Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 6, 1969, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE CARCUMIAH RALEIGH, N. C. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 6. 1969 2 FULLER cootttmvwb pi %tm paus onm At Sunday’s meeting, Fuiler told the workers, “I know we weren't engaged in a riot, I know we were dispersing, I know we didn’t break any laws." The next time, Fuller added, "If we’re going to be arrested for doing something, let's reallv be doing something." • PERSECUTION {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE; ; action by Southerners of ail colors. The directors also called upon the Southern com..iittee . Against Repression (SCRA) to • help free Hope Tigner, a Knox ; ville clack man serving a 10- ■ year prison term as a result I of an uprising at Knoxville Col ; lege in 1968. SCEF called his | conviction "a criminal miscar ; rlage of justice." • The board elected State Rep. • Julian Bond, Atlanta, as avice ! president of SCEF to succeed ; Methodist Bishop Charles’ F, ; Golden, who has moved toCaii ; fornla, The Rev. Fred Shut -1 tlesworth, leader of the move i ment in Birmingham, Ala., is ! nresident of SCEF. ■ MARINES (CONTINUED FROM PAG T ONt) ■ ed. ! However, all four marines ; still face another trial start ; ing Dec. 1 at Millington Naval ■ Air Station north of here. The charges against them stem from a clash between white and black ! marines at the air station last ; summer. The accused men all served : in Vietnam, all were wounded, and one was awarded the Bronze Star for bravery They were sent to the hospital at Milling ; ton to recuperate. They said the charges against them resulted from their de fending themselves when they Eyeglasses CONTACT LENSES HEARING AIDS Bring Your Prescription to fltdggmatj’a OPTICIANS, Inc. ; FIRST IN THE CAROUNAS RALEIGH-—Professional ; Building I RALEIGH—B 94 St. Marys St. : Other Offices: GREENVILLE . GREENSBORO -CHARLOTTE • JtNNMHannNttIIMNIHINmUMIIIHIIIIIIIHMItIitIMiiIIIIiIIIUIiiHHI John W .W inters&Co. FOR SALE—B 33 Coleman St.. Brink Home $15,000.00 Exclusive Sales Agent for PINEHAVEN and CEDARWOOD COUNTRY ESTATES CALL US NOW! 3. Samuel Hewitt—Joseph Winters, Sr.— Mfonza Thorpe Joseph Winters, Jr.—John W. Winters, Jr. JOHN W. WINTERS & CO. 507 E. Martin Street Dial 828-5786 wrnammMmmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmuammm ACM MALTY CO. M*i ESTATE sxsssr— PROPERTY M A NAGF.MFNT INSURANCE AND tVINDSTOR I M^° MOBrLE j Call Us For Information ACM MALTY CO. Phone 832-0956 129 E. HARGETT STREET RALEIGH. N. C, n n nra Bottled By Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Selma, Inc. UNDER APPOINTMENT PROM PEPSICO., NEW YoRR were attacked by 13 to 1' white marines armed with billy clubs. The holder of the Bronze Star is Oscar Terry, 19, of Paducah, Ky. He was the first to be placed on trial after his attorney, William H. Allison, Jr„ Lexington, Ky., asked for separation of the cases. Four or five white marines had testified before the court martial of seven white officers. Suddenlv one of the jurors, a lieutenant commander, broke down, and admitted he was pre judiced; he said he could not render an impartial veidic , The military judge, Capt. William Neely, granted a mis trial after Allison insisted tnat Terry could not get a fai: trial under such conditions. Allison and Kent Spriggs, of Oxford, Miss., another attorney for the marines, had alsofileda suit in the U. S. District Court here to stop the prosecution. However, Judge William Me- Crea reserved a decision pend ing further developments at the Millington trials. The other marine. l under charges are Arthur McCall, 20, Birmingham, Ab,; Charles Nlekson, 23, Memphis; and Per - ry Backstrom, 21, Meridian, M iss . Char ge s against five other have been dropped and one of tin accuse'!, Joe Talton, died Oct .31. ABERNATHY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONI 2;30 p.m, Fitch said that work shop invitations had been ex tended to representatives of the U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare; Dr. King V. Cheek, Jr., President of Shav: University; Howard F tiller, president of Malcolm X l ibera tion University, Durham; and Nathan Garret, Director of the Foundation for Community De velopment, Durham. CITY’S ELKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON*) senior citizens gave vent to their feelings. Every committee assigned gave most notable con tributions to see to it that It A WELCOME TO YOU Front RALEIGH’S NEWEST HOLDEN’S GLamOaaMA CLEANING CENTER 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD DRY CLEANERS OPEN 7 A. M. to 9 P M. MON-SAT. CLOSED SUNDAY COIN LAUNDRY OPEN 7 A M. to 10 P. M. MON.-SAT. 1 to 9 SUN. 1824 OLD GARNER ROAD 700 E. MARTIN ST. 401 E. DAVIE ST reached new pennacies of local esteem. We join the community In saying thanks to the F.lks for a job well done. While talking with some of the leaders, I also found out that the Elks host a Christmas Party for the children of the community. It has been tentatively set for December 19 or 20th, GOV. AND (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) sisters.’’ The group has undertaken various projects directed pri marily at the residents of South side. It engages in family re location and housing improve ments. It sponsors a Rat, Roach, and Rent campaign, designed to "bring about a change in the Southside area ” In a program aimed at the teenagers in the area,. UI-'PO drew up a program which, would provide the teenagers with recreation building, supported by a grant from the city of Raleigh. It endeavors to func tion as a gathering place for the youngsters and interested city employees, such as off icials and policemen In a letter to Governor Rob ert Scott and Raleigh Mayor Seby Jones, UPPO member Ed die H. Davis requested ‘‘the Raleigh City Government (to) sponsor (fund) a Black Youth Organization which will help prevent South side’s Black youth from participating in future Ra leigh ‘‘racial" disturbances and bring about better under standing and communication be tween the Raleigh City Police and Southside Black youth.” The Organization will spon sor Columbia University law student, Ronald Pollock, as a featured speaker at the Fay etteville Street Baptist Church on Friday, December 5. The cb.il rights worker will speak at 8:00 p.m. VOTERS TO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) A panel of League members, who work in various profes sional fields, will discuss the implications of welfare to and for residents of the immediate area and the state-at-large. The panelists include Mrs. Idorma Russell, Mrs Basil Sherrill, Mrs. Dorothy Allen, and Dr. Ellen Winston. A spokesman for the group said that all panelists are "qualified to speak on the wel fare picture.” The meetingwill be open to the public. WOMAN SAYS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the men were not riding in a car at all, but this was refuted by two witnesses. Donald Sims., 516 F. Edenton street, and Larry Lee Smith, 319 E. Mar- pax i i»f m tnmm i (lsso) a DIAL S2I-9317 For ! I Wafsh dag oli heat ser vice, ktee heating aii ond sii feufoar sarvice, | CAPITAL FUEL OIL ICE 6 COAL CO. *OO W. Hargatt It ‘ ■■ iT7WC*iTitf’ m t\TmumßUMi —illi SUBSCRIBE TO THE CAROLINIAN (iyr $2.140ff AND JAIE theßegdlar $7.80 Per Year Newsstand Price Clip This Coupon And Pd aii To: THE CAROLINIAN 518 E. MARTIN ST. RALEIGH, N. C 27601 SAVT M $2,141 Enter my one year subscription to THE CAROLINIAN North Carolina's Leading Weekly At $5.50 plus 16c Tax (Total $5.66) NAME ADDRESS CITY 1 SIGNATURE - Make Checks Payable to THE’ CAROLINIAN tin Street, who claimed the three assailants were in a GTO. At Wake Memoiral Hospital, Mrs. Smith admitted, after be ing checked over, that some of the wounds which site complain ed of were not new wounds, but ones that she had incurred sev eral days earlier. The hospital’s Dr. Lilly stat ed there were no scratches, bruises, marks or anything else to Indicate that Mrs. Smith had been struck with a chain. Mrs. Smith still contended that the white male who struck her with the chain was about 25 years of age. STATE, C’NTY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) The school was named for his father, who was also an area educator. The elder Jones was head of the only Negro elemen tary school in the area for 33 years. He offered a leadership that was respected by all. As a reward for his long years of service, the high school was named for him. Jones took the position of Co ordinator for Federal Pro grams when the Jones High School was consolidated with Mount Airy High. He was the first Negro principal in the city which built the school in 1936. And, upon its consolidation, he remained the only pr in c ipal throughout its thirty-years ex istence. The Mount Airy educator comes to the State Board of Education after establishing himself as an outstanding mem ber of the State Agriculture Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS) Advisory Com mittee. The Committee is be ing phased out as the State ASCS moves to include minori ty representation. He was the chairman of the Advisory Committee during his first-year tenure on it. In his own words, Mr, Jones has ‘‘been active in getting the Good-Will Committee in the County (Sur ry) that has worked closely with the Governor’s Good-Will Com mittee.” Mr. Jones’ term of office runs for four years. He ex plained the function of the State Board of Elections as ‘‘the Guardian of our most cherish ed possession--the ballot." The father of a son and daughter, Jones is married to the former Miss Elenor Sel lers of Chapel Hill. The Jones’ daughter is a junior in the Martin Memorial School of Nursing of Northern Hospital of Surry, Mount Airy, Kis son has recently volunteered for the United States Navy and is awaiting assignment, DRAFT BOARD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) black man appointed to West Point Military Academy from Kentucky. He left there after one year. He is now executive vice-president of the Mammoth Life Insurance Co., which has its national headquarters here. He is a member of the City- County Board of Health. LABOR DEPT. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) better guidance to the agency contract compliance person nel.” Unaffected by the order Is the construction industry where each agency will continue to be responsible for compliance ef forts on its own Federally-fund ed projects. “Each compliance agency shall be solely responsibility for the facilities assigned,” states the Wilks order, which went to leads of the 15 agenc ies. Under the new order, each Federal agency involved will have contract compliance re sponsibilities for all facilities within Its assigned industries. The order also stipulates that no Federal contracting agency will tie allowed to initiate con ciliation discussions or resolve deficiencies without first noti fying OFC-C and without par - ticipation of the government agency with compliance re sponsihil dies. The directive assigns the De partment of Interior compliance responsibility for all contra tors in Alaska, including those in the construction industry. Receiving specific industry assignments were the follow ing Agencies: Agency for International De velopment, Department of Agri culture, Atomic Energy Com mission, Department of Com merce, Department of Defense, General Services Administra tion, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Depart ment of Housing and Urban Development, Department of the Interior, National Aeronauti cal and Space Administration, Post Office Department, De partment of Transportation, Tennessee Valley Authority, Department of the Treasury and Veterans Administration. NEA ASKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) gency federal plan to feed more than five million impov erished school children, ‘‘For too long Americans have held the cherished myth that ‘no hungry child goes with out lunch at school under the National School Lunch Pro gram,’ ” declared C-eorge I). Fischer. "Meanwhile, millions of needy youngsters do not receive the f free ’'or reduced price 11 ....wu unused them by law because of inadequate appro priations and the political gam es played at the national, state and local level by using in nocent children as pawns,” said the NEA president. Fischer’s remarks were sounded as the White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health prepared to meet here Dec. 2 4 and consider one panel's recommendation for an immediate crash program aimed at providing meals for poverty-stricken children who are going without school lunches. "Too often needy children in the program are discrimi nated against or humiliated,’* Fischer said, adding: "The problem is so critical that there must be an emergency program at this point. A hungry child cannot learn”’ The Association’s Board of Diiectors in October 1968, urg ed the million-member NEA and its affiliates, which repre sent an additional one million members, to work for legisla tion which would provide lunch es for all students within the established school finance structure. Reports disclose that only one-third of the nation's 51 mil lion school children and only, 3 .4 million impoverished child ren participated last year in the 23-year-o!d school lunch program, More than 9 million youngsters - predominantly in the Inner-city and rural areas --were in schools where no food service was offered. Presently, the NEA Is back ing a bill Introduced by Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., to amend the National School Lunch Act and the Child Nutri tion Act of 1966 to strengthen the improve the food service programs and to increase the appropriations to feed more youngsters. John Lumley, NEA assistant executive secretary for legisla tion and federal relations, terms the bill (S 2548), which is expected to be reported out of the Agriculture Committee soon, "step in the right di rection.” SWEEPSTAKES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) turned it Into the office of The CAROLINIAN. He was ttie sole winner in last week’s con test. Tickets for this week’s Sweepstakes drawing must be blue in color and dated Novem ber 22, 1969. The lucky numbers are: 1130, first prize--, $10; 1754, second prize--, $10; and 877, third prize—, $5. Patronize businesses which advertise tn_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, then visit these merchants as well as other CAROLINIAN adver tisers, and be sure to inform them that you saw their ads in this newspaper. BgsPOßTiMAiral mL CORHB S^m by Clark Webster, Remington Wi!d Life Expert "Young Waterfowlers” It is important that the young hunter realizes hunting is more than just shooting. The true hunter holds an appreciation for the game that makes his* sport possihje. Waterfowling can be an Exciting sport. But, for fuil enjoyment, it CONFERS WITH STARTING FIVE-Cleveland, Ohio: During a time out in first period, New York coach William “Red” Holzman (L) talks with his starting Five, The Knickerbockers have a 17-game winning streak and are trying to set a National Basketball Association by defeat ing Cincinnati. (UPI). vW- A SCRAMBLE FOR LOOSE BALL- Cleveland, Ohio: A scramble for a loose ball by Cincinnati and New York was just about how the scoring went throughout, November 28 game. New York won the game in the final seconds, 106-105 w’hich enabled them to break the National Basketball association record with their 18th consecutive victory. Norm Van Tier (28) of Cincinnati goes after ball. (UPI). pi * ... *\. ~m Ww, % ' m J* % > | v V>‘ ;J| NOONAN BROUGHT DOWN BY Tampa, Fla.: Miami Dolphin’s wide receiver, Karl Noonan, grabs pass for first down and is brought down by Boston Patriot Larry Carwell early in the first quarter of the Miami vs Patriots game here today. (UPI). requires a certain degree of skill at both proper game identification and hunting technique. The states of Delaware and Ma c ncliusetts are now conducting Young Waterfowlers Programs de signed to teach inexperienced teen agers the ba ic knowledge and sportsmanship necessary to fully enjoy the sport of waterfowling. These Young Waterfowlers Pro grams are open to youths between 10 and 18 years of age and are being jointly sponsored by the Fish an<i Wildlife Service of the U.S. Department of the Interior, the State Game anti Fish Commissions, State Wildlife Federations, local sportsmen’s clubs, the Delaware Educational Television Network, and the Remington Arms Company. The youngsters are instructed in waterfowl identification, State and Federal hunting regulations, safe gun handling, and the technical aspects of hunting. They receive both classroom lectures and actual training sessions on clay target ranges and in duck marshes. The high point of the program is an actual hunting trip where they can put into use all they have learned. Technical and training aids have been furnished by Remington Arms in conjunction with the Fish and Wildlife Service, the State Game Departments and the Delaware Education Television Network. Participants in the program are learning the positive aspects of con servation, hunting skills and sports manship, that will make the tro phies they bring home much more meaningful. * * * Africans beat Columbus to the New World; And Chris knew they got there first, but triedto con ceal the fact in his famous diary. SEPIa magazine makes that discovery in its December issue now on newsstands. Everything For... BUILDING REMODELING REPAIRING • LUMBER • MXLLWORK ' • ATHEY’S PAINTS © BUILDING MATERIALS • RUSSWIN HARDWARE At Our New Location On RALEIGH BELTLINE CAROLINA BUILDERS CORP. Between U. S 1 and 64 Ph. 828-7471—Raleigh, N. C. IROWiPs PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT COMPANY “Building For The Future” j WHO’S BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE? MK, AND MRS. HOWARD DAVIS j H.A. mm$QM - BUILDER SPECIAL—FOR SALE j 313 BRANCH STREET—Frame 5-room house, 3 bed- I rooms, 1 bath, living room and kitchen: $12,009.00. 317 BRANCH STREET—S-room brick veneer home, 11 j baths, 3 bed rooms, living room and kitchen: $15,000.00. V.A. OR F.H.A. FINANCE No Down Payment For Qualified Veterans 3. HENRY, BROWN. President Comments On Stars SEPIA opens with, "IfChris topher Columbus deserves a day in his honor for laving claim to landing on American shores first; ve soon may have to set aside another day to commemo rate .1 hand of nameless lieros who sailed from Africa to Af rnerica before Columbus was born." There was a black city in America by 1450, maybe even 1400. The Vatican archives hold a document which shows how the Afitcans throughout South America, the West Indies, Mexico and even the United States region. In 3 537, a black leader organized an uprising against the Spanish conquistadors. The Vatican document even has a drawing showing the outcome of that revolt -- the black leader is hanging from a gallows. UNCOLN Raleigh, N. C. STARTS SUNDAY, DEC. t THE MAGNIFI CENT SEVEN Starring: YS.T BRYNNER j —pius— i HOW SWEET IT IS Starring JAMES GARNER — y STARTS THUUS., DEC. U 3 FEATURES DARK VENTURE ATOM AGE - VAMPIRE BATTLE OF THE
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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