Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 12, 1974, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
(-TC.l ■ - 4»i:ol • - - ■- I’KKSS RUN THIS WKKK ‘),85() Ri‘li. Waller Fauniroy And John Lewis Nat’l Leaders Here For Black Meet Elected ★ ★ ★ ★ ^ ^ ^ Kev. Jesse Jaekson Deelares Officials ^ ^ To Gather Fucl Cctsis Is A Hoax Two Lop black leaders will be keym.l*' Npeakers at ihe annual 1974 meeling of the North Carolina Black Elec- [♦•d Officials Conference, to be ht Id in Raleigh at the Sir 'S alter 1 Intel. Jan. IH-I9th. U alter Faantroy. Repr%- •entaine of ihe District of Columbia, will he the main speaker at the banquet Fri day..J^n. IHth. to be held at f 6:30 p rn. John Lewis, exe- ' culive 'ilrtci ‘I of the Voter iVorf/i Carolina’s Leading Weekly VOL. 33 NO. 10 RALEIGH, N.C. WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. 12, lt'74 SINGLF COPY iDC Raleigh Man Allegedly Educa'i'ii; f^rojeci. Inc. of .\tlania. will be the Satur day lunihtH)n speaker at 12 Ir. ...i.j • U\ Um ’■< Ihe addresses tii.uk leaders. i-rk'li p- he held with l-i.liuea] leaders serxiri*. j' panelists Workshop p.nh. •>..)! he K; .yd B d. K."'- • I' l'ider ol Soul I’.s M.i.i i.uiiK'e i.itJhl •UT K-.'^ \!.i\or Howard I ‘ e. (■] HkI Kepreseiiia •:\e |l- r\. (ireensboro. Ueptr : ' • .1 I .) .hilmson. rain. ' '• .r.filinan K. Wilkiie Hi.p. .ind lormer riiijneiin..ii: ' ihri > Stewart. atchets W oman 4 ^ ^ ^ rh. heinK Voter ‘Gocf Can Make Powerful Of Earth RightBishop \TI..\\T.\’S M.\\ OR T \ KKS O ATH OK OKKICK - .Atlanta • Fulton County .lud^e. I.iither .\l \ ersu* administers the oath of olfiie to Alavor Maynard Jackson. Atlanta's first blaik niuMir The n.-l i ceremuny was held at the Ci\ ic t enter and sume.A.tHM) persons attended the inauniiratioii uio[ii> with Ihe Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and a city wide choir. (fPlt -• .•!, I': ..teri and the ( iinteii'nce ol l ! I '• r < ilficials .John - (ii(ir(';iiator of I- -Mi l'iu;.it. slat I • the . . 1.1 hi- Hnw •. • nh' lab t an Be ■ •In ri..- Incision ' . f ile router '■I t oiior those rlectrd Till- Will r.i ullcial.s 4 iicU*d ■ v-t. r •♦•«isir.i- » n foniiucled .'i. i' A'oter I'rir:-:-! urul other Violent Incidents Continue he Is ir, ' l-iiaiiin.' '.B e 2 Moreiaoe Out For Ya. Rapist Naliotial Btack News .Service HKH.MONI) • Thomas Wansley. who wa.s the princi pal fi|<ure in one .)f the most celehraled ca.scs in the state's history. < ill not ht* ijetimg ^married planned, since it confiU'is wiih prison regula tions ’A .i. sley's niother Willie .Mar Ihiirntoii of Lvnchburg. } .m .irr,<.unci-d that he would ■' '■ -• '.:ig 'named to Karlinda ... ki t .if .1 loc.il rommunity 1 Ml ti IS siM*nt the last U >vdr.- Ill pii.son for the 1%2 - .p*- old .17 nihbery of an uih'ilv i.\ iii'hifuiu white wo man Heh.i- heeri reined twice >nd . ^•.’'enl■^ (I to two lile 'erms in pr's.ri, •H's ;j.l a misunderstand- S<*« M.yRRIAGE IS. P 2) Two separate incidences of violence have proven thus far that the year 1974 will apparently be running neck-to-neck with the pre ceding year. as crime seems to l}e progressing about the same as in 1973. In two police blotter cases, the items were considered too hot " for treatment in The Crime Beat and are being f iresented as stories. In the irst case, a woman charges her alleged boyfriend with literally cutting open her forehead with a hatchet, and. in the other, a woman accuses her husband of beating her up. then forcing their children to walk naked in the rain to her mother’s house. (See HATCHETS. P 2i Watergate Aired By Clergyman Police Officials Dispute Charges Of Muslim ('rime Mitd ECGENK TEMPLE MISS MARY MCDOL’GAI. Leader Of Operation PUSH: Demonstrate BY LOUISE E. WYCHE National Black News Service WASHINGTON • The Rev. Jesse Jackson, head of Chicago's Operation PUSH (People United To Save Humanity!, nas labelled the energy crisis a hoax and called on workers laid off to begin demonstrations to protect those jobs. Director Of OMBE To Banquet DURHAM - Alex Armendar- is. director of the Office of Minority Business Enterprise, will deliver the main address at the Durham Business and Professional Chain's Annual (See OMBE HEAD, P. 2) .-At the same time, the civil rights leader siad in 1974. "The complete emphasis of the civil rights and labor movements has to be in the protection of average workers and the expansion of the base of the average worker “ Addressing an over-lJi-v crowd at a Washington church. Jackson said the "energy crisis is a hoax, a contrived crisis." which is being used by CRIME BEAT Frum Ral«-ich's (Iffklal I'olirr Files » ni 1 OR ^ SOTi Tho lolumn or 1i a«ur« I* |,r.idu<t'd in Ihr i.ublir inirrr«l wilh an aim loaardo t-liminaiinf ronieiUk. Sumi rou« mdit iduaU hair rrqurOrd lhat thr» hi fi'fn Ihr i un»idrralion «l airrlimking Ihrir liil.nt on ihr police blutlii Ihl% Mr uuuld !<kr ID du HoMC-rr II i« n»i war tMailinn lo hr jadir or jur; Wr miiili I util..!> Ihr laiik a* »r lind Ihrm rrpuilf d h> iht am viing ollicrik To hrrp out ol |hi < iimr Rrai I ulumn^ mrrriy mrafl' o->i brini rrfuirfrd h) a pomr oili.ir in rip.iriinq ho lindin(\ vhilr o» dui ‘ •'« -ifni'O krrp oil Ihr "B'lHirr" and .■>u MOP I hr in Thi ( :imr Rial employers who want to replace men with machines. Although many employers have been describing layoffs due to the energy shortage as "furloughs." Jackson said "most of these people (will) never get the jobs again." Eventually, he predicted, they will go to "work-ins" and "go lo the streets en masse to protect their jobs" He said by expanding the black working class, welfare rolls and prison populations would be reduced .substantial ly "There is no energy crisis," he told the church members "God is not guilty of non-sup port There is enough oil for everybody there is enough of everything. The question is who is controlling the store house..." He later told reporters that 'See FUEL CRISIS. P 2> WASHINGTON - Bishop .A. G. Dunston. Jr., Phila delphia. in the opening ses sion of the 1974 session of the Board of Bishops and Ministers' and Laymen's .Association. AME Zion Church, at Union Wesley Church. I860 Michigan Avenue. N.F)., last week, t'lld the church leaders that .‘«i'd has a way of making the powerful of the earth do right. He pointed to the fact that at one lime. President Nixon intimated that Angela Davis had been found guilty by the court of public opinion. "He is now attempting to establish, in your mind and my mind, that salient principle of American jurisprudence, that any accus ed person is innocent until found guilty, by a jury of his peers. What has GM wrought in the heart of Richard Nixon?" he asked. He asked the audience to remember how John Mitchell countenanced the arrest of 12.000 peace demonstrators. “Who do you think Mitchell wants arrested today?" the bishop asked. The theme of the three-day (See GOD CAN. P. 2) y RAYMOND L. PERRY Principal Given Rites In Wendell CllIC.AfiO - Police Chiefs, and law enfortvmeiil Officials in Newark. Los Angeles. Chicago. Coiv.pt-in. New (Orleans. Washington. D.C . Atlanta and New York, have allegedly disputed printed charges o| "grave concern' over crime among Muslim followers of the llonoriihle Elijah Muhammad, in interviews given to Muhammad Speaks, the official Muslim newspapi-i. "They stand out. they're ' ^ ouiitv < hic.i^ > I conspicuously trying to do .something |)osilive. and that's different m many parts of the black community. " Edward L. Kerr, director of Newark. .\ J police ^ald. "The manifestations of the Muslims have positive influ ence on the blac-k community." Los .Angeles Police Captain Homer K Broome slated. despiO' strained relalion.s with Muslims in that city because of unprovoked attacks h. cv. lui WENDELL - Funeral serv ices were conduiled Saturuoy. Jati. 5 at the Riley Hill Baptist Church for Raymond L Perry who died Wednesday. Jan. 2. at Duke Hospital. Durham. Offic iating was the acting pastor, the Re\’. W, G. Horton. The Rev. J. D. Lockley delivered the eulogy. Interment look place in Carolina Biblical Gardens. Raleigh. .At the time of his death, he w as principal of the Holly Springs Elementary School. Holly Springs. Perry received his early education at the Riley Hill Elementary School ami She pard High School. Zcbulon He earned the Bachelor of .Arts (See PRINCIPAL. P 2- gainst the unarmed Muslim Ti'niplt* tIuTc in 1%2 and 1%.S "Religious philosophy such as ih»' Muslims', can go a long way toward reducing crime. «vi-n in the most adverse eir< ' Sherrii Rich- , ■ ' I;h«.d. ol der.se. urtiaii Tax Keeps Man From Post High Mrs. Miller Buried Here Dates For History Wk. Announced Appreciation Money Won TURK \TKNSN\IFK WITH GIN Mrs .Icwe! Mane Titus, 28. 21j Coi.ke Street, tufa Otficer D M Mattocks at .' it a m. Saturdav. that she e home that niornii;g and l.c. uusband. Curti.s Lee riius. 4i. started ao argument w iHi her. t(H>k out his shotgun, ioadt'vi it. pointed it at her and told tier lo get out. Ofiiccr Matlocks stated in hi«: report. When I walked in Mr. Titus was holding a loaded shotgun I took it and him downtow'i. where Mrs Titus signed a warrant. " Titus was charged with a.'^sault with a doadls weapon. iSee CRIME BEAT, P By Two In (jty There were two winners in last week s Appreciation Mon ey PVature. sponsored by Tht- C.AROLINLA.N and participat ing businesses •Mrs Phillis Robertson. 425 Dakar Street, was the recipient of a $10 check from Piggl> Wiggh Food Stores, located at Five Points in the Hayes-Bar- Ion section of the city. Piggly Wiggly specialues in natural brands, everyday low prices, plus choice meats and clean stores Worth Spivey of 817 Peyton Street, found his name inside 'See APPRECIATION. P 2' WASHINGTON. D.C, - The Association fur the Study of At ro-American Life and His tory. founded in 1915 by history scholar Dr Carter G. Woodson, has announced the 1974 observance of African-Amer ican History Week. Dates for the celebration are Sunday through Saturday. Feb. 10-16 The nationwide observance of .African-American History Week < now called in some parts of America. Black History Week and formerly labeled Negro History Week), has been sponsored each year, continuously since Feb. 7. 1926 by the Afro-American Associa tion This organization was formerly known as The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History and changed its name at the organization's convention in Cincinnati in 1972 to The .■^ee HISTORY WK . P. 2) Funeral services were con ducted Monday. Jan 7. at 1 p.m. at the First Baptist Church, 101 S. Wilmington Street, for Mrs. Annie Hayes Miller, who died last Friday. The pastor, Dr. Charles W, Ward, offic iated and bur ial tollowed in Ml Hope Ce metery. Mrs, Miller had been active in church affairs at First Bap- . .. — list for over 2 -MRS. MILLER score years. She was a member of the senior choir, attended Sunday .School regu larly and was on the finance (Sw MRS MILLER. P. 2) <9 National Black News Service NEW YORK David N Dinkins, chosen lo be New A’ork City's first black Deputy Mayor, has turned down the ixist alter revealing that he had not paid federal, stale or city income taxes for 4 years. Dinkins asked Mayor-Elect .Alirahum D. Beame. lo withdraw his nomination. Beame agreed, saying: "It's a very sad and unfortunate situation for Mr Dinkin and. m a sense, for the city, because David Dinkins is a very talented person. He would have made a great Deputy .Mayor," Dinkin.'. revealed during a screening process for Beame appointees, that he had not filed tax returns or paid the amount due (or the past 4 years He said that the sum involved, including penalties, was about SlS.tXM) He also said that in :i of the years, he had asked to be allowed to file later "I haven’t committed a crime," Dinkins said "What I did was fail to comply with the law I always thought of this as a thing that could always he TAXES KEEP. P. 2) The slaiidero i> vfiai ge- that "The source- said somi factions of lh«’ .M-i-l'in' a« i-f* engaged in sucli c ::vi’ exli»rtHin. ri'lil'cry ami burg lury. witti ti;r- itiMt.ev go.ng to SOnU 1*1 liie I • i«if! - writl«'n by t'i.uk -ep'irir Delaney. and pn.iied 1 rt. in the inilu(-;*i‘.il \»- Times, iatt-r s' Times' reprinted *n sevrai b'C il newspapers. The story was written after ".An independent investigatii^n by the .New A'ork Times ii\»t several weeks, coupled with the findings of police and othr i government agencu-s " and was refuted e»inpn.ilir.iii\ • \ Minister Louis Karr.'kr.. National Representative oi Mr .Muhammad and ilu Nation of Islam "This IS an ouirighl In ' Farrakhan. Minister ut the •New York Temple, said • I'h'- Honorable Elijah Muhammad is a man of principle. Ih !' a man raised among us to refniin us from a lile nf crime not only crime against or .1 law but crime against Duine Law "It I.S highly unthiiik.iide unworthy ol a l)i\ inc M'. -.semi er ol (iod. lo m .my w.r encourage those whom he iuis relormed from criminal wjns to return lo criminal \\o\- ■Set* MUSLI.M.S V 2 P. Andrews Outstanding NC Teacher BY .MRS A H THORI'K Miss Patricia Andn ws. .i Weldon teacher and Raleigti native, was named the Voting Outstanding FZducatoi of 'he Aear" at the Execuii\i- riiib. by the Roanoke Rapids Jaycecs and Virginia Eleot'-n- Power Company -Miss Andrews, a leather ai Weldon High School, was 'he honoree. She is the chairw*. man of the English dep’ ai.d serve.s as 9ih grade homeroom advisor, along with teacliing 5 classes in English. She is in her 9th year of teaching with alt ol her* experience as a teacher (See MISS ANDREWS. P 2» BULLETIN..’ Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK BHGDES H KM I l BE ((). ti.\ TRI \I. I OK -MASS MURDER - Donalsonvllle. Ga. - A jury of M uhiii-. and one black was selected Jan. 7 to hear (he case again-i (.iinitc Dungee of Baltimore, Md.. the becond of three men tu 1.0c iiial for mass murder of a farm family. Dungee is shown here'being led lo preliminary hearing. "For Quality Furniture At Modest Costs' a HI) F AYF.TTKA II.I.E • Dr. (ieorge L. Butler. 53. first black chairman of the board of trustees at Fayetteville Stale Universits. was pro nounced dead on arrival at Cape Fear Hospital at Tit.*! p.m. Tuesday. Jan. K. He was an apparent heart attack \u(lm. Dr. Butler, a well-known local dentist, was elected chairman of the board In 1971 and re-elected in 1973. for another 2 year term. Previously, he had served 2 terms on the local Civil Service Commission. FOR.M MOVING WEIKiK FOR MAYOR - Detroit • Grim, tight-lipped securltv agents, form a moving weage as they guide Mayor Coleman A'oung (C) and his escort. loyce (iarrell (R'. through the huge throng during his inaugural ball Jan. 5. at the Cobo Hall In downtown Detroit. A oung. who left the ball after a brief appearance, is the first black mayor for Detroit • fifth largest city in the nation. (CPI)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 12, 1974, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75