2 THE CAROLINA TIMES
SAT., JUNE 16, 1979
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Committee Against: Apartheid Calls For
mobilization at Jamaica Confab
mm
S By Angie Dickerson f
The United Nations
Soecial Committee
Against 'Apartheid has
concluded a tour-aay
special session in Kingston
all over the world.'"
, - Following the moving
program the conference
was officially opened by a
stirring address rfnade by
Honorable Michael
Jamaica to pay homage, to jiManley, Prime Minister of
Caribbean lead.ers.r fpr 4 If Jamaica. During his ad-
their valuable contribu-fdtess-' which was inter
tinns tn the liberation of '! !-ruDted many times by
Africa and to heighten th? thtiijderous applause, Mr.
mobilisation to end apar-wt Mariley stated: "It-is dif-
'''-'Vl ' " 'FMfV; 7-7 - J'theid. throughout puth.'f wujt to make a speecn
; - A :' ,i flt -7: " V J' Africa! i " H J,f lilbowt ; apartheid .in 1979
H .i i ''JS tt ' '"V i More than ,1 SOlilbecailse we know that the
represenatives comprised time for speeches should
of Caribbean and other If,", have ended 50 years ago.
governments as well as the ( However, the decisive
18 nations of the Special iv moment has not arrived.
Committee. Against Apars? This is because apartheid
t-:j lnk).: '!n Cmitt, Africa thHonial
IIICIU alUllg Willi tiigu vvyi3' uwum niiiv, uiv
A.J. C 1IU ' t f KUartit IT Vom!kll 1Y A
Carlton B. Goodlett, San
Francisco; Irving Davis;
Patrice Xumumbo, Coalir
tion, ' New York, Angie
Dickerson, UN correspon
dent. ' '- '' - . '
v The session concludedj
with a unanimous!'
declaration by the par
ticipants , which states:
"The Special Session'
stresses ,the need , for
mobilization of all
freedom loving govern-
" ments and people 'to
thwart apartheid
-maneuvers and render full
support to the just and
legitimate struggle of the
National, Liberation
Movement of South
Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe."
ill .s
I -': . 1 v...
Durham Native Receives
W.D. from lieharry
i if '
1
wis. reggy Masterson, &uw corporation, Kapnael N. i nompsun, uubciur n
...'..,
Educational Transplant Is Growing Program
Administrators in the
North Carolina Central
University School of
Business reported that this
year's sixth Educational
Transplant program was a
success. Plans are being
made to add additional
courses.
The Educational
Transplant brings
representatives of various
business firms to the
NCCU campus to conduct
the company's own in
house training programs.
The courses, with
enrollments limited, are
taught for five days, eight
hours a day.
Participants in the
courses are required to
have meals as a group,
and evening group activity
is encouraged.
Students earn three
semester hours of credit
for the 40 hours of class. .
John Howell and
William Newman of Ar
thur Young and Co.
taught the coause in Taxes
for Practice this year.
John Tunney of PPG In
dustries, taught, for the
fifth consecutive year, the
course in Data Processing.
Ms. Peggy Masterson and
Ed Verlander of SCM
Corporation taught the
course in Management.
The tax, data process
ing, and management
courses were taught on the
NCCU campus May 21 .-'
25. A fourth course, Word
Processing, was taught
June 4-8 at the Western
Electric offices in
Greensboro, with , eight
students involved.
Courses in fianance and
in marketing are being
considered for the summer
of 1980.
Blacks Getting the Gas;
Petroleum Doesn't Pay
NCCU faculty members
involved in ' the program
included ' Raphael N.
Thompson, chairman of
the department of accoun
ting, as director of the
program; Pyng Wang;
assistant professor of data
processing as coordinator
of the data processing
course; Sundar Fleming,
chairman of the depart
ment of management and
marketing, as coordinator
of .the management
course; and Marion
Thorne, chairment of the
department of business
education, and Albertha'
Fitts, instructor of
business education, as co
coordinators of the word
processing course.
BY CHARLES E. BELLE
The State of California
is the home of the third
largest number of black
Americans, which means it
also has the third largest
number of unemployed ,
young black adults in the:
country.
California's Senator
Hayakawa, referred to
.kindly by soh$''as jseMe,
could have Hau 'them "In
mind when he remarked
that only the rich needed
gas for their cars since the
poor do not work anyway.
It is true that the high
unemployment in most
black neighborhoods
would not argue well for
opening up a retail service
station on every corner,
except to keep them out of
white neighborhoods.
Unfortunately, poor
people are put into one
class in the minds of
many. The VS. Depart
ment of Labor estimates an
annual income required for
a typical four-membef
family to maintain, lower
level standards of Living in
uic ocuaiui s siaic uuiu
$11380 in Bakersfield to
$12,710 in San Francisco.
These are not the
unemployed, but the bulk
of the working black
Americans and other people
who put in their hours
for the rich multi-millionaires
like the Senator.
Two dollars and fifty
cents per gallon should be
the price for people, ac
cording to the right wing
' Republican Senator. Seems
like his message is making
a mark with most of the
retail gasoline station
owners. Dealer' mark-ups
are running up as repre
sented by an average of
13.7 of the pump price
of regular gasoline up from
the average of 13 for the
past two years.
Station owners who used
to take a full year to make
$35,000, now do it in
about one-third less time.
- National regular leaded
gasoline pump prices have
moved up from 34.8 cents
per gallon, on average in
. 1969, to the 76.3 cents
per gallon average so far in
1979.
Dealers, of course, are
not the only ones doing dirt
- to the public, ; Petroleum
companies are putting un
heard of profits on the
books. Basking in big bucks
i for the first quarter were
; Standard Oil of Indiana
with earnings up 28,
Exxon Corporation, up 37
Gulf Oil Corporation, up
61, Texaco, Inc., up 81
and Standard Oil Company
You don't have to borrow
your neifhbor'i copy of
THE CAROLINA TIMES
Call 682-2913
of Ohio up an ungodly
303. God fearing James
Earl 'Carter freed them to'
collect this money from the
consumers.
Black consumers are
paying, but not playing.
Professional engineers are
the only roads open to the
"oil industry. The National:
Fund for Minority Engineer-;
'.Ing'Students war formed in
i:Octob;ri974OaY a meanS :
of attracting the private
sector resources needed to
expand minority represen
tation in engineering.
The fund offers grants to
engineering schools for stu
dents who are black, Puerto ,
Rican, ChicanoMexican
American or American
Indian because they are so
severely under represented
in the engineering profession.
1 rflVl9)
YOUR
CITY
COUNCIL
The Durham City Council will hold a regular meeting Monday night at
7:30 p.m. in the City Cquncil Chamber at City Hall. The meeting is open
to the public. ,
: AMONG THE MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED BY COUNCIL WILL BE
THE ADOPTION OF THE 1979-80 BUDGET FOR THE CITY OF DURHAM.
, City government meetings scheduled during the next two weeks in
clude: -MONDAY,
JUNE 18
7:30 p.m., City Council
' '. TUESDAY, JUNE 19
. -10:00 a.m., Planning & Zoning Commission
2:30 p.m.; Urban Growth Subcommittee
' 6:30 p.m., Government Liaison Committee
. of the Human Relations Commission
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20
9:30a.m., City Council's
- ' - Community Services Committee
THURSDAY, JUNE 21
2:15 p.m., City Council's Finance Committee
FRIDAY, JUNE 22
8:30 a.m., Subdivision Review Board
MONDAY. JUNE 25
2:15 p.m., City Council's
Public Works Committee.
4:30 p.m., Recreation Advisory Committee
7:30 p.m. (Special) City Council
. . Closed Session
TUESDAY, JUNE 28
11:00 a.m.. Board of Adjustment
2:30 p.m., Urban Growth Subcommittee
7:30 p.m., (Special) Public Works Committee
THURSDAY, JUNE 28
10:00 a.m., City Council's ' f
Committee-of-the-Whole
FRIDAY, JUNE 29
. 8:30 a.m., Subdivision Review Board
All meetings are held In the City Hall 1 01 City Hall Plaza, unless other
wise indicated. Additional meetings may be scheduled after this list is
submitted for publication. Free parking is available during the Council
meeting in the Chapel Hill Street parking garage, located across Mangum
Street from City Hall. The audio portion of the meeting is also carried live
on Cable Television Channel! 1..
For further information, call the City Public Information Office at
683-4211.
DarticiDants from libera
tion, movements and
representatives from in
tergovernmental organiza
tipns, attended the four
day session. !
Leslie O. Harrirnan,
Chairman pf the commit
tee, fed participants in a.
wreath laying ceremony in
Kingstons Memorial Park
at the statues of Marcus
Garvey, George Padmore,
Sylvester Williams, Frantz
Sanon, Dantes Belegrade,
JoseMarti, and Nathanial
Critchtow. Some of the
surviving family members
including Madam Sanon,
Were present.
In his remarks Am
bassador Harrirnan paid
tribute to the writers and
intellectuals of the Carib
bean for furthering the
principles cherished by the
United Nations. He stated
"their lives and their
works are an inspiration in
today's struggle and they
deserve to be made known
of liberty in Namibia and
the current farce in
Rhodesia are symptoms of
a problem that goes
deeper than racial
discrimination.
"It is a symptom of the
lengths to which men will
go to protect greed and the
extent to which they will
impose tyranny to en
trench economic advan
tage. We are told that the
choice in Southern Africa
is between stability and
communism. That is a lie.
The only choice in
Southern Africa is, the
choice between justice and
profit."
Outstanding United
States personalities includ
ed Judge William Booth,
New York; Professor
Tony Martin, Boston; Gil
Nobel, TV and Media,
New York; Reverend
Moran Weston, New
York; Jean Carrie, bond
author, Professor John H.
Clarke, New " York; Dr.
Durham -Native-Recieveslhis
MD Degree
HaVold A Bailey recieved
,his ,; MD degree recently
from Meharry . Medical
College in Nashville, Ten
nessee. Dr. Bailey attend-?,
ed the Durham' City'.
Schools, completing Carr k
Junior High with the
highest scholastic average.
After graduating from
Durham High School, he
went ; to Hampton In
stitute, in Hampton,
Virginia where ' he
graduated with honors.
While, a stident at Harnp
ton, Dr. Bailey was one of
three students chosen
from a list of ten to study
at Cornell University for a
summer in a science pro-"
gram.
;' Dr. Bailey whose
parents, Mr! and Mrs.
Thomas Bailey, Jr. live at
1002 Cana Street', and
whose brother, Dr.
William Thomas Bailey,
DR. BAILEY
III heads the Dental Pro
gram in Soul City .will
begin his 3 year residency
in Pediatric at the
Children Hospital of the
Kings Daughters in Nor
folk, Virginia
Unfortunately, the fund
focuses too heavily on the
school and not on the stu
dents. It's expensive for
anyone to go to college.
Two hundred fifty dollars
per student per semester is
a sin. Petroleum engineers
are the prize of the engi
neering professions these
.flays,,, , ' ' , y.u l:-.'t
' ".131
The Petroleum compa
nies should pay their fair
share of minority - student
expenses. First year black
American y engineering stu
dents are still only one
half of their f national ayer-
1 ages. Petroleum companies
offers should provide "for
more Black Americans to
gain access into the indus-
- try. , : . '
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