Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / May 18, 1957, edition 1 / Page 2
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w c-it-ft ENDING SATURDAY. MAY to, i 5..., ODDS & ENDS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 15 tica! victory served bv this croup was the successful ef fort th»t landed Mr. Robinson on the Beard of Alderman two years ago. This year this ac tive group again blared the trail that led to Mr. Robinson's taking the top honors. This Hill organization is not nn isolationist group. They supported their candidate but since the Chap el Hill board is composed of four members plus an elected mayor ih« Negro group supported a full slate of candidates and the candi dates of their choice w ere the elec tion winners, Big, proud. Raleigh may feel it is beneath her dignity to learn from the little town of Chapel Hill, but it seems to us ihat sen sible people would be glad to learn from any one, big or little, who knows how to get results. Christ said. “A little child snail lead them.'' "I'D LIKE TO SEE THEM TRY IT: Those are the daring, even threatening words allegedly made j by Gov. Hodges when reminded | that. Federal use would likely be cut off should that state attempt to stop or curtail the present scale of payments to illegitimate child- ; rcn. We believe tin re is an abuse j being made in connection with i the expenditure of these funds. It must most certainly be true that in some instances the practice i lias grown into a racket. Every ef fort should be made to weed out i the.--'’ unscrupulous women w ho. in order to avoid honest labor, re sort to promiscous child hearing solely for the Welfare checks these ill-gotten children provide On the other hand. >ve believe that the great majority of these mothers and children are victims of circumstances, moral spiritual and economic circumstances We are afraid that snould the gover nor and his cohort* have their way, these poor unfortunates whose only fault is ignorance and conditions over which they have no control, might in all probability have to suffer for the sin? of the racket eering few. Mr. Hodees may have succeeded for the time being in setting the races in North Carolina at each others throats with .his white supremacy program but when he dares the Federal govern ment to carry out it? own pro gram with its own money, we won der who docs Mr Hodges think he is an w a y WHO IS BEHIND THE REDS: New? that the Commun ists in this country arc try ing their level best to Infil trate and even take over the “Prayer Pilgrimage" conceiv ed by a group of Southern Ne gro ministers and the N,\AtT for the purpose of marching on W:<-b!r>rton Mav 17 to pray for the full emancipation of the Negroes In this country brings up the ouestton, who is backing the Reds in this. Yes, ne believe (he Communist* will play every card in the deck twice in order to get what they want. We honestly do not believe that there is anything under the sun too low for them to stoop in or der for them to help achieve their sinful purposes. However, it so happens that these ere groups right here in this fair land of ours, men and women who cal! themselves good Americans, who will also stop at nothing in trying to prevent Negroes from ob taining their rights and privileges. Because we know all of this, it would not be so surprising if this present agitation of the Commun ists to ci-; in ori his “Prayer Pil grimage 1 ' i? no! after all inspired by some of those un-American groups who would like nothing, better than to be able to pin the label, of Communists on the NAA - CP and kindred organization? Malice, intolerance, hatred and bias are* not too particu- RALEIGH Kg? Seafood Co. i ‘ j| j^ s j n the sea . . . and.. eatable we have it, or we will get it ! Dial TE 2-7748 FREE DELIVERY • PLENTY PARKING SPACE 410 E. Davie St. Raleigh, N. C. ,, PENN BLENDED WHISKEY $ s I C# 4/© QUART GQODERHAM A WORTS. LTD , PEORIA, ILL. lar about what or whoa* bed they sleep In. The persons who work like beaver* io stop the progress of justice and equa lity in this country are under mining its foundation* just as much as are those who seek to over throw it by violence. 'Hie reds may have aiiies in what they are now attempt ing to do FREEDOM DAY RALLY: The tune is 3:00 o'clock in the after noon Sunday, May 13 The place is Raleighs Memorial Auditorium. The event is the annual NAACP featured this year with an address sponsored Freedom Day Rally, by the on 1 and only Jackie Ro binson Maybe you have been thick ing that the only thing that Jackie could do was play base ball. Well, you have, the sur prise of your life awaiting you because after you have heard Jackie speak next Sunday af ternoon you will probably he thinking that he can speak even better than he ca,n play j I ball. Make no mistake Jackie j is really a snell binder on the speakers podium. We would like to remind you that this event is a state affair There are ontv so many seats in the auditorium. If you want one j i of these seats. WHO IS INSULTING WHOM: j j Two ‘'great" American statesmen I "Senators Ervin (Ole Blabber [ Mouth > of North Carolina and ex : mill band Johnson of South Caro I lina are now calling the civil j rights bill that has just won appro- ( j w.’ of a sub committee of the U. ; j S. Smote "an insulting and insup- ; ; portable indictment of a whole < people the South". Ail of this causes us to ask when will the South stop insulting the rest of the nation with its mock justice and betrayal of the whole American ideal. k. cTmonarchs (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) Involved in the swap was not made known, both Dove and Ted Rasberry, former owner, said it involved a large sum. Since entering organized base-! | ball in 1920, the Monarchs have i won 25 pennants in the NAL, and were defeated by the Detroit Stars last year for top honors, j Brought Charley Neal Here Mr, Dove, formerly owned (he Raleigh Tigers, which boasted the services of Char ley Neal, who came out of Longview, Texas 1o join the local team and is now a regu lar second and third base man with the Brooklyn Dod gers. He played here during j the, 1949-4 f» season. The Monarchs, With farm clubs j | in Grand Rapids, Michigan and j Chicago, Illinois, sold four top players to the major leagues last, season. Among them were: Hal Jones, a catcher; Eugene Elliott, i Infielder; A. J. Jackson, pitcher; i Jim Barnes, outfielder and first base, all of whom went to the | Cleveland Indians. John Kennedy,! I infield, formerly of the Philadei- j ! pbia Phillies, is a product of the I club. j During spring training this ; i year, the Monarchs won five straight games from the Bir- : in high am Black Barons, also members of the NAL. Rasberry, a real estate dealer, i jof Grand Rapids, Michigan, has owned the Monarchs since 1955. j | He purchased the team from Tom j Beard, long time owner, of Kan- ■ i sas City, Mo. | At the present time, Rasberry 1 . said, there is an option on the ’ i Monarchs with Dove and him ! owning equal shares, but at the j , end of the season Dove will buy [ ' j the entire interest in keeping with i 1 ! NAL rules. “for a long time Raleigh has needed a good baseball leant and I hope the Mon j arch* and the teams that they will play in the NAL will give os good entertainment. We are expecting: big crowds from the city and other areas at these games,” Mr. Dove said Tuesday. Team-members of the Negro American Leases are: New Gl eans Bears, Memphis Red Sox. Mobile Cuban Giants, Binning ham Black Barons, Detroit Stars and the Monarchs, SCHOOL BOARD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE l) i topic discussed at the secret session and that the pupal as signment plan was not men tioned. Th” resolution specified that “, . the parents of any child of school age who desire that such child attend a specific school other than the one at tended . . shall file written ap plication with the Board through the principal of the school to which assigned. , ” It added that A copy of this resolution shall be filed with the superintendent and with 1 each principal In the unit and may be inspected by any in terested person at any time during regular office hours. A letter from Joseph H. Holt of 101$ Oherlln Rd.. ask ing the board to assign his son i to Daniels Junior High School, ; was read. Mon .-burs approved a motion in structing Sanderson to inform Holt, of iho "proper" channel for get ting his son's school chanced. The youth, Joseph Holt Jr., now attends J. W. I.igon Junior-Seanior High, inn all-Negro school. The 14-ycar ! | old youth seek? entry to Daniels | or Broughton High, both all-white j schools. He lives a few blocks from the white schools, but some three miles from Lsgon. Under the pupil assignment plan, a 30-rtav period Is given after assignment for dissatis fied parents to appeal to the School Board. Prepared forms will be supplied by the prin cipals, but must bear the seal «f a notary public before heing submitted by the parents. The School Board will act on the requests for transfer at its re ; gulnr meeting, according to plans. I ; “The Board expressly reserves | . the right to change the assignment i 1 of any pupil at any time when- j s ever, in the opinion of the board, the best interests of the pupil, of the school attended by him or ; of other pupils, or the efficient ad- \ ministration of the schools to j which pupils are assigned by this | board, require that he be assigned j io another school,” the plan states I | STATeIn BRIEF (CONTINUED FROM PAGE t) i Howards will leave for Hunts i vil’e. Alabama, to attend the com mencement exercise?. LOCAL BOOZE RAID RALEIGH Two person* were charged with possession rtf non-tax-pald whiskey after police staged a raid on Hay wood Lane and found S 3 1-2 gallons of whiskey, Police Sgt. George D. Pearce said Nellie Stewart, 27, and Melvin Pal mer, 26. were placed unde | $2(10 bond after officer* found the whiskey in their house at 611 Haywood Lane Saturday. Also participating in the ; raid were Patrolman R 1 Per ry and ABC agent Hoke Smith DINER COOK DIES j HENDERSON -- A man identi fied as Sandy Armstrong, middle aged cook, of New York, died a ; board the Seaboard Air Line rail i road's northbound Silver Meteor | shortly before it passed Hendoson j around 3 o'clock Monday morqing. j Coroner F. B. Ilight. who was call - led to the station concluded that j drah was from natural causes, ap ! parent.lv a heart attack a future . . . And we owe it all to motn'j free copy z>( "Amwcr* to Quejiion* Parents Ask About Music Les son*". Why w* actually found our best years were still ahead of •-« - • ■ and so, that's how *>*, our swell I Vinter Muir tie. and me nil got together. For fun with a future, pick up this amazingly frank booklet, ami see how won derfuliy a Winter Mmrtte tits into your child's future. j W“TE *4wo%e/ \ Maus Piano Co. 436 FAYETTEVILLE sr ‘ Raleigh, N.C. Dial TE v-4831 ALLEGED THIEF SENTENCED WILSON Shirley Davis, 18, Negro, was taken ta Raleigh Sunday to begin serving two years in State Prison far hi* part in a $1,413.92 theft. He pleaded guilty to breaking, en tering and stealing the sum from the Hussey Oii Company. His companion in the crime, Bealston Thomas, Negro, 16, also was sentenced to two years in State Prison. However Judge William -J. Bundy of Greenville suspended the sentence against him. BOSS’DEATH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) ter accompanying the flying man to a hospital. According io the Bladen S County Sherriff’s Department , the investigation is being con i Untied. ! Mitcliell Joe Smith, 38, the vie ! tim, owned extensive farming In* j terests nes: Clarkton and ope | rated the Clarkton Cold Stoiage ! Plant. Policemen said Smith wa* wounded fatally about 7:30 a, m. at the plant, and that pre- I liminary investigation indi cated the shooting followed a i quarrxj with Brown. Smith was pronounced dead on I arrival at the hospital, from a i .32 caliber bullet wound. I Brown, according to reports took Smith to a Clarkton funeral home in his pickup truck and accompanied an ambulance which sped Smith to the hospital. GOV. STANLEY (CONTINU'D FROM nOF f) the governor. Stanley said, "The Virginia Slate Chamber of Commerce as sured me the list would be care fully checked. I have not rescind ed the invitation to any person. He emphasized that he intends to be in attendance at the dinner. Mure than 600 native Vir ginians’ now living out of the state, received invitations to the dinner, scheduled to be held Friday night at Rich mond. It will mark the 350th anniversary of the Jamestown ! Festival. “Through a clerical error”, invitations were sent to at least six Negroes. Chamber officials said they were still not sure whether other Ladies ! SPRING SPECIAL ('LOSE OUT LESS THAN Y‘2 Price ITS EASY TO PAY THE O. K. WAY 1 0. K. CLOTHING Company 113 E. Martin St. •—— —— ———*— lll —-i i j At Southern Furniture .... DREXEL Floor Sample Sale! 1 ; l i j Stock on Three Famous Drexel coordinated collections —“Counterpoint”. - “Dateline” and “Sirocco” —is being reduced to make room for New Groups now in produc tion. Prices have been reduced with special approval from Drexel —much lower than recommended retail! LIMITED OFFER: This sale is limited to current stock on these collections and will be closed once this stock has been exhausted! OPEN TIL 9 THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT! Start a New Open-Stock Collection or add to your group now at drastically reduced prices! | Convenient Terms Gladly Arranged I Negroes had been invited Stanley’s statement, indicat ing that he thinks the Ne groes who were invited should be permitted to attend the dinner comes several weeks after the six announced they would not show up. The six agreed to stay away af ter Chamber President Frank A Ernst of Hopewell, Vs., wrote them explaining they were in vited by mistake and that the all r white chamber nad never uuend- I ed to have a racially-mixed din j ner. However, officials have empha- I sized that if any Negroes do show I up, they will be treated couteous i ly and seated at the banquet. —- Raleigh ‘Pilgrims (CONTINUED FROM PAGE II hundreds of southern ministers meeting in New Orleans. La., sev eral months ago, following terror ism in Alabama and other Dixie ! states, was designed to attract the j attention of the world on the j plight of the Negro in the south, I through peaceful and quiet do | monstrations. A two-hour demonstration I? j scheduled to be held at the Liri- I coin Memorial at 11 a m Fri [ day at which some 100,000 per | cons will be present. Ralciirh ministers making the j trip wll: be the Revs. John Fleming. Otis Hairston, O I Sheri!!. 3 W. Jones. J. H. Trv ant, Samuel Spencer. Grady D. Davis. Robert Shtriev and G, A. Fisher. Two chartered buses have born j secured to accommodate fh< in |7O persons attending from L , eigh and Wake County. The Reception Center for I BEVERA E ! ’ :! For These Hot Days I Take Some Home Today j > ■mi Mini ■■ I inM«*wi*liUlil i iHiii ii iii«~irii*i i a-tfw^- | vi" .■ ns i!.'*■ jo-uij-■nmur-warm tn * i muwiim -nr i nirunMMmu Till ■lr- mi mm »rr irw-n —-i—«r— North Carolina delegation will be i the Simpson Methodist Church, I corner 13th and Monroe Streets. A rest station and snack bar has been erected for use of the Tar Heels between demonstrations. May Call On Senators Senators Sam J Ervin and W. Kerr Scott may be approached b> j the North Carolina delegation for ' : chats. The Rev. Mr Fisher has I | written Senior Son Ervin request _ . it./., mi ,-*auieiice, but as of pi ess : time had not received a reply Following the Lincoln Memor . ' ial demonstration the 'pilgrims' \ j will assemble at the Uline Audi - 1 torium, Third and M Streets, N, E. where further plans will be made for regional demonstrations. Leaving Washington at 5 p. m Friday, the Raleigh-Wake County group will arrive here shortly after midnight. BONUS MONEY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Remember, persons partici pating in the promotion must buy front our advertisers and request purchase slips or re ? ceipts each week. At the end of the month these receipts should he turned in at The C’ROUMAN'S office. There b; no limit t.o the num ber of times that on? person may win. Winners are chosen on the basis of money spent and in no other way. SMITH PREXY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE i! j ; vincement of Science and of the I i 1 Oklahoma Academy of Science, and j a member of the American j Chemical Society and of the Sis- I " i XI Honorary Scientific Society sfdaeàfa &#&&&■ <'4&' - 2 caw«Ss^al3w^iiS^. r v« -• v v. -:*a j- OF RALEIGH, INC. 113 - 115 S. WILMINGTON ST. thi —imiw -rr - r-irii - mrf \mm mt wn— miiMmuimTiriirnwriM—m-n-wn- ■-n r ——jl j He has published research studies j ] | in the .Journal of the American j | Chemical Society, t) le journal of j j Oiganic Chemistry, and other 1 I scientific organs. ; His civic activities include mem - j bf rship in the Oklahoma State Atoms for Peace Program, the Research Council of the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Educa tion, the Langston City Improve ment Board and the City Planning Board The new president of the Pres byterian-affiliated university has been the recipient, of research grants-in-aid from the Res. arch Corporation and the Upjohn Drug Company. He has been a college contact officer on foreign agricul tural affairs. U. S. Department of Agriculture, since 1950. His wife, a graduate both of the college and the larv school at Howard University is a can didate foe the Ph. D. degree at j j the University of Chicago, and is now serving as chairman of | the department of social scien ce at Langston University. Dr. Perry will begin his du'ier- j j as President of Smith on July j succeeding J VV. Sesbrook. retired j j head of the Fayetteville State Tea- it "hors College, who served as act- l j ing president since the death of ! j President Hardy Liston in October. ' Cottonseed should be treated and ! ddinted before planting, , * W '*' M ** iishwim M-'j-jiw.'.arw war • ■n’wmct : i JONES’ BARBER IS SHOP Most Modern & Sanitary J Air Conditioned. W* Need Your Hoad vp. Our f j Business" 131 K. HARGETT STREET yfeMfKr.-eVWhAEf - . . . •- If I —l' Try Us For the Best Short Orders Fried Chicken Cheeseburgers Hot Hogs French Fries Hamburger Coffee Soft Drinks SPECIALIZING IN ... Pit-Cooked BA R-B-CITE 'V%kTr me * T''"i IT**» V vr.ns W * rt.iißLfcS GRILL ?•«<> jg MARTIN STUFF,T Raleigh N. C. 'HRS. & MRS VICTOR PKKBLF.S. 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The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 18, 1957, edition 1
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