ON THE WAR FRONT i * .Jgt t ' *'•*' H* A « » ENEMY REMOVED - Saigon: Body of slain Viet Cong suspect is dragged away from a government billet by two South Vietnamese soldiers, here Jan. 31, during Communist assaults on allied installations. JEf:r ATTACKED - u> s. Vietnam: Vietnamese civilians run past body of man who was killed when jeep (background) carrying goverpment troops was ambushed by Viet Cong terrorists during Communist attacks here Jan. 30. A Soutli Vietnam major and his driver were slain in the ambush of the jeep. jfrgg!*reto v e *' ' , ’ l £-< i&Ssi jr mS? Jm 9 **' ijp® - ~ s', SUSPECT SURRENDERS - Saigon, Vietnam; A Viet Cong suspect, believed to be one of the suicide squad members who stormed the U, S, Embassy and occupied part of it ior a short time Jan. 31 (Saigon time), is being taken to a jeep by Ameri can Military police during fighting that raged in scattered parts of the city. CIVIL WAR IN NIGERIA - Umuahia, Biafria* Biafrifua* troops man a Czechoslovakian jeep-mounted machine gun here Jan. 27 to guard against Nigerian air attacks as Biafrl an military leader Lt. Col Odumegwu Ojukwu addresses his' consultative assembly in a nearby building. Ujukwu told a UPI correspondent recently that secessionist Biafrta would welcome intervention by the United States to end the six month-old civil war between Nigeria and Blair a, the name taken by the eastern region ot Nigeria when it seceded last July, Bold Bank Robberies Gripping State 1 In Prison 3 Jailed 2 Sought Bank robbing, espe cially in North Car olina, 'looms as a new lure to Negroes, but up to now most of them have been caught o r are being closed in on fast. James EdwardNesbit,Dur ham cigarette salesman, was given a 15-year-prlson-tprm In U. S. District Court Monday for the robbery of a Rocky Mount bank, Dec. 27. He pleaded guilty to armed robbery. He was charged with having taken $13,041 Practically all of the money was recovered, in the trunk of the car he drove for the American Tobacco Com pany. The fad has even gripped wo men it is alleged. Terrie Lee Rogers of Sharpsburg, 20-yr old unemployed tobacco worker, was placed in jail for the alleg ed robbery of a Sharpsburg bank, on Jan. 15. The rob bery is supposed to have net ted $14,051. None of this sum is said to have been recov ered Allan Ray Grimes, 38, of Goldsboro, was caught in Colo nial Heights, Va., where he is said to have been arrested Sat urday. There were conflicting reports as to why he was ar rested in Virginia City. There was one report that he was ar rested on a traffic charge, as (See ROBBERIES, P. 2) Mitchell Supports Program “Become involved and not ac~ ' quiese to the power structure, which is politics,’’Senator Cla rence Mitchell IJI of Mary land, told students 01 st. Aug ustine’s College, Tuesday at the All College Assembly. “Poli tical Power runs our country,” and Black People must recog nize the power of vote.” Young educators must aspire to the best that the country has to of fer, and work in the areas where they are needed. The speaker stated that peo ple like Stokely Carmichael and Rap Brown are capturing the masses because the young col lege trained Negro youths have turned their backs on the mass es in the ghettos. The "Black Power” doctrine as advocated by Carmichael and (See MITCHELL, F 2) Palm er Menmb Femhm In ixmmthn Attmk The recent squabble over cheating in examinations, given to teachers in North Carolina and the announcement that there will be more cheating, raised the ire of E. B. Palmer, exe cutive secretary of the pre dominantly Negro body--North Carolina Teachers Association, He let loose a broadside, this week, at those who would re quire teachers to take the Na tional Teacher Examination as a requirement for teacher certification in North Carolina. The Board of Directors ot the North Carolina Teachers Association, in a head on con frontation with the issue, Dec, IC, 1067, voted unanimously to abolish the practice of such exa minations. He gave the follow ing reasons. !.• The use of these exami nations serves as a block to teacher certification. Failure to perform satisfactorily on the National Teacher Examinations could prevent students with good scholastic records and super ior teacher potential from working in North Carolina, The tests have the unwholesome ef fect of imposing a straight jac ket on the requirements for en tering the teaching profession in North Carolina. 2. These tests discriminate against persons who come from adverse economic, social, and cultural environments, inade quate elementary and secondary Housing Probe Reveals Bias ASHEVILLE - Persons who have watched the developments in the Hillcrest Community- Housing Project have termed ihe policy the most ruthless ever used, Charles McLean, field repre sentative for the NAACP told the CAROLINIAN that the peo ple affected had every reason to rebel A copy of the lease, that people, who rent under the terms of the Housing Au thority of the City of Asheville, reveal some startling facts. Because of the prevailing {»(>(' sioustvo. p. g> H ighway Traffic Mishaps Claim The Carolinian VOL, 27, N 6. 10 fi .#% § f A • M m lAJB • f.f : “ CTJh| ,#*§ %.# * \ gfiff C £X. § l w k i f 4*431 %Mw if W§ m Ir 98 ® %# jpshSl mf§ g m moam § W W 1 m m M m*, ,*«& M m .a, W 111 » m J&y m wT mt mSs m m m m mm? Jf mmm m m m mm a. m «v m m # # ill 4 % m JLJL .. n M rn . n m ffJP gs. Os gug gjy% f fit w M §wjfW iTwm % I f f w If"te I ii li ! wl iWv Isl /I® i I Jg REGRETFUL DEPARTURE - Newington, Conn,: Susan and Jenifer Duncan (L) greet Elizabeth Enemo of Nigeria at the Newington Hospital for Crippled Children. Four year-old Elizabeth is preparing to return to Nigeria after a long stay at the Hospital to repair a birth defect that had twisted the child’s mouth in a grotesque way. In such a condition, tribal tradition declared the child be slain or trained as a fortune teller. (UPI PHOTO). schools, and colleges which have been operated with mini mum facilities and budgets for decades. Unfortunately, Ne groes have been victims of these conditions and circumstances. 3. It was not the intent of the Educational Testing Service for these tests to be used by state and local school systems for teacher certification. At the most, they can serve only diagnostic purposes. 4. The ability to write test answers does not insure the abi lity to perform effectively in the classroom. 5. We are convinced that a single test cannot be relied upon for a state judgment that has the force of laws. Palmer presented other points to support his con tentions, but continued to come back to the point that Negro teachers would not reap the needed benefits, by being forc ed to take the examination, (See PALMER, P. 2) Rev. W. Lee Strikes Back STATESVILLE - Rev. Wil son Lee, militant Baptist mini ster, and J. D. Myers, Chief of Police, have exchanged let ters in the past two weeks that give different versions of an incident that touched off racial overtones, last July. The Rev. Mr. Lee, in a let ter, carried in its entirety, in the January 27 issue of the CAROLINIAN, charged that Chief Myers held an arbitrary hearing on charges, brought by Negroes, against a white member of the Statesville Po lice, one Dalton Brown, for having kicked a Negro boy and for having slapped a Negro girl twice. The charges were made as the results of clashes between the police and Negroes, who insisted on using a laundro mat, which did not permit the use of same, by Negroes. The letter of protest brought a prompt reply from Myers, which is as follows; (See Rev. Lee. P. 2). North Caroline’s Leading Weekly RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1968 [TweepsT^ ! 7792 1150 392 8 a WORTH $175 WORTH sls WORTH $lO \ L Anyone having current WHITE tickets dated Jan. 27, I£6B, with proper numbers, present same to The CAROLINIAN office and receive amounts listed above from the SWEEPSTAKES Feature P l©is@wifis ill Sweepstakes force f u 11 ne s s of the Sweepstakes, made possible to the people of the Raleigh area, by the listed merchants and the CAROLINIAN, is best told in the fact that two housewives picked mn.ru FROM RALEIGH’S OFFICIAL POLICE FILES m (mm si a r YOUTH STABBED FRIDAY James Larry Avery, 13, Rt. 2, Auburn, is said to have been stabbed Friday, at 5:55 p. m. by an unidentified person, ac cording to a report he is alleged to have given Officer R L Johnson. The report avers that Avery received a stab in his lower left abdomen and that he received cuts on the right cheek, in the groin and on the leg. He alleges that a knife was used to inflict these wounds upon him, at 410 S, Blount St, Not only was Avery unable to point out his attacker, but to the police report he was not cooperative with the police. He was reported as not answering questions about his attacker. He is alleged to have been advised that since he knew what the suspect looked like he could sign a warrant. The report listed Harvey Williams as a suspect and is al leged to have stated that Avery had been drinking. * * * WILBERT EVANS WANTED BY SMITHFIELD OFFICER Wilbert Evans, whose address was given as 320 S, East St., is said to be wanted by Smith field police on a felony charge. . SgE William A. Young, Smithfield Police Department, is re ported as having asked, on Friday, that Evans be seized and detained, on a warrant that charges he was in possession of burglary tools and that he attempted to break and enter. Evans was described as being 6* 2*' %veighing 210 lbs, and supposedly having an L shaped ,?car on his left arm. BEATRICE BRIDGES I)II) NOT THINK IT RIGHT Beatrice Bridges, 1016 Walnut St., did not think it was right for Eddison Waters, 310 E. South St., to beat on her with his hands and fist, at 0:80 Friday afternoon. She proceeded to complain to Officer Godwin about tiie treatment she received from the hands of Waters. She let it be known that she would sign a warrant, tsee t heat, r i* Truesdale Calls Mate Then Fires Away From the hall of the Wake County jail Shan non Truesdale, 38, 412 E. Martin St., known as “Shaney” told his story of how he shot William Burnett, 23, 14i29 Sawyer’s Lane, at 6:10 Saturday evening. Truesdale told a CAROLIN IAN representative that he had not been home, A 111 “SHANEY” from work, too long, when h e heard Burnett, out in front of his house curs ing He said that he went out an the front porch j and told him h& j would have tol move on, with* that cursing. He alleges that Burnett told him he was not going anywhere and told him to make him move on. Truesdale’s story continued by him saying that Burnett started up on the porch, with his hands in his pocket. “I did not Vrv-w whai he had in ms pock ’t and w'.ut he was going to so I shot him,” said Truesdale. The representative contacted the Wake Memorial Hospital and was told that Burnett re quired intensive medical care and was in a fair condition, Tuesday afternoon. “Shaney’s” story did not quite agree with the report of the police. This report read that Mary M, Jones, same ad dress, and Senora Truesdale up S4O this week. Mrs. Louise Haynes, 1417 Garner Road, received ticket #1260 from Triangle Appliance and got S3O for same. It was not hard. All she did was to PRICE 15c stated that they were at 31C Love’s Lane talking, when Truesdale came out on the porch and shot Burnett, with a 22 rifle. The report said that Burnett was shot in the right chest and the bullet came out the lower left side of his body, Truesdale said that Senora Truesdale was his wife, but they did not live together. He also said that Mary M. Jones was a roomer in the house, in which he lived. A call to Mrs. Truesdale re vealed that “Shaney”calledher and fearing that he would shoot her, since he had the rifle pointed directly at her, she started back to talk with him. According to her, Burnett was making an attempt, to keep “Shaney” from shooting her. (See •SHANEY” P. 2) Hawkins Stops Gibbs’ Threat With Firearm It is apparent that Willie James Hawkins, 547 E. Hargett c t ', had what if took to stop the ranting of Jt.sse James Gibbs, 52, alias, Johrnj Gibbs, Saturday afternoon. According to; statement math to Officer Joltr I son, by Hawklr .> describing the actions of Gibbs, fl |2|j H AWKINS at the above address, 3:45 p. m., Gibbs went on a reign of go in the store arid after she had finished her business, she asked for her ticket and got it. She compared the number with those on the front o the pap er and that was it. It was the first time she had won. Mrs. Mattie Sanders, GO" S. East St ~ was another first time winner. She got her ticket at Carter’s Furniture. Itwasgood for $lO. You can be a winner. The CAROLINIAN makes the money available to persons who visit the stores listed. Certainly you are buying everything from soup t'o nuts and the stores listed on the Sweepstakes page carry everything from soup to nuts. Since you have to have the things for yourself and fam ily, why nut trade with one of the stores that solicits your business, thru the columns of your newspaper, the C \ROLIN IAN, This is another public serv ice feature of the newspaper. Your visit to one of the stores shows that you have faith in the paper and It also shows that you want to spend your money with people who recog nize the value of your money, by soliciting your business, thru the columns of the paper. Not only does the CAROLIN IAN urge you to buy from these firms, but it asks that you tell your neighbors and friends that they can win extra cash, by buying from one of the Sweep stakes participants. There are two newcomers to the list this week, Wrenn Elec tric Company,| 404 Glenwood ♦venae alfd f*.tural Health Foodit, 8 last Hargett St. There is al%> t!te return of Thomp san-L«ich,«2o west Hargett St. The men bens an* values are as 'Twelve Fast Speed Kills Two Near Selma Os the. 98 persons who has been reported as having lost their lives, as the result of • traffic mishaps this year, 12 are listed as Negi’oes The January rate is running less than Jan uary 1967, but the Highway Department says there are still too many losing their lives, due to absolute carelessness. The most grusome accident, taking the lives of two men Saturday, on 1-95, 1 mile south of Selma, was related to the C AROLINIAN, by a person who visited the scene, minutes af ter the fatal mishap, The informant told the news (See SPEED, P. 2) Hi Woman Ignored By Top Police JAMESVILLE - The blood that failed and caused the death of the mother of two sons, serv ing the United States on two war fronts, could easily cry out ov er the world and certainly in North Carolina, from her grave, protesting the wrong done by po lice officers of Williamston, (See SICK WOMAN, P. 2) terror It was alleged that Gibbs be gan slashing people with a knife. lUk report says that Gibbs had cut two people and that he was drunk when he started up the stairs to cut Hawkins. See ing that Gibbs j still clutchedthel knife in his hand,! Hawkins alleges* that he told GIBBS Gibbs to stop or he would shoe* him. Hawkins alleges that Gibbs did not stop and he then shot Gibbs, with a 22 rifle. Doro thea Newson, same address, was listed as a witness. The report shows that Hawkins was arrested, but no mention was made of the two persons said to have been cut by Gibbs, or what happened to him. A telephone call to Wake Memorial Hospital revealed that no patient of that name was admitted there Saturday. There was no record of Haw kins having been put in the Wake County jail. Police Clear Wade Allen Anthony Wade Allen, 1104 E. Martin St., who was arrested by Raleigh police about 1:30 a. m. Jan. 13, and charged with driving a car without license, was completely exonorated. Allen told the CAROLINIAN that he knew they had nothing on him and that any investi gation would show that he was not guilty of violating any law. On the charge of driving with out a license he was able to produce his license and charg es were dropped. He was also able to prove ownership of a gun ound in the car and this clear ed up any doubt as to ownership. The whole thing is said to have come about when the car he was driving got stuck in the snow at the Bus Terminal. Al len alleges that he was doing a good deed by taking some per sons who were at the Termi nal home, when the officers ar rived and asked for the driv er’s license. He says he told them that the license was in his wallet and that he had in advertently left it. When he did not produce the license, the officers decided to search the car and that is when they found the gun. WEATHER Temperatures (Burinji fbe &*- rid Thursday through Monday will average much above nor mal. Daytime highs are ex pected to average In the SO's in the mountains and st-*S elsewhere. Lows at night will average S7 to 45 except mostly 30 in the mountains. Rather mild weather is expected to continue through Monday. Pre cipitation will total three quar ters of an inch or more occur ring as occasional rain or scat tered shower*.