TO vuv ' 1 ' I.I"' Duke University Library Newspaper Department Durham NC 27706 ro "(II.. MI II III III I I VJ.1I Words of Wisdom When m mind of a ftnfan eouldts wfth that of wo Iffy nun, K creates M ompty sound. Thaw it no question m to who k at fault -Salvador DaO VOLUME 54 NUM8ER 8 &a3;ks8t CAscur-A r atue8ay. mjtuwY 9, ma TELEPHONE (919) 632-2313 raw 7PJ A rr J IfurAuv 'J Ul. :LrLAui M(m Suit FUeds A&mwsi Cherry MmpUM 111 1 PROTEST f.lASSACRE OF FIVE on inJ o (I J. 3 v wur 1' LA J I - ?-.JJ- 3 1,1 I ByFcUdaM.Casseb GREENSBORO Som- 7,500 people par- , ticipated in a march and rally Saturday to protest - the November massacre of 7? five Communist Workers Party members and to commemorate the beginn--init of the n0slcivil rights movement twenty years ago. Marchers assembled at the World War Memorial Stadium to walk four miles to the Greensboro Coliseum. Participants traveled from as far away as Los Angeles, New York and Yellow Springs, Ohio to attend the march which was organized by the February 2nd Mobiliza tion Committee. A hrirf rnllv urac hM in Cbcrc:i Ret!:! Fed Violations RALEIGH A class ac, don suit, filed in Eastern District Court in December, by Ms. Lola J. McEachiri, LaForrest F. Mayes, Ms. Hilda Banks, James Best, King . David - rwuwu wiu ixiuy ihui il. ca,U.m ud BSainsi wnerry nnpiiw. Vr march Aft-r . nrawr th ffer $12 Million Suit NAACP officials and attorneys for plaintiffs in front of Federal Building la Raleigh after filing $12 million suit against Cherry Hospital in Goldsboro. Left to right are: Rev. C.W. Ward, president, Raleigh Branch, NAACP; Mn. Geneva B. Hamilton, president, Goldsboro-Wayne County Branch, NAACP; George Frazier, president, Durham Branch, NAACP; Earl Whitted, attorney; William Foy, chair man, Legal Redress Committee; Giennle Matthewson, attorney; and Mrs, Carolyn Coleman, state field representative, NAACP. ' i . ii. : . f J, and others, charges racial discrimination and viola tion of Federal Statutes and the Equal Protection, . Privileges and Immunities and Due Process clauses of the i Fifth and Four teenth amendments to the . Federal Constitution. The class that plaintiffs represent consist of all applicants for employ ment, present and ' past employees and discharged employees of the defen dant who are not male Caucasians, and who have been, are, or may in the future be ) 1 limited, j , classified . i restrictedr r V disciplined,; lexcluded for off Wig J. By Felicia M. Cassels In an optimistic speech Friday, Andrew Young addressed the issues of race, economics and Iran at Duke University's Page Auditorium. Young, former con gressman and United Na tions Ambassador, said race is just a symptom of America's problems. Jobs are not available because our economy is running 73 to 75 per cent capacity, he said. And while 50,000,000 citizens don't share in the wealth as those on a higher economic level, he said, Hispanics, immigrants and other minorities are as much a part of the number as blacks. He said both blacks and whites have made tremen dous economic gains as a result of a boom produced by the civil rights move ment of the 60s. He urged blacks not to be discouraged by the present widening gap between black and white gross ear nings. He said black earn ing power has doubled from 1960, but conceded that white earnings have escalated by 105 to 1 10 per cent. He explained that people already in the system can earn and profit by a boom quicker than those just entering, as in the case of blacks in the 60s. The gap will narrow in the 80s, he predicted, because more black people have entered the educa tional and political mainstream. Young said the situation jn Iran is actually an Islamic identification struggle. He said America's humanitarian tradition will not allow a return of the ousted Shah to Iran, especially since America help put him there in 1953. He said he sees tremen dous hope in Iran, because, while egos have been damaged, no blood has been shed and no pro perty damaged. He added that while the crisis is frustrating, humiliating and emotional America is not dumb enough, although strong enough, to go to war with Iran. It is not progress, he said, for America to have the power to destroy a na tion fifteen times over. . . ."every additional dollar we spend on death and destruction contributes to Cartor to Noninato Korncgay os Mooboi of Seaway Board WASHINGTON -President Jimmy Carter announced recently that he will nominate Francis Albert Kornegay, presi dent of the Detroit Urban League, to be a member of the Advisory Board of the Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corpora tion. Kornegay, of Detroit, Michigan, began his career with the Detroit Ur ban League n 1944 as the League's vocational secretary. Kornegay was born in Mount Olive. He receiv ed B.S. degree from North Carolina College I (now North Carolina Cen tral) in 1935 and a M. S. (1941) and a Ph.D. (1973) from the University of Michigan. He has worked at the U. S. Treasury Department (1935-36) and served as. Commandant of Boys and Head of Science at Dow ington Industrial School in Downington, Penn sylvania (1937-41). He is active in com munity affairs and serves on the boards of several organizations. He is married to the former Geraldine McWilliams Ellison and they have two children. our national insecurity." It is insecurity; that keeps people" within their own group, he said, and such sheltering leads to cultural retardation. He said he looks for the future to evolve out of the continuing experience of the races working together here in the United States. He said the celebration in Greensboro Saturday is very good because it is commemorating a move ment that introduced par ticipatory democracy to America. This democracy produced the women's movement, the economic withdrawal campaigns led by Ralph Nader and the: movement of environmen talists, he said. The civil rights movement, he concluded, made the Continued on Page 6 Dr. V. Clerk Speaker At ACA Progrca Dr. Vernon Clark, North Carolina Central University biologist served on January 19 as a partici pant on the three day pro gram of The American Camping Association in San Antonio, Texas. Dr. Clark is Director of the Governor's School-East during the summer. At the Texas meeting he spoke on the topic An Ap proach to Gifted and Talented Education: The Governor's Schools of North Carolina. The American Camping Association became ac quainted with the Gover nor's Schools' program from The Today's Show. Dr. Clark was extended the invitation when Governor James Hunt was unable to honor the re quest. The Governor's Schools' program is the oldest summer residential ' program for gifted and talented high school, juniors and seniors in the. country. against py the defendants in ways which deprive or tend to deprive - them of equal employment oppor tunities, or which other wise affect their status as applicants for employ ment or employees because of their race, col or or sex. Cherry Hospital is a state owned and operated institution, an in termediate care facility of the North Carolina Department of Human ; Resources, in Goldsboro (Wayne County). ( The plaintiffs are or were employees at Cherry. They are all residents of Goldsboro. The ' suit seeks to challenge a racial pattern and practice of systematic ' racial and sex discrimina tion by the defendants and their agents in the hiring, ; firing, promotion, ' discipline and arbitrary and summary handling of grievances filed by black men and women, and other minorities. The plaintiffs are seek- ing both injunctive relief and general damages in the sum of $11,650,000 and $500,000 in punitive damages. According to the suit, '.... as of March 13, 1979 Cherry Hospital had thirty two (32) managerial and ad ministrative positions of which 90.67 (twenty-nine) were filled by whites and 9.3 (three) were filled by Blacks. ". . . . Black females held 0f$ or none of the thirty-two managerial and administrative positions. . "That one of the three Blacks" holding an ad ministrative position, "one of the Black males, the Personnel Officer, was hired by the defendant, Department of Human . Resources and not by the Defendant Cherry Hospital, Office of State Personnel or Personnel Commission. ..." "That prior to September, 1978, The Ex ecutive Committee at Cherry Hospital inten tionally excluded blacks, minorities and women from its meetings and its : Continued on Page 6) . Kev. ci. Vivian, co ? director -of the event, noted the tremendous tur nout, despite the cold ; weather. He outlined the . agenda for the march and ' asked participants to con : duct themselves in an - orderly and peaceful fashion. The Mobilization Committee was made up of fifty: organizations in cluding the NAACP, the National Association of Black Social -Workers, the National Alliance Against ? Racist. an4 Political Recession and others. The march itself was led by students from North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro. This was significant in that it was four A&T freshmen Franklin Mc Cain, David Richmond, Joseph McNeill, Ezell Blair, Jr., now Jibrel Khazan who staged the sit-in at F.W. Woolwdr th's lunch counter on . February 1, 1960. While previous sit-ins had occur red in neighboring cities, Greensboro's action sparked subsequent demonstrations. Today, McCain is a tex tile executive in Charlotte; Richmond lives on a farm in Franklinton; McNeill is a Fayetteville stockbroker and Khazan is a job pro gram reviewer in New Bedford, Mass. Woolworth too, has undergone some changes and now has a black na tional vice president, Aubrey .Lewis, who is a former college football star. At the Coliseum, Rev.' Lavert Taylor of Norfolk, Va., led freedom songs while program speakers assembled. Opening remarks were delivered by Rev. C.T. Vi vian. He said persons were present from every spec trum of thought and ideology something that had never happened before. Vivian requested; the audience to be disciplined and respect the views of all organizations represented although some disagreement might exist. The invocation was given by Greensboro native, Rev. Sadye Joyner-Milton, who asked God to be with those com mitted to the struggle. The following is a short synopsis of each of the speeches: Rev. Fred Shut tlesworth, Southern Chris tian Leadership Con ference (SCLC) organizer, was the first speaker. He told the audience it was time to put on their mar ching shoes and encourag ed all Americans to join in the struggle to non violently end Ku Klux Klan terrorism. Baptist minister Mac Jones said there is a sickness in the land and a poison in the system that . needs to be rooted out ' before America self-: destructs. The purpose ofj the meeting, Jones, said;; national Association of Machinists, admonished Greensboro Mayor Jim Melvin for declaring the city a state of emergency. Melvin made this move to prohibit the carrying of weapons in the march, but Greenwood said he didn't need a weapon to beat the Klan. SCLC cofounder Rev. Joseph Lowery recalled his confrontation with the Klan in Decatur, Ala. He said none of the Klan had been arrested in connec tion with a-killing that oc curred there, although police knew who they wxrj!.. Lowery went on to urge ' .America to not only unite over the hostages in Iran, but also to protest the holding of black hostages in the U.S. by the "ayatollahs of white supremacy and the failure of education." Lowery was followed by Robert Locklear f the Lumbee Indian Nation. , He remembered a con frontation between the Inv dians and Klansmen in had to do with people: southeastern North standina ud for the truth Carolina, pointing out despite persecution. To be with God, he said, is to help the weak struggle to overcome oppression. Dick Greenwood, special assistant to BUI Wipinsinger of the Inter-. that the Klan is after U minority groups. , Skip Robinson of the Northern Mississippi United League stressed non-violence during Continued on Page 7 ByTrellieL.Jeffen In a move that surprised the - standing-room-only crowd at Monday night's tegular City - Council meeting, Councilman Car,', roll Pledger introduced a ,;i motion to postpone the previously scheduled discussion on the Durham Housing Authority Com mittee and to reschedule another meeting for Thursday night, Feb. 7. When several council members expressed con cern over the short notice being convenient to the members of the Housing Committee, Councilman Ralph Hunt called on J.J. Henderson, chairman of the Housing Committee, who, along with all other, members of the commit-; tee, was seated in the au dience. The committee members had apparently been present due to the public announcement that the City Council had plan-, Tony Drown Guest Lectcrcr At J.C Soitb ned to discuss its future at the . Monday night meeting. Mayor Harry Rodenhizer had formerly requested that all members of the Durham. Housing authority Com-1 mittee submit their resignations. All except; one member refused, leav-: ing the mayor to decide on another course of action. Councilman Pledger, : responding to a question . from the- floor by Mn. 'Carolyn I. Thornton on why the discussion was; postponed, said, "We arc1 i hoping to take another ag Continued on Page 2 - 2t, mM Jl CHARLOTTE - Tony Brown of Tony Brown's Journal will be guest lec turer at the Johnson C. Smith University Church on .Monday, February 11 at 4 8:15 p.m. Tony Brown's Journal is the longest running nationally syndicated black affairs program on television. There is no charge to the public. The founding Dean of, Howard University's School of Communica tions, Brown was selected one of the Top 50 Na tional Black Newsmakers by the National! Newspapers Publishers Association, and one of: the 700 Most Influential Black Americans by1 Ebony Magazine. He is, President of the National Association of Black Media Producers. Brown writes a nationally syn- ' Continued on Page 6' Black Perspectives on Urban Planning James Horton (left) of Durham ud Mi. Diane Bennett of Charlotte talk wisk. Mayor Robert Drakef ord of Carrboro (center) daring UNC-CH symposium "Cade Perspectives on Urban Planning" held la Chapel 1113 recently. Drakeford stressed tfct importance of politics in the future development of small cities. Horton sod Ms. Bca nett are graduate students in the UNC-CH department of city and resSosnl planning. rnoto y L.C. El EDITORIAL THE LYON PARK CONTROVERSY ". . .and with understanding. " all thy: getting get Proverbs 4:7 The Senior Citizens of the Lyon Park area have been more than a little con cerned in recent weeks about the flow of funds to their center for continued operation, supplies, services and equip ment. Some, potentially serious complaints have been discussed, including the firing of the center's director, Jimmy Lee; ac tions of the Coordinating Council for Senior Citizens; and some serious ac cusations have been made against .the Durham Branch of the NAACP and its president, George Frazier. In our continuing investigation of charges, counter-charges and counter counter charges, the web gets more and more tangled. At this point, we nave been able to arrive at only partial con clusions. We intend to see this situation, through to the end, however, and report to our readers our findings without fear or favor. One of our general conclusions, at this point, is that it seems numerous misunderstandings on the part of masy concerned with the Lyon Park tcdor1 Citizens Center controversy havt cca tributed to making a bad situstica worse. , , Another Is that the actions of th Continued on Pic 2 J' .