'The slogan was attached to the new license plates at the request of the State's;, Bicentennial Committee to commemorate What it considered two significant events in the state's history during . the country's; move for Independence. The first was the signing oTthc Halifax Resolution which made North Carolina the first colony to authorize delegates to attend the Continental Congress where the Declaration of independence was signed. The second event was North Carolina, in 1 775, being the first colony to expel it royal governor.' Unfortunately the Bicentennial Committee, the governor and others entrusted with the authority to dictate the state's image seem more concerned, with the state's past than they do with the present. One has only to remember that there are more persons on death row in North Carolina than any other state to recognize the foolishness of the "Firsf n iFreedom"' slogan. One has only to recall the governor's recent action. dismissing the members of the state's HUman Relations Commission to see thd absurdity of such a slogan. Hie list could go on and on, but that would only add to the embarrassment. Perhaps a more appropriate slogan to stick on the state's license plates, and onef which would seem to characterize North Carolina's present and possibly its future, would be "First in Hypocrisy." Jzclioon Advocates Silver Rights WE CAN NEVER BE SATIS FIED AS LONG AS THE NEGRO'S BASIC MOBILITY IS FROM A SMALLER GHETTO TO A LARGER ONE!' REV MARTIN LUTHERKIN0 vti m tarn m 4 ftO$tDAL,QUENSltt POLICE SAJPA NOTE WAS LEFT READING NIGGERS BEWARE. STATEMENT OF THE REVEREND JESSE L. JACKSON. NATIONAL PRESIDENT, OPERATION PUSH. ON HOLY DAY SERVICES AND MASS DEMONSTRATIONS For th hot three months the . National - ecumenical . inlnitter's Division of Operation PUSH has attempted to serve as taa moral catalyst In. loasfsbllihlng the coalition for progressive - change. The eepondveoes of the religious community, ' chic and . ctvl rtdits orgtnlzatlona, schools,. organized and unorganized f ags. Specifically we are labor, the unemployed and just' supporting congressman ordinary decent people of all 'Augustus Hawkln's Bill, races and ail political and ntltled the "E4ual coBomlc fievpolnts have' Opportunity and Full coa vlnced us that the Enplovnent Act of 1976." economic Issue and our riming 2. DECENT IIOUSING-The both comet. . . right of everyperson to safe and On Dr. King's birthday we wiU launch our "SUver Rights" program by marching around the White House, and around U.S. Labor Departments and Manpower Offices across the country, seven times. Just as Joshua marched around the wall of Jericho, we intend that Ford's economic policies shall tall. Our Initial "Silver Rights" program includes: 1 F U L L EMPLOYMENT-The right of every person willing, able and desiring a job to be employed in , meaningful and socially productive work at liveable Profile: Angela Davis Today By EMILY F. GIBSON LOS ANGELES It was Sunday afternoon, June 2, 1972. The small office on South Broadway, which , for almost two years bad housed the local "Free Angela Davis" committee, was filled with supporters. They spilled out onto the sidewalk and along the curbslde anxiously awaiting the verdict. They were the faithful, the believers, those who had trod the streets getting signatures on petitions, selling "Save Our Sisters" buttons, staging rallies, collecting coins - and sometimes dollars for the defense. As they waited, the minutes dragged by agonizingly. Abruptly, the newscaster's voice shattered the silence: "Miss Davis has been found not guilty on each of the three counts - murder, kidnapping, , and conspiracy....- -U " An. Incomprehensible shriek, almost like one voice, pierced the air, as the crowd exploded in jubilation. Thronging into the streets, they clapped and chanted in unison: "The power of the people has freed Angela." Simultaneously, on the steps of the San Jose County Courthouse, a tearful Angela Davis told reporters, "This is the happiest day of my An all white jury of seven women and five men had cleared her of complicity in the Marin County Courthouse shoot-out which had left a white judge, two black San Quentin inmates and 17 year old Jonathon Jackson dead in its wake. According to Angela's mother, Mrs. Sallye Davis, the period preceding the acquittal had been "Twenty-two months of total nightmare." The nightmare is over for the present. Today Angela Davis is at home in East Oakland's black ghetto. The door is always open to the ' comfortable, freshly-painted, yellow frame house which she shareswith her long-time friend Victoria Mercado, a young Chkano activist. At 30, Angela is a striking woman with quiet good looks and a generous smile. Tall and willowy clad in Levi cut-offs, knit body shirt and knee socks, Angela no longer bears the emaciated appearance which, was evident during, the latter part of her 16-months-long incarceration. The walls of her study are lined from ceiling to floor with books, perhaps 1,200 of them which she has collected over the years. There is a 40-volume set of the "COLLECTED WORKS OF KARL MARX AND. FRIEDRICH ENGELS" in German, dating back to 1965 when Davis was a graduate student at Goethe University's Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt Spanish languages selections by Cuban poet Nicolas Guillen are remnants of the summer of 1969 which she spent working in the cane and coffee fields of Havana. The numerous French-titled literature books bring back memories of student days at Brandels and a year spent J'ttudyihtf at'nilhe Sorbonne in Paris. At the far end of the room is a large wooden desk, rescued from the San Francisco headquarters of the former National United Committee to Free Angela Davis. It is in these surroundings that the former philosophy professor recently completed her autobiography which she drafted during the early months of 1973 in a Cuban villa. Between puffs on the small, narrow-stemmed pipe, Angela talked about the experiences which had taken her from "an intellectual conviction about the necessity of social change to actually working for the revolution." Davis first drew headlines five years ago when she was fired from her teaching post at UCLA. The action was triggered by a blurb in UCLA's student newspaper, the DAILY BRUIN, June 24, 1969, which reported that the Philosophy Department had made a two-year appointment of an Acting Assistant Professor, and added, "The person is well-qualified for the post and is also a member of the Communist Party." Bill Divale, the author of the article, earlier admitted that he was a paid informant for the TBI when he testified as such before the 1968 Los Angeles hearings of the Subersive Activities Control Board. Divale's article formed the basis tor a "scoop" by the SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER'S Ed Montgomery July 9, 1969. Davis incurred the wrath of the California Board of Regents by her admission of membership in the Che- Lumumba Club, an all-black collective of the Cormunist Party of Southern California. The regents summarily dismissed her. Thus, on September 19, 1969, Angela Davis, became perhaps the first teacher in the history of the American education system to be fired without ever having taught a class. Basing their decision on anti-communist resolutions which had been passed by their predecessors nearly thirty years earlter 'and re-flffed' 5uVing the "Red Scare" of the McCarthy Era, the action of the regents sparked a nationwide controversy over the question of "academic freedom." The real issue, according to Davis, was a question of political repression which encompasses both academic freedom and racism. "They did not question my qualifications, academic training, or ability to teach, only my politics. And had I not been so deeply involved in the black liberation struggle, it is doubtless they would not have cared." Definantly, she replied to the regents: "As a black woman, I am used to fighting and I will continue fighting now." The first round of the fight ended scarcely a month after it began when the courts declared Davis' dismissal improper because resolutions on which it was founded were unconstitutional. When Davis returned to UCLA to present her first lecture in a course entitled "Recurring Philosophical Themes in Black Literature," the largest auditorium on the campus could not accommodate the students and spectators. More than 7,000 showed up to greet the professor. TD Fuq:iL'.V ! o runiri 0j & ' iioicisg-f ?VeV ; Vmmmmmmm By DR. GLORIA E. A TOOTE mmHt HOME I WVB'EIT decent housing. Specifically, 300,000 units of housing sponsored by not-for-profit corporations are scheduled for foreclosure In the coming year in the midst of the present housing crisis. These units must be saved. 3. ELIMINATION OF HUNGBR-VJe're closer to soup lines today than we've been since the 1930's. 4. 8UPFORT OF SMALL BUSINESSES-The little Iran's desire of , self-determination cannot be sacrificed. 5 . SPIRITUAL REGENERATION We must have an abundant moral as well as material life. January 15-Martln Luther King's Birthday is the occasion for a rededicatton to the kind of unrelenting mass action that will nuketbesegoals a reality in this decade. Resolution Passed In Memory Of Mrs. Zoo ParltQ Dorboo The 1974-75 School for County Commissioners held at the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill passed the following resolution in memory of the late Mrs. Zoe P. Barbee, the black woman county commissioner who was fatally injured in a car wreck on December 23, in Durham County, WHEREAS, Mrs. Zoe Parks Barbee, late of Guilford County, had been elected as a County Commissioner on November 5, 1974 and by virtue of such election was a member of our freshman class of newly elected County Commissioners of 1974, and WHEREAS, she had attended the first sessions of this class at the Institute of Government in December of 1974, exhibiting her usual intense. interest In furthering her own knowledge to the betterment of her county and constituents; and WHEREAS, shortly afterwards, on December 23, she was suddenly removed from our midst in a most unfortunate and tragic highway accident, thus depriving her family, her friends and ber const! tutents, county and State of her valuable counsel' and service; Now, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that this group of ' her contemporaries do hereby go on record extending sympathy to her family and friends, and 'expressing our Horreownership, with its many benefits, also ' carries' with it the burden and responsibility for maintaining and improving the property. The properly cared for home pays dividends that can be unnecessarily forfeited if improvements and maintenance are deferred. ' ; ; Under the new Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, the HUDFHA insurance program for Home Improvement Loans has been made more attractive for the individual. ' Previously, the interest rate -had varied according1 td the amount and term of the loan, and the loan maximum was $5,000 for seven years. Single family home improvement loans may now be made in amounts up to $10,000, with a maximum finance charge of 12 percent and maximum maturity period of T2 years. Borrowers are free to shop around and should for the" most favorable rate, and lenders can charge any rate up to the ceiling. The HUDFHA loan insurance program is authorized by Title I of the National Housing Act. These HUDFHA-Jnsured Title I home improvement loans may be used for any improveritenls tnat will make your home a basically more livable and useful place. The loans can even be used for ' disnwashers, refrigerators, freezers, and ovens that are built into 'the house, htacvetv they may not be used for purchase? free-standing ppliances!''!f'y Neither can these loans be used for what are considered luxury type articles, for example, ' swimmihg; 'pfitors 'and1 ''outdoor fireplaces. Additionally, it is not petmiSSBhte'W"Usl1l6iiH to pay for work already done. -?irlV-f:-: snUw The loan can be used to pay for' materials antf lkb6r;land',the improvements can be made by a nWactor'or'dealeif!llf y6iflinave the experience and skill for the j6b, yWi'rJaff'do !iMf:noi' HUD's pamphlet, "Fixing Up Ybur,fibme'!cWiatiTo foAnd How To Finance It," provides guidance1 ana1 iitfbrMidMiou would do well to review before uhdei'iaklng linrjfotohts on your home. ai.ol n There are three requirements you must nielli' lisec'iSreone of these loans. First, you must own your propelty '6it!'!ipng term lease on it. Second, you must have i4sktifa,ctiiiiy'icffedit rating. And, third, you must have enough lhcom''lo reptfy' Ihe loan over its term. ' ' :i";,rtV!WJ The loan insurance program is generally aiaflab'le tWo'ilgribut the country through banks and other qualified rYders! i'' The loan can be small enough to pay'fusV'r6flmtftetts?or larger, and can cover architectural and erigWe'eHn'tosft'ind building permit fee's; In most cases,' loans Airidei' SftltWOWhol require any security other than your signature arid1 r6 cbsigrfer is needed. 'i.utfon'l With the present national economic climate, second thdught should be given' before acquiring new financial indebtedness. Creditors are seldom sympathetic as to the whys, when you are late in making a loan payment. However, some home repair is essential to maintain property value and excessive cost when minor repairs go unattended and cause major structural damage. There are several good plans with reasonable terms for financing home improvements, if one must borrow. You should shop around. And you should never sign anything you do not completely understand. . , ; ; ..,..,; -Single, copies r.ot 'ixLb.Yq'rjHrikiss jarid How To Finance It" are available free in any HUD office or by "writing:' U.S.' Department of Housing and Urban Development, Publication Service Center, Room B-258, 451 Seventh Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20410. THIS COLUMN IS OFFERED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY THIS NEWSPAPER, Things Yon Should Knov ,VV.i;l) ll(C' "... ' ; I : k: 55ST ' "I" . . lit lr 1 1X;M H". V(f itul'j Hfifmi'itti') lelliifna fj l v.' .famous Philadelphia church -yii r UEAD6R VVHO WORKED WITH BISHOP RICHARDAL- ,, I , - klNPOUNDEROF THE AFRICAN METHODIST PlSCOPAj &HURCH).TQ SAVE THE CjTY IN THE YEL LOW' FEVER EPIDEMIC OF 1793 WHEN THE BRITISH CAPTUREDTH CITYOF WASHINGTON IN THE WAR OF I8I2JHEY RECRUITEOZiO N6J5PJE!SMIE?jTWO BATTALIONS SERVED UNDER GEN. N- CKSON IN THE BATTLE OF NEW ORlEANS ON JAN. 3315 iDREWv sincere sense of loss in her untimely passing; and Be it further resolved that copies of this resolution be sent by the North Carolina Association of County Comrissioners to her farrily, and to the Board of County Commissioners of Guilford County. Done at the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina in the town of Chapel HD1 in the County of Orange, this the Ninth Day of January in the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Seventy-Five and Is the One Hundred Ninety-Ninth Year of . Independence, and adopted by unanimous vote. .' mm L. E. AUSTIN Editor-Publisher 1927-1971 Published every Saturday at Durham, N.C. by United Publishers, Inc. MRS. VIVIAN AUSTIN EDMONDS, Publisher MALVIN E. MOORE, III CLARENCE BONNETTE... J. ELTOOD CARTER....... . Editor ......Business Minager ' Advertising Mmager Second Class Postage Paid at Durham, N.C. 27702 ; , SUBSCRIPTION RATES United States and Canada..;..;...........l Year $8.5tf United States and Canada......;...:'......... 2 Yeara $15 6$ Foreign Countrie...;.......;..;...... ye,, giolofj Single Copy... 2fJ Principal office located at 436 East Pettigrew Street ' Durham, North Carolina 27702 - -