PRESS RU^
K THIS WEEK
>
9,450
Gives His Side in Shooting Case
Story Not True; B. Dew
‘IDidnh
Start It,’
Says Dew
BY CHARLES R JONES
Bobby Rayford Dew, 37.
arrest^ last week in the
cheek shooting of William
Nathaniel Vinson. 43. 314
S. Bloodworth Street,
came into the offices of
The CAROLINIAN Tues
day afternoon to mve his
. side of the case. Altl
this
k if if if
Raleigh Woman Allegedly
★ ★ ★ ★
Kills Mate; Gives Self Up
T.HE CAROLINIAN
TENANTS PICKET KNIGHT
* ¥ ¥■ if
Need
At Shaw’s 110th Convocation
★ ★ ★ ★
Leaders: Hargraves
■ mar'* -•
^ yiorth Carolina’s Leading Weekly
Although
' contacrMT^Dew'before ^3 NO 50 RALEIGH. N.C. WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1974 SINGLE COPY 20c
Jirab"/'to'’do’so'’' Criticize Councilman's Housing Stand
An affable and weiMiked
man. Dew said the entire
story was written according to
the shooting victim's side -
and it was. ”1 don't bother
nobody." said Dew, "unless
they start something first
“On Sunday. Sept 15,
around 9:3(» in the morning. I
was over to the house of Mrs
Lizzie Ruth Quiller. across the
street in the 300 block of
Bloodworth Street." Dew said
“This Willie Stokes came
out of 311 and he said 'Hell no.
I ain't going to join you all's
march,’ I didn't know what he
was talking about
“Stokes saw me and said.
Til fix you.' then I left and
went on back across the street
(See STORY NOT, P 2i
UNCF Will
Observe
30th Year
NEW YORK, N Y. • The
United Negro College Fund
will celebrate three decades of
service to black higher educa
tion at a 30th anniversa.'v
dinner Thursday, Oct, 17, at
the New York Hilton Hotel
Andrew Heiskell, chairman
of the board and chief
executive officer of Time,
Inc . has agreed to serve as
chairman for the dinner
Morris B Abram, UNCF
board chairman, said it was
"particularly appropriate for
Mr Heiskell to chair this
affair because over the years.
Time. Inc., has been a
consistent and longtime con
tributor to the college fund"
Some 800 persons are
expected to attend the dinner
Founded in 1944, the Fund
was originated to bring
1 desperately needed support to
[ the then 27 schools which
made up its membership
Over^ the past three decades,
the Fund has raised some $150
million to assist these schools
whose membership has now
grown to 41
Much of the professional
and community black leader
ship has conic out of these
I’NC'K schools, including the
Rev Martin Luther King. Jr .
Julian Rond and Mayor
Triangle
Leads To
Murder
BY STAFF WRITER
A 25-year-old Raleigh
woman has admitted st^-
bing her apparently es
tranged husband, since he
has a Durham address and
she lives in an alley on
Raleigh’s north side.
When Officer D. M Mat-
tock.s arrived on the scene at
202'a Selwyn Alley at 3:37
a.m. Saturday, he found W'iilie
Pierce. 27, 1208 N. Elizabeth
Street,
FACES OF PAIN • Chaloma. Honduras • A refugee bolds h«*r
two children Tuesday as a rescue U.8. Army helicopter luut of
the Canal Zone) approaches to pick up the refugees. 11ie
heiicnpier evacuated some 46 men. women and children in one
trip. il'Pl)
R-WCA Resumes Its
Deliberations Here
BY MISS J E HICKS
Raleigh-Wake Citizens Association opened it-
Durham, in a pool of fall meeting last Thursday night with president Raloh
blood and unconscious be- Campbell, presiding. Invocation »as offered by James
cause of lack of it^ His wife A. Shepard. ^ oumes
We Must
Emerge In
Our Time
Shaw University presi
dent J. Archie Hargraves
spoke to a capacity
audience at the institution
admitted slabbing Pierce
ver another man"
The officer called to the
scene, an ambulance and the
City-County Identification
Bureau for further details of
the gory knifing. At the lime
Pierce was admitted, he was
listed in very serious condi
tion.
Mrs. Pierce later turned
herself in at the magistrate's
office and was immediately
charged with murder The
original count had been
assault with a deadly weapon.
Conjecture has it that the
lepart
Mr Campbell reported on
the membership drive, stating
that letters have been sent to
i3> individuals and organiza
tions. requesting them to
renew their memberships.
Organizations were asked to
name representatives who
would attend the monthly
mei'tings Through the attend
ance of these representatives,
it is hoped to create a
Sergeant
vwiijtfviure nas ii mai me ^ «
two were fighting over ’this
o^her man.’’ when she plunged
La. Sessions
the knife into a vital and life
last Friday saying “A ,
new leadership has to ^ corner s inquest was
emerge to meet today’s
problem- ’ Dr. Hargraves'
remarKs came at the
opening convocation for
the 110th academic year at
Shaw.
He said, education is
means by which you
illuminated and enhghlem
order to be endowed and
(See DR HARGRAVES. P IJ
u get
ne<r in
POLK'KWOMA.N shot, killed - WathingtM - GaU Cobb, a 24.vear-oM Waihlngioa. D.C.
Policewoman. wa*> shot and killed Sept. 20, trying to capture a shotgun-carrying man who was
fleeing from two male officers. She was the first Policewoman in the nation's capital city to die
in the line of dul>. tHficer Cobb was shot In the chest and rlbbs. She later died at George
Uashinelon linsnit^ Mere police search the area for the suspect, who later surrendered to his
original pursuers. The suspect was not immediately Identified. (UPl)
Pat Bryant Leads Pickets In
‘Raid’ On ‘Bill’ Knight’s Job
Organization picketed in front of St. Augustine's
- J , Tuesday to protest statements made by City Councilman Willinm R KnioKf
Maynard Jackson of Atlanta ihe Raleigh Housing Inspections Department from collaboration with
The man who founded the landlords on the inspections of slum housine ^ ^ collaboration with
(See KILLS MATE. P 2)
Educator
Heads NEA
Committee
WASHINGTON, D C An
outstanding black educator
from Flint, Mich . has been
appointed chairman of one of
the most important comm.t-
lees of the 15 million-member
National Educational As.soc
iaiion, Ihe Committee on
Educational Finance
Announcement of the aelec Goodwin said that the dep
ion of Melvin E Banm
Michigan teacher for 21 i
, ^ „ — ...e depart-
lion of Melvin E Banner, a ment was fortunate to nave
him selected, as the institute's
program is recognized at one
United Teachers of Flint, was of the most comprehensive
by _NEA_ executive administrative training pro-
21 ye;
and pajt president of the
UNCF. Dr Frederick D
Patterson, will be honored
it the anniversary dinner Dr
Patterson was then president
)f Tuskegee Institute, at 73. he
s president of the Molon
''oundation. which provides
lervices to black higher
-ducation Tuskegee is one of
(See UNCF WM T P 2)
inspections
Mr Hill Knight and other
members of the Citv Council,
loured 9 of the 14 houses
Saturday. Sept 21. and
expressed shock at the apall-
mg conditions tenants lived in
in Raleigh Af'er the lour, the
Council memi.rs praised the
inspections department for
landlord, one would have to
make sure some personal gam
IS involved, such as the
passage of money
"1 believe that Ihe entire
system of placarding and
re-entering a house needs
more work done on it
"t think that Pat's actions
were premature The commit
tee report has not even betm
made to the full City Council
Mr Knight was referring to
Ihe visits made last Saturday
to several substandard homes
by a Council committee
Mrs Isabel Jackson, who
lives at 409'} S Haywood mi
Street, complained that "The
housing inspectors are Ihe **niri
(See KNIGHT IS. P 2i
^ r 4 *'■
ARCHIE HARGRAVES
WILLIAM R KNIGHT
doing a good job
In an interview with Coun
cilman Knight by Charles R
Jones. CAROLINIAN manag
ing editor. Bill stated as
follows "I have no reaction to
Ihe picketing, other than I find
his I Bryant's) statement that
I am in cohoots with the
landlord's, startling To find
one in collaboration with a
Appreciation
Feature Has
3 Fri. 1^7/i/irr.s
Three persons hit grand
slams home runs for $10 each
last Friday, when they saw
their names in ad\eriisment
slots of merchants participat
ing in The CAROLlMAN's
Apprei'iation Money Ftalure.
.See APPREClATioN. P 2.
CHA.MPiON GKEhTK YOUNG FANS • Kinhhabii. Zaire • World
leavyweighl champion. George Fon-miin. greets some fans in
he hotel lobbs Sept, 21, Foreman and challi-nger. Muhammad
Ul, spent the dav at the hotel relaxing. Their lilte boui is now
el for Oct. 29. il PI)
Appreciation Money
SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK
CAROLINA BIBI.ICAL
(LAKDKNS
“For A Well-Kept Final Resting Place ”
I ^ MITE rsik (•IBBS sr
proau<f4 la lb« mSIk lM*rrtl
tun itittrat •llmtaaila^ lit
rrqurtird ISal Iht} St fltta ISt
(■a«idrraikan tl attrlaaSlaf iScU lltllaf
m ISr iMitrr SIMirr TKit at aania likr
la4» Kaotitr U It MM aar imHlaa la St
ptaft ar fttf Mr ntrrti} paSllaS iSa
larit at at liaa iStra rrpan«4 S} iSa
arrttliaf afitrrrt Ta ktr^ a«l a( TSt
Crimr Stal ( alamat, mtrti) mraat aaO
Stia< rtfitirtta Sy a paiMt alflttr la
rrparitat Sit fiaaingt aSllt aa aaly Sa
•imply krtp aft iSt "aiatitt" aaa yaa
aaa'i St la Ts» ftimt laal
THROWN 01 T OF IIOl SK
.Miss Phxllis Ann Lewis. 21.
1425 (iarner Road, told Officer
L H Knight at 1 24 p m
Saturday, that she was lying
on the Iwd al her house when
James Lerox Neal. 26. 438
Smithfield Street, came in Ihe
riMini Miss I^wis slated that
she then got up and vacated
Ihe room In another room,
she said, "he grabbed me by
the arm and threw me out of
the back door Then he look
me by the hair and beat my
head against some bricks 1
finallx managed t., break
away and cat) t'.e police"
.Miss Lewis suffc.ed scratches
on Ihe face i..id bruises on the
neck The woman was advised
to Sign an assault on a female
warrant Williams had "split
the scene" before the cop
came
'See CRIME BEAT. P 3>
made
secretary. Terry E Herndon
who was executive secretary
of the Michigan Education
Association (MEA) from l%9
to 1973
Adequate financing fur pub
he education is one of 6 goals
currently given top priority by
NFZA The Committee on
Educational Finance works
toward that goal by advising
NEA governing bodies on
appropriate financial policies,
recommending wavs to pro
mote taxpayer understanding
of school finance programs
and needs, identifying prob
lems and trends in school
finance, and suggesting ways
to improve school finance
programs al all levels of
government
Banner, a teacher in Emer
son Junior High School,
received the .MFIA Recognition
Award and Ihe Law Day
Liberlx Bell Award last year
He IK also a recipient of Ihe
'See F.m (.ATOR P
stronger alliance m thi
community
Campbell called for reports
from the following committee
chairmen:
James A. Shepard. Political
Actions, no report at this
lime; Miss Louise Latham
Education, nothing at ihi-
time. However. Miss Latham
was authorized to organize an
educational task force to be
reported on later
Allan Rutheford, .Membe.'
ship, a number of persons and
organizations have paid men.
bership fees.
Mr. Campbell then di5cuK.s
ed. briefly, these issues the
dire need for low-income
housing and the lack of mone-.
for such projects; the group
practices in Raleigh pubhe
schools. which the NAACP hus
challenged in the Federal
Court in New Bern, and
resolution opposing the de
scription of h.iusing along tin-
belt line
The R WUA promised i
invesligalf a grievance pr«
sentH hv Glenn Plot!
(See R-WCA RESUMES P .
Dept. Of
Justice
Is Suing
The Department of Justin.
filed a civil suit and a dt-cri
this week, reauinng lh<-
DeVry Institute of Technology
in Atlanta. Georgia, to adopt .<
nondiscriminatory policy f<i:
its housing referral service
The suit charged De\ r
with operating its student
housing referral service on >
racially discriminatory ba'-<-
II said records were codiu
to indicate apartments and
boarding homes which weie
for while students only
Attorney General William
B Saxbe said Ihe houMiig
discrimination suit and the
decree resolving the issut
were filed Irgether in U S
District Court in Atlanta
In addition, a negotiated
Fair Housing Agreement l/<-
tween Bell & Howell ScIkk>1s
Inc . and the Justice IK’paii
ment was also submitted foi
the court's information IK-
Vry Institute is a wh«ili>
owned subsidiary of Bell &
Howell Schools. Inc
Under the agreement. Ht-ii
& Howell schools said it would
follow similar fair housing
K( KERD (• WINSTON 'SeeDEI»T SUINti
(Tiief Robert E Goodwin,
announces that Sergeant Rck-
erd Curtis Winston has bean
accepted by Izouisiana Stale
University to attend the 4lh
session of the LSU Traffic
Management Institute L’hief
(ioodwin has been notified by
Mike P Topousis, coordina
tor, LSU Law Enforcement
Training Program, that Ser
geant Winston is invited to
attend the institute which
began on Sept 16, and
terminates on Dec 6 The
training will be conducted at
Pleasant Hall. Louisiana State
( niversity. Baton Rouge. La
In announcing Sergeant
Winston's selection. Chief
grams available Chief G<^-
win said. "This professional
training experience he will
'Sit SFIttJEANT IS P 2)
.STlUKMjt INTKH>1IN(.I.K ON STRPS - F jiliin . Whll. and black iludcnli Inlcrmlnllr on
slop, of Hide P^ark lll||h F .lool a. Ihc trconi- oil »ork of court ordered buiina In Boolon achool.
got undtroay. .«-pl. 23, Thr ichool oa. cloat J. Sept. 20. lollowrng tludcnl uitrril which aurted in
the cafeteria. (IPI)