w-wm Wake County Opportunitie#, Inc. In Turmoil I May Have Erred, ” Says J. Holloway ★ ★★ ^ ^ ^ Campbell Mrs. Eva Frazer Hay Wets 57 Ex-Shaw Registrar DiesLinSlr™* The Carolinian VOL. 37 NO. 24 iVorfh CoroUno*! LfatUng fFeehty RALEIGH, N.C., THURSDAY, APRIL 20,1978 SINGLE COPY 20c 0//tcer Allegedly Struck Victim VFith Blackjack Beating Trial Set ★ ★★ ★★★ ★★★ City-County Church Members Attend As AreaRevival Acclaimed BY WILLIE WHITE IV ... Maybe I did act too quickly," J- Mills Hollo way said Wednesday about a letter in which he cleared a Wake County Opportunities Inc. (WCO) official of charg es which resulted March 16 in his suspension with out pay. In a telephone interview from Talladega Ctdlege, Ala., Hollo way, chairman WCO's Board of Directors, responded to “en raged" reactions of other WCO officials concerning the letter erf April 14 in which HoUoway told Anti-Poverty Director Ralph Campbell that the EhiecuUve Committee and the Grievance Committee had cleared him of all charges. The matter became public when Campbell released press state ments saying that he had been (SeeCAIrfPBELL.P.2) SHE’S FREE AT LAST— Detroit— Lilly WUliami, 60. cries tears of Joy after learning April 14 she would not be going back to prison. "Thank you Jesus. praUe the Lord." Miss Williams said after learning that Michigan Gov. William MllUken refused to extradite her saying. "Tlie ends of Justice would not be served." Miss Williams served 9 years In an Alabama prison farm for robbery, but escaped In 1951 while serving a 218 year prismi term. (DPI) High Court’s Rejection Stuns Ex-S&L Exec BY ALEXA.VOER BARNES DMAHAM ' WbgpJulip^ "Shag” Stewart, ex-praaraant of the Mutual Building4Loan Aaaociation. the third member of the “Black Busineaa Empire, learned that the U S. Supreme OHirt would not even review hia appeal Monday from the three-year prison term and the 910.000 fine he received in 1976 for iiregulari- Uea in the operation of the CRIME BEAT “i *■ Saying;”aiii this make me bitter. 1 will keep the faith and atand tall.” Stewart took over the reigne in 18S9 and held it until 1978. J. Little^s Lawyer Is Now On Trial hi Ow psMk met .... .. ..~t ■•varS* allaiUallBl c«Me«U. NaoiarMi hBlIvMaaU have r«> Ual Ihfy ha £lv« iCa •( ••artMhhit lhaU DURHAM — Spectators and others interested in the outcome of Durham Attorney Jerry Paul’s case, centered around his being tried in the Durham Civil Superior Court for unbecoming conduct when he represented Ms. JoAnne Little, cannot quite determine whether the stormy banister is tfraS h) a rwihipw UiaTRal ituiaa M ua being prosecuted or persecut- igtiM Itte U 4a. . Mataf.Mtaaa(awMtUaateha)a4sa 00. w)ar>.Wa«iatrtjsaUahihalaaUa»»a The trial WaS SUppOBOd lO fkif^Vi ^ Tha'jVfme'fcaBt havc bogun Monday, when the Cahimaa.^-^N.C. Bar Associatlon was to rtfialaSrty.saiiBi'k^^f* present its case of violating the uaa" aaS yaa aaa ( ha la Tha I ...... i naal. CHEAP CANDY "LIFTED” Frederick Alexander Mial was arrested and charged with unlawful concealment of an 89 cent package of Brack's (^locolate candy, according to police reports. The alleged larceny took place at Hudson- Belk, 319 Fayetteville St., at 10:25 a.m. on Tuesday. (SeeCRIME BEAT. P. 8) Raleigh Native Mourned DURHAM - Mrs. Eva Frazer Ray, former Shaw University regis trar, died at Durham County General Hospital at 4 p.m. Sunday. April 16. She was 57. A native of Raleigh. Mrs. Ray had lived in Durham since 1947. She was the wife of Dr. Charles A. Ray, Sr., also a Raleigh native and chairman of the Department of English at NCCU. She tau^t psychology at NCCU from 1961-1963. At the timeof her death. Mrs. Ray was a staff psychologist at the Outpatieni Clinic at the Children's Psychiatric Institute at Butner. Her father was the late Dean Charles Rivers Frazer. Sr., first black dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Shaw. Her mother was the latr Mrs. Daisy Christian Frazer of Richmond, Va. Mrs. Ray attended the Raleigh public schools. Shaw University (B.A.), Columbia CaroUna', judicial ayatem and Univ^ly (M.A.) and the Uni- ita flagrant abuse of certain veraity of North Carolina at people being tried in the aute. Chapel Hill. She had completed The first flare began Monday the preliminary examinaUona when Judge Henry McKin- ("c dK Ph.D. degree in paycho- (SeeMS. LITTLE'S. P.2) (See HRS. RAY, P. 21 Human Rights March* Demonstration S aturday MRS. EVA FRAZER RAY ...given last rites DR. WILLIAM A. JONES. JR. ...rooducls mammoth revival Under his leadership, the firm and became <»e of tbe largest black-controDed building as- sociatloas In the nation. He had (See HIGH COURT, P.2) Say Man, 65, Was Attacked On Floor C^anons of Ethics, said to be the credo by which lawyers are duty bound to respect when ap pearing in a court of law. Paul was alleged to have vio lated this sacred pact while de- KINSTON - This Lenoir County seat will be the center of a focus on human rights ftM* eastern North Carolina this coming Saturday, April 22. On that day, beginning at 11 a.m., citizens of Kinston and other eastern North Carolina communities will gather at Mitchell Wooten Court and begin a 2-mile march through fending JoAnne Little in her •>« black community to the successful trial, where she was Lenoir County Courthouse, charged with the slaying of a where a rally will be held. The white prison guard. The lawyer march will then continue on to is said to have made deroga- the board of education building lory suiemenls about North where, following a prayer vigil. DURHAM — W. J. PleasanU, a white Durham police officer, was bound over tar. trial in Durham County Superior Court last Friday on charges that he beat a 69-year-old black man. whom he had arrested on a charge of public drunkenneas. OHlcer Pleasants allegedly struck Jake Williams “two or three times” with a blackjack on March 27 in the Durham County Jail, according to jail employees, law enforemnent officers and inmates, who testified at a hearing in District Court here Friday. Deputy Jimmy Lee Murphy testified that Pleasants hit Williams with the stick several times afta* Williams look a swing at him. After missing Pleasants, Williams lost his balance and fdl on tbe floor, Munrfiy said. Pleasants con tinue to hit the pn8