Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 3, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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Death Parades N. C. Roads & r > £> # iz -vi <1 # Wftl Mm RsimMMim NY’S HARLEM IS RESTLESS Fatalities Sored On Weekend Thirteen race people Jos* their lives from May 24 thru the 28th, «iHi precaution be ing heard from every nook and cranny. Headon crashes »ere recorded as the top cause for most of the deaths. Attempts to pass <«e car, with another approaching and too much speed were the prevailing factors. There was a two-car crash in Pender County, about 6.2 miles north of Bnrgaw, ata.«? 5:45 p. m. Wednesday. Investigating officers reported that lailaHer ring Murphy, 58, ran off of V. S. Highway 117, smiting a nottser car headon. Is the im pact the Murphy woman was killed and Rufus (Pud) Williams, 30, Rose Hill, a passenger in the ether car was also killed. At 11:45 p at. Friday, Cal vin Co&idge Clark, 41, attach ed to Service Company HAR BTN, Parts Island, S. C , was traveling on V, S. 17, 3 miles north of Wfbntagton, on the wrong side of the road. hit m* mm vm, y n WEEKLY LEGISLATIVE REPORT MOTET This is ti»T?@EiSsifc ■at a series of weekly summaries prepared by the legislative staff oi the liistttfite of Government on due work of the Sotth Car olina Assembly of 1967. It is confined to disotjs stans of mat ters of general interest and ma jor importance. * * * The 1967 Assembly Is now fXMudtog down the backs! retch, having turned! Use corner of the iSih toll week <d the session. 1712 bills and resolutions have been Introduced, at which m 5 Mils and 53 resolutions have been ratified. While the pace of new introductions slowed somewhat this week, even so. a total at 95 bills were intro duced *cd added to already buig i»g committee larders. (818 «m* übskahvk, r. f» ir. lilirt L fatal CHARLOTTE - Dr. Hubert A. Eaton, Wttm ingress, datr&issaf the civil rights committee of the Old North state Medical Socie ty oompl,lined to the & S. Health, Education -sari Welfare Department, 4a a threat letter that the continued practice at m& bj- North Caroltoa hospitals, r SWEEPSTAKES' 1 UMBERS 1 i 1027 677 7531 i nomts2s WMnns mmm swwpst«fcs Wii mm Ircyiig - Carolinian sweep states ■aimer hit the "Jack Pot” last week, tost they did mt Weak the bask. Tte fSO that goes to eads iswk to availatoie and all you have to do Is avail your self wht the wincing ticket. Mrs. tertto Mayo pteted tte purse, Om to «te fart mu ate got WMtnm Lem *~rw SSLfs* ;« «!■*£ * ; - « iSmifc mJSfs^ M» W ?*“*•■ ■*»»« *»<*•»».». C»™t Dr £t? •* ®® i ’ ifcffltl®, MAAC* Legal Defense Fima, fee »'<?*■ c£iw? mS aa-°*w2SJ;££ 2r rs * a *® Ws *«»»«*. ®T“* »»** *» K«- W«i ««S Stoter, will re ; Swt ra !l. r '% f&sfe *w tei *tefed«ftira£fcm taMeg, or si to .V cewa f®**t«§ Sb Itads; msae«»«lte rcteetopte** :w<sgm ®, .as® m(bitrm:v. THE CAROLINIAN North CaroUm *t Loading Wsokly __ ___ VOL. 26, NO, 18 RALEIGH, ii. C.. SAnJRGAV, JUKE 3, 1567 PRICE IS CENItS 2 Held In SII,OOO Theft 1 .«t| Va C*OT®T!O36EB JN KOL&SIIG - Chicago; Seen® to Bfh District *? ag * aa k®*® ®**% M*F 21 as poHcemea tpestkm ua- Idemtfied youths liter one person was kfflod md eight were tafared fa a shooting spree on Chicago's west side. Police **•>' midenafflta victim was found dead in a truck. Police are holding one youth is custody in connection with the shooting a«d searching tot 3 other persons allegedly involved. (UPT PHOTO). tc dtscrtouteatfeg against Negro doctors was driving them from the state. la eesffimeattog m tte letter Monday Extm said the best pr<rn Hunt tbe problems still eslst was to tte declining tmm her at Negro physicians hi the state - with cue-third tenlf Bynsm Opticians She reeeh «d UO wtera she visited tte CABOU9SAX office. Mrs. Pearl Murphy got tic feet number 4299 from EBirds and received s'&c. g ■*■»* the first time stse had picked tg> a ticket and she was happy that *te had read tte details to tte iafs HospHab !a the last five years. The tetter ashed the depart ment to immediately revise the standards to close the loopholes la the guidelines. He charged that these guide lines tore permitted hospitals “to indulge in discriminatory practices abates* N%ro physi Mrs, Murphy said tte money came to good and that she would give some of it to her church. Mrs, Mary Thoifipsan, F-15 Washington Terrace, had 3154 flat she got from Davidson’s Coffee Break, and received $25. Every' person who does busi ness with me of tte stores t«M« awes. r. ft 2 Nabbed lit Bank Robbery GASTOK - The recent flurry of bank robberies and attempt ed bank robberies, by Negroes, In North Carolina, got a set back Monday afternoon, when Bobby Ree Newsome, 18, and Cornelius Davis, 19, were easy prey, after they are said to have taken SII,OOO from a local branch of the Planters Na tional Bank & Trust Co. They were caught in a road block after officers were noti fied of the holdup Witnesses to the holdup say the two men entered the banking establish ment about 10:05 a. m, and an nounced they were stag tag a holdup. They are said to haw scooped op the money and to have fled. The witnesses said that one of the men carried a small pistol, with a white handle. Officers set up a road block ami in less than one hour, af ter the crime was committed, they were both under arrest. The two accused robbers are said to have escaped from the Person County jail, in Roxfco ro, where he was awaiting trial osa a charge of ai med robbery, to April. . Arresting officers said that wfaea the two me® were arrest ed they were driving a car belonging to the mother of Da vis. They were apprehended just outside at Murfreesboro, on Highway 258, The officers allege that a pistol, having the resemblance office one describ ed by the witnesses to the rob f#«e WWM, P. *) cians to the area of staff priv ileges.*' He said the Old North State Society toe* of mauerocs te rtances across toe state, hot de clined to he more specific, pending docwnentattoß of the cases. Give The Havenots A Chance In the Wed®icaday momms Nmm & Observer tm article, or story, appeared qasotssig Coancflman Jofeo W. Winters, as warning Raleigh o# a jxssaibk tost summer, m view of the apparent flagrant disregard for open bousing. Mr. Winters reminded the Mayors Human Rdatkaas Commission at , their regular meeting that largely feraugh ait-ins, Negroes ’ are now enjoying the decency of other Raksgbites, in public « pleas®. Along with Mr. Wwtextf warning to the policy makers j of Raldgh, if there is violence sin the making here. The j Cmxslimtm would admonish the power structure to take \ heed of the need for a training on high school level which < would allow an individual to earn m mffi&entt income t© 3 support his family in a decent eavinsnascsiL * Prom time to time this newspaper has cMded the eduea- i tiocai and political forces to sponsor a technical high t school, under the local board, of education. For some rea- \ son unasplahted, our fair dty apparently frowns upon a j technical high school. This is unfortunate, in that, mast people will not go to college. This leaves the vast majority «sf our population without the training needed to meet the present economy. And this includes housing, m matter where it may be found in Raieigjh, We understood of the 237 graduates of the John W. L£g m High School in this gear’s class, only some 15%, or 35, are expected to eater college m the fall- This is a drastic nrairasisnce in our esgwcted escalation mad promotion of college matricuSatson. Unless these high school graduates are to be equipped is the future to earn & thribng. comsnm surate with, the demands of the warn §mk spiral it wiS! be impossible for this great mass of people, along wife the thourands of dropouts, to uaSnwst* good food, adequate homing, clothing., food, mmmmese, school for their children, church, civic, and social sctmtics. Hum ingredients are asaoeg the attribute, like honesty, forthrightness. depen- —— , From (tektoh’s Official Police Fites masmuAi f MTO®© FUJOTS M«W Loresssa *toss ts. MS & Jmm S&wwfc, s®, vaa etonetti! sfee toawaay of © wswjS ffef* er from HoMtail® Pas® fleam. 8. VQattftai StnML “Sis* i»- «ts«m«sit tetstefi as «i *«t Whit*, i& etAar. was tten «m FrJaSsy, ®fcm& * Sam. Use ww» «*« lifer to mts to feme 'teas #toim tea® Junes ‘Xtensis MAjnrfci, of jpi V s “FIRST” M.D. FROM DUKE- ; Wilhelm Delano Meriwhether, ’ one of seventy senior students at the Duke University School ‘ of Medicine holds the distfac- * (ten of being the first Negro to graduate In medicine from that I institution. He will terminate four years of medical train- 4 tof which has included seven months of training is research. Graduation exercises are sche ****** fortune sth, 1967, as the Duke Indoor Stadium to Durham. Prior to entering Medical School at Duke, Meriwether completed three years of un dergraduate training at Mich igan State University. Follow ing graduation, he wfll totem to medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital to Philadelphia, Pa, His major -Merest is to hemototegy. He is tfee *on of Mr. and Mrs. W, h. Meriwether car Charles ton, Sonth Carolina. RrolestOf n »npportew ; Unheeded ' TtSESf YORK - Eii-ta te dewing a dtetine* restlessness over the fad that it has no " rspreseotsitoa to the House of Representatives to lock after Its interest. This teeming see € See SAK&aag s*. b> mm,. MKVK J»®es»® SsMfe Marrt* Suites em« te jwtoee «b»? Ok i few?, tetr tost: s**S 'teas. p&* «a «*f at tfc? Thsm WanS »■ M Fwr.er, mi ft. Manta fit, **» mm Itoot as* to mm mmMm tank* info. B ' «®i tofitotea, if tes 3 tet tie trnemm tWRSM sfeassS, UrM pm, manitgr.. mr f ATTEND DAUGHTER’S FUNERAL - New York: George Scbuvler(right) and his wife, Josephine attend funeral services of their daughter, Philippa Schuyler, to St. Patrick’s Cathedral here Mav iah. Francis Cardinal Spellman (left) conducted a pontifical high mass ror me megru cwiuu pianist who died a heroine’s death fa Vietnam May 9th. (rf’l PHOTO). Controversy Koesing Killed WASHINGTON, D. C. - Per haps the most controversial piece of legislation to affect Californians since the famed Covenant Cases was held un constitutional Monday when the United States Supreme Court said that California's Propo sition 14 not only was a vio lated of one's civil rights, but ’‘authorized racial discrimina tor* in the housing market,” fa » 5-4 decision. The voter approved amend ment to the California const!- utiaa wiped out two Califor jia laws that had barred sales and rentals. The amendment was a toe* to the proponents of open housing and was the neucleas of many political bat Sdwef Assistant Appointee! CHARLOTTE - The policy tbiters o(this city came near er to making democracy work here when they recommend ed that Jarr.es T. Burch be named to the newly-created post at assistant superintendam for supplementary education. The move was hailed ihruoot th. state as the greatest boost to democracy that has taken place since the days at Bishop J, W, Hood, who Is considered one of tte founders of the state’s eitoeatSonal system. As saperteteodaa? for sup plemental education, Mr. Burch would have broad responsibility for federal programs but also would work to the area of the proposed Learning Academy and the Model-School program and would be the school sys tem** representative to con ferences where new programs are be tog proposed or ex Duke Grid Star WadesThru Five DURHAM - Rote Bodkin, a 21-year-old £45 pound junior, who plays tackle on the Bute University football team, prov ed be was a true tackier in District Court here Friday, whee he told Judge s. O. Riley hem he waded to to five Negro boys to the early mot a tog hours of May 14. The evidence showed that Re ginald Earl Hinton, 13, Tripo li Dr ~ a student at North Car - olina College; Richard Hayes, !§, Hillside High School foot toll player; Bernard Williams, 19, an apprentice printer; Stan ley Smith, 17, and Paul Stroud, 17, both students at Hillside decided they would go out for & little adventure eo the May morning. The adventure did not prove as favorable to them as they had hoped for. They oot only felt the brunt of Bodkin’s watch but ended up being sen tence 1 to court, Hinton and Haves not onlv '-m Mint mmmm mm F. RhSatord Jtotfwa, Or. «Sf. A, Bof»r, ttmKm. Matte* Jteaes* Bs«&lasr»® apMfter, prmMtesA Pnwffl R, StoMesaa, stud !Sw Iter. After CUkwtf, Interim teii md rector at 2%, Ambrose llPtoteMi dstsa <*. tles. Congressman Haw kins has carried on a continuous battle to keep it on the books. There are many who say that Governor Reagan won the state’s highest office by supporting the idea ology of those who oppose open bousing. There are others w+ ( o say that Edmund (Pat) Brown lost due to the fact that he felt that the law was discriminatory. Mayor Christopher is said to have lost the gubernatorial nomination of the Republican Party, due to his fight against the amendment. The support ers of the amendment took the issue to the people, after open housing became law and suc ceeded to killing the liberal leg plained, Dr. Phillips said. He added that the position will also involve key planning lor summer-school programs and long-range evaluation of plans for anticipating needs and working toward meeting them. "Mr. Burch has real talent and will make a fine addition to the executive stall He has demonstrated genuine leader ship qualities,” Dr. Phillips said. Mr. Burch is 39 years old and has been with the Chari otte- Mecklenburg school system since 1957. He has been to his present position since 1966. to other appointments the administration has recom mended that Mrs. Elizabeth S. Randolph, presently principal ot University Park Elementary School, be named to fill the director post now held to Mr. drew suspended Jail sentences of 30 days, but must pay a r**t SAa&sjs* *. ft !» l|p|jPfS|£ V , ROMCIN islation by putting the amend ment to the constitution. Justice Bryon R. White, to a majority opinion, said, of the ill-fated amendment it made “The right todiscruninate” one of the baste policies of the state. The admendment, adopted through the initiative process in November 1964 by a margin of nearly 2 to 1, gave property owners “absolute discretion” to housing sales and rentals. The decision banning discri mination in the sale and rental of housing is hailed by many as the propelling factor that will tear down the ghettos and do away with “defactor discrimi nation” fa the United states. Burch. Burch was torn in Raleigh to 192”, but his parents left ab ject poverty during the depres sion there for New York City, “and my earliest childhood memories are ol Westchester County.” (an affluent suburb of New York City). His mother worked as a 4 iPt|i« W : JAMES T. BURCH domestic all her life. She still does. His father woi-ked in a dry-cleaning establishment. He died when Burch was 15. When Burch graduated from high school at the end of World War H, tie tried to join the Merchant Marines. "I went down to the Lower East Side (of New York) and found out the only positions Often for Negroes were stew ards. My mother heard about it fs«« auun, p. ft 7A4? "SSSSS *• tetfh •
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 3, 1967, edition 1
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