Stan. tt. WT Hlfh Candidates Reps.' :c an-gr i go., i or xlY LoulBvlllo^ "::7 FIRST IN FIGHT — New York — First presidential candidate to make an appearance in Harlem In 8 years. Jimmy Carter gets warm greeting Tuesday at rally outside State office building. Rally preceded address at Democratic National Convention dinner at N.Y. Hilton Hotel. (UPI) JScottsboro FigureSeeks Full Pardon National Black News Service MONTGOMERY. Ala. - Clarence Norris, one of the 8 “.Scottsboro Boys" • victims of racial injustice in the South of the 1930s • is pressing for a full pardon. And he's getting support from Alabama’s attor ney general Bill Baxley, who maintains that Norris "never should have been charged" in the first place. Mayor Abra ham Beame of New York and Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.) have joined Baxley in urging Norris' pardon. But Norman F. Ussery. chairman of Alabama’s Par dons and Parole Board, said i that Norris, who has lived as a ^fugitive since 1946. will have to turn himself in first. ^ Norris, now 65. has been yJiving in New York City for the last 23 years, according to attorneys seeking the full pardon. They said he is married ^nd has two teenage daughters. Norris, 19 at the time, was sentenced with 7 other black youths in 1931 to death in the electric chair for allegedly raping two white women on a train traveling through North Alabama. The 8 were called the "Scottsboro Boys" for the north Alabama town where they were tried. t'sserv said recently that he wp^ld not consider a pardon for Norris "as long as he remains a fugitive from justice” He added that if Norris returned to Alabama, he would face jail without Ixind before his case could be considered. In a letter Aug. 5 to Ussery, Atty. Gen. Baxley noted the "Overwhelming evidence of his (Norris') innocence in recommending a "full and complete pardon so that in iSee PARDON. P 2) Wilmington Ten Release Sought EDITOR'S NOTE: After the key witness (Allen Hall) in the Wilmington Ten cate changed hla testimony recently, the telegram below was sent to the Governor and the Attorney Gttieral of North Carolina by the Rev. Dr. Charles E. Cobb, executive director. Commla* sion for Racial Justice. United Churcfa of Christ. "You already know that the sole witness against the Wil mington Ten has now admitted ^t under pressure from the icutor and police, he lied, e did not see them (Wilming- Ten) commit any criminal Vi- He was coached by the prosecutor to lie to the jury in th^ trial. "You also know that the attorney for the Wilmington BULLETIN Stewart Wins, Loses The CAROLINIAN tried in vain to reach the defense attorneys in the case of the State vs John Stewart, to ascertain the status of the motkm to set aside the guilty verdict, returned against the president of the Mutual Build ing and Lean Association, located in Durham. The defendant was found not guilty on two counts of the four brought against him for the falsification and conspiracy to defraud the government. The jury is alleged to have ^taken ten ballots and came up ' with two guilty and two not guilty verdicts. Dec. 6lh is the ^te set lor sentencing Stewart ^fld others (all white) In a building "fiH" that Involved several of the building loan officials and the fast-buying and selling of several pieces of property, built and negotiated with the firms, by two brothers. C. Paul Roberts and Bobby Roberts. Ten has a habeas corpus proceeding in Federal District Court ana that be has now asked for their immediate release on bail. The United Diurch of Christ has supported the Wilmington Ten from the beginning, convinced that they are innocent victims of a conspiracy. We continue that (S^ TEN. P, 2) Spaulding Addresses Convention WILMINGTON - Asa T, Spaulding, the only black running for statewide office, said black voters provided the margin of victory for his incumbent opponent in 1972, who has done "little to repay the favor” He made the statement before the state NAACP convention here last week. Spaulding, the Republican nominee for secretary of stale, noted that Secretary of State Thad Eure, 76, who has been in office 40 years, only has two black employees in his office, one a clerk and the other a messenger. "We know he has an affirmative action program, but where is his affirmative action? asked Spaulding, the first black to win a major party statewide nomination in the South since Reconstruction. "I think its way p>ast time we slop giving pmple like Thad Eure automatic support when we vote the traditionally straight party ticket," he saicl. "Our votes are worth more than that,” added the 42-year- old Durham businessman. "Once we make It know laud and clear that black voters, in 1976, refuse to be taken for granted, both parties will be much more res^nsive to black people," he said. Ray Seeks Review In King Case WASHINGTON, O.C. -- Jomes Earl Roy, convicted killer of civil rights leoder Martin Luther King, Jr., recently osked the Supreme Court to review his cose, claiming he was "set up to take the rap for a crime he didn’t commit." In his appeol to the high court, Roy said he was "fromed by the FBI ond local police, and then coerced by his own ottorney to pleod guilty against his wilt." Roy's new attorney, James H. Lesor, of Woshington, wrote in osking the high court to review Roy's conviction, "The charge is that those who did kill Or. King ore still at targe, . protected in part by the unwillingess of th« courts to face these unpleosont facts." His petition colled Roy's cose one "of notionol importance, ^both politicolly and legity." ^ Shortly before the 94th Congress adjourned, the House set up 0 special committee to investigate the ossossinotions of King and President John F. Kennedy. King wos killed by a rifle shot as U stood on a motel balcony in Mem in 1966. Roy was orrested in London ond brought bock to the United States to stood triol. He pleaded guilty. NOMINATED — Umtata. South Africa — The ruling Tranekei National Indepen dence Party Tuesday nomin ated Paramount Chief Botha Sigeau as the first president of the Tranekei. which South .Africa grants Independence next week. Sigeau is shown here after the announcement. The Denmark-sized tribal homeland in the southeast and bordering the Indian Ocean Is the first of some 8 or 9 homelands Pretoria has offer ed independence uiMler its ^grritorlal apartheid program that designates 13 percent of the Republic's land area for black rule. The remainder to slay "white" South Africa. (UPI) Minority Leaders Named CAMBRIDGE, Moss. — Nine men and women from throughout the United States • minority community and government officials - re cently begon o yeor of research and study ot the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under the uni versity's 1976-77 Community Fellows Progrom. The pur pose of the 5-yeor-old program, whi^ is ondutfed by MIT's Deportment of Urban Studies and Planning, is to give the Fellows on opportunity for study, re flection and the ocquisition of new skills ond tools for greater effectiveness in their work. Black Press Protests WASHINGTON, D.C. - In en banc hearing on Oct. 12lh. the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) heard the representative of (he National Newspaper Publishers Newspaper Publishers As- s(Kiation • "'The Black Press of America" (NNPA), Attorney T. Carlton Richardson, general counselor to NNPA. protest the alleged systematic exclusion of members of the black press from news panels on radio and television. Richardson claimed that the black press had a constitution al right under the First Amendment to "equal access" to news sources emanating from the broadcast media and that the "fairness doctrine" of the FCC further forms a regulatory basis for the claim of the black press to such access. Lawyers Discuss Issues ★ ★★★ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^^ (Jiii^ms OIC Gets Fed. Monies Conflict THE BAROLINIAN VOL. 36 NO. 1 North Carolina’s Leading Weekly RALEIGH. N.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1976 SINGLE COPY 20c In Shooting ANSWERS ARE SOUGHT Minority Officer Balking An investigation announced Sept. 24 by Minority Affairs Assistant Rev. James Shears has slipped his memory. Shears, assistant for the North Carolina office of Minor ity Affairs, told a reporter on Sept. 24 that Wake County Commissioner Elizabeth Co field has requested that he investigate a shooting incident in which a young Waite County youth was allegedly shot at 1^ Sgt. “Billy" Daye of the N.C. Highway Patrol. 'The alleged shots were fired following a high-speed automobile chase from downtown Flaleigh to an all-black section of suburban eastern Wake County. Contacted by a Carolina Community News Service (CCNS) reporter this week. Shears said that he had not talked with Commissioner Co field about the matter, nor had he talked about the matter with reporters. When asked by Commissioner Cofield in the presence of a CCNS reporter why he had dropped the investigation, Shears, obvious- What the next governor of North Carolina can expect from the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers and what the group wants from the next sovernor was discuss ed Friday at the Hilton Inn in Raleigh. The candidates were not present. But John Larkins represented candidate James Hunt and Carlton Fellers represented candidate David Flaherty. No promises were made to the lawyers. At the outset of the meeting of the Executive Committee. University of North Carolina Law Professor Charles Daye. president of the association, said that the purpose of the meeting was to let each of the candidates know the concerns of the association's members. Most of the concerns com municated to Fellers and Larkins were related to crim inal justice. Appointment of black super ior court judges and N.C. Court of Appeals judges when va cancies arise was a major thrust of the questioning, which at times resulted in clashes between Fellers and Larkins over the number of patronage jobs given to blacks by previous Democratic adminis trations in contrast to Repub lican administrations. Fellers said that appoint ment of appellate juoges in North Carolina is strickly patronage, or return for poli tical favors. Although seldom mentioned at the meeting, most were acutely aware of the only current black Superior Court Judge, Ronald Barbee, who was ai^inted by Gov. James Holshouser after the resignation of Judge Samuel Chess, the first black Superior Court judge of modem times in North Carolina. Chess was also appointed by Holshouser, first Republican governor since 1897. Larkins and Fellers at times (See ISSUES. P. 2) QIC GRANT SIGNING — Secretary of Commerce EUlot L. Richardson,, center, recently annoanced the awarding of a 1902,498 grant to Opportnoltles Indastrialliation Centers of America. Inc. (OIC) of Philadelphia, Penn. Participating In the grant signing along with Secretary )Viinoj-(|y Butlnek*! Enterprise (OMBF); and Rev. I.eon H. Sullivan, OIC founder and chairman. Regulations Aim AtUnion ASHEVILLE - (CCNS) - An attorney for the state's Department of Corrections, James Peeler Smith, said last week that the new restrictive regulations being written to govern inmate organizations is being done precisely to limit the effectiveness of (he N.C. Prisoners Labor Union. Smith was present at a forum .sponsored by the Asheville Chapter of the League of Women Voters on prison condi tions, particularly focusing on the over-crowded situations that exist in most of the state's 77 prison units. Dr. Richard Urbanik. director of programs for the Department of Correc tions and a panel participant, was asked why outside organ izations. such as (he Imke Fellow and Jaycees, were having difficulty getting access ((iprisoners. Smith responded. "The courts had forced us to admit (his inmate labor un ion." The union had been "a disruptive influence which gives individual inmates pow er" and "results in the inmates taking over the prisons." Smith also said that when the courts "tell us to do something, then we have to do it." He further staled that "the riot in 1968 at Central Prison, happened be cause (he inmates had too much power and tried to take over the prison svslem" and said that he sees the presence of (he union as fostering that type of atmosphere. Smith’s presence at the forum was engendered by the Prisoners Union law suit against the Department of Corrections is presently in court at the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals level, and because the department has been receiving negative press recently because of allegedly unconstitutional actions by department officials against prisoners. The panel included, in addition to Urbanik, Attor ney Russell Brannon, who is handling the Prisoners Union lawsuit, and Bobby Forrest, an inmate who had spent 24 years at Crauy Prison. The Prisoners Union has been engaged in legal action against the Department of Corrections in orcfer to gain the right to organize inside the (See UNION. P 2) 100 Clerics Back President G. Ford omv, 6 Of fa ly irritated "I ain't k*** »^‘‘'hajd5on were. left. Alex Armendarls, director of the Comiqerce Departmeat’s- Offke of nothing to about it. I never *—•**• *’ -■ - •' • - said anything about an inves tigation." Mrs. Cofield said, "1 cannot understand why Shears has said this." A passenger in the car that was chased for 14 miles on Sept. 19 said shots fired white law enforcement officers chased Ihe driver through a (See ANSWERS. P. 2) Projects Include NC City National Black News Service WASHINGTON. D. C - Secretary of Commerce EUioi L Richardson recently announc ed the awarding of a 1-year grant totaling $902,498 to the ODDorlunities Industrialization Centers of America, Inc. (OIC) to establish local cooperatives aimed at providing capital and training for minority business owners. 'The funds, from the Com merce Department’s Office of Minority Business Enterprise (OMBE), will go towaril the formation of (bmmunitv In vestment Cooperatives (CIO) in 8 cities-Jacksonville, Fla.; Rocky Mount; Augusta, Ga.; Springfield, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Saginaw, Mich.; Trenton, N.J.; and Santa Ana. Calif. The CIC's will offer a vehicle by which com munity members can invest in a for-profit investment com pany to provide "seed money" for local enterprises. Each CIO will also provide training in business manage ment and ownership for com munity residents, the Secre tary’s office said. 11)6 plan also calls for the establishment of a local branch of Progress Venture Capital Corp., an OlC-sponsored min ority enterprise small business investment company (MES- BIC), in each CIC city. This will allow for reinvestment of the cooperative funds and for other funds invested directly in the MESBIC by local business es and individuals. First-year goals for each CIC city have been set at 500 local investors in the cooperative. 50 persons (rained at economic development training centers, and $150,000 of venture capital funds for the local branch of Progress Venture Capital Corp. (X)NI LI III HAPtl.M' National Black News Service WASHINGTON - One hun dred black clergymen recently announced the formation of an Independent Clergy Campaign Committee to elect President Crerald Ford. Rev. E(iward V. Hill of Los Angeles, Calif., national chair man of the newly formed group which held an Executive Com mittee meeting here, said that the decision to endorse Ford and to work on his behalf came after a number of concerns ami considerations. "President Ford look the nation at its lowest level and lifted it to a higher plane," Rev. Hill said. "He has mov^ with deliberate speed in turn ing the country around and headed in the right direction. He has led us in making economic progress while keep ing down inflation. He has demonstrated a delerminalKn to keep this country moving forward during a peace-time sense of fairness motivates us to give him our fullest support to win the election to this nigh office. "After a thorough examina tion of all the speeches td his oi^ionent and a search of his performance in the State of Georgia, both as a State Senator and former Governor, neither his promises nor per formances, to our knowledge, offers specific detailed alter natives to what Mr. Ford U presently doing or has propos ed. 'ITierefore, we refuse to substitute the experience of President for the ar.ibilion of Jimmy Carter" Rev. Hill added; "Our organ ization it independent and non-partisan. We are seeking to enlist in our effort. Demo crats and Independent voters from among the churches Butz Meets Protest PfREENVILLE. Mils. — Former AgrkuHure Secretory Eerl Butz. in Mistitsippi recently to compoign for o congressional condidbte, wot interrupted at o news conference by blocks pro testing the demeoning rociol slur that led to his resignotion. "I have mode a grievous mistoke. I hove opologized os sincerely os I know how and 1 hove poid deorly for it," Butz said. But obout 25 block protesters in the bock of the motel conference room where Butz held his news conference interrupted him several times ond occused him of racism. Butz repeated his contention thot his obscene remork, mode on o plane to John Dean and printed in on orticle by Dean in Rolling Stone mogozine, was not intended to be derogatory to blocks but was an ofd phrase he had used for many yeors. "I've even used it in joking about my own people, the Germon Lutherons," he soid. Green, James Win Money This Week Roman Green and Milton James were the two winners last week's AppreciaUon Mon ey. They each reported to The CfAROLINIAN that they found their names listed in the advertisements on the Appre- iiuiii aiiiuiiK me viiurvnes. riatinn Mnnau D.a. 'The names of the other clergy- winnara - if*' men were not available al “'h received a check press time. * ' (See APPRECIATION. P. 2) Appreciotion Money SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK I'^M)I.^, HI*. \MI)( () STATION "We Proudly Service Your Vehicle" EDITOR'S NOTE: Th« CAROLINIAN mualiu H* paklicMlM •! TS* CMm Real, lallaartaf a irnnaaAaa* aaaaSar al C rtaaal lasalrtea aM Ulapkaaa caUa far rrla^airmaM. Aa waa MatrA ta iSa ariglaal tAKar'i aaia ragarAiBg lha ralama. prraaaa aUAlac la kart ihak aamat aal al TSa Crtaaa Raal thaaM aal kacaoaa tavalvaA wMb lAa Ralalfb PaHaa OtMrtaMai. ibarabj tMUac aaaaaa aa iba palka blauar lrs« wUab aS W Iba atairrtat tar Tba Crtaaa Raal U gaibaraA. BURGLARS ARRESTED Marcellus Pierce. Jr. of 105 N. East St. and Larry Earl Pierce of (he same address were arrested in connection with an alleged burglary. Charles Garner. 46. of 1111 Mark Street was the alleged victim of the reported forcible entry which occurred at his residencearound9a.m. Thurs day. according to reports. The reported damage was. 2 locks on doors inside the house and windows in the bathroom valued at $20. The alleged burglary was reported by J. M. Glnver of 110 S. McDowell St. (See CRIME BEAT. P. 3) LAb'l' PANEL— WashtaigtM, D.C— The RaneUsU ck—eR I* peiUsw PresMeRt Ford RRd Jimmy Carter during their third debate WUIlamsbu-g, Va.. Friday are. left to rl|2it: Robert C. Mayaard. fditorlat writer and coiamntit for the Wathlngteo Poet: Joseph Kraft, ayiidlcated columnist; and Jack Nelson. Washington bureau chief of the Lot Angeles Timet. The moderator for the debate, to be held at the College of William and Mary, will be Barbara Walters, who co-anchors the ABC Evening Newa. As Is indicated elsewhere In this and other editlooi of The CAROLINIAN, black leaders have been calling for the inclnsloo of a black joamallst on the debate panels since the Presidential debates were first organized several months ago. Hie above selection was sent acroat media wires Tuesday night. (UPI)