Stanford L Warren public Library . jttevill® St White Jlkin Indicted For Stalile Rape Of 16 Year Old Girl ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ WRONG MAN SHOT IN LOVE TRIANGLE Pauli Murray, former Dur- hamite currently a member of a prominent New York law firm, returned to Durham last week for a series of lectures and a speech at Stanford L. Warren Li brary, where she discussed her recently published autobiogra phical work, “Proud Shoes." Here the distinguished author- attomey i shown, second from left, with library officials at a luncheon given in her honor. At far left i« Mrs. Ray N. Moore, li brarian; John H. Wheeler, third from left, secretary of the. li brary trustee board; and Mrs. Lyda Merrick, chairman of the library board of trustees. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Says South Must Accept Tnitli Of Court Edict Tar Heel Lawyer Defends NAACP / RALEIGH A prominent Wlngton-Salem attorney spoke out in defense of the Supreme Court ruling against public scliool segregation and called upon the South to accept the "truth” of the court’s ruliiig. In an address before the Chris tian faith and human relations conference at the Good Shep herd Episcopal church here Tuesday, Irving Carlyle declared “the truth that all men are en titled to freedom is on the side of the U.S. Supreme Court’s se gregation decision. The South "must confront and accept the truth on the side of the law against segregation,” and “we should try to do some thing constructive regardless of how unpleasant and disagree able the task may be.” The prominent Baptist lay man also called for a halt to pre- (continued on j>age 8) Ctm^0 VOLUME 33 — NUMBER 47 DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1957 PRICE: TEN CEN18 "King” Cole Blames Admen For Failure Of TV Show Ice Cream Arguments Bar Case Heard NEW YORK The Nat (King) Cole once-a- week television variety show, slightly less than four months old, is schedided to be seen for the last time on December 17, it was revealed this week. buy his show for their clients because they felt sponsorship would hurt the clients’ sales in the South. Quoting Cole further, the story said, “You can’t always put the popular crooner-^ I blame on the South for these pkUB aiyi.ttBhuK- 'We'f always using tlw North is that Southerners are outspoken. “In the North, they smile at you once' and t^en knife you in the back. In the South, at least you icnow wliat to do.” Cole is a native of Alabama, ^and was the victim of an on ^sta^ in Birmingham by Defense Claims No Trespass Was Committed By 1 RALEIGH The State Supreme Court Tuesday listened to arguments froin l>oth sides Tuesday in a case in which seven Durham Ne groes have been convicted of trgpfepass at a white ice cream INK. \ Wocd last week tfaikt Ing iqr'tbe variety mSms'’ivaa Tuesday nights over NBC-TV, to fulfUl personal ai^earance en gagements previously contract ed. According to a signed article in the New York Post Thursday, Cole took national advertising u^BudeB to tHsk and placed the" blame for the failure of his show on their refusal to obtain na tional sponsors for it. “They could have sold it if they wanted to,” the Post story quoted the popular entertainer. T^e story further said that Cole feels agencies refused to New Zealander Lauds Schools In Fayetteville FAYETTEVILLE W.A.B, Goodwin, Member of the UNESCO Technical Assis tance Missions in Sierra Leone, British West Africa, and super vising teacher now on a one- month leave from the New^ Zea land School System, recently made a three-day visit at the Fayetteville State Teachers Col lege and at certain ,of the city and county public schools. Fayetteville was one of the many teachers colleges and uni versities in thin country which Goodwin included in bis itiner~ ary. Asked for impressions of A- merican education as he had ob served it, Goodwin concluded: “There is a freshness and vitali ty in all schools visited which is most encouraging. The atten tion given to oral use of English Language in the first year of elementary school before pro ceeding to use reeding boolcs seem to be productive of excel lent speech. I have seen excel lent teaching methods in social studies. . Father Of Four Felled Three Shots From .38 By Pistoi Iilatthew Lee Tyson. 37 year old father, of 608 Roxboro St., is being lield by police in con nection with the fatal shooting early last Sunday morning of James Lloyd Fowler. Tyson admitted firing three bullets into the body of Fowler at 1110 Braswell Street shortly after one a.m. Sunday morning. Funeral services for the slain man were held Wednesday after noon. Tyson reportedly told inves tigating police that he shot Fow ler following an argument and a fight they had at the Braswell street address. However, reports circulating throughout the city in the wake of the shooting say that Tyson became jealous because a rival for ills girl friend was to marry her and waited outside the house to ambush him, but shot the wrong man. The same reports did not state who Tyson’s rival, tor wiu>m the bullets were intended but felled Fowler instead. The “other man” in a love triangle reportedly involving Tyson and Miss Nola Newkirk, who lives at the Braswell street shooting scene, was not identified beyond the statement that he was a taxi driver. Both Tyson and Fowler were booked with the,1110 Braswell street address, but it was learn-' ed that Fowler actually lived at 1115 Fourth street while Tyson maintained his family at 608 Roxboro street. The victim of the shooting, Fowler, was the father of four children. According to police patrolmen C. W. Rogers and R. L. Barnhill who investigated the shooting, Tyson telephoned police head- Bosnc NIXES jn,WLAnN TOUR NEW YORK Saxophone star Earl Bostic on last Tuesday told this reporter that he had just turned down a $50,000 otter (and, that ain’t hay, brother) from Universal Attraction, Inc. for a twenty-day tour of South America to follow Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong, who winds up his tour Down Under on November 29th. Bostic sitid that the reason be refused the tour was “because I want to be home for Thaniss- givlng and 1 don’t feel lU|e fly ing that far right now.” How ever, the dapper musician con firmed his physician’s optimis tic outlook on hit future as. t bandleader because he has com pletely recovered from the heart attack which he suffered last year. quarters around two a.m. Sun day morning and reported he had “just shot someobdy at 1110 Braswell St.” Policeman Rogers discovered Fowler’s body in a driveway at the Braswell street residence and Tyson waiting at the house. An open knUe was located near the body, officers said. County coroner Dr. R. A. Hor ton ruled that Fowler died of three pistol wounds, one in the right shoulder blade, another in the back of Ills head and a third which ploughed into his right pelvis. Though there was no report of witnesses to the shooting and no conunent from police, the belief XNir Ishi a ifcflSiwiwnt appAl In Su^rlor Court and received an increased fine of |25Mch. Tues day's arguments before the State high court was the first step in the second appeal made by the defendants. The action originated from an incident last June 3, when seven young p(k>p1e entered' the white" side of the Royal Ice Cream company, asked for service, re fused to leave at the insistence of the manager and were arrest ed. Judge Wilson of Recorder's Court found them guilty and le vied a $10 fine. Later, on an ap peal from Wilson’s decision, Judge Clifton Moore of the Su perior Court upheld the convic tion and fined each of the seven $25. In arguments before the state his pocket because he expected high court Tuesday, defense at- trouble, then followed Fowler! torneys based their arguments out of the house. on 1, the contention that no tres- Outside, Tyson said Fowler pass had been committed by the attacked him, knocking him to j seven under existing North the ground, whereupon ' he Carolina laws, and 2, that the “came up shooting.” | '(continued on page 8) that Fowler's back was turned to Tyson when the shots were fired gained support in specula tion around the city. However, Tyson told police that he shot Fowler “three or four times” after he had been attacked by Fowler. He said aq argument between the two of them began in the basement of the Braswell street residence, he invited Fowler outside, went up stairs in the house to get his .38 calibre pistol which he put in Among the 1500 educators at tending North Carolina College's Eleventh annual Resource Use Conference here last Thursday were Mrs. Lottie Villines, Rox boro, shown pinning conference badge on Mrs. Roxie Wagstaff, teacher in the Person County Trainine School, Roxboro. Dr. T. R. Speigner, NCC's RVE direc tor, was in charge of the session that featured 15 resource use emphasis clinics and workshops in reading, directed by Dean George Johnson of Winston-Sa lem Teachers College, and a sci ence workshop headed by Dr. T. E. Malone, professor of biology at NCC. Virginia Demo Says Reds Would Use NAACP, Levels Blast At High Court Girl Lured Away By Man On Baby-Sitter Pretext CLINTON charges of rape here last week. Monday aftemooi A white man who picked up a Negro girl from her home on the pretense of wanting her to baby sit for liim was being held on Daryl Clegg of Bronx, N. Y.. past president of the general or ganization of Industrial Arts high school, has won a $2,000 one year scholarship to Bard College. He is son of former Durhamites John Clegg and the late Mrs. Katie LilHon Clegg. charges of rape A formal charge of criminal assault on a female was filed against Devane McLamb, white Honeycutt township resident, ini the wake of charges by Lula Bell Lamb, 16 year old Negro girl. McLamb was arrested four days following the incident and held without bond pending Grand Jury action. According to reports from Sampson County sheriff W. D. Hall, the assault allegedly took place at a stable about six miles from here on Nov. 11. The sheriff said the white man admitted having sexual re lations with the girl but declared she submitted to him. First indication of the inci dent came from a Negro physi cian here. Dr. R. H. Lewis who reported the incident to sheriff JlaU on Nov. 11. Or. Lewis told the sheriff it looked as if a girl had been raped and asked him to come to his office. According to the stieriff s re ports, he want to the physician's office where he talked with the Lamb girl. He said site told him the following story: A white man whom she did not know came to her home late Monday afternoon (November 10) and asked her to baby sit for liim. She said after they had ridden around for several miles, the man drove to a stable, drag ged her from the car and as saulted her. (continued on page 8) RICHMOND, Va. A Virginia Democrat told the Richmond Bar A^ciation here this week that Communists are trying to “use” the NiVACP to “break down rights of the States as a prelude to establishing a dictatorship. Senator A. Willis Robertson told Bar member* that the Com munists set out to break down States' Rights after failing in an earlier drive to make the United States spend itelf into bank ruptcy. The communists will do "all In their power, not only to fo ment racial discord and antago nism, but to use. If they can, the NAACP as a political instrument to destroy oiic form of govern ment through the destruction of the fundamental principles of States Rights. His speech also attacked the (continued on page 8) Segregationist Parents Attack Pearsall Plan RALEIGH A re;uest by a group of white parents in Greensl>oro that the token school desegregation per mitted by the Pearsall Plan be reversed raised anew questions about the status of the recently enacted law turned to all GrcensbsRM imtll an appeal which '' entered against ■ ‘StgMrlor Court decision uoholdlng school board’s assignment of Ne gro pupils to white schools could be heard by a Jury. The request is being made in the form of an appeal to the State - Supreme Court which heard arguments from attorneys representing the parents and counter arguments from lawyers for the Greensboro school board. The Greenalx>ro school tKMird voted in an historic session late last summer to admit six Ne groes to previously all white schools. The assignments were subsequently protested by some white parents who asked a Su perior Court to issue an Injun'- tlon restraining the assignm?nt of the Negro pupils to the white schools. Judge Richardson Preyer oi Superior Court refused to grant a petition by the wiiite parents that Negroes be prevented 'rom attending the schools. Hl« court held that the petitioning parents had failed to apply for reassign ment of their children to white ^ (continued on page 8) ^ Sentence Meted In Gob Slaying NEW YORK News was received here that Pfc. Robert Allen, of Nashville Tenn., first of six Negro Marines to face trial, has been convicted of the murder of Navy corpsman New Policy For President'sCommittee To Prevent Bias In Government-Contracied Jobs Needed: Wilkins NEW YORK The fourth annual report of the President's Committee on Government Contracts indicates “the adoption of a regular re^ view policy,” Roy Wilkins, NAACP executive secretary, said here last Thursday. "Thia has been badly needed,” he ad ded. While expressing the Associ ation’s appreciation of this inno vation, Wilkins noted titat ttie report, issued on Nov, 10, reveals too little about the enforcement of the non-discrimination clause in U.S. government contracts. The committee, he asserted, was eBtablished to secure compli ance with these contract clauses. AccorUng to the report, the ■committee last year received 293 complaints of which 187 tiave been closed with the remaining 106 "still under study and inves tigation.” If the contracts reviewed are key ones within large industrial groups,” Wilkins said, "the re sults oould have a salutary ef fect.” Further, he pointed out, "vi gorous action q;) the part of the committee is essential to end racial discrimination in enaploy- ment because the federal govern ment plays a vital role In de termining the course of civil rights In America.” Currently before the com mittee are cases filed by the Na tional Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People against many multi-plant xor- poratlons operating in basic sec tors of the Ainerican economy. Among these are complaints against several major aircraft manufacturers including Boeing Aircraft Company, Wichita, Kans.; the Hayes Aircraft Com pany, Birmingham: Rohr Air craft Company, Riverside, Calif.; Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, Marietta, Ga.; and Cessna Air craft Company, Wichita, Kans. Adrien R. Nokleby of North Dakota, in Okinawa. Alien was charged with kicking and (Mat ing the white corpsman most viciously In a "savage tribal at tack” as described by the prose cutor. For. this, he was sentenced to 12 years. Trials of the other five will begin before the holi days. Coming at the time when Gi rard was tried and freed, ^ia Marine court martial sentence came as a surprise. Counsel for the defense. Major J. E. Stauffer of Oceanside, California, tried in vain to iiave the case thrown out on grounds of prejudice. He only succeeded in having two of the nine court members removed. He insisted. on knowing which memt>ers were from the south. Eddie Chestnut, 21, a Negro marine frwn Walterboro, 3. C. (and one of the six under trial), testified that Allen had kicked the corpsman several times, nie prosecution called the beating “a head hunting.” Nokleby, attacked outside Marinc Batracks last 4th, died of injuries lmmjB4tij|f||e afterward*.