Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 21, 1975, edition 1 / Page 1
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I'olhmin^ I ioli-mr 4t Raleigh's tt nnu’ii's Rristm female Prisoners Boycottiiig (Juwt Is 1—1— PRESS RUN 10,026 X.-., Prevailing At Prison V Th<‘ \f»rlh Carolina Cor- rwiional CVnK^r for \Vfim(‘n was Ihu scent* of what some observers considered a ■■peaceful dennmsiMtion" was endtsl Tuesday morn ing. 'Phe proti*sl al the all-woman facihiv started Sunday afU'rnoon when the inmates ri'fust^d tt» rt*iurn to their dormorlones. Phe women art* now funcotting their it){is at ih»* insininwm lyoUnl on Bragg Street. •^rt in Kaleigh me inmates siatt'd that the> ^ould s(a> nut of their ^ormitorie.s until their griev ances were met A siKikesper son for inmates said thrnugii the wire eticliised facihtv at ihe end of Bragg Street ’ We .-un't going nowhere until we see the Governor, or Mr Kea .Morr's Kea is the lilack acting director of the facility Be was appointed to the position after Mrs Juanita Baker, the superint«'ndenl of Ihe nrison. was fired ★ ★ ★ ★ For Dixie State ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Voter Tour Planned VOL. 34 NO 34 Morth Carolina’s Leading Weekly K.^l.KIGH. N C. SATURDAY. JUNE 21. 1975 SINGLK COPY 20c I.K.\[)h:K \ni)RKSSKS CITY'S • FDRfiDTTKS NW)MKN ' — Raleign. N ( — Miss t elene Chenifrr icenleri. a member of “(iroup For Forgellen Women." speaks over a loudspeaker to women inmates of the North Carolina Women’s Prison here. June 16. during a demonsiratiQD v^hJch included a rock throwing incident with guards. <l'PI) i arrived al the prison 1 ;tt) a m Mondav and I‘ J Ke are'- i.See INMATF.S ABK ‘Miss Black Teenage’ Set In Goldsboro I Fourteen \oung lailie yjars of age will compeie for i; *^Aorlh t arolina State t ille al Uie seci.tul annual .Miss Hl.ick ^ -enage Wuild -f N.irih ‘ arolma p.igeanl Ttn- date is Salurtlav light. June ’Ji The place (ioUMM.i.i High Schix)! Fast am! the time is K The stale cnmmiHee is the local producing organization. Pageant's I'nlimited. Inc of Danville, Va , is the national producing organization The local committee wel comes a tremendous increase in participation over the first annual pageant held in 1974 The pageant is designed to provide avenues for young ieejiagi*rs i > display Ihiur talent {Kiise and personalities thus instilling iniellect. dignity and pride as a vlimulant for leenag(*rs to he able to m(H*i the challenges in mir highly comjH'tiiive smielv The stale cnmmiltee is elated to present this pageant in Ihe best interest of all leenagiTs and adults through out Ihi* stale m regards to anv raw. creed or color ^aiik you for joining us in m.r clforl to "Beach Dul mich A Teen " ^Irs Gladys B Todd is stale director Minorities increase In Fed. Jobs BY Al'BKKY K ZKPMYH National Black News Service WASHINGTON The I S Civil Service ('omnussion has reported that niinoniy group members amounted for 64 percent of the total increase in non postal federal employment throughout the nation between May 1973. and May 1974 "Of the net increase of 19,982 persons, l2,66.'i were minor ity." the commission rej«oried According to the survey, blacks held 14 6 percent of all non^obtal federal jobs in May 19Tlfi4»p from 14 3 percent in May 1973. accounting for an increase of 9.314 positions Wiuring the one year period Spanish •s{)eaking (See MINORITIKS P 2* Ftnir \fliite .\C Cops Accused After BLACK FAMILY BEATEN ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ KU-Gted .4l 88tli Annual Convention ★ ★ ★ ★ Local Medic State Prexy N.C. — Raleigh Rescue Team INMM K ISJI RFI) IN ROCK-THROWING HKRF. - Raleigh. wniki-rs tarrv Ms. Bessie Baldwin, an inmate al North t arolma lorkThrowine'bfgSn ambulance after a rock-throwing incident al the lacility here. when guards tried to break up a sit-down demonstration demanding better medical tare. (LIU ard' NEA Asks Congress For Early Childhood Education Measure WASHINGTON. DC - The National Kducation Associa tion urged Congress to enact legislation aim^ at providing voluntary universal early childhood education, develop ment and care for millions of preschcml children "NKA believes that the purpose of early childhood care Howard Is Given Rare Ala. Honor W ASHINGTON. D C - The Bev Daniel Napoleon Howard. Sr . professional sounter for more than 25 years with the Boy Scouts of America, was honored last week by the Daniel Payne College and the I nion Baptist Seminary of Birmingham. Ala . with the •S»N* HKV HOWARD, P 2' and family services is to begin to prepare a child for life - not necessarily for education in the formal sense, but for life.’ James A Hams, (he associa tion's president, told a joint Congressional committee con ducting hearings on the Child and Family Services Act <HR 2966 and S‘626>. "Child care programs must provide an atmosphere in which Ihe child may be exposed to experiences which he or she cannot or does not get in the home, and extend, strengthen, and augment (hose valuable experiences w hich the child may bring into the program.■’ he added Harris stressed that the requirements for quality pro grams in early childhood include education, health, nutrition, recreation and spec ial services and should not be confused with custodial care services "W'hat these bills address and what we support are early childhood education, not mere baby-sitting ■■ Harris declared. Under the proposed bills, the programs would be adminis tered through a system of slate and local governmental ■■prime sponsors’^ including iSee NKA ASKS. P, 2) Kelly Alexander Of NC NAACP Has Bleak Words Family Of Four Is Jailed DURHAM - A gripping^ story that sounded more like a Gestapo raid than an American arrest, was told hy a local woman, from her bed at her home, 1306 Drew Street. Tuesday morning, to a representative of The CAROLINIAN, how she. her husband, her brother and a 15-year-old nephew were harassed, brow beat en. cursed, beaten, drag ged, slugged and thrown in ih( Wake County .Jail, to face what she termed "Irumped-upped charged. Mrs Lillie Holloway began by saying that she and members of her family were returning to Durham Sunday afternoon, after having attend ed a family reunion at Saginaw Lake, when the car she was driving was stopped for what she thought was a driver's license test Knowing that hr* pocketbook was in her daugh ter's car. behind her. she (old the officer she wanted to get it out of the car. She alleges (hat the oRicer told her she was not driving the car when he observed it and he was going to (See FAMILY IS employ- RKV D N HOWARD HILLSBOROI GH - Kelly M Alexander, president. N.C Stale Conference of NAACP Branches, laid the cards on the table here Sunday, when he addressed a Freedom Fund Rally, sponsored by Ihe Northern Orange Branch at the Payne s Chapel AME Church at 3 p m He began by outlining (he fad that Richard Milhouse Nixon had all but wiped oui di> of Ihe gains made by blacks under Kennedy and Johnson He was willing to adopt a wait-and-see attitude on Ger ald Ford He warned (hat it would be a tragedy if the present trend of conservatism continued in .America The most blatant attack was made on black registered voters who refused to vote for Terry Sanford in the 1972 Democratic primary He siad if Wallace was permitted to carry N.C in 1976. blacks should be held responsible. He deplored the fact that Con gresswoman Shirley Chisholm invaded the stale and sheared off some of the black vote. He hopt‘d that Julian Bond would not come into N.C . along with Wallace and Carter, and aid in another political catastrophe. Li (Jovernor hopeful Mayor Howard Lee. shared the plat-- form with Alexander. The speaker told the audience that Lee would make a good candidate on the Democrat ticket He then tore into black deputy administrators who had been selected to shield elected officials He said that the only thing the most of them had been able to accomplish was to shield their white bosses when an issue, involving blacks. .See ALEXANDER. P 2i Appreciation Checks Claimed By Tv»o Here Twu persons, a man and a woman were the lucky winners of SiO checks each as Ihev saw their names m The CARDLIM.AN s Appreciation Money Feature, sponsored by (his newspaper and participat ing merchants, and located each week on (he back page of the first section of this newspaper Clifford T Kurtz. 1108 Spaulding Street, spotted his name in the ad of Kar Parts. Inc . located at 2712 S Saunders Street in Raleigh, and at 132 W Mam Street in Garner This company special izes m all car parts, new and rebuilt, and carries a complete line of tools The other winner was Mrs. CI.Ka.n l P At KlI.I.fNGSCENE —Richmond. Va. —Richmond police clean up al the scene where Florence J Kelly. 1433 Sawyer a man Identified as Buh-ri J. Mllberrv. was killed In a shootout with Patrolman Jerry Sianley. June Lane, whose name was in the 17 The shimiimt. hi which Stanley was injured, occurred when Mllberry abducted his wife al ad paid for by the Bea Hive. 126 gunpoint, and Sianley tried to stop him. The car being lowed away • belonged to Milherrs, < I PI. (APPRECIATION, P 2) DR ROBINSON Robinson To Serve On Body Dr Prezell R Robinson, president. St Augustine’s College. Raleigh, has been invited to serve as a member of the Task Force of the Education Commission of the States on State. Institutional and Federal Responsibilities in providing poslsecondary edu cational opportunity to service personnel The invitation came from the Honorable Arch A Moore, Jr . Governor. Stale of West Virginia, and chairman, Education Commission of the States. The results of the task force are expected to be of value, not onlv to service personnel, but to the slates, the ‘See DR ROBINSON. P 2) Program Of NUL Proves Successful GEORGE HOLLOWAY* NEW YORK. N Y - With the overall economic condition of our country at a crucially low ebb. the black educational institutions are struggling to hold (heir ground. It is particularly significant that the 1974-75 Black Executive Exchange Program (BEEP), which arranges for voluntar ily-lent black executives to serve as visiting professors in their areas of expertise on black campuses, is "without a doubt the most successful in the program's 6-year history.' BEEP director Renee Du- Jean measures this achieve ment by the increased corpor ation support, with more executive visits and courses offered. ■'Our roster of visiting professors grew from 177 for 1973-74 to 252 for this year," Ms DuJean noted "Four government agencies and one university participated for the first time, totaling 147 partici pants as compared with 112 last year " she continued. "College participation rose from 19 of last vear to 27 in <See NLL PRO\ ‘IS. P 2) Debnam Doctors’ President ASHEVILLE - The 88th annual session of the Old North State Medical Society convened at the Great Smokies Hilton last weekend. For these years, it has uniquely served the medical needs of the Black people. The first business meeting , was highli^ted by the farewefl address of outgoing president, Charles Johnson o( Durham. He thanked the assembled membership for having had the opportunity to serve, and for. their cooperation. In giving an account of his stewardship. Dr Johnson called attention to the unwav- ering'supporl by the Old North State to the East Carolina Medical School project He urged continued efforts to get black medical professional faculty and advisors at UNC; gave a current assessment of PSRO; and called for a legal attack on stale laws which for 88 years, have prevented black physicians from serving on state boards (See LOCAL MEDIC. P 2) Shaw U. Student On UNCF Body A Shaw University student has been selected to partici pate in the United Negro College Fund summer Intern ship program in college development. Stephen B. D'Arbeau, a fourth year urban politics major at Shaw, will join interns from other UNCF schools in New York for the 3 month program. "The purpose of the intern DR GEORGE C DEBNAM Four-Day Mobile Tour Set ATLANTA. Georgia — A four-day Voter Mobilization Tour, featuring rallies and public addresses in 15 Mississ ippi Della towns, will b^in June 19. according to officials of the nonpartisan Voter Education Project (VEP). Featuring VEP executive director John Lewis, a long time civil rights worker aM advocate of nonviolent social change in the South, the lour is an attempt to encourage increased minority political participation in Mississippi this year "Mississippi has demon strated a lot of progress in the past decade, but full participa- (See VOTERTOUR. P 7* “Kennedy Is Electable;” T. Bradley National Black News Service LOS ANGELES - Los Angeles Mayor Thomas Brad- ship program is to give a select ley has joined a group of west number of students attending coast political figures who are UNCF member institutions pretty sure that U.S. Sen. some experience in the field of Edward M Kennedy, D-Mass.. fund-raising, in addition to will be the Democratic providing summer employ- ic (See SHAW STUDENT, P 2) 'See KENNEDY IS. yfC- . P. 2) Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK HUDSON-BELK DEPT. STORES ■•'1 wo convenient L,ocations To Serve You" • POSSUM SLIM". 1*6. FACES MURDER Ed Poeium Slim’ Myeri. IM yeert old. them ■ •• he Ulk. to reperteri. The m Mj”J ,577 awaltina trial fw murder in the shooting .dodlh, Jane 7, Mrs. Loulie Slewert In Soirente. He .pent • week In the ^•‘jUi'illlly j>ll and w«. releiied U> • friend In Apopka. Jona IS. He ceud receive Ille Impriaonment. (UPI)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 21, 1975, edition 1
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