THIS WEEK I’RKSS lU N ‘>■^(*0 ISaiioiial Urban lA‘nf{iii’ Hrad Durham Speaker •r* JTX 1756 ' 1. Ky iKtl Jordan Warns Blacks To Improve ¥ ¥ ¥ 4 In Attica Five Case-Key ★ ★ ★ ★ Witness Admits Lying Banquet Orator In ^Bull City^ \orth ('.arolina^s Leading Weekly VOL. 34 NO. 17 R A LEIGH. N.C.. WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. FEB. 15. 1975 SINGLE COPY 20c Viclim Also Kidnaped TWO HELD !N RAPE DURHAM - Vernon Jordan, Jr., who heads the National Urban League, told about 1.000 persons from all walks of the Durham community, in cluding several whites, who assembled at White Rock Baptist Church, at 5 p.m. Sunday, to honor Nathan T. Garrett for services rendered, tint even though he was not satisfied with of the things President Ford had done and was utterly disgusted at a Democratic Congress, that much can be done in the black community, b^ blacks, to improve their conditions. ★ ★ ★ ★ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ... .*apping Kt._ for his inept handling of the Gen. Assembly Resolution Boston situation and his failure Cites Believed Bl'K\ U \\' TMKtll'tiH KOOK New York — A band ul professional saferrarkers. bypassing an Inlrirati- alarm \>htem. burned Ihrir uav through the roof ttf a thick steel vault 'lop. center) in a city office, commandeered three Weils Kargo trucks and escaped uith three Ions of coins Horth un estimated ti;t7.lHUi. Police said the hurglers removed Rl bags of coins and I0'> padlocked cannisicrs whose contents would have been coualed Keb to. h\ (he vO-maii staff of the lily’s Kin.ince Administration's Parking Meter Oiv ision The emptied cannisiers. their snipped locks on the desk at center, are shown in bottom photo. '(T'li 1st Time Citation Slain City Leader Dragged I From Car to use the kind influences of his high office to hit inflation and recession directly in the face. He was not too interested in oil imports or energy squabbles. He showed quite a concern fM* directed energy toward the Black Forsyth Legislator Backs In what many tenned an unprecodonied act, Ihe 1975 General Assembly of North Carolina finally got to acting Monday night and ratified a joint resolution which extolled the virtues Rehabilitation Of All Prisoners White and poinU*d out tf.e The CAROLINIAN made the rounds d! the (ieneral Assembly .Monday and Tuesday. Most of the small rooms that house the soions in the Legislative Building were empty. The concensus was that most of them leave early Friday afternoon and return Tale Monday afternoon. Thi.s ib behevt.d due to the fact that (he Monday session is held at night and the Friday session, if held, is in the morning. The CAROLINIAN repr%- tentative returned Tuesday afternoon, following the sche duled opening of the Tuesday session and mund that it had adjourned and committees wtn meeting. It was learned that the White resolution passed the third reading Monday night, thereby being ratified. RefH'esenlative Richard C. Erwin, Forsyth, made his position clear on the proposed correction laws. The Winiton- Salem lawyer fell that our present laws dealt more with E unishment than rehabilitation le said the committee handl ing the proposed legislation should study the circumstanc es surrounding crime and then make, or propose, laws, that would attempt to rehabilitate the convicted law-breaker as soon as possible. He felt that even though there is the hue and cry about penal institutions being over crowded, that additional build (See FORSYTH. P 2f 2 Muslims Charged In Death Of Inmate great lo.ss by her untimely death on Jun. 9. The cesolution {passed its third reading, thus becoir ng the will of the soinns in lb # irst session of Kith legislative day. The resolution was sponsor^ by Wake County Represepta lives Cook. Atjams, Creech, Farmer, Johnson and Smith. The resolution reads as follows: GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 1975 HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 33 (See GEN. ASSEMBLY. P. 2) black community. He threw a broadside at Congress for dilly-dallying with proposals that tended to feed the hungry, cure the sick and clothe the naked. Screaming MAYOR H. N. LEE MISS CHAUCEY DOUGlJtS May< or Howard Lee To Speak In Mount Olive National Black News service murders occurred. Price and Moody were cellmates at Holmesburg and were confined to a ‘security (See TWO MUSLIMS. P. 2) PHILADELPHIA. Pa - Philadelphia law enforcement officials have charged two men convicted of murder in the 1973 slaying of 7 Hanafi (Orthodox) Muslims with Ihe Dec. 31 murder of a fellow suspect, who had turned government witness. Theodore Moody, a Black Muslim and one of those convicted, was charged with murder and conspiracy to commit murder in officers of the Baleigh-Apex death of James R Price m^e naaCP, are scheduM NAACP Sets Installation Of Officers the Holmesburg Prison. Moody is serving a life term to be installed in their offices on Sunday. Feb. 16, at 4 p.m at .M. .» I uJAajisjae , a w. au. os » a. .11, 01 The other man is John RICH Park office building MOUNT OLIVE — Chapel Hill's Mayor Howard Nathan iel Lee will speak here on Sunday. Feb. 16, at 4 p.m. at the Mt. Gilead Missionary Baptist Church on a special program, sponsored by the local chapter of the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People Gave False Informalim At Attica (NAACP) and the Entertain ers' Gub of Mt. Olive, Inc. Also slated to appear on the program is “Miss Black Teenage World.’’ Miss Chau- cey Douglas, who will sing the two selections that won for her the coveted title last July 19 in Danville, Va. She performed “Good Morning, Heartache" from the popular Billie Holiday classic, and one other number, not yet revealed. Miss Douglas also won five troDhies in competition, a $1,500 renewable scholarship to Shaw Universitv, a $9,ROC (See MAYOR LEE. P. 2) LUMBERTON - A 32-year-old local woman, Mrs. Naomi Hardin, was allegedly dragged, scream ing from an automobile here last Friday night at gunpoint, then was report ed raped. Two men have been charged with kidnap ing and rape in the bizarre case. According to Sheriff's De puty Luther Anderson, the two men being held in jail are 27-year-old Robert Lee Tliompson and John William Thompson, 25 years of age. Both men are being held (See TWO HELD. P. 2) He took a crack at black leaders who put themselves beyond the real issues, making them "showers'” instead of achievements. He called upon black elected officials to not become so enshrined in being on this or that committee that they forget to remember the promises made to the elector ate. Jordan was quite concerned about activity by blacks in community iievelopment. He told the audience that com munities make up the county, counties make up the state and the states make up the nation. He was sure that if action is started in the community and properly nourished, it would be (See WARNS BLACKS. P. 2) iVE/4 ISurses To Fight Youth VD Mai Goode Is Coming To Shaw U. National Black News Service BUFFALO - Charles "Flip Soions To Matvin Goode, the first black news correspondent to work for a major television network, will appear at Shaw University March 2-7, for a series of public speeches, workshops and classroom lectures. Goode’s appearance is spon sored by the Lilly Endowment and the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundia- lion. WASHINGTON. D C. - The nation's menacing epidemic of venereal disease among young people is the target of a spring campaign sponsored by the National Education Associa tion's Dbpartment of School Nurses (DSN-NEA). Plans for Youth Health Defense Days, May 1975, are being coordinated bv DSN state chairpersons in 21 stales. But the nalion’s school nurses hope Ihe special drive to detect and begin treatment of (See NEA NURSES, P. 2) Court Rules — v..iicii ica rti|; —— —~ A tion Crowley, a key prosKution JI0op K-WCA Goode, a native ot Virginia, In FoVOr Witness against five Attica **'-'«** »» ad^ w-...-*** CIWA ELIJAH Ml llAMMAl) l\ CKITIt’AI. CONDITION - Chirago— Elijah Miihaniniad. 77, (hr founder and Iradrr of the nation of Islam, britrr knoHn as (hr Blark Muslims, was listed in rritical rondilinn at Mrrr> Hospital. Keh. 9. from coners(i\ e heart failure. < I 1*11 Griffin, also a Black Muslim who has been charged in warrant murder The branch officers will be installed for the coming year at iih the Price monthly membership meeting Already elected as A third man. Theodore Brown, has been named in the warrant. He has been describ ed as ‘a member of (he same gang" who already was in officers are Rev. Charles W Ward, president; Mrs. Sarah Davis. vic(i president. Mr Cornelia Hunbard. secretary. Mrs Carolyn S. Debnam. prison when WON'T SHOW I P — New York — Hill Russell, former haskelball great, anniiunred Keb. 9. hr will refuse (o show up for his induriion into the Raskelhall Hall of Fame in niid-\pril. "For m> own personal reasons, whirh I don't want to dist uss. I don't want to he part of il.” Russell said in SeaKle. «lT*li Lawmaker ^Guilty' In Tax Case t- National Black News Service ATLANTA — Former Stale •/ Senator Leroy R Johnson, the ‘f first black to win election to a Southern legislature since p ^ Reconstruction, has been con victed by a federal jury of submitting a false tax affidavit to the Internal Revenue Service The jury cleared him. however (if two other charges that he understated his income in 1969 and 1970 by more than $50,000. <^rges that Johnson had evadqd more than $40,000 in taxes Svere dropped before the trial began. Conviction on the false affidavit charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5.0()0 fine. Presiding Judge Newell End- field said, ifowever, he would delay several weeks before imposing sentence. Johnson said he would witness against five Attica Brothers accused of murder and kidnaping, testified here last week that he had lied and given false testimony to the Grand Jury investigating the September I97i Attica I^son revolt, because he had been threatened, beaten and tortur ed by New York State police and prison guards. Crowley, who is black and a former Attica inmate, told a hushed courtroom at a pretrial hearing that the torture was so severe "I was ready io tesi.fy against my mama." He is now on parole. He described the experience as “(he most intense terror I have ever known...! knew the things that 1 was saying were untrue. .1 knew (hat I was lying ." he said. At Attica. Crowley served as an elected representative of the prisoners of the E-block during the uprising and made a Interests According to Ralph Camp bell, Sr., president of the Ralei^-Wake County Citizens Association, tree Wake Coun ty state senators and 6 members of the N.C. House of Representatives have agreiid to meet with the organization on Tuesday, Feb. 18. The scope of this meeting will be to provide the Raleigh- Wake black community an opportunity to discuss with the (See R-WCA PLANS. P 2) joined ABC News as a United (See MAL GOODE. P. 2) ODDS AND ENDS ^Uer an absence of many \ears. the once popular column. Odds and Ends, returns to The CAROLINIAN. It is written by James Augustus Shepard, veteran newspaperman and this news paper hopes that it will attract much reader interest at before. Odds and Ends Is found on the editorial page each week. Of Students National Black News Service WASHINGTON - The U.S. Supreme Court, by a 5 to 4 vote, ruled last week that public school pupils cannot be suspended without notice of the charges against them, an explanation of the evidence and a chance to tell tlteir side of the story. It was a historic precedent. It marked the first time the High (See COURT RULE. P. 2) (See WITNESS. P 2) Blacks And Whites In Agreement Appreciation Checks Won By Tiro In City Two Raleighites were the lucky ones in last week's CAROLINIAN Appreciation Money Feature, sponsored bv See APPRECIATION. P. 2) National Black News Service PHILADELPHIA - Both black and white students seem to learn better in integrated grade school classes, but when black students reach the junior high level, they benefit more from a setting that is predominately black. That’s the conclusion of a two-year federal study con duct^ by the Federal Reserve (See AGREEMENT. P, 2t Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK W.\RF.H()l SE OF TIKES VALENTINES "For Top Quality Tires At Reasonable Cost" (See 'GUILTY'. P. 2) receives a large pile of Valentines from a small group of shy school children during a visit (0 Veterans Hospital here Feb. 10. .^aion broke Babe Ruth's career home run record. (tPI) H.ASN’T HAD A PAIN — Wasblsgte* — Heart traaspUal recipient Arthur F. Gay of Wasblngtea, D.C.. says lib kasa't bad a pain since he had hU transplant two years ago, except when be bas to paste clippings in his scrap book reciting the deaths of bis fHlow heart recipients. (UPl)