r
yames Of Fat he ts ptfMiSnHea prkss RUN THIS WEEK 11,130
Unwed Moms Warned
MANAGF.K CKIKS IN N K'TOKY - ( alif. • Muhammad All’s trainer, Angelo Dundee (L).
cries out “Praise The Lord." as \li speaks into a microphone after winning a 13 round split decision
in a non title bout against Ken Norton. AM won the split derision in a rematch for the fight held last
March in which Ken Norton not iinl> heat \li. but broke his jaw. (t’PI)
General Accounting
Now Blaming Rep. Chisholm
i - The 1972 Presidential campaign organization of Rep. Shirley
.. has been charged with four violations of the Federal campaien
/ the General Accounting Office.
WASHINGTON
Chisholm. D-N.Y ,
financing laws by
The allegations were relerr
ed to the Justice Department
for possible legal action and
4 the office of Rep Chisholm
said she would have no
comment until the report had
been read
The Shirley Chisholm for
4‘residenl committee was
created in (X*tof>er 1971 to
primarily raise funds for her
campaign for the Democratic
Presidential nomination
Specifically, the (iAD accus
ed the committee of lK*ing
guilty of fh*> following viola
tions of federal campaign
laws
Failure to keep records of the
Say Many
Now Look
To 1976
DEN'VKR - iNBNSi A
small, secret meeting between
black Democrats and Republi
cans last week may pave the
way for black political unity
and a new political strategy.
. The meeting, the first time
4}3lacks from the two parties
had joined in such an effort,
was also the first time black
elected officials had joined to
coordinate black political ef-
T forts for the 1976 presidential
camp.iign.
The meeting, deliberately
held to 16 persons, was
described as preliminary and
no decisions were made’
The gathering was arranged
by Colorado State Sen. George
Brown, Georgia State Rep
Julian Bond and .Mayor
Richard C. Hatcher of Garv.
Ind.
One of the primary topics of
discussion was the problem of
declining interest among
blacks in voting. One report
presented at the meeting said
that blacks “are still essential
ly without substantial political
power and continue to suffer
(See MANY LOOK. P 2i
iH L L
Accounting Office.
dales when contributions of
more than Slixi were received
a-s well as (be occupations of
the donor.s ijrid their business
address as required by law
(at holies
(Uted For
L nity Try
The Nulional Ofliceof Black
(■atfiolicr.. representing the
inleresis ol over 1 IHIO.OOO
\mei :<'aij black Catholics, far
irom lieiiig divisive, i.s working
• III ilo'direction of unity tor ail
111 (to Cfiurch "
Inie k’ronei-- editor of the
ml luenliul National Catholic
Register, emphasizes these
points in an editorial in the
Si‘pi 2 i.ssue of the 54 year old.
independent weekly.
Coinmenting on an explana
tion l)> NOBC leaders at the
organi/atioir.s recent conven
tion at .New Orleans that it is
not involved in forming some
kind of splinter movement
within or outside the Church.”
Francis observes that “why
the National Office of Black
('atholics has to keep making
this dental is difficult to
understand.”
He points out that there are
separate organizations of Po
lish. Czech. German and
Italian Catholics in the United
Stales, and that ”no one
suggests that these groups are
dividing the unity of the
Church ”
"If ethnic groups have the
right to organize then why
shouldn't black Catholics have
See C.ATHOMCS ARE. I* 2»
NAACP MEET
The Haleigh-Apex Chapter of
the .\.A.A(’P will hold its
regular monthly meeting at
Hu h Park in Method at -I p m..
Sunday . .Sept i6
Piea.se come out and join in
our discussions and plannings.
Failure to file all of the
required reports on receipts
and expenditures and inaccu
rate reporting of balances on a
linal “terminalion” report.
GAO said the report showed
"a negative cash balance of
about $6,000 on July 13. 1972,
while our audit indicated a
positive cash balance of over
$18,000 on that date.”
Failure to appoint and report
the name of a responsible
chairman of the committee,
although .Mrs. Chisholm’s
husband. Conrad, had control
ol all committee receipts and
expenditures
Receipt of $686 from the
funds of three business
corporations, although federal
law bars corporatitxis from
making political contHbutions
in federal campaigns. The
head of one of the firnis had
personally reimbursed his firm
for its $100 contribution but
GAO charged that the other
$586 in corporate contributions
had not been.
Soul City
Gets Exec.
Director
WARRENTON - Mrs. Eva M.
Clayton has been named
executive director of the Soul
City Foundation in Warren
County, it was announced by
Floyd McKissick. president of
McKissick Enterprises and
Developer of Soul City, and by
Dr. Albert Whiting, chairman
of the Board of Directors of the
Soul City Foundation.
Mrs. Clayton, who has been
Executive Director of the
North Carolina Health Man
power Development Program,
with offices in Chapel Hill, has
taken a leave from her duties
with that program to assume
the Soul City position.
.As Director cf the Founda
tion. she will have overall
responsibilities for developing
the broad spectrum of social
services for the new commun
ity of Soul City and its
environs. In her statement of
acceptance, she noted that
major emphasis in the first
months of her tenure will go to
industrial development, as the
critical basis for development
of human services In addition,
said Mrs Clayton. "Educa
iionai development is a major
See SOUL CITY, P. 2)
★ ★ ★ ★
Names Of
1^0 J^ods Asked
ijj By Judges
9 HARTFORD. Conn.
Unwed mothers must
W disclose the name of the
▼ men who fathered their
children if ordered by a
court, a three-judge Federal
Danel has decided.
The law. passed in this state
last year, reciuires that the
mother name the father of her
child only if the slate obtained
a court order. Only one other
state. .New Jersey, has a
similar law.
Attorneys for the unwed
mothers said that this was an
invasion of privacy, instead of
a right of the state. They
likened the practice to forcing
a wife to testify against her
husband.
But the court ruled against
the mothers saying:
“The relationship which
these unwed mothers seek to
protect from disclosure is
emphatically different There
is no privilege to withold the
testimony of a mere para
mour.”
The Stale Welfare Depart
ment says it will now be able to
collect an additional $7 million
from absent fathers, since the
year-old law has been declared
legal.
Chief Judge M. Joseph
Blumfeid quoted the U. S.
Senate Finance Committee
when revealing the majority
decision;
“It is e.ssential to make
certain that all legally respon
sible parents of sufficient
means make their appropriate
contribution to the support of
their children.”
The mothers' lawyers con
tended that the sinle often
pursued fathers whii did not
have the means to support the
child and the law forced many
mothers on the welfare rolls off
them.
Julian Bcmd
To Raleigh
On Monday
Young Georgia legislator,
Julian Bond, will be the guest
speaker at Saint Augustine's
College on Monday. Sept. 17 at
8 p.m. in the Emery Health and
Fine Arts Building. He will talk
from his knowledge of the
”new politics.”
A founder of the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Com
mittee (SNCC) in 1960. Bond
has been through the civil
(See J. BOND. P. 2)
^ ^ ^ ¥
-A' ★ ★ ★
la Durham
Masonic
Hailed
MOLINIAN
North Carolina’s Leading Weekly
yOL. 32. NO. 45RALE1GH. N.C. WEEK ENDING SATURD.^Y. SEPTEMBER 15. 1973SI\'G1.E COPY 15c
y. ('. Fx-Marine
FACES DEATH FOP
★ ★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★ ★
¥ 4 •¥■
For Racial Unity Work
Black Catholics Lauded
‘Violent
Overtones:’
Rev. White
MANTEO - William Percy
Daniels, a black 21-year-old
Vietnam veteran, went on
trial for his life on the
charges of rape and kidnap
in -Manteo, (Dare County),
North Carolina Monday,
September 10, 1973. The
indictment against William
iSee FACES DEATH. P. 2)
^RIME
BEAT
I ton. r. <1 Orrit UJ
JULIAN BOND
EDITOR'S NOTE: TSU column nr fealiir*
ts prsduced In Ike pnbllc Intcrcsl »llb ■■
•im lomnrds rllmlnsilni its ronleui.
NumcroHS Indit Iduals have requested tSat
Ike; be fiven Ibe eenilderailan a(
ascriaabinf Ibeir listing an the pallce
blatter. Tbls we weald tike la da. However,
M to nal our Datitlon la be jadfe or Ju;. We
merely publish Ike fads as we find ibem
reported by the arrestlnf offtcers. To keep
eat of The Crime Beal Calunns, merely
means not belna reflslered by a police
officer in reportTni bis fladlafs while on
duly. So simply keep off the "Bloitcr" and
you won't be In The Crime Beal.
WANTS NAME CLEARED
A charge made by Miss
Dianne Leach, former wife of
Cornell Everetle. 4\A S. Swain,
that “he lied to me about our
being sick from poisoning, was
denied by the 2G-year-old
Everelte in a recent article in
The Crime Beat The actual
facts, according to Everette
were. “I was provoked to strike
her because she came into the
energency room at Rex
Hospital and accused me of
‘going with' a good friend of
mine. The fact that my friend
was at the hospital at the same
time was irrelevant, stated
Everetle. “I didn't even know
that she was there My
ex-wife's main concern should
have been for our son and not of
some jealous nature. The
purpose I contested the article
was to protect my good name
and reputation, not to slander
anyone.” Miss Leach lives in
the 8(Hi block of S Haywood
Streel. a portion of Chavis
Heights
bee CRIME BEAT P 3)
•- a - *
7 • -ar.!
THE BREATH OF LIFE - Wioiton-Salem. N.C. - Sgt. C. C. Joyce
Ol the Winston-Salem doIIp^ flwnt sIum i_
Hlnslon-Salem police depl. gives mouth to mouth
resuscitation to Deibert Eugene Bennett, utter bis cur crashed and
overturned traping him beneath it. iate September 8. Bennett
remains in satisfactory condition in iocai hospitai after beinil
treated for severe arm injury. (UPI)
State NAACP Plans
Meeting Saturday
should have had a lobbyist in
Raleigh and that the organiza
tion is moving with extra speed
to have one placed by
December 1
.Many names have been
dropped into the hopper. There
is a big possibility that the
person will be named Salur-
dav.
Asks Nation^s Women
To Be More Active
PEDDLES W ARES DOWN TOW N^Montgomer>. Ala.-83-yearold
Beorff Shine of Montgomer> cracking hik iMinirmade nhip high
above head of hi* mule. “.Annie" iraieU the dtitontoun area here
OR hi* route to peddle melunv during the teasun. Shine and
"ARRie" travel about 35 mile* a da> and have been un the ruule
about 1$ year*. (This took place Mondav. <lPli.
Over 200
NC Baptists
At Sessions
On Tuesday of last week,
over 2(K> people, representing
the General Baptist Slate
Convention of NC , left on a
United .Airlines DC-8 to attend
the National Baptist Conven
tion of the U S .\.. Inc . in Los
Angeles Accompanying the
group was Dr O L ’ Sherrill,
executive secretary of the state
convention, and Dr. C. R.
Edw ards, president of the body
and pastor of the First Baptist
Church. Fayetteville.
The remaining members of
the group represent pastors
and lay persons from baptist
churches throughout the state.
The plane originated at the
Raleigh-Durham Airport,
8tom)i^ in Charlotte to pick up
additional passengers, and
'See OVER 200. P. 2)
WASHINGTON - Minority-
women must be more actively
involved in the women's
movement, and in greater
numbers. Carmen R. Maymi,
director of the Womens
Bureau, said recently
The Labor Department offi
cial said the movement must
become more sensitive and
committed to the problems of
dual discrimination baseti on
PICNIC SET
All CAROLINIAN newsboys
and newsgirls are invited to a
picnic to be held on Saturday.
Sept 15. from 2 until 6 p.m at
the Tee Off Club, liKated on the
Rock Quarry Road Games,
eating and soft drinks will
highlight the event.Singing will
be provided by the Heavenly
Gates, a local gospel aggrega
tion Members of The CARO-
LINIA.N staff and other
chaperones will be present to
help the children enjoy the
event. Persons needing trans
portation should call 828-6430 or
go by 406>2 Hill Street. Ask for
Evangelist E. M. Smiley.
both ^ex and racial or eihnic
background
Speaking at the Feminist
Fair, held in Washington. D
C. she noted that “today's
movement hring.s a tradition
and a history of attempts by
courageous w(>men to change
conditions that nppres.sed wo
men ■'
-Ms. .Maymi- a native of
Puerto Rico, noted that
minority women have been
slow to join (he movement
because "we felt our primary
concern should be equality for
our race or ethnic group"
.Minority women are still the
most disadvantaged, the low
est paid, and the most likely to
be unemployed, she said, even
when minorities as a whole
make gains.
She urged greater participa
tion of all minority women in
working for equal rights
Opportunities just don't hap
pen. v«e must work to achieve
them, she explained
Ms. Maymi said women ol
minority groups cannot leave
all the decisions to majority
(See ASKS NATION'S. P 2t
GREENSB(>RO — Officers
and chairmen of committees of
the .N. C. Stale Conerence of
Branches. NAACP. will meet
at the Cosmos Club. 9:.30 a m
Saturday. Sept. 1.7. 709 E.
Market Street. There are two
important items on the agenda
— the Slate Conference
meeting and the selection of a
lobbyist
The annual meeting of the
Stale Conference, scheduled to
be held in Raleigh October 25.
26, and 27. will be programed.
If has been quite sometime
since the Conference met in the
capital city and much interest
is being generated due to the
new motivation, under the
leadership of Rev. C W Ward.
Kelly ,M. .Alexander. Sr .
stale president, in issuing the
call said that the time has long
since past when the NAACP
Ttro Ladies
Are Aftpreriation
Feature Winners
Two ladies ^avv their names
in the September 1 edition of
The CAROLINIAN lallhough
the office was clusedi. came in
Mondav and were sent to the
businesses under whose ads
their names had appeared
.Mrs Margaret Melvin, of 826
E Martin Street, saw her
name under the New Bern
Avenue Exxon ad. located at
12(K) New Bern .Avenue, and
'See APPRECIATION. P 2»
■wm
N
Cta.NTDOW.N: ONLY FOUR
AU.AY - .Atlanta - Hank Aaron
moved to within four of Babe
Ruth'* career homerun record
September 10 when he hit the
7loih homer of his career in the
third inning of a game between
the Atlanta Brave* and the San
Francisco Giants. It is the 37th
homer of the season for the
:{9->ear-old Braves outfielder.
(I'PD
Event Draws
Many From
Over State
DURHAM - The ^eate.‘;l
bond of fraternal ties was
demonstrated here Sunday,
when officers and members
of the three Prince Hall
Masonic lodges, together
with their auxiliaries,
celebrated the birthday of
the founder, at Ebeneezur
Baptist Church.
J. A. Carter, who served a.-
the coordinator, said it was the
most successful observance
ever pul on b> f.ali.rni’
prnuns. He said he .set . ul to
have all the secret Older
Greek letter bodies .issenihli*
to pay homage to the tenets of
their respeclive creeds.
A gala parade was planned.
(See MASDNH . u. 2t
‘Won’t Let
Them Die:’
D. McAdams
WASHINGTON. D C -
Although it has been estimated
that 6 to 10 millior. deaths could
occur as a result of the severe
drought in the Sahelian region
of Africa, this will not be
allowed to happen, according
to David McAdams of the U S.
Agency for International De
velopment (AID:
McAdams. AID Regional
Programs Officer for six
nations in Central and West
Africa, was interviewed on
radio during a recent brief visit
in Washington. D. C . from his
post in Senega) In Dakar he
directs the regional economic
assistance programs in the
drought-stricken countries of
Mali. Mauritania and Senegal,
as well as those in Gambia.
Guinea and Sierra Leone,
Three other countries - Chad.
Niger, and Upper Volta — also
are in the drought-afflicted
Sahel Zone.
Questioned by reporters on
the WAMU-FM radio program
“Overseas Mission,” Mc
Adams said, "Aid is going in.”
But although he does not wish
to think negatively, he added.
“It is a fact that people of the
stricken area are literally
living from meal to meal. If
they do not get food, they will
be too weak to work and
produce in order to help
themselves."
The United States, through
(See WON'T LET. P. 2»
Appreciation Money
SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK
HHODK.S El KNmJKE IN(
For Qutltty, biexponilve Merchtndlie
DAVID McADA.M.S