Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 27, 1973, edition 1 / Page 3
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FROM RALEIGH’S OFFICIAL POLICE FILES THE CRIME BEAT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ACCl’SKD iS; THKFT Craip Lee Leonard. 708 Leonard Street, reported to Officer J. T. Davis at 6; 12 p m. last Wednesday, that while he was working out in the gymnasium at Sanderson on January G. Dwight Dunslon. 17*year-o)d black student of 828 E. Hargett Street, allegedly took his brown swede Madrid coat, valued at $05. C ASH IS TAKEN Mrs. Catherine Long Baker, E*35 Washington Terrace, in formed Officer O, T. Wester at 9:24 p.m Tuesday, that at about 12o’cIock midnight on that date, her home was broken into and about $25 in casn was taken. Entry was gained through the bathroom w indow Officer B M. Perry has further inloriiiation concerning the suspect in the case. C. Duke at 9:22 p m. Saturday, that a black male subject canie into the place of business and asked for a package he had left there Stevens said he told the subject he didn't have it and since the man was intoxicated, he told him to please leave. The subject then left, went around to the side window and threw a brick through it. Stevens said he then chased the subject up Blake Street and fired at him twice. Damage to the window was set at S70, anartment and masturbating. A male witness. Stephen Moore, 2200 Hawkins Street, said he caught the subject and the subject asked him to let him put his shoes on. When he got up. he started walking, "then broke and ran to his car," a 1966 black over white Chevrolet, license number LW-7053. registered to Mac Jordan. J-17 Washington Terrace. University. Richmond, reported to Officer W. N. Denton at 6 p.m. last Monda\ as follows; i had arrived in Raleigh by way of Greyhound Bus. to visit some friends at Shaw University. I stayed in the bus station for a while, then went outside to find a cab, 1 noticed two Negro men go out of the door in front of me. but didn't notice them too much. When I got outside, the same two men stopped me. one of them pulled a gun and said he wanted my money. They took $24 and my watch, valued at S2tMi. then walked away.’’ He also staled that the men appeared to be in the 40s. Black Journal Completes THE CAROLINI.BN RAI.EI^.H, N.C . SATURDAY. JANUARY 27. 1973 Investigation Of Deaths IIANDRAtJ ■ .SWIPr.D" Mrs. .Annie Butler Hnchelle. 1030 Walnut Street, told Officer E. Williams at 7:16 pm Saturday, that she arrived for work at the Doroihca Dix Hospital and she placed her handbag in the ladies' room, but when she returned at the end of duty, someone had taken S40 from it. The woman admitted that she had no knowledge of who could have removed if \AH2I\ THEFTS Wesley E. Leyton, an employee of Hud.son-Belk Department .Store. ;H9 Fayetteville .Street, informed two cops at 1:09 p.m. Friday, that he had two .Negro females in his custody and staled that he had ob.served them go into a dressing room and come out dressed in the merchandise they had taken in, concealed in large purse. The subjects. Mi.sses Debra Hinton, 19. i;H4 E. Edenion street, and Thomasina ('renshaw. 20. 736 Quarry Strec't. were arrested lor stealing two pair of blue denim jeans, valued at S16. TAMPERS WITH AUTO Miss Margaret Faye Hinton. 1215 S. Bloodworth Street informed a cop at 10 p.m. last Tuesday, that she and Jackie Williams. 26. 816 S. Boundary Street, had been out and when they got back to his residence, he started to "beat on me.” The woman also declared she slipped out of the back window and. at this time, he took three spark plugs off of her car to keep her from leaving. Williams was jailed on a tampering with auto rap STABBED BY BROTHER? Investigation in the stabbing of Kenneth Douglas Ketter, 24. 109 N. Swain Street, revealed that he was assaulted by Robert Lee Ketter. 25. 221 Seawell Avenue. This action took place at 7:15 p in in the street in front of 119 N Swain. The younger Ketter suflered a puncture wound under his left arm. Ex-Principal ROBBED Willi E ASLEEP Mrs Aletha Massenburg. 59. 10 Franklin Terrace, reported to anolficerat 7:42p m. .Saturday, that she was lying on the touch in her living room and had fallen asleep, while Willie Williams. 23. addre.ss unlisted, was in her residence Also present was Bill> Yale^ The woman staled she had $15 in her bra and one of the two subjects took her mone\ She said that she searched Yales and he didn't have any money, hut when she came around to .searching Williams, paper cur rency and cash were found in his pos.session. The woman said Williams hadn't had an> money all day. The monev is beli(*ved to have iK'en returned to her PISTOL STOLEN William Arthur Moore. D-14 'Washington Terrace, informed Officer O. T. Wester at 3:40 p m Wednesday, that at about 10 a m. that day. or after his pistol had been taken from the barber's counter at Blalock’s Barber .Shop. 217 S Wilmington .Street, where he is employed, he believes that Forest Holt. 24. of Fuquay-Varina did this, be cause he and Holt have had incidents of this nature. STEAI.S PANTY HOSE Battle .Alex Holloway. 414 Smilhfield Street, told Officer -M W Br wn at 5:50 p.m. Wednesday, the* Lane Monta gue. about 40. 407 I^e Street, stole four pair of pant> hose from his business at the Blount .Street address. The man said he was informed of the theft by James Hogers. a w'itness. also of 407 lA*e, THREATENSTOCUT George Martin Alston. 36. 220 W Hargett Street, told OfRcer P J. McAnn at 1:23 a.m. Saturday, that he was threaten ed by a Negro male, who told him that he was oing to "cut me between the eyes” He identifi ed the man as being Louis Williams, about 20. 717 S. Bloodworth Street. Alston went to the magistrate's office to sign an assault with a deadly weapon warrant against Williams, but was denied one. The threat was made at 217 W. Morgan Street, the location of the Union Bus Terminal. Joins Faculty At Jackson DESTROYS WI VDOW F^dwind Bright Stcv.*ns. own- »‘r ot .Slevi's Dark Reslauranl. J2UE .Martin St., told Officer E I'EEIMNf; TO.M SOUGHT .Miss Mary I.«is Williams, white resident of 31)3 Shellum Road, reported to two officers at 12:29 a.m. Wednesday, that she saw a black male peeping into her ROBBED AVD BEATEN Curtis Spraggins. 39, 500 E. Hargett Street, reported to Officers. J. Rand at 6:15 am Friday, that he had left a friend house in the 500 block of E. Hargett Street the night before at about 11:30 p.m He said he was beaten and robbed of 530 in cash. Investigative notes re vealed that Spraggings does not know the subject by name, but knows him by sight. He suffered burises on the right side of his face JACKSON. Miss. - Lonnie C. Crosby, former principal of Sandy Gavin Elementary School in Laurel for the past eleven year.s, has accepted the position of Director of Institu tional Research at Jackson State College. Crosby holds the B.S. degree from Alcorn College, the M S. degree from Jackson State College and is presently a doctoral student at the Univer sity of Southern Mississippi. Affiliated with the city schools of [.aurel since 1958, Crosby began his educational career as a math teacher at Oak Park High School and served as assistant chairman of elemen tary principals from 1967-72. His professional affiliations include Laurel Teachers Asso ciation. Sixth District Teachers Association. Mississippi Teach ers Association, National- Education A.ssociation. Nation al Elementary School Princi pals Association, and Phi Delta Kappa, an educational fraterni- tv W I '? ROBBED ON STREET .Michael Francis Rodriguez, a student at Virginia Union [‘‘Adam and Eve had many ad vantages,but the principal one jwas that ihey escaped teeth: |ing " (Mark Twain) NEW YORK. N Y. - Hergert Harris, a black student leader at Southern University's troubl ed Baton Rouge campus, charges the two students killed by a shotgun on November 16. 1972 died from the blast that was meant for him. Thai's the finding of a special BE.ACK JOURNAL investiga tion entitled "Death at South ern." presented nationally on Tuesday, January 23 at 9:30 p.m. over the Public Broad casting Service. BLACK JOURNAL returned to the school to investigate the reasons why sheriff's deputies were called in to put down a disturbance sparked when stu dents voiced their displeasure over the administration's poli cies. The killings of the two students. Leonard Douglas Brown and Denver A. Smith, both 20, resulted when a live shotgun shell was loaded into a deputy's weapon instead of a teargas shell, reports a biracial commission appointed by the slate's attorney general. The two dead students were standing beside Harris and were shot at the exact moment that Harris dropped to pick up and hurl a teargas cannister back at the sheriff's deputies, BLACK JOURNAL reports. Harris recalled on the pro gram : "I was standing between them and as I went down they (sheriff's deputies) fired. If 1 hadn't ducked I'd be dead now." Ix>uisiana Governor Edwin W. Edwards told BLACK JOURNAL that when he first learned of the shooting incident, he had assumed the first shots "or something hurled" was started by the students. But after seeing films of the incident, he had another assessment of the situation. George Baker, one of the discharged Baton Rouge- insturctors, tells BLACK JOURNAL: "I’m charged with activities that led to the disruptions because I found myself attending student meet ings. I was fir^ on Nov. 17th because they needed a logical scape-goat. They (the adminis tration) moved as fast as they could. I would like to continue here and teach At the conclusion of "Death at Southern,” Tony Brown stated: "The incident brings into question the role qf the Black Can college in America. , „.. „.. institution controlled by whiles and those selected by whites be relevant to Black students and the Black coniinunily?" He al.so warns thal mergers of Black schools with while institutions are interpreted by some "to be an attempt to tiesiroy Black colleges as potential power bases for the Black cummuni- t.v ' Man Wins In Welfare Case WASHINGTON - Weltare authorities may not attach retroactive disability l)enefits paid under social security to William Wilkes, a Newark. N J. man who applied for and received disability assistance from the State beginning in 1966, according to a unanimous Supreme Court ruling this week. The Slate had required Wilkes to sign an "agreement to reimburse.” this, when he was found eligible for federal benefits In 196B and received a Social Security check for $1,864.20 in retroactive pay ments. the Essex County welfare board attached the payment under the reimburse ment provision. SORORITY PRESENTS WORKS ON BLACK WOMB UNIVERSITY LIBRARY — Mrs. H. S. Dobson. Zeta P| Sorority presents Woman's Life Work: Labors and Experitf t'luiiivellor K. R. Williams. Winston-Salem State I'ni^ersil Sorority highlighted its Founders' Day Celebration by pres^T hook to the university library in honor of each of its five fol "PerhapN il Wiis becausi* Nero burned Rome " (Oliver Herford) played the fiddle After two Slate courts found the reimbursement nieg«il un der federal law, the N.J. Supreme. Court ruled in 1971 that the couniv was entitled to repayment of what it would have saved if Wilkes had been getting federal aid all along. However, last Wednesday, the high court reversed that ruling on the grounds that federal law is supreme in the case of federal-state conflict. Lightner Insuf qnce Agen Life — Retlrement--- Education— I I^Mortgage THOSIAS MIAL LEWTN InsuniKe Programming and Financial Planning Specialists It’s the CORNERSTONE FINANCI real thing. Coke. [ SFRVICES'INCORPORATED lA SnbddUry •! Kentone CutodlMi Fuid*, Ina. LCWYN HAYES, JB. Bcftatcrcd BcpreMntatiTC 81* Bmlthflcld St. BuitncM SSS-KTT Horae lU-7t4I IKVCRtiOUSe SCOTCH wmiii The FMA-235 Program is Being Cut Oti! I I Act New If you want to own a home under this program. Key Homes still has a few 3 and 4 hedroom homes availahle in Kingwood. Down Payment $100 Monthly payments less than rent i 828-0538 Anytime H<xnes
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Jan. 27, 1973, edition 1
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