Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 22, 1975, edition 1 / Page 1
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w Others Also Encouraged To Apply PRKSS RUN 10,050 “^Get Food Stamps,’Teachers Urged If if ^ ■*■ ★★★★ In Durham County License Opinion Delayed Treedom’i Plate Is The CAROLINIAN Discussed Carolina’s Leafling Werklv nURilAM - Durluin. Counly Dislnci C ourt VOL 34 NO. 21 RALEIGH. N.C.. WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. MARCH 1975 Judge J. Mtlion Reiiti ■■■■■■' ■ ■ ■ found himself with o ■Ho' t r-* ah Jl Folatn Monday ufternuon HO lie LoUHty Man, 05, AllefSeaiy when the case of James K. SINGLE COPY 20c ^ Flowers was called. Flowers was ordered into court Saturday for having pul tape over the words "First in Freedt>m" which appear on the 1975 state nunor taj^s The CAROLINIAN has lonp since been apprised of the fact that there was going to In* a ie!'i case due to the fact there Kills Neighbor ★ ★ ★ ★ ¥ ^ those who say that it is the understatement of the age Many blacks question the righi of North ('ari)lina to parade under any banner of freedom, due to the (act that it has (ailed to practice it since the singing of the Meckleiiherg- Declaration. which many whiles say was the granddaddy of the Declaration of Independ once in 177») Thesecntics point to the fact that slavery was legal and was the cause o( North I'arolina seceding from the Union It was one of the stales that entered into the natanoiis combine with Rutherford B Hayes They also say that As Trial Date Nears. Miss JoAnne Inflation Cited In Statement Little^s Case Compares Case To Scottsboro Y iSce LICKNSK. P 2i Seminar Series Is Scheduled A series of seminars on Prison Ministries and Prison Reform wilt be conducted at (he Edenton Street United Methodist Church, beginning on Tuesday. April I ai 7 30p m and continuing on each Tuesday evening during the month, it has been announced by Ernest Haiford, YMCA executive and chairman of the (ask force in charge of the meetings The purpose of the seminars is to organize programs to assist in the rehabilitation of youthful offenders A speciafist in Prison Ministries. Ray .Moss, director of the Yokefeffow Prison Ministry of Winston-Salem will ^ conduct the discussions Persons interested in regis tering to attend are invited to write Seminars On Prison Reform. P () Box 2.Sfi97 Raleigh. N C 27iill Sliiidc*- of the famed Sciii ivhoru casi- seem to be hdviTing «i\»T tlu* nation, wiib mosi III them shadow'* ing .Ifi.-\iuu‘ Little, whose lih* IS in H'lipardy. due to the death ot a white jailer, wlmtn she alleges she irc-pickcd when he at* lempH'd In r.'ipi* her in the wei* hi'ur'* '•! ilie morning. M.iiiv pci'.ons recall the hi>lor> Ml th.it lamous Ala bama I .I'c 111 which seven til.K k Ihi\s were jccu.sed of r.ipiiig some white girls they eiK-Miinii leij .^liiir hoboing in (II ne.ir Scotislioro, .Ala Fund r.iiscis spring 11]) all ov(»r the ii.iiiMii P IS believed hv many ih.ii the same thing is happening with the tattle case. Her atlorney denied making a deal with (iniden Frinks to give him :tii ]K‘icenl oi ihe money raised to linance rallies, while the Rev Ralph I) Abernathy, financiullv troubled S('L lead- (T. says he can adjust Ihe mailer to Ihe satislaclion of alt concerned The prune actor in the drama. Miss Little, has become used and abused so much until she is said to be badly in iiin'd ol hospitaliza tion Persons throughout Ihe country. including .some law See MLSS LITTLE. P 2) THE UNEMPLOYMENT PICTURE — Miami - With over 8.3 percent unemployment In the state. Florida’s jobless have little to do in the present economy except stand in unemployment lines and sit the hours away on street corners hoping work w ill come along and relieve the monotony. (UPI> Looming Big Coroner’s Wake County Collision Claims WASHINGTON. D.C. - The National Education Association is encouraging teachers to anplv for food stamps, if eligible, as a means of keeping their heads above water in the tides ot inflation. At the same time, NEA is .suggesting to it.s nearly 10.000 local affiliates that they spread the word about Ihe federal food stamp program to other persons in their communities, especially senior citizens in undertaking this nation wide community relations project NEA expressed strong criticism ol the Ford Adminis tration and the V 8 Department of Agriculture for insensitivity to human need by not bringing the program to Ihe attention ol hungry people in many slates. NEA stressed that this program should not he consid ered charity - for persons who qualify for il lully justifiable No stigma should be attached (See FOOD STAMPS. P 2i Jury Will Set Fate Lives Of Two Men; Another Hurt TORNADO WRECKS HOUSE » Tennille, Ga. - Only a teievUlon remains where once stood a house after a tornado touched down In this small east Georgia community. March 14 morning. Several houses were destroyed and six persons were sent to the hospital, although only one person was hospitalized according to aiilhurilies. (I'Ph Ben Hooks Blasts US For Its ‘Immorality’ MACON, Ga. — Benjamin Hooks, (he first and only black to serve on the U. S. Federal Communications Commission, speaking at the Freedom Fund Dinner. Southeastern Regional Conference. NAACP, rapped America about its rank infidelity and devastating immorality from the signing of the Declaration of Indepen dence to the loneliness of San Clemente. California Friday night. March 24. ’’’he preacher-lawyer and Rev, Jesse Jackson Decides Not To Boycott N,LT, Games former Memphis, Tenn. judge used all the attributes of a Baptist preacher, the argu ment of a prosecutor and the judiciousness of a judge as he enraptured his audience. He began by taking the coming bi*centennial to pieces. He argued that the 200th celebra tion of this nation would find it still not complying with the first paragra^ of the famed document. 'We hold these truths to be. etc." The commissioner chided the framerf with their failure to The refusal of an alleged drun., man to leave the house of his neighbor last Saturday night, cost him his life, according to information furnished The CAROLINIAN Tuesday by Wake County Coroner Marshall W. Bennett, who investigated the killing. Carlisle Crum;.. 6S. of New Hill in western Wake County, is scheduled to go before a coroner’s jury investigating the alleged murder of his neighbor. Dead "before he hit the floor," according to the coroner, is 29-year-old Edward Lee Graham, Route l. New Hil. The weapon was a single barrel shotgun and only one shot was fired, striking the victim in the center of the chest. The coronet* and Wake County Deputy Sheriff David Baldwin, iMth declared that Crump stated the shooting was in self-defense. The inquest will be held to decide whether Mr. Crump will face criminal charges. According to the coroner, the two men lived within 15 yards of one another. Bennett said Crump related to him that he had had trouble with Mr. Graham previously and had ordered him to slay <See NEIGHBOR. P. 2» A head-on collision claimed Ihe lives of two Wake Counly men Saturday, and a third survived the crash, which occurred near Holly Springs. All of the victims were thrown from their cars Dead are Larry Darnell Heggie. 22, Route 1, Fuquay- Varina, and Luthanie) McCul- lers. Jr.. 37. Route 1. Holly Springs. Howard Leslu-. age unknown, also from western Wake County, survived. As late as Wednesday of this week, he was reported in fair condition in the intensive care unit at Wake Memorial Hospital. Drivers ol the cars were McCullers and Howard, who were traveling in opposite directions on Holly Springs Hoad, two miles north of the town when the collision look place at ulKiut (>15 p m "The rain had stopped." reported Stale TriHipor W H Moore. He declared that Ihe McCullers automobile was going taster than the 55 mph speed limit, when he lost control ol the cur and crossed Ihe center line Mccullers’ au' i .struck Les lie's with such impact that the molnr was separalcd from the Leslie car. knocked backwards and overturned Heggie was a passenger in the U'slie car. McCullers died enroute to the ho.spital. stated the officer Brown Surrenders In Killing Of Miss Jones MarchOn Boston Aim Of NAACP framers with their failure to , .m u • l. accept the black man as their AdOIIO Ml€iSflt8 equals and listed t as the one ' Group Rallies NEW YORK N Y The Rev Jesse Jackson, who heads Operation Push, decided here Monday that he would not push u proposed boycoll again.si Ihe National Invitational Tourna ment. now underway at Madison Square Garden. t»e cause promoinrs of (he national sports even! decided to meel some ol the requests made by him When news of Ihe proposed boyeott reached Michael Burke, president. Madison Square Garden Corp . he called a conference with Jackson and ItNiofhe Pl'‘'H asstKiales Bill > Cherry anu Re\ Calvin * Sampson Peter Carlesimo and Ken Norton of Manhattan College. Andrew Brown, com missioner. Southwest Alhletic Contcrence and Earl .vlason. commissioner. Mid-Eastern .Athletic Coiilercncc. along with Howard Evans and Frank Hannisier. Naiionai Black News Service lAerc also in allendaiice Tht* IxiNcott was (0 Ih‘ a ])i'olesi over (he (ac( (here were no black schiKils invited to (ho (nurnanu-nt The conference resuKi'd in agreeing that Carlesimo would recommend the following to (he MIBA Thai two jihli'dc directors from black institulions be elected to Ihe NIT Selection Committee II was suggested t)\ R<‘\ J'ckson that Karl Banks ol .Morgan State College anti Eddie Robinson Athletic Director ot (irambimg Stale College tH“ lonsidered. That at least one black institution be invited to compete in future National Invitation Tournaments, and That the school involved will share equally in the revenues and other benfils derived from il. and That New York Operation PUSH will plav a supportive j • role in the promotion of future Appreciation Rev Jackson, a close Checks Won By equals evil that has been the black eye of the nation ever since. "Jefferson's failure to stand flalfooted and demand that all men had the same right, sank America into the fleshpot of immorality, from which ij has not emerged in 200 years." he said He iGod> heard the plaintive cry ol the black man and sent Abraham Lincoln along, but I See BEN HOOKS. P 2> For Hollman associate of the assassinated Rev Dr Marlin Luther King. .Ir . founder and president of the Southern Christian Leader Conference iSri.Ci pulled out from that organization several years ago. first to head Ihe SCLC sponsored Opera t i o n Breadbasket, then to found and See REV JACKSON. P 2> Three In City Three persons hit a grand slam homerun for the Appre ciation Money Feature last week as thev saw their names on the back page of the front section oi this newspaper, came to Ihe ottice to identify themselves and received checks (or SIti each Ms Essie Trowell. 50fl Beverlv Drive, spotted her name in Ihe ad paid for by Taylor's Nurserv. Inc . 3703 New Bern .Ave . specializing in shrubs, trees and plants and known as Raleigh s largest nursery The name of Alfred Pretty. IfkiA Boaz Drive, was in (he Hudsnn-Belk Companv adver tisement Hudson-Belk. 319 Favelteville Street and Crab tree Valiev Mall, is known to have evervthing in the way of clothing and materials for Ihe home Ms Mildred Mitchell. 661 Coleman Street, saw her name in Carolina Biblical Gardens' ad On Thursday evening. March 13. Henry Hollman, Jr. accepted the thundering ap plause of the Apollo Heights Community as he announced his candidacy as President of ihr Board oi Directors of the Apollo Heights Home Buyers Association. The group assembled and listened attentively as Hollman promised, among other things: To serve all 216 families in Apollo Heights and not just a select few; To g e ( to ( h e bottom of the situation and find out just where (he residents stand — home buyers or tenants of the Raleigh Housing .Authority; Open up the Community Center to ALL the residents of (he community and elemmate the shadow of mystery that surrounds Ihe Community Center at present. .Also a candidate is Mrs. Elsie Womack. Hollman moved to Apollo Heights in February 1970 and immediately involv^ himself in community politics. He served on the interim board of directors as representative of section SIX and was active m getting Ihe community chart ered as a non-profit organiza tion He has been one of Apollo Heights' most active members. After being elected to repre sent his section on the first permanent board, he served as vice-chairman and acting chairman from lime to time iSee H HOLLMAN. P 2- New York — The National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People will lead a demonstration on Boston on May 17. the 2Ist anniversary of the Brown decision, in support of quality desegregat ed ^ucation and the Constitu tion. In addition to bringing a ^itive focus on Ihe current Boston school desegregation struggle, the march will aim at demonstrating that there ex ists in the nation a broad-based conviction that the "separate but eoual" doctrine that was buried with Brown cannot be resurrected. The demonstration is being organized by the national office of Ihe NAACP with the support of the New England Regional Conference of NAACP Branch es. On March 6. Ihe executive committee of the .NAACP Board ol Directors, adopted a resolution in support of the demonstration and march Gloster B. Current, director of branches, consequently, is mailing to local units through out the nation, an invitation to support and participate in (he demonstration. Other civil rights organizations and tradi tional supporters of (he NAACP will be asked to participate. Boston, in recent months, has been (he scene of violent opposition to a desegregation order that was handed down by Federal District Judge Arthur Garritv in a case brought by the NAACP Rev Charles Smith, a member of (he National Board of pirectors. and Thomas Atkins, president of the Boston NAACP Branch, are assisting Current in coordinating plans for Ihe march. A Jonesviiie iWake Counly i man. wanted for an almost two-monih-old murder, sur rendered to officers Monday at the Wake County Sheriff’s Department in the death of his former girlfriend The suspect. 2'2-vear-old HonaIdH Brown, was released from jail in less than an hour on a $‘25,000 bail, signed by black bondsman James K. Cofield Ho has been charged in (he February 1 shooting death of Miss Darlene Jones. 18. of the Jonesviiie Community, near 2ebulon. and (he wounding of her companion m a car nuisiHe Todd's Drive-In. Auhie Day of Zebulon. Miss Jones died almost immedialwly from her wounds, but Day was hospital ized for several weeks with bullet wounds in his chest. District Judge George F Bason set Brown's bond, under an agreement between attor neys for Brown and the office of the district altorney Dislrict Attorney Burley B Mitchell told the judge (hat his office had agreed to the low bail "based not on a feeling of Ihe strength of (he stale's case, but on (he probability of his showing up fni trial ' Mitchell also said. "This man ' ad been able to completely elude law enforce ment officers for almost two months, but he voluntarily turned himself in ’ (’ ('.Malone. Jr of Durham. Brown's atlorney. said that the surrender release agreement was negotiated after Brown’s (See SURRENDERS, P 2» Civil Rights Conference Announced MAY RUN FOR PRESIDENT New Orleans — Georgia SOUTH BEND.Ind -Oneof America's leading black spokesmen. Rev Jesse L Jackson, will join several noted authorities planning to attend the annual Civil Rights Lectures and Confrence at the University of Notre Dame April 16-18. The annual senes is sponsored by Ihe Center for Civil Rights and the Law School and will be open to the public State and national leaders attending (he conference in the University's Center for Contin uing Education will focus on the theme "Beyond Civil Rights The Right to Economic Security." Discussion topics will embrace health care and Its distribution, urban educa tion and the right to qualify education, economic distress and minority group.s. and welfare reform and the redistribution The latter two cover the right to meaningful employment and the right to an adequate income Jackson was a lop aide to the late Re\ Marlin Luther King, who split three years ago from the Southern Christian LeadershipConference to form State Senator Julian Bond said operation PI SM - Peoph Itf If. AAl.ia •• . March 16. IF he could raise adequate funds and attract United in Save Humanity, liiis IS an outgrowth of Operation support from outside the south. Rreadbaskel the economic he would run for the presidency ^^m of SCLC in 1976. (UPIi See CIVIL RIGHTS. P 2i WON'T BOYCO’TT NIT GAMES- New York - Black Civil Rights leader. Rev. Jesse Jackson <L». talks with Madison Square (iarden president. Michael Burke, at meeting, Ma 17, at which a decision was made to guarantee future National Invitational Tournaments <N 41 include at least one predominanil, black schnot. Jackson, director of operation PUSH iPeo, Jud To Save Humanity), had protested the abitencc of any black schools in this year's .NIT. while (he majority of the players on the tnUted teams are black. tUPI) Appreciation ^oney SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK RALEIGH PCX SERVICE "For The FesI In Seed. F* rtilizers. Tools ' SAYS HE MAY PUT HEX ON CHAMP — Richfield. O. — Dominic * hamm^ " Bulano tL» gives heavyweight champ. Muhammad All, the evil eye during a news coot-rente at the Coliseum. Bufano claims he can put a hex on anybody or anything. Bufano is with Chuck ^>epner and hopes he can help the challenger to defeat AU in title bout here March 24. (UPl)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 22, 1975, edition 1
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