Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 19, 1957, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO . I OLD 42' RETIRES A ccrroer in sports which began on the baseball and gridiron fields of VCIA. cam* to an end last week for the legendary Brooklyn Dodger star, Jackie Robinson. The versatile Dodger stalwart, recently traded to the New York Giants, officially announced his retire ment from the game of baseball, which he has electrified since breaking the color bar and break ing into major league baseball 10 years ago. With his wife Rachel and son Jackie Jr, looking on, Fiooinson hangs up fus giove in the trophy room of his Stamford. Conn. home. (Newspress Photo), ODDS & ENDS I (CON'T’’ \ U '» FROM PAGE 11 Tcrsy ran sort will hr resolved hi a manner profitable to both sides. "KIND OF INDUSTRY A local j ’tally recently printed an editorial j deploring the lack of job oppor- ! (unities in North Carolina for Ne- j proes, particularly Negro males, i After briefly reviewing the piti- j fu! plight of the many jobless Ne- : groes in this state, this editorial 1 continued, “North Carolina needs more industry for all its people. But there A an evident and in creasing reed for the kind of in- j rliu try that will employ Negroes." j It is hard to believe that the edi- j torial writer who penned this edi torial does not know that the un- ' dcrlyipy cause of he poverty en dured by thi : state's Negro citi- ! zens Is the rank diserimtnation j practiced against them in the era- i pioyment market. Why. should a call go out for the kihd of industry that will em ploy Negroes?" Would not a plea for the employment of all persons Negro or white by any industry in need of workers have been a step tow;..-d tiie recognition of a man’s right to work regardless to his color? Asking for the coming in of the type of industry that will j employ Negroes is tantamount to | saying that the Negro is only fit I to perform certain limited tasks j end someone should nrnvide opnor- s (unities for him to obtain these ! limit'd jobs. There is no racial group in this country that hnp b. ■ n more fhoroi -biv tried and tested | SS has the Negro. He has. v'-ere ~nd v. lien given i he chance to do so, proven his 1 ability and skill in evi i y phase of j our economic structure. This state; has lost ufdoid millions of dollars • ity rc fusim to utilize p*,. great no- i ‘.entu.i. of its N ciHzons The < "‘■suit .of this failure, b--cause of | racial discrimination, has result- ; ed, as all discrimination must, re- j suit, in terirble losses for both ! those who discriminate and those who Sr - disci iminutedf against. ! Yes. more industry is needed in ! Yorth Carolina, but transcending hat need is the ne-d for an en lich.tr ntd aw a ken ins of ibe nva;; - mg of Democracy and Christian ity. “I JET IS U,ON|."; r. s. Senator Kerr Scott was not foolirtg when he said ids hat v as in the fin? for re-election to tb • 1 nlti’d States Senate from till-, suit” In recent state merits be has (ft it t ie known what his eamnaign for relec tmn wi l ! tie based upon. In fart, judging from some of the Senator's rerent remarks. |,e nu-t be assn min? that Gov ernor Hodges will he his chief opponent. Once hailed as the great and tolerant liberal. e\- Gnvernor Scott, since his ele vation to the Senate, has moved closer and closer to the side of Hie white suprrmists" and raeiat demogofue*. It would *eera, however, that a man. mire noted for his original and pithy remarks and observations ivohM not have fallen to the unimaginative level of the Sontlt’s “defenders". That the good Senator has done lust that is evidenced by a state ment be made last week while lambasting President Ei- nhower lor what Mr. Scott called "play ing both side* of the finer' Ij. fending the white South. Mr Scott' I* quoted as futher saying, If they J would just leave us alone, we ! could work all of those things out " 1 Evidently Mr Scott can do better than that. That phrase has been j tised so much that it has long , »inee become meaningless if it ever j hsd any true meaning But. as wo j tair! it. would seem that Senator j boott fs willing to help keep the Hock turned back and. remember tng how once upon a time, his hand picked candidate for the U. S Sen ate was defeated by an opponent who played up the racial issues, he ha* decided that he is not go ing to be defeated that way when be runs for reelection. SCHOOL BONDS; II would be Dice, very nice, if many more of our people would register next j paturday, which by the way is the I last day for new registration. Mow- j ever, nice it would be to have more Voters on the books, it would be I pven nicer if those who are al- I ready registered would show their J Interest in things of vital concern lo them by voting. On January 29 j Raleigh and Wake County wiil be I toting for some $8 millions of new 1 pond dollars for new school houses * Vunrcvcments to some of the j >!d ones There should never be 1 j any reason why citizens should be ; urged to vote for school growth I and expansion. This, particularly i should apply lo citizens who are i parents. On the other hand, it should no! make very much difference whether you are a parent or not because you will be just as adversely affected in a so ciety that has neglected to pro vide adequate educational op portunities for its youth as par ents will be There is every reason to believe that this bond election will pass. The best way you can be assured it will is to go to the polls January 29 and vote for its passage. SELECTED: A new spiritual, i Gonna sit no more in the back of 1 the bus, j No Lavd. ! Gonna sit no more in the back of the bus, i No. Lawd, no more. Folks can holler and folks c m fuss. Gonna sit no more; in the back of i the bus, j No. Lawd. i: uubtfT *3in r gonna comt?. from us * No. Lawd. Trouble ain't gonna come from us. No. La’wd, not here. Trouble ain't gonna come from us. Gonna 'bide the law in the front of the bus, | YES, Lawd. I). C. DENTISTS ■ CONTINUED FROM PAGE II the actual count, had not been . made public at press time. The question of lowering (be bars yrninsf Negro members raised after Dr, John V I urrer. chief of oral surgery at Howard University School of Dentistry had filed an ap plication for membership. ! Turner said membership in the ioc il .society would make him ell- i ! Bible for membership in the A-i i mencan Dental Association which | j has no racial bat s. bank assets ■CONTINUED FROM RAGE ! ! lowing officers were elected to serve for 195,7 Clyde Donne!!, chairman of the board of direct or.-,; J. H. Wheeler, president and 1 chairman of executive committee- 1 E R. Merrick, vice president; L E. McCauley, vice president and > chairman of executive committee j (Raleigh Branch ■ J.E. Strickland I vice president and manager (Ra- j lech_ Branch); I O. Funderburk! Car hit r; Vivian Patterson, Assis tant Cashier: V. W. Henley As sistant. Cashier: J C. Scarborough, Jr.. Assistant Trust Officer; Wal ter K. Ricks, Assistant Trust Of ficer. j ST. AUK. STUDENTS ‘COMlM'tn 1K,,,! !\\GE |, aoti of the campus dining hail, were eating as usual Saturday morning as activities for the ob servance of the 90th Founder's Day at the institution got under way. Several of the student* are reported to have said that they were protesting agHinsl "the had food" that seemed to be a daily ritual in the college dining hall. Some claimed the food was not fresh. Others ad ded that it was not prepared properly. Dr James Alexander Boyer, president of the college, said that j officially there was no strike tak | ing place, as neither he nor the I Student Council had received re* j Ports of any grievances on the j part of the students. This is the usual procedure when there is dissatisfaction on the campus, the president added, Dr. Boyer said that he was | informed that Some of the i students might have used the j alleged boycott of the dining hall, land some Hasses too, reportedly) as mi excuse for not paving their bills which came due on January 1, "We permit them to continue eating m the dining hall even if they owe bills." the college head said. “However.'’ he added, “they can't go to their desses." As far as could be determined ! the boycott is over and everything j is "back to normal" at the Epis j copalian college. Attorney General I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE D ' Pupil Assignment Act already have been upheld by the Fourth U. S. I ! Circuit Court of Appeals. Patton I ' said | He said the plaintiffs, some 15 : members of the, National Associa* j tion for the Advancement of Col- I or"d People, have "deliberately ignored and refused to follow" the administrative proedures pres-' cribed by the law. and "have dc liberately ignored and refused to abide by controlling decisions of Federal courts, including this Dis trict court construing the public school assignment statutes of this state,” Patton said. The Attorney General referred to decisions by the U. S. District! Court at Greensboro and the j Fourth U. S. Circuit Court of As> ! peals in the Old Fort, N. C , school ! segregation -suit, in which the Ap- : peals court held that the Negro plaintiffs must exhaust adminis trative remedies available under the Pupil Assignment law before bringing action in the federal ! courts. Patton was the. Superior Court Judge who heard the , Old Fort suit in state courts, prior to his appointment last fall to the post of Attorvey General. His answer in the Caswell Coun j ty suit said the plaintiffs present | "No case whatever" for the inter ' pretation of Articles of the uui i 1 o*-« „—.-. i-, - Z.T . I uai xjtittbubco iiupKJUiCiudUH blit; Pearsall Amendment, which was approved at the polls in a consti tuional referendum last Septem ber. The statutes concern education al expense grants and local op tion operation of public schols. Patton said that "Neither in Caswell County or in any other county of the state has any action been taken or is about, to be tak en" on local option and c u-a l.ional expense grants. DOOMED MAN • CONTINUED FROM PAGE l) The U. S. Supreme Court, in a 6 to 3 majority, today re versed the 21-year old Negro’s conviction for first-degree burglary in the home of Airs. Jean llritiz Rockwell, daugh ter of the Mayor of Selma. McLeod said the case would be j tried again just as Soon as I I ran get the judges together on the i i case.’ J The Alabama Supreme Court ! : clerk's office said an order of re versal would be forwarded to tn>- Circuit Court at Dallas County when it arrives from Washington. STATEGRIEFS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE li this week that tiie group had j decided to m U an ■-•>- uual affair. Each year some I j Tips on Touring | 1 evnaa 5/ Carol Lone IHK- ■*, J > . ,en' r , Travel Ajli o. Cur Telephones I'o: motorists interested i.i car telephones, here’s a brief iej art <>n who uses them, how you get one, how they work. About 17,000 Americans have telephone* in their automobiles. Country doctors, real estate men, contractors «- foik* who spend a !ot -f time in their car yet must *- keep in touch with a centra! /T office-find them most useful. Sjp To own and *■ maintain your ° VJI) car tele FCC. Rut most folks 10 . the eg lipment; the tele phone ccn > any wi!! instaii ami maintain the set. For this, no per mit is needed. The equipment is usually install ed in the trunk compart .- it v. ih a control uirif on or rv.- r tiie r.i staument pjr.ffi an the phone is witiiin easy reach. The telephone company has div ided tiie United states i/.to about 250 "Mobile Service Areas" located in thp various cci.te-s of popula tion. A w.cv.t.-.iy mair.i tnai-ce and service charge for calls includes a certain number of message units" when calling within you: Mobile Service Aren. Fcr calls to another area, it’s l.mj dirt ante - an additional charge. To cad from your car, just dial operator and give her the number, j ou v. ■ ! be bills J monthly, just a-, 1 with yo-.-.r horrie phone. V.'nen gomeona calls you wlnh you'i’o n tiie road, a ! c-li rings. If I you’re driving through traffic, the i set car- be loc.;cd er.-.i no calls will i I come through to disturb you. The j j cct can e’so be locked when you park so no one Hie can use the j telephone. If you ree'ive a rail when you're j j away from the automobile, a red ■ • 'ns! on the control pane! lights, i \Vjisn you return, dal the oper- i ntor ' rhr will connect you with the caller, i individual from the Raleigh community will be chosen as the outstanding citizen of the year and will be honored at this type of testimonial. RALEIGH The State Su preme Court ruled Friday that the Eleanor Rush case was closed, but not without dissent. The court also affirmed the award of $3,000 in damages to Mrs. Geneva Gould, administratrix of the estate of tho prisoner who died after she was shackled i na cell at Woman's Prison. The money was awarded to Mrs. Gould by the State In dustrial Commission. MAN DIES IN FIRE FAYETTE VILLI,E A man, tentatively identified as Pear lie Hair, died in a fire which destroyed his home at Cedar Creek Township near here early Saturday. The body was discovered about 3 A.M. in j the ashes of the six-room frame house where Hair lived, j His wife and children were in Fayetteville at the time. I HIGH POINT MAN j (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) fare took him into the coun try near Greensboro where he | had car trouble, lie said he j decided not to drive the cab j back to High Point that night j and so spent the night with a relative in Greensboro. Johnson also was charged with embezzling S7O from the taxi com pany. He pleaded not guilty to ! both chan.i s and ho is free under j ; S6OO bond. j FLA. GOVERNOR 1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) \ !U viewed (he ! S. .Supreme I court decisions in segregation as the law of the land, adding that “no good whatever can be accomplished by defying the court." i However, he said ‘boycotts, ul i timatums and preeinptory de- j ; mands can never achieve what j | persuasion, peaceful petitions and i : normal judicial proccedure can I do for the Negro.” He also said he believed segre gation laws passed by last sum j mer's special session of the state j legislature could be expected to ! “preserve traditional segregation j in public schools of the state for j the foreseeable future." HOLD E ARM Eli j (CONTINUED FROM PAGE li Mrs. \V. Elton Lewis, near Oldhams on Virginia’s north i ern neck. Westmoreland Sheriff Charles j I English said Clayton had lived in' ; Oidhams until six months ago. j j Mrs. Lewis, beaten severely on : ! the face and head, was reported! : in satisfactory condition in a hos-; 1 pital here. She told police she was home alone Saturday while her husband was shopping at a nearby community. She said she heard the burglar force his way in through a living room window, and she fled nut through the kitchen. The masked man caught her' after a chase of about 100-yards,; knocked her down and beat. her. ; j He tied up the frail. 64-year-old : ' woman and forced her back to | the- house to await her husband. When Lewis arrived home, the 1 burglar bound him and forced i i him to disclose where he kept the | i key to ?. floor safe containing I ! cash saved from the sale of their i crops- with which they had plan-! ned to build an addition to their! i house The burglar took the cash, shoved tiie 67-year-old farmer to the floor and left Levis said he i worked himself free and waited i with his wife until sunrise when he called police arid a doc to: Identity Os Baby (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) i Marshall W. Bennett said Wed ne.May thai he believed the baby | was dead when placed in the pil-! low case however, This was the second infant fished from a Raleigh stream in two weeks. The first was found at an outfall line at j Raleigh' new sewage line on the ni i\t of January 1. About j year ago another Negro ba by was round in practically the same spot as the one dis covered last Thursday. A crowd of more than 200 per sons gathered on the street above j the branch when news of the bo- 1 civ was made known. Traffic on WAS liSKD COR rXTiF!'!' •**••—, ■•<$ xK? ciS' 3 'WbrS - ■«» OO' , — ■* ; : ffI&RA f^Sßk^r^ ARC NEEDED FOR MAXIMUM PROTECTION! ! ' WITH Rfe.r»EffT KNOW F.OSR. [JI?[J2?Q 3? Q£ ? COM Pl»t. I £ UCOVI! T, l < A ■-i t *^J* ,l '~-~ i '7 T ', '" "* > * W ' r1 '"'* ‘ ■'".—mr—■-- .nil »—«—■ II 11. "'. -T- PCLO ca; •.. j ytfTtlfUKr age grojr op POLIO - 1 •P-C.ED.N... I w£JH VICTIM# MAS INCASED TO* ] j 6 MONTHS •’ | 3 Vt-AKS ? MOST IN THE PAST J 2 „ , . YEARS ? «** L l B -^ 3 * Q > □• v STo s ,rAKs ? •j& . 3 erf' I 1 Y ‘ ’"* ’ £■ 2- /j S, J S,, □ • « T 019 '‘-AR-.it .' ■■ . % f z ° anp ° vr:c ? ! ' J * , Answers: a2AO aw ot: -W" f 'Ef /£9 '^ ; "*”* S ■■4*Wi fcV /> VZ// « * i ■ Jjanm- * JANUAY THE CAROtINIAN G.lH> CLASSIC ’IP—VbKO Lombardi licit), oilensive coach oi tho prochampion Nov/ York Giants, has a session with ; Fran Hogs!, (ccntc-r) of tho Pittsburgh Steelcrs, raid Ohio Matson i cl the Chicago Cardinals in preparation ior tha seventh annual | East-West pro-bowl game at Los Angelas. Lombardi later coached the East team in the fray. (Newspress I’hoib). ! How to Pat a Filled Sheet Qn a AH j P»y Ruth Leigh, Director of The Caunoit Gometnaking Institute A FITTED SHEET IS A GARMENT worn by your mattress. Think of it this way and you’ll have ;-n easier time slipping it on and off. You know from exp-.- t v.; on you ' ; ■ on a blouse or a dress, it’s important or tugging may cause rips. It’s ; sheet on or off the mattress. i ! E-JZ // YJ&zt mv ■ i j Isßiy!). I East Street between Cabarrus and Lenoir was heavy for at east n hour. Investigating officers were Sets C. Atkins and J. M Steli. VA. BOARD (CONTINUED I ROM i’\(rt li teeth of ibe language of the Supreme Court . . , which de clared the fundamental prin ciple that racial discrimina i tion in publie education is un eonslilutioual." The three-member board lei-.-as ;-d a short statement in which h j raid. "Last Friday V Opinion of L ! . : S. District Judge Hoffman in the Newport News and Norfolk ca.-t- • ; has come to th attention of the; Pupil Placement Board. Unless; ! and until lawfully prevented, the: board intends, in what it. consul-- corner as you >.jp it o ;■;* mat- j tic Pull against side < w j for ...'ter elasticity. ; 'l’-iiYi of s freed o . i tress corner 2. ' ,\ all three corners fitted j snug....-, smooth out any wnn- t kies from sheet, Now you’re i ready to put on the fourth I r r. You’ll do th . artlessly. * * * > the sheet fin. . n ii'ng, using two b. ad -or i two • .urnbs. Slip it do. "t over in ;,rr You’ll fi: i flint it : so easily tl : ‘ > mat - '•> aig is requ.. I « » 4. ’£ . take sheet off. u L hand:; Pull away tuel.-; from ail sides. Take hold < - corner, lilting up and o eliminates strain, mak quick and easy. (ANS» ors t ' bn in the public interest, to carry out its duties and respoiusi-, jilit-ies und.T the Pupil Placement Act in strict accordance with its terms." The board was set up during a special September, 1956 session of the Virginia General Assembly. It is empowered to make all a .sien ments io Virginia's public schools ; ; ‘on bases other than race." I ruicr flic I’lipil-I’iaceineiit Program, persons who do not approve of the assignment given their children would first appeal to the board, then to the Governor and fin ally to the Virginia courts. In the Norfolk and Newport News cases, attorneys lor the i school boards had asked Judge Hoffman to dismiss the suits be cause Negro plaintiffs had not ex hausted administrative remedies providd by the act. j Hoffman denied the motion and j j said: "All legal restrictions which curtail the civil rights of a single! | racial group are immediately sus- I i pect." WAKE WHITE MAN (t’ONiINLKI) FROM PAGE I) j i in the early evening of April 17, 1*156, and asked her moth er whether she could take a | job as u baby sitter for him. The young lady said that he i mother consented and that Smith j • •■•ok her to an isolated area and! ; . ached her. Smith, mi ho is reportedly mar-! : lied and the father of four chi!- ! dren. pleaded innocent to the ; charges. HERRING FREED “been raped” by a man that she was “going with” before site v picked up about *1:30 a.in. as a passenger by Her ring, who denied ihe rape charge. When ashed why she did not | j report the first "rape," Miss Mit-: ■ chell reportedly told Solicitor! Robert L. McMillan, “that was | done by my boyfriend ” Following these words .fudge j Albert Doub set Herring free. One of the worst things a poul j t.ryinan can do is i,o pack eggs in I the case while they are still warm I Let them cool in baskets before I packing, advise Extension poultry specialists at North Carolina State | Developers and served for two years as district representative. Tor the Omega Psi Phi fraternity J lie was also a member of the Ma sons and Shriners. V/EEK ENDING SATURDAY, JANUARY id, tvo/ f COOKING HINTS Alt / Carnation Home J te //ju/?// Service Director and her staff see. t Meatball-Vegetable Skillet is just the thing for that "meat and potato” man in your family. Mg th;*i mix > with better blending Carnation Evaporated Vuik a"< always juicy . . . never dry and crumbly. No other io. m of milk makes meat mixtures so good! Try this n- v recipe soon. It’s pretty enough to serve right from the skillet. fciiPPM&jßß&ffi - r ' d*SSa&.n»kmfc u ••» aßSiKnHßrw.g4 %L. -T Miflr! - *. . • • i syygt ;y ; A MEATS ALL* VEGETABLE SKSIIET ( ’ fakes 4 servings) Y, tv-5 ' by bread cnirrhs 2 tablespoon* short: Vj cup 'Oil.: ! CARNAT 2 cups fhinly sliced > EVAPORAT' D MilK 1 package froxen r 1 pound ground beef 4 carrots cut in <:• 1 teaspoon sab 4 te 6 small onions Few grains pepper ‘ tup woter V 4 teaspoon nutmeg ‘ 3 teaspoon s.- It 2 tablespoons gratae! t n v/ grains p , 1 < 2 fabiespoons flour Soak bread crumbs in Uanr- in :rvi: pan Br>>w|i dls tion Place beef in mixing b.- ; m ail wider;. Add the v( -u !■'* Add 1 teaspoon salt. pep;*.--. nd water. Sprinkle with '■> t*-«- onion and Carnation mixture ■ ;■ on salt and pepper. Cover Msx thoroughly. Divide meat ’.. .-fitty Conk over low heat tu rn ixturc into 12 portions and i-.l vegetables are tenc-r. an-w. shape into balls. Doll meatballs ■> mu *it is. t’er-.-e . in Hour t.o coat. Melt, siiortenincr Cherries Are Red for Vv inter Holidays FEBRUARY’S A MONTI# FOR PARTIES . . and this easy-to make cherry c r.ut pie may be decorated with hearts for Val entines • • • with cherries or hatchets for a Washington’s Birthday party ... or with cut-out pastry flags tor Lincoln . which make this pie as versatile as it is delicious! In addition, this excellent cherry pie lives up to the familiar rhyme ’She can bake a cherry pie, quick as a cat can wink her eye”—and with tender-thin coconut flakes to enhance both flaw , and color, it’s sure to waMMn « ,cm ’WIgMI -a holiday favorite. IS.-] «£V ' ,-■ « ~ CHERRY GLAZED < COCONUT PIE r I -***.«' UAW'I 1 HU ■ .. ~ tablespoons butter ' l package vanilla i.. :.-N t pudding ar.t and water - . , ' '» cup sugar .5 t *- A cups drained 'JL canned red sour | : % «***’% P'tlsd cherries, "V packed in heavy em 2 teaspoons lemon t ' a>' « \ ; : '%v -A j U ; ce m wOr‘ *- ■V Saute 3 t cup of the coconut in butter in saucepan until golden brown, stirn-'-s constantiy. Add pic tilling mix and milk, blend well. Cook and -tir over mod mm heat until mixture comes to a full boil. Cool only about 5 minutes, stirring once or twice. Pour into pic xhcil. C; dl Combine gel.v.in and ,- Mr , n f the cherry juice. Heat re maining juice and d "dvr- i ••' tin '.l sugar in hot juice. Add cherries and loin nq: 0. ( 1u: 'd foil but not firm. Turn nto chilled p.e filLr.g. w.di renwining N cup coconut Chill until firm. Valentine Fir. U•« .- Ye for Cherry Gl; -1 Cocor. t Pie Cut small hearts t rom ! -itovet jK-.-tlry ikti-.c i ...; in hot oven (4JO* F.) about 10 M::ii!ii' ~ or until done. Arrar mounds of coconut on cherry topping to resemble Pice and place hear; on coconut f ANSA GOVERNOR: L H. Hodges looks over on advanc - espy tit,? February issue of Hoi id-.y rrv • v/! .ir.ii -a : N-"- ’> 1 Carolina, written by Ovid Williams Pi ”C 5 F.uj Hudiis'iers presented the Governor a 120 liter bo. id copy. SUPPORT Tl IE f>~7 r>P
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Jan. 19, 1957, edition 1
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