J IC’/ Firat Blaak On Paroles Board ■■-' 9.200 I Was Not Asked To Resign:' J. Baker ■ ■ — ' ^ Wake Solon Fletcher Was Ex-Nixon Aide LOWKH Ol XI.I.I ttKI) ( <>!' K!l.l.KI<-> Xtl.inta \tlanta I’olit e and firemen to\U‘i (he hiKh of Mark ( . Ih ihune ollteiroit. Mi< t nn (he r(M»f of a Morrjv ftorw n < ollei-e doniiKoi \ Kehriiar> -’7 after heiii(> shol lo death in a shooloxt th an Atlant.i poiireniam Beihune a liiktitive u anted lor the slavinf{ of a Delmil polu email, h.i ' en hunted in the \ilanta area loi font davs There were conflirtintt reports on how Hethiiii' died, howiver I IM Crash That Killed Three Blach Kids Could Be Jfiurder SLMMKHVll.l K, S.(\ - Ihie. Dorcht .sU*r (Ouniv. S ('. lust w th(*v w(*if iintniiTod, The U’l'-- •'■tuli Cttre X . in» I . a cominunTty operaleil school in Kidj:! Se\i*ni. five feet in front of a *h*’ stop Mfin the bus swerved off i hool ativd H..Tk children diwl m a bu' accident in el). 201. Com. i.nitv re'^idenl'' are corn inceil that nlotiK with I'i hers, were bet»S'Vlriven to Dorchester County Day jub.prh a ditch and ran tree The entire left side rlppeii irom the bus. Pamela Smith, 6; Otis MAJOR MCDANIEL ‘Cutoff Is Disastrous,’ Aide Says National lUack News Service WASHINGTON - Typical of the altitude displayed towards the Nixon <‘dict calling for the eliniinaiion of federally funded poverty programs, was hat of 24'yeiir-old Ed W'iggins of Bridegeport. Connecliiut in town !■> participate ir last week'' National Mobili;ation for Di'inestic Unity Day. (See (T TOFF IS. P.2) POW Honored In Greensboro GREENSBORO Air Force Major Norman McDaniel, outspoken POW opponent ol granting amnesty to deserters, had a .special da\ planned tor him in Greensboro Wednesdas ul this week The ‘ hamber of Commt .sponsiied the occasion. .After being among the fi POWs released. Maior n: • iSET VOW MAJOR, P. Fires Director 1 ARO North CaroUna*s Leading Weeldy VOL. .32. NO. 18 WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 1973 SINGLE COPY 15c Raleigh Student At JNCCMJ Slashes N.C. Coed ^ ^ Commission For Racial Justice Chavis iiea^ DC Ben Chavis Free Under SOGs Bond 4 4 ^ EXHIBITS IIM i ROW LAWS - Undated - The ■•aparthied” laws of pa<il 2.1 >earv have placed the non whit- mujoritv of South ^ \fiica under the ahvolule control of a goverBiiient ele* ted onl> b> the white minoritv fhe black lives in separiti town^hips. Their children attend ail hlack sihmds. Blacks mmt .it at) nines carrv Spe. ul police passes 'shown here* (I Pli. ille, S.C. hkay, Johnson. 4; and Raymond ii^o a Campbell, 3, were killed. Three other children were injured. Elijah DeLee, the driver of the bus. had to undergo surgery for a ruptured spleen and liver, and has not yet been able to explain what happened. How ever, his mother, Ms. Victoria DeLee * the school’s founder - was quick to come up with an explanation: “Foul play.” Ms. Del^ee reported that two • mysterious” accidents had occured the day before the fatal crash, both involving day care center vehicles. The steering mechanism on the school's other bus went out while it was carrying children down a dirt road. When a station wagon was sent to retrieve the children, a tire and wheel came off of that vehicle. Some reports attributed to eyewitnesses at the scene of the fatal bus crash have told of a wheel missing in that incident also. Thus. Ms. DeLee is convinced that the accident is the result of sabotage She has been the leader of two recent boycotts of the Dorches ter County schools. Black students walked out of Harley* ville-Ridgeville High School on Jan 26 and began boycotting Summerville High School on Jan. 29. In the Summerville walkout. 147 students were arrested for “failure to disperse.” The State Commission on Human Affairs has been heading up negotia tions to answer the grievances of (he parents and students raised during the boycott. The boycotts stirred a lot of (See ( R.\SH KILLS. P.2) Victims Of Disease Did Mot Consent '.SHINGTON ■ None o( the 43 black men atflicied with sy lbs and untreated in the I Tu ppgee studv gave their ! “ii. l ined consent to take part in • • ''tudv. T i wasoneo!’hefindingsol a c 'en's panel investigating the . '.2 study that came to light ia^l ek IT. report indicated that at least and pi*i hap> as many as 107 Ol <e men mav have died as a vvh of unlreaieii syphilis Tin 1 S Public Health Servii a division of HK\X. spoils* -d the exocianenl The experiment featured rural lacks trom Macon Countv \labaina The purpose was to fnl out how untreated syphiii> ttects humane iSee \ 1IMS OF. V 2) 1 h(' Reverend Benjamin Chavis, former organizer in the North Carolina-Virginia Field Office of the Commis vion for Racial Justice United Church of Christ has been nameti as the new dirtHtor of the Commis '‘ion’s Washington. DC Field Office. Chavis who was released on bad of SMi.iNMi from Central PriMin in Raleigh North Carolina in I)(*cemb<‘r replaces the Kev Benjamin I.a*wis, who along with the former program ciMirdinator. the Rev William (.and. w 11 ht'come a part-time consul’.in* m the ( onvmission TV. '■ '- ii?iv«* Iiifs >(*r ol the C<mimission for Racial Justice. Dr Charles E Cobb, praised (SEE BEN CHAVIS. P. 2) MY INVESTIGATE DISORDERS AMONG CREWMEN • Washington - Rep. Donald V. Dellums. D-Callf. (left), the first black member of Congress to be named to the House Armed Services Committee, said February 26 it should reopen its investigation of disorders among crewmen on two aircraft carriers to get testimony from black sailors. At right is Donald Miller, formerly in charge of the Pentagon’s equal opportunity programs for servicemen. (UPI) Raleigh Student Jailed After Coed Is Knifed DURHAM - Otis H. Jeffries, 24, a student at North Carolina Central University here, of 1331 RaleiRh Boulevard, Raleigh, was charged with assault and battery on Mis Ruby Golden, NCCU coed, in Durham Monday. ARTHUR A. FLETCHER UNCF Head, Board In Disagreement NEW YORK - Christopher F. Eflev was slated to replace Arthur A Fletcher as director of the United Negro College Fund this week Fund officials decided Iasi week to fire Fletcher after several months of disagreement over policy matters. Edley, a lawyer, has been with the Ford Foundation for the past ten vears. He comes to the United ' Negro Fund post trom a position as program ofticer with the foundation Fletcher was formerly assist ant Secretary of Labor in Ihe Nixon Admimslration He succeeded y'trnon Jordan as UF director. It was a "mismatch " from the beginning one lund official said of the hoard’s relationship with Fletcher Fletcher g(»t 49 pc*rcent ol the vote lor LieulenanI Governor of Washington when he ran for I See UNO FIRES. P. 2' Police reported that Jeffries slashed Miss Golden with a steak knife in the college’s Law Building late Monday after noon. The coed sustained wounds on the left side of her chest and on her left ear. Jeffries was placed under $400 bond in the Durham County Jail. Campus sources said the two had been ’ going together ” for some lime and that they argued aflp urning to Durham from Ihe -.AA tournament in Greensboro. Miss Golden was treated at Duke Medical Center and released. The incident drew a large, but orderly, crowd on the NCCU campus. Police said students in the Teacher Of The Year Going To Mediterranean DURHAM - James (Jay) Marshall Rogers. Jr . the North Carolina Central University alumnus who was the first black educator named National Teacher of the Year, will tour the Mediterranean on a Slate Department-sponsored trip in March- The Department of Stales Bureau of F'ducational and Cultural .Affairs will send Rogers lo meet with educators, government, university, and Embassv officials in Athens. Thessaloniki. Cairo. Alexan dria. Beirut, and Tel Aviv He will visit universities, second (See TEACHER, P. 2) Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK Jollnson Laiiibe For The Bevl In Kleclrii Xppliances crowd had disarmed Jeffries by the time they arrived on the campus Investigation is continuing in Ihe case. CHIME BEAT From Raleigh’s Official Police File* EDITOR'S NOTE-' ThU coiumA or feature Is produced in the pub lic ijiterett with an aim towards eUmlnattni Its contents. Numer ous individuals have requested that they be given ihe considera tion of overlookin' their listing on the police blotter. This v.e would like to do. However, it is not our position to be Judge or Jury. We merely publish Che facts as we find them reported by the arresting officers. To keep out of The Crime Beat Columns, merely means not being registered by a police officer in reportlna his findings whUe on duty. So sim ply keep off the “Blotter" and you won’t be la The Crime Beat. STABBKIUNSIDE Fred Wilson. 61. 1013 S. Wilmington Street, told Officer W B Holland at 3:05 p m. last Wednesday, that he was at 107 Bragg Street, the home of Mrs. Marv Spencer. He admitted that he and Mrs Spencer got into an argument and she made him leave. Wilson said the woman followed him lo the street, where she then slabbed him with a knife He was taken to Wake Memorial Hospital for treatment ol a puncture wound in the left side and released He refused to sign an assault with a deadly weapon warrant against Mrs. Spencer, whose age was listed as 69 See ( RIME BEAT. P. 3) Appreciation Feature Has No Winners There were no winners in The UAHDLIMAN s Appreciation •ature last wt*ek but as many as three pt'ople could have won $10 prizes Last week as U is every week, three names were listed on the appreciation page However, no one came into the office of The ('AROI.IMAN to I (SEE ,\PPUK( lATlON. P. SAYS SHE’LL RETIRE • Washington • Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y., the first black woman ever to run for the presidency of the United States, reported this week that she will retire from elective office in the very near future. A native of Brooklyn. N.Y.. Mrs. Chisholm is a former school teacher. (UPI) Seeks Reform On Paroles John Baker, Jr., this week denied published reports that he has been asked to resign from the three member North Carolina Board of Paroles. A Greensboro daily news paper in a series of articles on the parole program said last week Baker and Robert Weinstein had declined the governor’s request to resign. Efforts to reach Weinstein and J. Wiley Earp, third member of the board, were unsuccessful Tuesday night. Baker was interviewed by telephone from his home, '616 Battery Drive. “1 conferred with Governor Holshouser last week about a routine case and the matter of my resignation did not come up," Baker said. He added, ”I realize when Governor Scott appointed me to the Board of Paroles that the lime would expire in July That was made very clear to me and I have been concentrating on doing the best job that I can while I am in this position ■I am emphatically interest ed in correctional work. This has be-..i by chief interest since I left professional football. ” Baker is a Raleigh native who excelled as a tullback on Coach Peter Hines Williams' Ligon Little Blues championship teams in the 1960’s He later attended N.C. Central University where the late Herman H. Riddick (SEE JOHN BAKER. P. 2) $5 lllion Suit Filed By Rap Brown NEW YORK ■ H Rap Brown’s lawyers have filed a $5 million suit growing out of an article published by NEW YORK magazine Robert Daley, former New York deputy police commis sioner for public affairs, wrote the article called “The Man Who Shot Rap Brown ’ Brown and three condefen- dants are charged with armed robbery of the Red Carpet Lounge, a West 85th Street bar, on October 16. 1971. They are also charged with attempted murder of several policemen in a gun battle after the robbery. At issue in Brown's suit is the matter of free press vs. fair trial. Brown’s lawyers object parti cularly to a drawing accompan- ing the article. The drawing , shows Brown firing a handg* ti I at Patrolman Ralph Ma rita, the policeman who shot and captured Brown. Jack T. Litman. prosecutor in the case, admitted that ballistic tests show the weapon in question was not fired. First Baptist Planning 161st Anniversary The First Baptist Church of Raleigh will observe its 161st anniversary Sunday, March 4 Dr. Rudolph McKissick of the Bethel United Institutional Church, Jacksonville, Fla., will be the speaker at 11 a m services. Dr. C. W. Ward, pastor, in reviewing the church’s history at midweek said, “It happens that the day of observance falls on the exact date of the founding of the church 161 years ago. "Our church was started as a (See Ut BAPTIST. P. 2) WACS EXCHANGE WEDDING VOWS - San Francisco - Two ■\rmv WACs who recentiv exchnnged wedding vows have been granted honorable discharges, but the minister who wed the two women savs the marriage is "nult and void.’’ The couple, Gail Rales. (1.). and Valerie Randolph. (R). told a news conference February 26 that they were both heterosexual until they hit It off the basle training, which is exclusivelv female company (IPD.

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