Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / May 18, 1974, edition 1 / Page 1
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;j MIS w i;i;k 9,625 Si(lie's Miillirrs -ilsii 7V» lt(> Ihniiircd Al. • . B«l'- ■ iS ’■■'V 1, icy, ‘Roy Wilkins’ Day’ In Raleigh Sun. ( IIAlUiKD IN Ml RDKR • \lbjui>. N V, • Robert ilougius Walton, i*!!. i> tuki n Irom the New Voi k itate I’oliie bai racks in neat b> l.oiidoin ille late Max I t for arraignment on a charge ol murder in he death of Karl RIanchard of Niskaxima. Kscorting Walton is Inxestigator William ( ourlis Might oaK and one ol the state's nexx xxoman troopers. ( arol Desell. <1 I’ll If \ixon Stofts Dtnvti ¥ ^ ^ 'if if if Donald W. Sanders. 21. Was Passenger Crash Kills City Man ROLINIAN Norf/j ( aroHna's Leading Weekly VOL. 38 NO. 28 RAl.KIGH. N C. WEEK PCNDINC. SATURDAY. MAY la. 197) SlNCll.K COPY 20c Lai'dl 11 anian Accused Afler TWO ARE AXED Crowning Will Be Hi^hli^ht All citizens in the State ol North Carolina are cordial* Iv invited to the RaleiRh Memorial Auditorium at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday. Mav 19. when Roy Wilkins, executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Color- ed People, will be honored in a celebration of Rov Wilkins Day.’ The occasion is the annual observance of the NAACP’s Freedom Day. Another feature of the projrram is the crowning »>f the ‘Mothers of the Year, of persons selected fron> major cities and smaller towns. Senator Edward Brooke Says He’d Serve As Veep To Ford ^ if if if ■★ ★ ★ ★ Founder Of OlC, *¥*¥*¥*¥ W,\SIII.\(;T0N Son. Kd- vxard Brooke of Massachusetts, the nation's only black I'.S. senator, says he xcould serve as vice pr<‘sidenl under Gerald Ford, if he lu'canie president, succeeding President Richard Nixon Responding to reporters’ (lueslions. Brooke insisted that the President has been (hinkingaboul the{lossibility ol resigning throughout the Wat* iTgale affair ' I don't think he's ex<T dismissed the idea as viable, " lie sairl He reminded repnrti-rs that when he mel xciih President Nixon last Noxionber he cauiioned ihi’ Presidenf thal this iWalergali’i isn’t going to go Jtxxax \i that tune, he Med l<ir tlie Pre.stderil".s resignation, citing the lU'ed to restore confidence in the government Brooke was also critical of the Watergate presidential transcripts, declaring that "people expi'ct more and demand more of a president." The President is lacking good political judgment in thinking that the release of the transcripts and "taking the case to the pulihc. ” xxould slop the continuing criticism and calls lor his resignation or impeachment Brooke main tained thfit device has backfir ed on the Piesident and he has continued to lose ground - even among other Republicans, xvho formerly .'.upported him. •As to his .MTX ing as vice president under (Jerald Ford, tin* -Massachusetts Republican Publishers Hear Sullivan P. Bernard Young, Jr., Ex-Editor, Succumbs NORFOLK. \'a. - Funeral services were hel'd on .Sunday, May 12. al Grace Kpiscopal Church for P Bernard Young. •Ir.. a former edil«»r in-chief of \ the Norfolk Journal and Guide, who died Thursday afternoon. Moslems’ Case Going; To A Jury BY PAI L M WVCHK. JR National Bltick News ScTvice WASHING'roN The Hanafi Moslem mass murder Inal, afler nearly i;i weeks of testimony, is going to the jury. One of the defendants. W'illiam Christian, ehose not to i.StH* MOSI.K.MS P 2) CRIME BEAT l rum Ratf.ehS •’(ilirr Files OR S SOT I Till, »r fraiur* Ik in ihr inurni «iili •« •im Ifi«ar4v ri.mmaiini iit fonitnit. Sninrriiu. mdO Itfunlk hiir friRm Ifcny h« (i.vn itir i an«idrra(i«n •( kinaiii Thik «r Huuld Skr 10 «s Hna*,** .May 9. in a liK'al hospital alter a prolonged illness .A son of the late P. B. Young, Sr., founder and long-time publisher of the Journal & (Julde. and of the late FJleanor White Young, he attended the Norfolk Public Schiwtls. gradu ated from the Academy of Hampton Institute, and receiv ed a B.S degree in journalism xvith honors from the Ohio .Stale I’niversil x While at Ohio Stale. Young was the first black editor of The Lantern, the student dailx newspaper, and was a recipient of the Scholarship .-Award and Gold Key ol .Sigma Della Chi. the prolessional and honorary lournalism .societx He was a member of the staff of the Guide for nearly 35 iMH* KX KDITOR, P, 2) FLKADS GUILTY TO KIDNAPING • San Jose. Calif. • Convict Rucheli Magee. 35, pleaded guilty .May 10 to a charge of kidnap as a result of the .August 1970 .Marin County courthouse shootout, which left four persons, including a judge, dead. Sentencing has been set for .May 17. at which time Magee could receive a life term. (I’PD Two Mayors To Receive Doctorates DI'RHAiM - Two black mayors of Southern capital cities will be awarded honor ary degrees Sunday, May 19, by their alma mater. North Carolina Central University. Mayors Maynard H. Jack- son. Jr. of Atlanta. Ga.. and (See NCCU GRADS. P 2) Alcohol Cited As Motive Raleigh police officer’s have attributed the maiming of a 26-vear old woman anti her boyfriend, by another female. 66. late last Sunday afternoon, to have been the result of drinking intoxi cating beverages. Henvaver. the alleged fads in the case have not been completely brought out by detectives, still involved in the axe and razor blade cuttings of these two persons. Miss El-ie Hinton. 809 S. Person Street, told Officer G Jonesat 6:23 p.m. Sunday, that she went to get some food out of the kitchen and the suspect. Mrs. V'ictoria Hatchell. who reportedly rents a room to Miss Hinton, came into the kitchen with an axe in her hand and struck the complainant on the head x^ith it. According to the officer's investigative notes, Mrs. Hat chell had been drinking "and she was trying to run Miss Hinton out of her home, but Miss Hinton had already paid her rent for the next week and (See TWO AXED P. 2) jiidir r )ur< «.f»l» i lb, iri»wMrdb. ihr ollwfr* Tohrrs wl •! Til* <r>inr (alumni. m«rrl* mr.n. n»i br>n( rf|uirrad b) ■ ullUrf Ki rf|>«riin( iiu lindlnf» whik •• dM) j*,. ,im|»l) kMpnfHhr -•'wifp • ■H br in Tti» C-lmc etni. SIRMUS.M MAN Ven/e Senders. 2.-.0.T Hoik Quarry Hoad, an employee of the (Jrexlioiind Bu.s Terminal. 314 W .lones Street, told Officer R .A Parlikins at li>;20 p m Thu'-sday ilial he was cleaning up in the men’s bathnxni. Mr Sanders said he asked one ot the iiKm m a booth to leave (nal h»* could finish He declared that the man refused to leave, and, when Sander> allegedly threatened to "ihroxx him out,' the man produced a small calibre automatic pislpl from his pocket . S'l.iders said he backed up as the man reached the •1;. 1. tonied and iircd one shot ^al ..-jr.uers The bullet report edly struck one side of the wall and bounced olf the other side ; Damage to the wall was placed at $1(1 The black male wa.s described bx Sanders as being aboul 4(» years old. six feel, one inch tall, and weighing 150 pounds iSee CRIME BEAT. P. 3) Lucy Heads Trade Union Of Blacks WASHINGTON. DC. - Wil liam "BiH" Lucy of Washing ton. D C., secretary-treasurer of the nation's largest public employee union, last week, was elected president of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists ‘CBTU) Lucy, one ol the founders of the 3.noo-member CBTU, is the second highest officer of the American Federation ol Stale. County and Municipal Km ployees .AFL-CIO' Other CBTU olficials elected al the orgam/ation’s closing session .Sundav in Detroit's Cobo Hall were: executive vice president. Charles Hayes, vice president ot the Amalgamated Meat Cutlers; first vice president.Cleveland Robinson, president of the Distributive Workers, second •'.ice presi dent. Ms. Alzada Clark United Furniture Workers, secretary. William Simons, president of Local 6 of the .American Federaiion of Teachers: and treasurer. Nelson Jack Ed wards. vice president. Unilt-d See LUC'V HEADS. P 2i AiuS VICTORIA HATCHELL Chatham Collision Kills One Donald Woodard Sanders, a 21-year-old Raleigh man, was killed as a result of an automobile accident, some three and one-haif miles outside of Pittsboro in CJhat- ham County, about 8; 15 p.m. on F'riday, May 10, as he was a passenger in a car driven by Leroy Rivers. 29-year-old black male of Post Office Box 125, Hopkins. N.C., who is believed to have been towing Mr. Sanders' 1964 Volvo automobile at the time of the accident. He x^as taken to Chapel Hill's Memorial Hospi tal. xx'here he later died. According to Stale Highway Patrolman C. F'. Wheeler, a 1970 International truck, was being driven by Jack Allen Hoskins of 4430 Memorial Drive, Raleigh. The vehicle in which Sanders was a passenger was going up a curve, curving to the left, while the other vehicle vx-as going downhill, towing a trailer and another automobile. The trailer started swaying, caus- ■Sep CRASH KILLS. P 2i Appreeinlion Confab Set For Newsmen WASHINGTON - Dr. Leon H. Sullivan, founder and national board chair man of Opportunities Industrialization Center (OIC). will deliver the opening address of the 34th annual convention of the National Newspaper Pub lishers Association in Pittsburg, Pa., at the Pittsburg Hilton. June 19-23. The announcement was made Monday by Dr. Carlton B. Goodlell. NNPA president and editor and pubii.sher of the San Francisco Sun-Reporter Dr. Sullivan, whose OIC has trained or retrained 150.(100 men and women for gainful employment in more than Hxi U.S. cities and in four Atrican countries, will speak at the I p.m. luncheon on June 20. Others expected to spc'ak al the convention are; I S Judge Damon J. Keith, who will receive the NNPA Distinguish ed Service Award. .Ms Beulah Sanders. chair|H>rson of the Board of the National Welfare (.See DR. SULLIVAN, P 2- 6 Honorary Degrees At Shaw Finals Honorary degrees xxere presented to a stale legislator, a civil righ*'- leader, and four oul<tan'l cligious leaders ill ' ..iversily’s liioth aiiitu.il Commencement exer cises on Sunday. .May 12. The recipients of the honor ary doctorate degrees were Reverends Corbin L Cooper. (See 6 HONORARY, P 2' DR I.KON H .Sl l.LIVAN ALSC In Raleigh Protest 'f'he Raleigh c hapter of the African Liberation Support Committee announced plans to hold a mass demonstration and rally here in Raleigh on Salurdiiy. May 18. in front of the Wake County Courthouse. Fayetteville Street. The pur- |M)se of the broad based rally, will be to 'll express support for the liberation struggles lieing waged by Africans against continued Portuguese aggression and oppressive colonial dominations in the area ol Angola. Mozambique, and (Jumea-Bissau, West Afri ca. <21 draw attention to the social economic and political conditions of black people in the Raleigh area; and (3) commemorate the birth date of the late Malcolm X, The AI.5C. a broad based alliance of progressive black groups and individuals struggling to elim inate racism and imperialist domination, has invited black community leaders, activists in various areas of struggle to participate in the demonstra tion on May 18 The ALSC body will leave from the campus of 'See ALSC IN. P 2) ROY WILKIN.S The day wilt get underway promptly at l2::io with gospid singing. provid(*d bv more than 3(1 youth singing aggregations from throughout lh(* state Al :i p.m . the -MoHut ot (tie A’ear" program will iH'gin Mr Wilkins will crown the NAACP Mothers Another highlight ot the dax will be when Wilkins, in his unassuming way. delivers his annual dynamic and soul searching address to the waiting audience Wilkins has hetm termed 'SiH- RDY WII.KINS. P 2- Theory Of No Poverty Disputed National Black News .S<Tviee WASHINGTON A five year study by the University ot Michigan's Institute for Sim-kiI Research has disputed a key theoretical principle of the war against poverty It has found that, lor the short run at least, a ptTson's mental attitude has very little effect on his chanc(*s ol golliiiK ahead in American s(K'iety lb- may be ambitious or he may Ih- apathetic, but his econuniM standing is more likely to Ih- determined by factors enlirel-. beyond his control More than .5.000 familie* were interviewed in each of the five years of the studv ro ‘See THEORY OF. P 2- (Jieeks Cduimed By 2 Wumen KHROI.I, (iAIlSKR HKMIMSCE.S ABOIT C.AREER . Bru.srll - Winding up his i.5th lour of Europe, pianist Errotl Garner, reminisces uU»ut his musical career. At age 53. he's one of the most sought-after musicians in the world. Unlike most pianists, (iurner leiinied to play not iiy doing scales and sonatinas, but by jamming on rixeiboais. He still can't read music. (UPI) Two ladies won checks in the amount of Sio each last weekend, when ihev saxx their names in advertisements, paid for by the merchants who adxertise on The Appreciation Money Page, a feature, sponsored bv these merchants and The CAROLINIAN. This special page is always found on the hack ol the first section of this newspaper. Liles Shoes. 131 F'ayetteville Street, had a check awaiting •See .APPRECIATION P 2- Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS Vv'EEK .SKCl Rn Y MEAT MARKET "For Quality Meats Al Great Savings To You " GIBSON WINS SECOND FOUR-YEAR TERM AS MAYOR • Newark. N.J. - Mayor and .Mr«. Kenneth .\. Gibson wave to their xxell-wishers as they leave Avon Avenue school, where they voted ruiix Tuesday . .Mayor Gibson was re-elected with 54 percent of the vote. (UPI)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 18, 1974, edition 1
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