Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 3, 1968, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PICTORIAL HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEK I, rwr4 Jii/JF • ' : - >3 fit «§« ACCUSED IN CLEVELAND - Cleveland, O.* Harlell Jones, considered one ol Clo\,'- land’s leading Black Nationalists, appeared in court at Centra! Police Station. Jones was arrested July 26 on charges of carry *" tag a .38 caliber revolver in his car. GUESTS AT WHITE HOUSE CEREMONY - Washington: President Johnson July 29 signed into y law legislation putting new emphasis on U. S. aid to developing countries which voluntarily adopt ' birth control programs. Following the signing, the President hands out pens to George Holland of the Veterans Administration, and his sister, Mrs. Bertha. Collins of San Antonio, Texas, guests at the White House ceremony. gWBBBLII ft , W"L? jtj£*E£ tean »«? i> itftTr'tf.^’^y^ ’* w> W *■*' RIFLE BUTT IN STOMACH - Mexico City: Rifle butt is jabbed into student’s stomach by 4 paratrooper July 30 as the youth is forced against corrugated metal door. Student is grinning and yelling. &sT VIETNAM WAR - Placards and umbrellas are used as cover from a heavy dcmn ps@r during a demonstration at the Philippines Congress to protest the war in Vietnam and de« the recall o! Filipino troops from Vietnam July 30. Later, the students stormed into the P* Embassy compound but a force of Manila policemen kept them from entering the Embassy gefldiiiSg. (ALL PHOTOS Hi UK). .Jl £§& / mmSSntmL muh fOSS - Washingtons Rob «ft Vtece Walton, charged j with participating in th« 1 SMOot murder of a CMca- | go storekeeper, has been j * added to the FBl's list of i - - "*T®n Most Wanted Fugt- 1 tives." Walton, a Negro American born in Norfolk, V&.» Is 21 years old, la 8' #>* to V 8" tall, weighs 148 pounds, has black hair, brown ay*;*, a medium «*4»d*sioji and a slender BaSSljiniliE. jjrjjg . I POPfe PAUL AGAINST BBSTS CONTROL - Cas*«»- gandolfo*, Italy: Pope Paul VI, speaking to several thousand pilgrims at his summer residence here July 81, appeals to Christian couples io eeospt his controversial encyclical m birth control “for &s human truth*' det&fte the up-oar tt has caused In the world. MCKKSICK \T LAWYi RS» CONVi NTION - Washington: Floyd McKissick, lormer president oi the Congress ol Racial Equality (CORE),(right), holds a news conference at the 43rd annual meet ing oi the National Bar Assn , a predominantly Negro organization for attorneys, here July 30. ■t £& i .v-A ' 11 ||py§ip p jpßo£gjj& NIGHT OF VIOLENCE - Mexico City: Riot police battle a student demonstrator late July 20 in night of violence which ended with Mexi can Army troops using bazookas and bayonets to break up anti-police demonstrators. The students have been calling for the ouster of the police chief. City Man Murdered With Own Rifle While Running &## r> $& # 2;> # && &&&& New CORE Director Declares GUN LAWS DISARM BLACKS TH£ CMQLINIAnI North Caroline's Leading Weekly VOL 27. NO. 36 Calls Poverty War A Failure Bishop Says "God Kept Ghettol Alive With The Black Church” >l.l . ■■•::.. ... :. Ji '. .-•■■- ■ ' ■■■■■. ■.•■ '. >■ ■' *. . ; ■ ; . M «areoS*K«B®i(«B»HßPwra®*WssieswPwWs««^^^fs>*-I■MKH IJiffes Pm I# Given hi Share LOUISVILLE, Ky. - The War On Poverty is a failure, ac cording to Presidential aspirant Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D. - Minn.). The nation’s anti-poverty ef fort, he said, “has failed so far from lack of funds and mis guided priorities. But is has also failed because the Demo cratic party has not b#en sensi tive to the requirements of mod em democracy.” That party, he asserted, “ob structed the War on Poverty - not intentionally, but as a con sequence of its rigid struc ture.” Poverty funds have “too of ten gone to the wrong people. They have been distributed through political middlemen and through the patronage system to organizations which have no connection with the poor people (See CLAIM GHETTTO. P S) AME Zion Bishop Is Heard DURHAM - Delegates to the 1968 annual meeting of theCon necticnal Council, AME Zion Church heard Bishop A. G. Dun ston, Jr., say that only wea pon God had kept the ghetto a live with the' '-'Black Church,” due to the fact that it was lo cated in the ghetto and its sup porters dwelt in the ghetto. The prelate delivered the opening message at St. Mark AME Zion Church, Wednesday morning. He spoke from the subject, “Preserving a Herit age He admonished his hear ers to realize that the Negro church, throughout the years, had been the hope of a defense less people and had eventually awakened them to the fad that first-class Christians should have all the rights of first class citizenship. Bishop Dunston dwelt upon (See ZION BISHOP, S*. 2> WEATHER Temperatures during the pa rtes! Thursday through Mon day «US average near normal in northwestern North Caro lina A o mueh above normal in the seuthera half of South Car olina. Daytime temperatures will average in the Ms, extent mostly In the *fls in the south ern portion of South Carolina. Low temperatures at night will he mostly in the Ms In the mountains and the T«» else where. Quite warm and humic weather is expected to prevail through Monday. Precipitation Is expected to be one inch or snore, occurring as mostly af ternoon and evening thunder showers. i B^HOM ,l RALEIGfi^S^FE[GLA! l L l^O lIJC l IJC? ,^lLfiSa^ THE CRIME BEAT I PASSERBY STRUCK BY ant suffered cruises there. BOTTLE ' * * * Miss Jeanette Louise Wil liams, 38, 104 Kirkman I Ana, told Officer B, W. People* at ISfIS a.m. Saturday, she was walking home and spotted a couple fighting at the later sec tion c? E, Oavie and S # East Struts, She stated to* man threw a feotti® at the woman, but u missed its mark and hit Miss WUHam® to the side. ffls* said she knew neither toe cairn nor Jhe wemm, but ton wm,§a mj ’called *vi*gfcsto* by toe man fighting he?. Stew* in to# to#, rite, toe osmpiski- RALEIGH. N C. SATURDAY. AUGUST 3. 1968 DR. HAWKINS ORDERED BACK TO SCHOOL - Charlotte: Dr. Reginald Hawkins, Charlotte dentist, has been ordered by the six-man State Board of Dental Examiners to return to dental school or face the loss of his license to practice dentistry in the state. The order was issued Tuesday, July 30. (UPI PHOTO). BUk Pumr btwded By HuHhad lawyers’ Guild LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The National Lawyers Guild is one of America’s most progressive bar association It is com posed entirely of black and white civil rights and civil liberties attorneys At its 30th convention held in Los Angeles a few days ago, the Guild took two significant Miss Addye C. Brown Laid To Rest In City Miss Addye C. Brown, sec retary of the First Baptist Church, 101 S. Wilmington. St., for the past 32 years, died Sunday about. 7:50 p.m. at her home. Miss Brown was 85 years of age last January 24. Funeral services were conducted Wed nesday, July 31, at 4 p.m. from the First Baptist Church and burial followed in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rev. Dr. C. W. Ward, pastor, officiated. A native of Warren County, she came to this city at a very young age and attended the John Chavis School. She resided at 111 Klndlsy Street, formerly 18 E. Worth Street. (See MISS BROWN, p t) SNATCHES WOMAN’S PURSE Miss Barbara Ann Watson, 205 B, Seawall Avenue, re ported to Officer D. Brinson at 8 a.m. Sunday, that she was walking elans in to® 200 Mock of S. Tarboro bead, when a colored male snatched her poetetbook and ‘took off down the street,' Miss Watson described toe purse snatcher as bsiag about 18 years of age. She stated the brown purse contained .$4 and tost It ms werto SB, rs«« esmm wkat. p. *> steps to make itself more rele vant to the Black struggle. The first step was the elec tion of Milton R. Henry as vice president. Henry is trorn the Detroit area, and is first vice president of the Republic of New Africa. The Republic of New- Africa seeks to end the (Sfe BIACK POWER P. 2) _ *. > HBSffiljnjS MISS ADDYE C. BROWN Swmlm INRrmRrPr Bkmdßf A Raleigh businesswoman vras charged Monday about Hjlß p.m, with striking another wo* msis in the forehead with a pistol alter to© latter refused to leaver her place of bustofis. <«•• wmmtwsk*n. SINGLE COPY 15c BBt——a— —■zmammm iihn» Shy imis BkslsLaws 0a Weapons WASHINGTON - Proposed gun legislation would disarm Negroes and not whites, accord ing to Roy Tunis, who soon will become national CORE chair man, Shnis, who suspects “all gun laws,” said he opposes allgun j control legislation unless it ! would disarm white and black j citizens alike. “White racist police and | judges and prosecutors will be enforcing these laws, and we know how laws are now liriple j merited. Black people will b© disarmed, and white people will not be,” More important than the issue of tun legislation, Innls said, was the assertion by black peo ple of control over the insti tutions in their own communi ties and the attainment of so cial stabilization. 50 Exited As Officer Talked A CAROLINLAN newsman found himself the only press representative on hand Wed nesday morning at IQ, o’clock after having been invited to sit in on a press conference by a youth group, which challenged the Raleigh Police Department on a number of issues Monday morning at the Chavis Ree reaction Center. The Monday morning meeting broke up twice-about midway through it-when about 50 young people walked out as Major H, T. Bliley of the uniformed, di vision of the Police Depart ment, was speaking and again as the meeting ended on a note of discord. When the group returned af ter the walk-out, it ms at the Intervention of Shaw University President, Dr, James E. Cheek, who went outside and talked to the leaders. A demonstration by about fif ty Negroes took place at City Hall last Wednesday, sparking 'tha Monday morning session be tween the protestors and Po lice Chief Tom W. Davis, Ma jor Robert E, Goodwin, Major Bailey, Detoeiivf Eckerd Curtis Winston, the city's only Ndfcro detective, and Uk Tommy jus tice, The initial complaint grew out ©f the questioning of a group of <«ee YOUTH emovp. F, *> \-vnmsnm~} 1003 6752 6504 S l SSO S3O 120 * ! jw»™r u ssi,?s?«affidMA’S2 | i raeeiv® amounts totted *bovs frem the BWlfewrAKlßg No Sweepstakes Winners Since toss*® wer® no winners in The CAHCLINIAN’s Sweep stakes promotion tost week, the caum is foibled tots vmk, TtoSest# pod this week are green to color and mast be dated My PI. They are now* ava&«B at tossto«s»*e* listed as toe BweecMttfißM ftog*. Si sure to plek v& your tidfcat when visiting a Sweepststew Bullef In Back Os Head Kills According to witnesses, Charles Arto McCray, 41, of 508 Montague Lane running toward his car in*the street In front of 1021 Cannis ter street Saturday at 9:15 p. m. when he was felled by one shot from his own .22 calibre rifle Being held in the Wake County Jail at Central Prison without privilege of bond in the Incident is James (Doc) Wil liams, 48, of 500 Battle Street. McCray was shot once in the back of the head. Officer F. L, Benson reported that he arrived rat 1021 Can nister Street, after receiving a call, just in time to set ambulance personnel placing CHARLES A. MCCB^^ JAMES (DOC) MLLUMS McCray's body on a stretcher. McCray was pronounced dead on arrival at Wake Memorial Hos pital and Officer Benson then turned the case over to the Detective Bureau. Mrs. Eloise Jeffries Johnson, who lives at the Cannister Street address, told detectives that Linsey Lee Young and Mat tie Dixon came to her house earlier Saturday evening and they all went to a grocery store and returned about 6 p.m. A bout one hour later, according (See CITY MAN. P. 2) Patterson Wed To Caucasian LOS ANGELES, Calif. - North Carolina - born Floyd Patter son, the only man in history to win the world heavyweight boxing championship twice, stid here this week that he had been married to the former Miss Janet Seaquist “for about a year and a half," but said the marriage was no secret from the world. Patterson, born in Waco, N. C,, said, '<We definitely haven't been secretly married. No one asked me about it and when (See WtTJKWSOV W?®*, P. *) advertiser. No purchase Is nec essary, but the merchants ap preciate your business. Sweepstakes numbers good for tois period are 1093, worth $36; m2,P 0; ML Pf Patronise CAROLINIAN ad vertisers sack week. They ap preciate year buetosis. Tell them you, mw toeir advertlae («m (iwrawam p. «
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 3, 1968, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75