Julian Bond Raleigh Speaker-Says Placks^Needs Moved Back Since LBJ ★ ★ ★ ★ ‘Benign To ^ WEEK 1 0,430 ^y- 4«2»i ★ ★ ★ ★ ('.RJ Anti Her. White Declare Malignant, Boly War^ On Death Here Julian Bond, GrarKia State 'No Man Can Fear ^For Life’ Thf Ui’.iti'd ('hiircl. ot I'hrisi ('f*rnni;'''i‘*n U>r Hacial a'' of ‘^alnniher 17 !^>7:i de- I)ir»*(tor lit '.hf \.r.*Va, ('{jiuniihS"ii, fur Kacial .(iisMrc sijiU'd, d holy war" on liu- d»-ath penalty in North (’arolina and 'ows to HlruK^h* a*:Hinsi these fvil sidtntes so n<» nmn will hd%'»' to statu! before i he bar of jusliee in tear of his life Since Mareli 1971 ileven men u hlai k jnd A while ' have l»een cundi'nmed tt du in Ihe North t .ifolin.i ehamlMT Tht ('o!iiniis>.fitn lur Hdiial .Kifctue eulb '•pcei.il alUiilion tofive V •.>. ,m h i' plans to aid th« xii tmis 111 •.htaining new fiinb ilKM-t'.i^e'v include 'lonii*;> \r>e!l I «»ri\'U'te(l of ajM' N Oram»i ' “lin"- AuK t. ls7:i ■ i! 'lie! A I'ldiUv (<mvitt ed hi.! l: i-l I • I'l M'Uiri 4f . ad’. lUJ-t 114 is:: Alton I lit - ilei Mill .rn.VU ed i>f III ii: ileyrer hui^lar; North Carolina’s Leading Weekly VGl, ;12 NO 4ti U \I,K1GH. N C WEEKKNDING SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 197:)SINGLK COPY 15c Raleigh Man 'Slices' Ttco-Coes On 'Q r I 6HT RAZOR RAMPAGE ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Will Address Shaw Audience Stokely Carmichael To City 3 Groups ( <M \ IIMIW S oM V I hItl.K '|0(>O ttUiita - Hank Xarnii mn\rd wilhin three td Babe ' < .iieer hum*- run rt-curd ^i>t l< when he ht( Ihc Tilth huiner id his « .u eei in Ihe Hth inniiiii ul a lianu' between the \tliinta Bi.i\es and iht San 4 ‘ieKe I'adies. It is Hie IHlh imei id Ihe seasiin lur the IW-xear-uIri Biave*-' uulfieliler. iieel The ('antlitlales Here Tiies. V.\ Mivs • K Ilh'Ks 1h. I'-dii;.',.' .X'.-l-t.i; Com li-.in.- - :.t ,he b. •‘•'dti '‘I'./eii^ .. 1(1 a /r.i'i I t Mndid.ih * t'.i i'tini’ o' ■ • I .< -I. >. pi at St t";l ■ .1 h P I Opal CflUK h ia» lAti'l [I'llj'l* ;u’;‘ L !•:. I: i "f Cil'- Cil '• I «ll''r'.'t ont* . .! 1. ■ i iMit.lu i Warrant Out For Mfiii, 27 A local black man apparently went on a rampage Saturday, cutting one white man, who was trying to prevent him from cutting another black in hia place of business. The man IS still believed to be "on the lisise rern*n«c- liiggs 2KNeor-old < iiii ..'•uir li'O S Hovlan - II, J.S., police ■' • 1. « 11 p r*. .Sji.'I tlay. ■..i’ SjsMii *1 Sirukland, 27. \iidr»- X .Johnson Hotel. 100 W ■ Si c KA/OH r 2 fwo Blacks Seek Posts In Henderson HKNDKKSON - Two local I - ii ks filed here last week lor . its on the local City Council Incumbent Thurston Kd- A mds, councilman from the >urth ward, filed for re- .•ctum to this post A resident • ir*;io .Andrews Avenue, Mr Kilward^ has already served !r '"e lerms tin the Council I'he other |H*rs<m to file was (itsirge Anna Hart, who ' ks also an aldermanic .non She l)ecame the firsi nan to file for that position ;■ the upcoming election. car.didate from the first -.ird Mr.' Hart. If elected. ! :• r)g(‘ lo he fair to all at all !•> I will work toward ’ler gox ernnient for all ot the ■I 'ple m tn\ ward I hope that Ihe peoplt will coiiperate " aying that she expects ,;iport from the people in the '• ward Mrs Hart conclud- 1 I have rxeen living and 'king here for thirty years Sponsor Stokely The Raleigh Chapter of the AU Afrikan Peoples Revo lutionary Party, the Youn^ Pioneers, and Shaw Uni versity's Student Govern ment Association, presents a lecture by Brother Stokely Carmichael, chair man of the All Afrikan Peoples Party and Sp^ial Ambassador from Guinea ind Uganda. He will speak here Friday at ^ p.m. at Shaw University’s gym nasium. Carmichael has been a Btudenl under the great Dr. Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah, ex-president of Ghana, since 1968. Stokely remarked in an interview in Oct. 1972. that he was an organizer. "I want to set an atmosphere conducive to alleged members of the terrorist group were arrest^ and any ms organizing our people I want three ameers jQ^help bring our people together.” Within the span of seven short years. Stokely has become an undisputed interna tional Afrikan leader. He’s one of the leading spokesman of "Nkrumahist philosophy and thought." Stokely recognized that blacR people needed a base outside of America and (See STOKELY. P 2) legislator told St. Augus tine’s College students Monday. September 17, that presidential attention to the needs of blacks has moved since the do se of the Lyndon B. Johnson admin istration "from benign conctrn to malignant ne glect." He said that the Martin Luther King dream has come alive, because blacks have becom e aware of their ability for economic power to become a reality. Black people are more aggressive now*. Be told the capacity audi ence that a "coalition of the comfortable, callous and smug." re-elected Richard Nixon in 1972. and his administration has since dis played "arrogant contempt for people and their problems " He suggested the gathering to work for creation of a "national political coalition of need." as a remedy for problems, including the Watergate affair. Bond is a founder and former national chairman of the Student Non-violent Coordin ating Committee (SNCC). which was organized in Raleigh. He challenged the students to put their "heritage back into action." in resurrect ing the visions of Reconstruc tion era black legislators. He concluded his one-half hour address by quoting P'rederick Douglass. Black Civil War era anti-slavery advocate: "Men who would be free must strike the first blow.. The man. who is outraged must make the first outcry ■' At the close of Bond’s speech, Clarence Lightner, mayor pro-tern and mayoral candi date of Raleigh, presented the legislator with a key to the city, referring to Bond as one of the brightest young men in this (See BOND SAYS, ARM SEWN BACK ON • New York • Janii Jackson, 16, rests in hospital September 14 after her right arm, severed in a bus accident, was sewn back on by doctors three davs ago. Dim tors said blood circulation has been restored in the arm. the first major achievement in successfully reattaching a severed limb. The next, and more important step, is restoring cut nerves. (11*1) NAACP Plans Review Of Drive To Revive Separate, Equal NEW YORK - The Board of Director; aat the Nalionai Association for the Advancement of Colored People has authorial the establishment of a Board committee to review....all efforts to overturn the Brown vs. Board ot Education decision" in the historic 1954 desegreKation ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court COPS INSPECT BULLET HOLES - New VorS - PoUcemea look al bullet-marked apartment door after retd on anspected Black l.iberatlon Army headquarten In the Bronx Sept. 17. Three alleged members o( the terrorist group were arrested and an arms cache seiied after a blazing gun battle during which three ofllcers were wounded. (LPI) Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. To Address State’s Masons BY R IRVING BOONE ELIZABETH CITY - With major emphasis on charity, brotherhood, education, econ omics. law and order with ju.sfice. and first-class citizen ship. the Prince Hall Grand Dr. Graham Will Hold Press Meet Evangelist Billy Gral am has ju-st returned to the United Slates from a ministry in London England. called M'HE E 7:1 He will begin the Central (’arolina Billy Graham Cru- tSee DR GRAHAM. P 2; Iwodge. Free and Accepted Masons, headed by Grand Master Clark S. Brown, distinguished business and civic leader of Winston-Salem, will convene in its 103rd Annual Communication. Oct. 1-3, in (jireensboro. with headquarters at Ihe Hilton Inn. and general sessions at the Shiloh Baptist Church- Thuusands of members of the Craft • from all sections of the state, along with numerous masonic dignitaries from other iurisdictions. will converge upon the Gate City for this historic event A special highlight of this three-day observance is that of the Annual F«‘llowshm Ban quet. to be held on Tuesday night. October 2. in the Moore Gymnasium, on the campus of AAT University Guest shaker for this occasion will be the Honorable Vernon E Jordan, Jr., internationally known (See N C MASONS. P 2) Ones E. Folk Appreeiation Money There was one lucky winner m The CAROLINIAN’S Apore- ciaiion Monev Keature last week He was ones E Polk of 2020 Waters Drue in Biltmore Hills Mr Polk s name was in the See APPRECl.ATlON P.li, x^TS wori.f) i;; i.^NK robber • New York Police Officer Annmarle Butler, a ifaffii at niidtnwi. . icr sintion Sepleinber 11 wUb her prisoner, f lliroy C ouslns. She arrebied him aft*-r h*-<irinv' in a nearb> bank that he allegeilix tried to hold up. Hank Ku«r(| t \ril J<7se, .s |.i tackled 'Yim 111*1 > CRIME BEAT Stoai HaJplfh''* Official I’oIkc Kile* F.DITOB’S NOTE: TfeU r»l»nin or (raliir^ It prodocca la ibe public iMcrrhi »llb an aim laaardi ellmlaatini Hk etniaiui. Numprout lailkiduali bak* requrtttd tbal ibe> be fiven (be (aMlderailoa af •«erleoklaf (beir lUtmi an ibe pallce bloiier Tbit «e Mould like (e da. Honever, It It not our Doalilontobc judfe or Jury We merely publlth Ibt lacit at uc nad tbem reported by Ibe arrcttlnf •((Irert To keep aul el Tbe Crime Ecai Calumnt. merely meant nai belna refitlered by a pome allicer la rrpartlnf bit llndlnjt ublle on duly So timply beep olf (he ‘ Bloiier” and you Mon'i be in Tbe Crime Beat. NEWSCASTER CLAIMS ASSAULT Charles Warren Massen- burg. 19. 5027-E Fort Sumter Road, a newscaster for Radio Station WLLE, told Officer HW Richardson at 6:37 p.m. last Tuesday, that he and Bobby Rogers. 32. 184 South- gate Drive, who formerly was a disc jockey for the same station, were arguing over a tennis racket at the station He said Mr Rogers struck him on the right side of his face with his hand According to the general offense report, young Massenburg had bruises of (he face He was advised to sign an assault and battery warrant It was understood (hat the racket belonged to Rogers, but .Massenburg said it was ai his home at the time i^ee CRIME BEAT P LLi^ AUUHESSES CITIZENSHIP CONFERENCE - W aahinglon • Julian Bond, of the Georgia State House of Kepresenta- lives, was the luncheon speaker at the 2Kth annual National Conference on Citi zenship here Sept. 17. The conference, a congressional!) chartered non-partisan organ ization. will criticall) examine the issue, "Does Citizenship Have a Future?" (t'PI) Bishop Stephen G. Spotts- wood, chairman of the NAACP Board, announced the action following the Board's quarterly meeting nere, Sept 10. A Board resolution authorized the ap pointment of such a standing committee. The resolution was parked by the Office of Education's establishment of ethnically separate education al standards and the withhold ing of Federal funds from school systems which refuse to comply with "this....wrong and unwarranted return to the separate but unequal educa tional standards and facili ties...,” llie full text of the resolution, made public here this week by Bishop Spottswood, follows: The quarterly meting of the National Board of the NAACP denounces the action of the U. S. Office of Education in .setting up different education I standards for black, Spanish- I speaking and white students I and their refusal to give funds I to School District 19, in New j York City, because they I refused to apply these different i standards. This is a wrong and unwarranted return to the separate but unequal educa tional standards and facilities against which we have been fighting. If the lest questions are irrelevant they should be dropped for all students and if relev ant should be kept for all. U is true that President Nixon’s veto of the minimum wage bill, unless overturned by Congress, will further worsen the educational as well as the health and financial silualinn of poor workers. But that di.”.' not justify setting up uni'ijUiil standards for educational tc'-i and achievement' fn.- ' sludenls, as the U Ulfice ni Education in Presi*lenl Nixon Racism Now Under Test By General National Black News Service BAD KREUZNACH. Gei many - When the German bar refused to admit the young black man with an Afro hair style and mod-looking clothe.s, it had, without realizing ii. refused lo serve U.S, Army Maj. Gen. Frederic E. Davi son, commander of the Army'.' 8th Infantry Division. The general related the incident as an example of ho. he tries to get first-hand information on his troop'.' problems. As the first black (•> command a U.S. divi.slon. llu 54-year-old general reported progress in solving inoralt problems such as racism drugs, drinking and others in the 14 months of his command "We have experienced o\e the past year a very markco reduction in racial tension. ” lu said. His 16,(KK) man division which is 22 percent black, ha' (See GENERAL IS. F 2) Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK h I ' ^ For The Beat IN Quality Food BOOKED AFTER GUN RAID - New York - Three alleged leaden of the Black Llberalloi* Army ar^ booked at 48th Precinct police station here September 18 after having liMarKai nev r»ld latr .Scplrmbcr 17. Bandagrd man (L) la Robert Htyea; Avon Mblte (2nc*, R) and Mrl Ky n v iRI arr other two, Olfirlali are unldenlUted. Police Commlaaioner Donald Cawley aald iiollie na put a "monumental dent" In leadership of Black Liberation Army with the arrea o reputed chleflalni. (UPl)

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