Thanksqiving r To Carolinian Readers Everywhere ConfrontationHasMeritiNAACP Exec. Speaks At Reidsville Meeting REIDSVILLE - Roy Wilkins admonished black militants Sunday of this week to stop throwing rocks and start some books” in a speech delivered before a mixed audience in Reidsville. Wilkins, executive secretary of v ' the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), was the prin cipal speaker for the 22nd anniversary cele bration of the Reidsville chapter of the NAACP. The main thrust or militants should bo directed toward ed ucational goals instead of non Xj-U-S-X}- Launches Drive To Mobilize Four Million US Black Women TAR HEELS PKfcKKJNT unau k iu « aauf SSXECUTIVE DIRECTOR - pset us eo apove officials of the Reidsville branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, posing with the executive director of the National NAACP. From left, they are James A. Griggs, president of the branch; Mrs. Mattie Lomax, presenting a check for'a NAACP life membership on behalf of the Ministers’ Wives; Mrs. Grace Totten, presenting a check for a life membership; Roy Wilkins, receiving the checks and- Charles A. McLean, NAACP State Field Director. The occasion was the observance of an anniversary by the Reidsville branch. Meharry Has A Detailed Plan To Relei've Shortage Os Physicians NASHVILLE, Tenn-At least one medical school has a de tailed plan to relieve the acute shortage of Negro physicians in the United States--a short age which was pointed out in a recent Journal of the American Medical Association which stat ed that only 2 percent of the nation's physicians are black. That school is Meharry Medi cal College in Nashville which already has graduated almost half of the black physicians and dentists now practicing in the country. Meharry, the country’s only private, predominantly black medical school, three years ago set about reorganizing its Fmes Multiple UNC Charges i Activist Howard Fuller Jailed Again -ft### “Educate” Wilkins Tells Militants North Carolina's Leading Weekly RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1969 teaching methods and course material to attract progressive -minded students. As part of its revision, Meharry set up two programs specifically de signed to attract more college students into medicine and den tistry, whether at Meharry or elsewhere. One program, the Collge Biomedical Science Program, administered by Dean of Re search and Graduate Studies Dr. C. V/. Johnson, gives col lege students an intensive sum mer course in subjects related to those they may encounter the first year in medical school. Twenty students from five Ten nessee colleges enrolled in the 10-week course last summer. They are being counseled during the academic year in what sub jects to study, outside reading to supplement their biomedi cal preparation, and are being encouraged to pursue health careers. One immediate expectation of the biomedical students is that whey will score higher on the medical or dental college The Crime iffif From Raleigh’s Official Police Files ASSAULTED BY THREE Ned Womack, Jr., 25, 1011 Glascock Street, told Officer C 6 W. Harris at 4:43 p.m, Sunday, that he was walking in the 1600 block of Glascock when a maroon 1865 Chevro let, containing three white males passed by, the occu pants “yelling something at me." He admitted that he yel led somthing back at them. At that time, Womack declared, the ear stopped and the three person? .oat. Woman said one, wear lag green utility pants, and a white shirt, cut him, Suspects were listed as Dan Drunners, 18, 706 Sasser Street; Bernice Era Earp, 18, 220 Milburnle Road; and Colon Cable, 17, address not listed, cite* cams' mjka, v. » aptitude tests after having been in the program from one to three summers. In addition to an allowance of SSOO for room, board and other expenses, the students receive SSOO each as a stipend, which is about the amount they might have made working during the summer, ac (See MEtIAKKY, P. 2) City Seeks Funds Extension Raleigh Mayor Seby Jones sent a letter to the U. S, De partment of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) request ing (on behalf of the City of Raleigh) an extension of the deadline usage of funds reserved for the City. HUD had set aside funds to be used for urban renewal In Southside. How ever, without an extension for HUD, the funds will not be available after January 29, 1970. The Raleigh City Council is attempting to lay groundwork for public hearings on the Southside renewal program. The Council has tentatively scheduled December 9 and December 17 as dates in Memorial Auditorium i,n which suggestions on re-evaluating the project will be aired. The Council’s November 26 meeting focuses around the public hearing plans. nsßsKEn l no m me 1 S2O $5 $2.50 I Anyone having current ORANGE tickets, dated Nov. 22, 1959, with ❖ proper numbers, present same to The CAROLINIAN office and £; receive amounts listed above from the S.xEtPSiAKES Feature. I ?/.V. , I V.V.V.VAV • • t ".V,'iV.Ve , i”«WsVtVi*»W Two Win Sweepstakes Cosh Sweepstakes winner Mrs, De loris Moore, 902 Manly Street of Raleigh, won second prize money last week with her Sweepstakes ticket. Mrs. Moore received her ticket from the Economy Shoe Shop and brought St to The CAROLINIAN where she got $lO, Her Sweepstakes ticket No, 1330 was as good as money In the bank, Ticket No. 1127, worth $2,50 in last week's contest was pick ed up at .Rhodes Furniture by Oris Harris, 402 Bledsoe Ave nue. Harris won third prize the first time h@ played Sweep stakes It was “beginners luck* 1 for him. Tickets for this week's con test must be orange In color SINGLE. COPY 15c Snow Hill Scone Os Accident' SNOW HILL - A head -511 automobile collision ri Snow Hill left one lead and six others in ured Monday. Theacci lent occurred two miles >ast of Snow Hill on N, C. .8. The investigating State 'rooper said that a motor ve icle operated by Humphrey uggs, 47, of Route 2, Snow Hill, ttempted to pass a pickup truck nd collided with another truck driven by Jonny W. Shirley, Route 1, also of Snow Hill. A Snow Hill resident, Charlie Fields, 42, riding in the auto with Suggs w'as killed instantly upon impact. Suggs and three of his children also sustained (See ONE KILLED, P. 2) Plans Os NCNWAre knmumed WASHINGTON, D. C.-In a spirit of new unity of purpose and action, the National Coun cil of Negro Women used Its 34th annual convention as the (See NCNW PLANS. P. 2} and dated November 2a, 1969. Lucky numbers are as follows: 130, first prize—worth S2O; 879, second prize--worth $5; and 1180, third prize—worth $2,50. Patronize businesses which advertise in The CAROLINIAN. They welcome and appreciate you calling on them* Kindly Inform them that you saw their ads in this newspaper. Sweepstakes advertisers may be found on page 12 of this edition Look them over, than visit these merchants as well as other CAROLINIAN adver tisers, and be sure to Inform them that you saw their ads in this newspaper. Claim He Engaged In Riot CHAPEL HILL - Malcolm X University head, Howard Ful ler, was arrested Tuesday, on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chape! Hill, following a disturbance there, Fuller said he had been arrested on charges of engag ing in a riot, failure to dis- *>s *- 1 ,r film. '... ? CONFRONTATION AT CHAPEL HILL- Chapel Hill: In the photo at top, Howard Fuller (Afro haircut, right), is ordered to get off campus of the University of North Carolina by a state Highway Patrolman, left. Fuller, presi dent of Malcolm X Liberation University at nearby Durham, was later arrested on three counts Tuesday, November 25. In photo at bottom, Chapel Hill police hold a demonstrator with a nightstick Tuesday after violence broke out on the UNC campus over the food s vice workers’s strike. (UPI). Raleighite Promoted To Top Ag. Extension Post MRS. HELEN BRANFORD WEATHER Temperatures during; the pe riod, Thursday through Monday, will average much below nor mal in the North Carolina moun tains, and below normal else where. Daytime highs will av erage in the low 40s in the mountains, and 43-55 degrees elsewhere. Lows at night will be Sn the upper teen-i and lower 20s in the mountains, 32-43 de grees along the coast, and 25-35 elsewhere. It will be cool on Thursday, turning colder Satur day and again on Monday, Pre cipitation will total one-fourth to one-half of an inrh, occurring mostly as rain east of the moun tains, and as vain or snow in the mountains, probably beginning and ending Saturday, Says Nixons Policy Threatens NEW YORK, N. Y. - The Nixon Administration’s policy of polariza tion threatens to plunge the nation into more pernicious McCarthyism than the country has ever known -- and a violent reaction to it that may tear the American people apart. This warning was funded Monday, November by How ard M. Squadron, co-chairman of the American Jewish Con gress national governing coun cil, ’in an address to the So ciety of Guardians of the or ganization’s national women's division. perse, ancl disorderly conduct. The Durham college presi dent said that officers arrested him when he questioned the arrest of two other persons. The UNC campus has been the site of a strike by food workers there. The three-week old strike had produced picket Mrs. Helen Branford, a dis trict supervisor with the N. C. Agricultural Extension Service, has been appointed director of special programs for Univer sity Extension at North Caro lina State University. Mrs. Branford's first assign ment will be with the Turnkey 111 housing project for low in come families in Winston- Salem, according to Dr. E. Walton Jones, acting admini strative dean for University Extension. She will be responsible for the educational phase of the project, working directly with the families that will be re located in the 821 individually owned housing units to be con structed. Turnkey 111 is a Housing and Urban Development project of Winston-Salem Housing Au thority, which has contracted with NCSU for educational and technical assistance. Agricultural Extension Serv ice Director George Hyatt, Jr„ said Mrs. Branford will be granted leave from her posi tions as Northwestern District homes economics supervisor to take the new assignment. Mrs. Branford has been with Agricultural Extension since 1946. She is a graduate of Ben nett College and has a graduate degree In adult education from NCSU. (See TOP POST. P. 2) In his talk, Mr. Squadron said that a * ‘dangerous polarization” was developing “not only be tween black and white but also between doves and hawks, right and left, young and old.” He continued; “The opposition of philoso phies and viewpoints is not lines where the disruptions oc curred on Tuesday. Two other persons, Anthony M. Belcher, 19, and Thomas J. Grayson, 18, both of Durham, were ar rested before Fuller on charg es of disorderly conduct, fail ure to disperse, and engaging (see a. fuller, p, 2) New F und For Fayette Revealed FAYETTE, Miss,-Seventeen prominent Ames leans--includ ing former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and ex-Whlift House aide Theodore C» Sot en sen--have joined with Mayor Charles Evers to form a new national fund t» develop Fay ette, Miss., and its surround ing county, Mayor Evers an nounced last week. The new organizatlon--The Medgar Evers Fund, Inc.--Is named aftei Mayor Evers’ Ute brother, who was slain on June 12, 1963, in Mississippi while leading a campaign to register Negro voters He was immedi ately succeeded as N AAC P State Field Secretary for Mississippi by Charles Evers, who continu ed the campaign which ultimate ly witnessed the registration of almost 200,000 black Missis sippi voters. One consequence of their civil rights efforts has been the elec tion of more than eighty Negroes to public office in Mississippi in the past four years, Includ ing Charles Evers’ election on May 13th as Mayor of Fayette. Evers is the first black man to be elected mayor of a multi racial town In Mississippi since Reconstruction. The Town of Fayette-the sec ond oldest in the state- -is locat - ed in Jefferson County, the fourth poorest county in A (See NEW FUND, P. 2) LM Files 2 Muhammad Cases In NY NEW YORK-Muhammad All’s right to box in New York State was called for in a suit filed this week in U. S. District Court here by theNAACPLegaI Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF). The State Athletic Com mission “arbitrarily, caprici ously, and unreasonably refus ed to renew plaintiff’s profes sional boxer’s license for a reason which has no rational connection with plaintiff’s fit ness or capacity to discharge the duties of the boxing pro fession," LDF attorneys as serted, (Meanwhile, in the U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans, LDF attorneys sought reversal of the draft evasion conviction of Mr. All.) (They challenged the legality of the government's practice of wire tapping as used in Mr. LDF FILES, P. 2) new, but it has always been the genius of democracies to com promise and reconcile such op position through free discussion and debate. “That process is networking today, primarily because the Nixon Administration seems iSee NIXON'S POLICY, P *>