Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 11, 1975, edition 1 / Page 1
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Gogpel Highlight's Bro. Edward Holloway ro JCOC 173<5 Li N 10,050 Head-On Collision Kills Columnist Widoiv^ Condition ★★★★ Member Of Lily-White Country Club Serious 99 HY (IIAIUKS R JONKS Ihe tragic Hiid sudden death of Bro. Edward Holloway. Sr. 55, popular manager of the Gospel Jubilee Singeis of Raleigh last Saturday night, in a fiery car wreck, near Pittsboro in Chatham County, has stunned and suddened the hearts of all who knew him. He wrote Gospel Highlights for The ,*^AROLINI AN for the past sf I'ral years, of Wendell. Route 2. (g - ] tn a two \'ehti.'li- colhsion ati >i>' and his wife. Mrs. Bemift B Holloway, travelled toward Pittsboro to attend a gns^'f mnging program to be held d' the Horton High School there Members of the Gospel Jubilee Singers were riding .jhea'io! them on a van owned by the group, and Johnnie Holloway, a suu of the late Mr. Hoilowoy reporied!> saw the headtm collisoo of hiv father’s car with a small truck Both vehicles caught on fire and Hbllowav as well as'he driver (See C OLLISION. P 2> Faculty Blasts North Carolina's Leading Weekly VOL. 35 .NO. 9 RALEIGH. N.C.. THURSDAY. DEC. 11, li)75 SINOLF: TOPY 20c Signs Of Approaching Yule Season TWO SLAIN IN COUNTY ★★★★ ★★★★ For Black Elected Officials Brooke To Address Meet WIPE'S TRIAL DF.1.^\Y — Washington — Miss JoAnne Little’s lawyer, Jerry Paul, clowns with photographers by hiding behind a hai belonging to JoAnne as they leave the Beaufort Co. Courth use Dec. »> altet winning a week's delay for a hearing on whether she must return to jail to finish serving a .enlrnce for breaking and entering. (I’Pl). EPWART) ilOI.LOWAY. SR For Rape In Raleigh A Raleigh man. Willie O. Frink, 30, of 542 E. Jones St.. Apt. 1, was arrested last week and charged with ihe rape of Miss Shirley Mac Jackson, ^ter she identified him in a Mice line-up. r Miss Jackson related to police, that on the night of last Jan 31, she left her apartment at 210 E North St., at about 8:.30 p.m. to visit her sister. She also said that a man stepped from behind a building and grabbed her. holding a knife to her throat and forced her to walk to a parking lot on Halifax St., where she was raped After the incident. Miss Jackson said she was released, so she returned home and notified the police. Raleigh detectives who had pursu«‘d the case for several month.<i without any success, were finally able In make an arrest, after Miss Jackson called the police and said she saw her assailant riding down the street on a bicycle Frink is being held in the Wake County Jail without privilege of bond pending a hearing in Wake District Coiu't. Deaths In Raleigh, County As the Christmas Ssason nears, murders have begun to run rampant in the Raleigh and Wake County communities. Two men have been killed and as many other men have been "hauled off” to Wake County Jail to await hearings. Police have charged a Raleigh man with (he slaying j resirtert in .‘-.oufr liairigh last l-'riday. George Grace Munson, 27. of Zebulon. was found dead uutside a house at 413 S. Bloodworth St., about 9 p.m. Friday. Munson had been shot with a small calibre handgun in the side and in the leg. Munson died 4 hours later at Wake Medical Center, and during the weekend, police apprehended Charlie Junior Harris, 48, of 711 E. Hargett St., and charged him with the murder. (See TWO SLAIN. P 2) Zion Lay Meeting To Ohio WASHINGTON. DC. - Arther E Brooks, president. Laymen’s Council. AME Zion Church, said here Friday that a meeting has been called for St. John AME Zion Church. Cincinnati. Ohio, for Dec. 1M2. The meeting has been called to discuss issues pertaining to the expansion and development of the program of the second largest biack Methodist body in the world The church leader is report- TSee ZION LAY. P, 2) noni.mati':d to appeals COl'RT — Columbia. B.C. — .Matthew J. Perry, ToUmbia attorney, noted for bhi civil rights activity , was noimnaled lo the i:.S. Court of .MUilary Appeals by Presider.i Ford. Pe.'iy Mirvfd in the Armv for four years during WW II.' The nomination was announced bv Sen. Strom Thurmond. Il-S.C.. who had pushed Perry for the post. (UPi). U. Of Va. President Censured National Black News Service CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va — Frank L. Hereford, Jr., president of the University of Virginia, has been “censured" by a faculty group because of his refU84:i to drop his membership in an all-white country club here. The faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences, a major group at the university, refus^ to vote approval of a resolution expressing confi dence in Hereford's adminis tration. This, some faculty members let on, amounts to a vote for censure. Hereford, defending his membership in the Farming- ton County Club, said he should remain in the club and work from within to eliminate its racial policies. The 2.800-member club, which bans blacks as members and guests, is located 3 miles west of the university campus. (See FACULTY. P. 2) DR. LEOLA G. HAYES Ex-City Resident Is Author Dr. Leoia G. Hayes, formerly of this city, but now of New Jersey, has published the first in a series of books, written for the non-academic teenage student. The first book in the series dealt with the subject, Come And Get It Or Reading For Pleasure Made Easy Through Recipes. The next book will deal with Nurses’s Aides. Maintenance Men. Parking Lot Attendants And Library Aides. Dr. Hayes decided to write this series after completing her doctoral dissertation, wnich dealt with The Training Of Educable Girls To Work As Teacher Aides In Regular Classes. She received the B.S. degree at Winston-Salem State Uni versity, a M.A. degree from the City ifniversitv of New York. A M S. degree from New York University, professional de gree in clinical psychology from Teachm’ College, Co lumbia University, New York City; and the Ph.D. degree in occupational and vocational rehabilitation from New York University, New York City. Dr. Hayes resides in Leonia, N.J.. with her husband, Spurgeon S. Hayes, who was bom in New Rochelle, N.Y., but also resided, for a while, in Raleigh. Her present position is professor of specialized education at one oi the state colleges in New Jersey. She also is a consultant to the West Indies Schools. B W.I Appreciation Check Won By- Ms. E. Mitchell Ms Elaine Mitchell, a resident of Washington Ter race Apartments, was the lone winner of a tIO check last on the Appreciation Money Page Ms Mitchell's narne was K ‘ ced in the ad of One Hour rtinuing Cleaners of 3911 Western Blvd ABC Mobile Homes was the business that was spotlighted m last week s edition ABC Mobile Homes is located at 4301 Highwav 70 East, and they have a wide assortment ot mobile homes Sessions Will Open Thursday WASHINGTON, D.C. - A three-day national meet ing of black elected officials Hi get underway here Jecember II with a ; <eynote address by U.S, ^nator Edward W. Brooke H-Mass.), who will assess the posture of blacks in public office and the political power they need to Nring about economic iivj^cement for black Sponsored by 8 national and regional organizations, the meeting is ouicially called the (See BROOKE. P. 2) NAACP Of Durham To Seek 5,000 DURHAM — The executive committee, Durham Branch NAACP, in its December meeting, voted to begin a drive for 5,000 members. James T. Hawkins, prominent business man, told the committee that it is a travestry against freedom for black people to permit the organization to curtail its operations, due to the lack of money. The committee decided that there were 5,000 interested persons in the cause of freedom to enable the local branch to raise a considerable sum. The committee decided that an extensive drive would get underway. Dec. 15. Hawkins was named chairman of the drive and Elmore Mangum, vice chairman. Hawkins vowed to enlist the support of every facet of the Durham common- (See SEEKS S.OOO. P. 2) 15,000 To Be Out Of Detention WASHINGTON. DC. - More than 15,000 youths charged with status offenses - truancy, running away and incorrigibility - will be taken out of detention and correc tional facilities and given alternate treatment under $6.6 milliwi in granta awarded to 5 stales and one county by the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration LEAA administrator Rich ard W. Velde, has announced that the grants had gone to .\rkansas. Connecticut. Dela ware, Ilhnoia. South Carolina and Licking County, Ohio. He said they are the firit in a series that will help provide aliernaiives to incarceratiMi fur status offenders The 5 grants were awarded by LEAA 8 Office of Juvenile • i>ee OVER IS.otw, P 2. Final Rites Held For Durham Medic TO BE fTlEED New York — Rnxt-r Rubin • Hurricane > Cartfr and (odrfendrni tohn Arils viili be from a .New .Irrsev Prisirn b> t'hrlsl- tna». uiiilir an evrrulive clrmeiicy Older bv \iw .Irrvev (tuvernnr Brendan Hy.'nr, it wav reimrded Mmiriav *t f’l>. AHegecl Kilit’ Ala ir Dl.'RHA.M — Persons who knew Dr Clemuel Durham Grandy since he came lo Durham in the early 30s (o iniern at Lincoln Hospital, along with relatives and friends who knew him as he traveled from hi.s native Wilson Mills to Smithfield to get an edu'-ation. have been stunned since learning that the popular medic died in his sleep, at his Crete Street home at 5 a.m. Sunday. Grief-strickened patients, chiircn le.iders, fraternal bro- the.> and even tho.se he greeted («. the street corners and at styled"buzzard's roost.” whom 111' counted as some of his beat (r.-niLs, have oontinously ask ed, "Why Dr. Grandy?" He w,"i styled as (he last of a lined (hat would make house calls He gained the reputation of living the credo of the profession According to those whi' knew him intimately, his concern wa.s his p^itienLs. He maintained a rigid work J...I......I. .vhien legan av "ar’y os 7 m toe ii.orning and extended well into the night. One of his patients told l^e CAROLINIAN that he had known him to administer to his father as late as 2:30 in the morning, while he was in (See MEDIC DIES. P. 2) > IRE IIIAN ONE hl.Nt.KK «>N TRIGGER:" DR. KING — MMtgoaerv. Ala. Dr. Mania l.u'ihrr King. Jr.. W4» killed by a conspiracy, bis faally and closest associates said Dec. S. Mrs. ( ureUa King <L> sjvesks with the Pev. Martia L. Kln^. Br.. <Ki after a speech ia which he said "There was more than one finger on that trigger, and some of ihetn black." Mrs. King railed lor aa indepeiiririii ini (-<.iigalion of the assassinalioii irf her husband. rivU rirhU leader Dr M I.. King. Jr. 'UPI, Appreciation Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK KAR PARTS, INC. "For All Of Your Automotive Needs’’ Willie I.«e Perry. 38. of 2 Bladen St., was arrested Friday night by Detective D. R. Turnage and charged with the murder of Mrs. Mazie Hedgeputh Keith. 56. of 108 N. Fisher St. Det. Lt K J. Johnson said that the local man is being held in the Wake County Jail without privilege of bond, pending a hearing in Wake District Court. Mrs. Keith's nude body was found in a shed behind Cheap Johns on E. Hargett St. on C)ct. 24. Del Turnage's report indi cated that Mrs. Keith had beer beaten to death with a piece ol concrete block Perry It expected lo face i judge in Wake District Cour earTj next week for t preliminary hearing on th( death rap. Shaw Gets Grant Of $95,000 Shaw University and 8 other predominanll) black colleges and universities have received a grant tolalling $751,000 from the U.S Justice Department’s Law Enforcement .Assistance Administration, to develop professional training for crim inal justice careers for blacks and other minorities. Shaw University has receiv- t^d $64,000 matched with $31,000 of Its own monies to total $95,000 for the iR-month pilot program Criminal Justice tracks or courses are beiny develop^ within the Department of Public Administration Research conducted by the Justice Department showed that major colleges and universities failed in interest bli^k and other minorities in criminal justice careers and small institutions generally have not offered the (raining. TtU' urea of ('nininaj Justice has turned off blacks and minorities hecauso they have traditionally l>ee(i geared to ward white concepts and value.v Shaw s program will sei'k to train persons in erimmal justice areas to be broad thinkers In other words, Shaw hopes to make the trami>.g relevant Shaw ^ program w ill focus rni several areas of crminai justice including law enforce ment. corrections and juvenile delinqueinry Dr Lorenzo Thompson is chairnian of the department of public adminisiraiion and dirwtor of the cnnunal justice prograni DR CLEMUBI. D, GRANDV SAMMYCELEBRATE8 5«THB1RTHDAY —Las Vegas Nev — superstar Sammy DavU, Jr., and hU wife. Altovl^. were all smiles after a birthday cake was presented to Sammy on stage at blrlhdav. His birthday was actually on Dec. 9. Sammy, a long-time hit In Us Vegas, is continuing a two-week engagement at Caesar's Palace. (UPI). B-Rcuiem Labor Aids NAACP NEW YORK. N Y. - A group of labor Iead.}r8, representing more than 7 million working men and women and approxi mately 23,000 local unions, gathered in New York last week to help the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People in its financial crisis. "We cannot allow the NAACP to go down the drain" declared Roosevelt Watts, secretary-treasurer of the Transport Workers Union, AFL-CIO, who serves as co-chairman of the labor group. "The NAACP must survive and become even stronger," he said. William H. Oliver, of the United Automo bile Workers, called upon labor to make emergency contribu tions and to take out life memberships. The meeting, called in response to the association’s (See LABOR AIDS P 2> MUHAMMAD'S TEMPLE *2E GIVES POWER SAI.UTR » St. LoaU — World heavyweight boxing champ. .Muhamraed All. gives the black-power salute as he leaves (hr Muhammed Muslin Temple during his visit to St. I.x>ui8, Dei-. 3. All is visiting various cities to meet with student groups .inal public officials. U'Pl).
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Dec. 11, 1975, edition 1
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