f
THE CAROLINIAN
RALEIGH. N. C.. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1970
2
BOOK WINS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1>
should ask themselves why It
always took only a quick tele
phone call from the south to get
them to put up thousands of
dollars to get Dr. Martin Lu-*
ther King out of Jail. . .but. a
call to invest the same amount,
u start up 'a perfectly sound
black bank led to a conference
of the executive committee at
which no decision was ever
nvade. . .And when the heat
is really on, why do all our
task forces and crash programs
wind up financing Cadillacs,
vacations, minority - owned
chicken coops and fast food
operations 0
'ls it bail money, ‘fun’
money, ‘boy’ money, or capi
tal-type money that will finally
liberate the black man''"
BLACKS STAGE
CONTINUED FROM FAGS 1)
Committee for Black Progress
filed a suit in the United Dis
trict 'Court in Raleigh, last Fri
day against the city’s anti
picketing ordinance, and a mo
tion for a restraining .order
to prol ibit its enforcement but
•no action was taken on the mat
ter by closing time for the
office on that afternoon.
.- ‘ Therefore, in an effort to
-get across their point of the
boycott, Negroes
fathered in the business to con
duct what they called a stroll
•rather than set up picket lines.
•The group orderly obeyed police
orders to break up into groups
lof five or six if they wanted to
Ist roll the Oxford main streets.
; The Negroes conducted their
abbreviated form of picketing
in the business district from 4
p,m. uni 1 1 si or ;s closed about
6:30 p.m.
• The birth of the economic
boycott in this city was born
out of the racial disturbances
which resulted following the
alleged killing of a Negro male
by a white adult a few months
ago.
HORRORS OF
CONTINUED FROM PAG* 1)
of na : cotics. For fourteen
months, confined behind the
fences of the Florida State and
County Prison System. Robert
Moorman began a most painful
and agonizing rehabilitation.
After Moorman’s release
fron prison, a whole new world
opened to him again, one he
had not known for six long years.
For the-past two tears, Mr.
Moorman has lectured at high
schools, preparatory schools,
and colleges and universities
fiom coast-io-coast. As in his
previous lectures, Mr. Moor
man is expected to bring to
our community a fresh, sincere,
and candid approach to the
mounting problem of drug a
buse.
NCNW REGION’!,
(CONTINUED FROM PAG* 1)
Workshops in the afternoon
from 1:30 to 4:3,0 will consist
of Hunger, Consumer educa
tion and Day Care.
Saturday night at fi o’clock,
Mhss Fva Jefferson, the brilli
ant black president of Student
Government at Northwestern
University will speak at the
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ALSO— • ■
T & T TRAVEL SERVICE '
For a weekend theatre party or football game in Atlanta,
Baltimore, New York or Washington, just call T&T
Travel Service, 828-7429 or 828-7420,
CALL CS NOW FOE RESERVATIONS. WE ARE HERE
TO SERVE YOl.
Office Phones: 828-7429 and I
828-7420
Conference banquet. Miss Jef
ferson. it will lie recalled is the
lone black student of the four
students chosen from seven
million students to confront vice
president Agnew on the David
Frost Program. Miss Jefferson
-was the only student praised by
Newsweek as having held her
own in the Confrontation.
Miss Jefferson, 20 years of
age, from Mascoutch, Illinois
is the daughter of retired Air
Force warrior officer. She grew
up in a middle-class environ
ment on U, S, Air Force bases
throughout the world. Accord
ing to Jetj July. 9, 1970 ‘Miss
Jefferson charactetizes herself
as an independent with liberal
to radical learnings.’
Tickets may still be obtained
for the banquet bv contacting
any NCNW member or affiliate.
Local affiliates known so far
are Daughters of IBPO of Elks
of the World, Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority, Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority, Eta Phi Beta Sorori
ty, National Beauty Culturists
League, National Grand Court,
Heroines of Jericho, FAAU
Masons, USA. Sigma Gamma
Rho Sorority, The Chums, Inc.,
The Women’s Convention, Auxi
liary to the National Baptist,
Convention, USA, Inc., United t
Beauty School, Ownes and •
Teachers, Women’s Auxiliary
to the National Dental and Medi
cal Associations, Women’s
Home and Foreign Missionary
Society of the AME '/ion Church,
Women’s Missionary Society,
AME Church, and Zeta Phi Beta
Sororitv.'lnc.
NC MASONS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
nor the aean the epitome of
intelligence, or the dormitory
mother the epitome of purity.
He told of how the trustee board
of vesteryear could come tothe
campus at commencement time,
sit upon.the stage, receive the •
plaudits of the president and
leave glowing in their own es
timation of what an impression
they had made on that student
body, as the lords of that hold
ing. ■ '
Dr. Thorpe told the Masons .
and their guests that t! t presi
dent must have a line of com
munication with the student body
that enables him to have some
idea of where the dopepeddleis
ply their trade. He must know
the source of destructive prop
oganda and have a pipe line
to the hippie. He was award of
the fact that the dean had to
gear his curriculum to the
satisfaction of his department
heads and they had to so im
part It rotheir respective facul
ties so that it would be pala
table to the student.
He further described the
plight of the present-day dormi
tory mother, not as a guardian
angle over the sex life or the
girls and bleak admonition to
the boys, but she had to lie
come conversant with the modes
of methods of the hotels, the
motels and the motor inns.
He finally got into the meat
of his address when he told the
audience that the Masons of
Nortli Carolina could play a
great roie in making education
what it was intended to be--to
teach. He talked about the tenets
of the Ordei and warned that the
:ob must begin.in the several
communities, with a sobering
approach to the whole matter.
PTA WEEK
(CONTINUED FROM PAG* 1)
“Certainly, it is time that
the nation pay recognition to
those millions of American who
today, and in the past, have
dedicated themselves to pro
moting the welfare of our young
people, to seeing that they get
the best the nation can offer--
with such signal success,”
Senator Moss said.
Mrs. LeonS, Price, National
PTa presi hull, explained that
menu ership in the PTA is
through the local unit (local
PTa), which is usually organiz-
Eyeglasses
CONTACT LENSES
HEARING AIDS
Bring Your
Prescription to
®TiC: \NS, Inc.
FIHXT IN THE C AROUNAS
BALEIGH —Professional
Building
RALEIGH—*O4 St. Marys St.
Other Offices: GREENVILLE
GRKENSBOR O - CH ARLOTT V
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ed in a school, and is open to
all persons interested in the
welfare of children and youth.
“We are especially delight
ed that the President has pro
claimed ‘National PTA Week'
at this time,” Mrs. Price said,
“as October is our official
membership enrollment
month.” She added that many
state governors have also pro
claimed state PTA weeks or
months across the nation.
Challenging all PTA’s to be
outspoken on behalf of A
merica’s young people, Mrs,
Price sail, “Throughmember
ship in the PTA, men and wo
men and youth can turn drift
into direction, indifference into
enthusiasm, and delay into ac
tion now.” •
ONLY REAL
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
year,” said Henri Peyre, Paris
born and educated and head of
Yale University Department
o! Romance languages from-the
past 25 years ana now visiting
professor of French, graduate
center, the City University of
New York.
Speaking to a group of facul
ty and students in Dett Audi
torium, Hampton Institute, last
week, Peyre noted the causes
and effects of the youth move
ment in France, in particular,
and the youth movement in gen
eral, is to a large degree
brought about by the frustra
tion youth feels in recognizing
the change that takes place in
education often outdates ma
terials they learn as freshmen
in college.
To add to youth’s despair
and frustration is the lack of
the older generation’s willing
ness to see the ne.ed for change
and give them a voice in what
is or what is not to be and the
older person’s unwillingness to
see the need to adjust to cur
• rent situations.
He noted that, many youth
'feel that the older generation
practices genocide upon them
and this feeling is born out in
the hositility of youth against
war, pollution, and other such
matters that would lead to the
death of youth.
Quoting from literature,
Peyre said, “the youth revolt
can be summarized in the feel
ing, ‘Do not speak to me of
the wisdom of old men, but
of their follies. ’ ”
SAYS IVIINIOR
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
ministers 'ho Black Studies
program.
The department of history
continues to offer the largest
number of courses in the pro
gram. Four courses in African
history are included, as are
four courses on the black man
in the United States.
The art department continues
to offer a three-hour course
on Afro-American Art.
The department of dramatic
art has added a program in
■ Afro-American Theatre, with
two courses t-o be offered ev
ery two years. Neither course
is offered in 1970-’7i.
lii addition to last year’s of
fering of “The Geography of
Africa the department of geog
raphy now offers “The Geog
raphy of Afro-America.”
The department of music con
tinues to offer “Afro-Ameri
can Music: O/igins and De
velopment.'’
Offered in the philosophy de
partment is “The Black Pow
er Argument: A Study in Ap
plied Logic.”
Two courses have been add
ed in the department of political
science. They are “Black
Politics in America,’’and“Re
volution and Ideology in the
Third World.” In addition, the
department continues to offer
“Civil Rights: Problems in Ad
ministration and Compliance.”
• In sociology, the offering is,
as last tear. “The-Developmen’■
of American Negio Protest
1 leologies.”
Dr.. Thorpe said the Black
KINGWOOD
FOREST
Join the many in the crowd who are
buying homes in Kingwood Forest—
Limited funds available—Huy Now-
Your best investment in Real Estate.
HOUSES OPEN FOR
YOUR INSPECTION
Kingwood Forest is located adjacent to 'New Elementary
School and Park Area
VjD&f 1 i
DIRECTIONS: Kingwood For
est is located on Sandertord f§ f HOfThpc
Rd. or off Cross Link itd, _ *
I . 828-0538 I
Studies major and minors ate
intended to “provide an area of
concentration for persons who
want knowledge in depth about
the geography, culture, history,
thought, experiences, achieve
ments, and problems of Africa
and persons recognized as de
scendants oi black Africans.”
WAS CURSING
(CONTINUED mOM PAG* ONE)
newsman on Tuesday, that he
received a cal! from the East
ern Star Church, reporting the
presence of a drunk disrupting
the church meeting. After find
ing Purcell in the aisle, “he got
to staggering and still cursing,
then he was escorted to the
squad car. He broke away and
swung at me,” said the officer.
“During the scuffle that fol
lowed, lie was sprayed once
with the gas to bring him under
.control We cuffed his hands in
front of him (“Cadillac” swore
he was handcuffed from behind),
because he was struggling too
much for us to get them behind
his back. I told him to act like
a man, instead of a dog.
“He said to us, ‘you white
men ain’t taking me to no jail” ”
Some of the people attending
services reportedly aided the
officers in placing Purcell in
the squad car. After his re
lease, he was again picked up,
this time by Officer Anthony
Dunbar, who took him to Wake
Memorial Hospital for treat
ment. He was transferred, how
ever, to Dr. V, M, Sykes, Jr,,
3109 Glenwood Village, for
further treatment and medica
tion.
“Cadillac,” who said one of
the two first arresting officers
said to the other, ‘Let's kill
the s-o-b-, 1 said he has been
employed by the Fred Sykes
Construction Company for the
past two months. Mr. Purcell’s
record with “the law” ranges
from public intoxication and
larceny to assault with a dead
ly weapon.
NEW YWCA
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
Os 1969.
After one year’s activity,
we are proud to dedicate our
new home, A special program
will mark the dedication with
Mrs. R. B. Jones, a former
president of NCTA as guest
speaker.
The public is invited to come
and participate in this dedica
tion.
SWEEPSTAKES
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
Wake Forest Road.
The Sweepstakes Spotlight
this week is on Natural Health
Foods Company, 8 E, Hargett
Street.
It is important that 4*e per
sons who have these lucky tick
ets understand that he or she
SHOULD NOT go to the busi
nesses involved but first pre
sent them to The CAROLINIAN
1 for verification. Deadline for
submitting any winning house
number to this office isMondav,
October 11 at 5 p.m. If no one
claims the m ere h andise the
week that it is offered, then
when that particular merchant’s
number is drawn again in the
revised Sweepstakes feature,
amounts indicated v. ill be added
to it,
CATHOLIC
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
“It there is a tenet which, a
church claiming supranational
fealty must find awkward to
ignore, it is the brotherhood he
fore God of aii men and the
; equal obligation of the Churc!
to serve them,’’the report says.
, Yet it notes, for instance, that
, until 1963 no led in the two
Catholic, hospitals of New Or
leans was available to the city’s
• 55,000 ! lack Catholics. And
Catholic schools often only
• slightly preceded public schools
in desegregating.
The Catholic Church in the
: South usually has remained lie
hind national policy in matters
of race but slightly ahead of
other Southern institutions, the
report says.
“The churches are open to
anyone now,” it notes. “The
hospitals are unrestricted. The
900 ot so Catholic schools a
cross the South are all open,
theoretically, to Catholic chil
dren of any race. Throughout
the hierarchies of the region
the machinery of social con
science hums in a business
like wav.”
The report says the Catholic
Church now may face a new
crisis of integration, hinging
upon whether its schools will,
offer an escape for the chil
dren of parents displeased by
public school integration. “If
it comes, (this crisis) will con
front an organization which is
in a considerably different in
tellectual mood from that of the
early 1960’5,” the report says.
“Reform movements which
once sustained a precarious
lif“ outside the Church itself
have increasingly moved inside
it.”
Some leading church officials
appear to have altered their
postures, the report suggests.
It cites Archbishop Thomas
Toolen oft! i dun -Birming
ham archdiocese, who in 1365
said of nuns and priests in
volved in the SeL: a march (hat
they wore “certainly out of
place at these demonstrations’’
because “their place is at
home doing God’s work.” Last
year, by contrast, the arch
bishop urged his flock to work
for harmony and justice and
permitted priest s t< ■ follow their
consciences in joining lawful
demonstrations.
In recent years, the report
says, it was probably the late
Archbishop Paul J. Hallman of
Atlanta who provided “the out
standing example of a Catholic
prelate determined to use limit
ed power to the greatest possi
ble extent” in bringing about so
cial justice. Aftei arriving in
Atlanta in 1962 ho led his arch
diocese into desegregation and
greater involvement in the com
munity’s social ills. His suc
cessor, Archbishop Thomas
Donneilan, lias followed in the
same general direction hut.
much more cautiously, and “a
spark is m issing, ’ ’ the report
says.
It notes that in the Atlanta
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area there are 115 diocesan
priests, only one of whom Is ’ ,
Hack. “There Is no black
membership worth counting in
religious orders, nor is there
any reported increase in the
enrollment of blacks in semi
nars,” it says. “In this, At
lanta is precisely representa
tive of other Southern dioceses.
Since the archdiocese of At
lanta shows the Church in the
South, in its mot favorable situa
tion and climate and with the
most enlightened and innovative
of past leadership, it seems
clear that the role of the Church .
in the reformation of the South
will not be great.”
Club News .
IDLE-A-WHILE SOCIAL CLUB • '
The Idle-A-Whlle Social Club
met at the home of Mrs. Jen
nie Charles on Thursday, Oc
tober 1 with the president, Mrs.
Hazel Williams, presiding. The
devotions were led by Mrs. E
lizabeth Pridgeon. The presi
dent. called for the minutes and
reports from the committees.
Birthday greetings were sung
for Mrs. Dorothy King.
Members were ■entertained
highly by the hostess. A deli
cious repast was served,
Pinochle was played with high
prize being won by Mrs. Cath
erine Holden; low prize went to
Mrs. I onise Walker. The lucky
number drawing was won by
Mrs. Esther Haywood, A prize
for the first to arrive was tak
en by Mrs. Rosetta Rand.
Members present were Mes
dames Dorothy Jeffers. Esther
Haywood, Dorothy Powell, Lou
ise Walker, Phyllis Haywood,
Louise Nunn, Mary Graham,
Dorothy King, Margaret Bald
win, Catherine Holden, Eliza
beth Pridgeon, Hazel Williams
and Rosetta Rand.
FOR SALE
Buick Wildcat. Completely
equipped. Forced to sell.
Make us an offer. Need -
the cash. Dial 828-1300.
For Sole
By Owner
Apollo Hgts. Area
House with 3 bedrooms,
1 1 9 baths, living room
with fire place and car
pi t, screened porch, car
port. large back porch,
storage room and base
ment, large fenced in
' vegetable garden. Ap
praisal $21,850. Now
SIO,OOO.
828-1728
472 Dacian Rd.
g”
white walls, radio ‘2628.7& '--/Y
white walls, body molding, Cfljj
luggage rack, dual tailgate,
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mileage * %Jf S I
'A. : t fpppf ■
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