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PK9I. $1.09 $1.00 QlTp50i: UP TO gOe o ICE CR2AT.1 SANDIVICKES o -CE DAE3 o TVflM FO?3 o FUDGE o ''vdra-U-vM-pzca CKOICS s i ::'.r: flrrr-T-ri jiwcy aim TOOTHPASTE! TKin I(2R GPOT UFTGRi DISFC-ACIG UHTGil3 EA. ' g TH CAROLINA TSwS ' 'SAT.. JULY 23. 1977 rContinued From Front Page ; "baked chicken, rice, cabbage, watermelon and apple pie. ; ; The reception fa Wfl mington was predictably cool ; ' from many of the town'a citizens. None of the Wil " mington 10 mothers marched nor did local leaders or ministers participate, At a "rallv, on the steps of the '.,-Wilmington Municfoal bujttd ""ing,1 Frinks criticized the ; mothers and local leaden in . the town for being afraid. ; But one mother inter viewed. Mrs. Wright, said that she wasn t rrigntenea out said z a supervisor on her job had . asked, "Ybu're not going to march with Golden Frinks, are you?" Another - mother, Mrs. Delorei Moore, told a repor ter two weeks before the march began that the mothers were not going to march with Frinks, but did support the idea behind the march. An - .apparent conflict . between - Frinks and the mothers grew out of Frinks' alleged misuse of money when he was in - Wuniingtoninl971. -But despite the contro versy, Frinks was unfettered and marched on with his small band that had come 1 from Edenton, Scotland Neck, Greenville, and Atlan ta, Georgia. Initially planning to walk 21.1 miles per day, some days the veteran marcher paced nearly 30 miles, with the help. of his long distance runners." The , PhJ). he holds, Frinks says, "Is my degree for being a public highway demonstra tor " - The man's humor often . eased , the tension of real dangers faced by the marchers. If didn't lessen "those dangers, he did keep the marchers laughing. Only one arrest had occured in the march by the time it reached Clinton and that was the arrest of a white man in Pender County after he caused his car to kick gravel on tho' demon strators. ' . jf - A few rnfles out of Wilmington, the marchers were visited by E. Lawrence Davis, a state senator, stump i ing the' state to get support in I" hisljid forDemdcratic Party nomination for the U. S. Senate seat held by conser vative Senator Jesse Helms. Davis asked Frinks and Rev, Leon White, Director of the N. C. - Va. Commission for Racial Justice for an up date on the case, "Because if we could just get them out of prison and then we could stop the Communists and everybody else from hollering at us." The case has been cited by many Socialist countries and a large num ber of Third World countries as an example of racial in justice in the United States. So extensive has been the coverage of the case by overseas news that many people fa other countries un doubtedly know more about the case than people in eastern North Carolina. Many blacks questioned about the case fa that area said they had heard about it but not enough to comment. Those were a minority. The only white people who marched with the marchers Were from Wallace, North Carolina and were workers and union organizers at the J. P. Stevens plant in Wallace. One organizer, Charlie March, questioned as to why he supported the march, said the imprison ment of the Wilmington 10 was related to J. P, Stevens Company not allowing its employees to unionized and to bargain collectively . Following the march since it began have been re presentatives from Governor Hunt's office who have worked closely with law en forcement officials. James Coleman of Raleigh, Lynn Martin and W. D. Oxendine of Robeson County, all em- Eloyees of the North Caro na Human Relations Commission, kept the Cover . nor's office informed of the marchers progress daily. . Hunt has said that he will consider a pardon carefully, but has a policy of not in tervening in cases before the - courts. The Wilmington 10 were convicted in 1972 of firebombing a white-owned , grocery and assaulting fire men trying to put out the blaze. The witnesses who testified against them in 1972 recanted their testi mony in a May post-con- '., viction hearing saying they 1 were given time off their sentences Another said he had been given a mini-bike and a job. . J L lr'4lAVll WkJ PK. f W ; i ...r-g ' : : : , - . - ' ' . ' '