Greensboro Murder Victim To Be BuriecTSiinciay bURH^ SHOCKED BY VANDALI^ RETURN POSTAGE GUARAN^TEED fine Citn^0 VOLUME 35—NUMBER 37 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1»59 PRICE: IS CENTS 74 Sign Up For TIMES Contest C-R COMMISSION * Asks Federal Registrars The Commission on Civil Right* Tuesdiy handed a report to the President and Congress that recommended the appoint ment of Federal registrars wherever it can be shown that mfcmbers of minority groups are being denied the right to vote. Three ofithe six commissioners proposed a Constitutional amendment that would further protect the voting rights of Kegroes and other minorities. * The proposal for the amend-*voting requirement^ other than ment, put forth by Chairman John A. Hannah and Commlssioneri Theodore M. Hesburgh and tJeorge M. Johnson, would extend univer sal suffrage by limiting State au thority to the establishment of any New Legion Head Promises To End Bias NEW YORK — Affir/nltg hit Mnvictien that th« "•iitntlal r«- |uirtmtnts for •ligibllity in tha Amarican Ltfllon" should not b« addtd to by a tubtidlary organlza* tien,' Maiptin B. McKnaaly, nawly •lactad commandar of tha Lagien, hai pladgad "immadlata action" ^tewardt lha alimination of racial dtacriminatien in tha 40 A S, a Lagien auxiliary which now hart Nagro vatarant from mamBarahlp. In a talagram to NAACP Exacu- tiva Sacratary Roy Wllkint, Com mandar McKnaally promisad to "appoint a eommittoa to moat with tha 40 A 8 to ditcuts and clarify and to bring to a propar conclu •ion this conflict." Tha talagram to Mr. Wiikini, datad Aug. 31, was See BIAS, Page 8 REV. SMITH Cliurcli Marlts 80tli Year The climax programs m a series celebrating th? 80th anniversary of the establishment of New Beth el, Baptist will be held at the Church on Sunday, according to an announcement this week from the Rev. L. W. R«tid, church pas tor. The Rev'«Rei;a stated that guest speakers will be heard at two spe cial programs Sunday ending a See 86th, PaRe 8*^ those pertaining to age, residence and legal confinement. It would also prohibit any p««on, as well as any State or th^ Federal govern ment from denying a citizen's right to vote. Tht raport eontidar* thrao araas of civil rlghtii dlwrimination In It asked tliat the'Commisal^.^tf extended, be permitted to set up an advisory and conciliation serv ice to help local school officials develop plans for the transition from segregated systems to de segregated systems. And it sug gested that the Commission serve as a clearing house for informa- lion. about procedures used in^ segregation. In housing, the report urged that the Federal Housing Administra tion and the Veterans Administra tion strengthen their present agreements with cities and states having anti-discrimination housing laws by requiring that builders using FHA and VA machinery agree in advance, in writing, to abide by those laws. I> also asked tha Prasldant to Issua an' axacutivo 'ordar directing ail Federal agencies to shape their .policies in accordance with "the wee k-long observance of the church’s anniversary. Attorney Floyd B. McKissick, prominent layvyer, will speak at the regular 11 O’clock service. The Rev. H. Albert Smith, pastor of Shady Hill Baptist, of Roxboro, will address a special one O’clock See REGISTRAR, Page 8 Big Prizes to Be Given Top N.C. Beauticians MR. ROWLAND Carey Laymen’s League, The Rev. E. T. Browne, pastor of Mt. Vernon Baptist Church, de livered the eulogy at Sunday after noon’s funeral services. Burial rites were conducted at Beech- wood cemetery. The deceased had been a mem- ter of Mt. Vernon Baptist for 30 years and was active in many phase of the church’s life. He lived at 825 Ridgeway avenue. Born on May 17, 1905, in Milton, son of the late Henry and Mary M'itchell Rowland, he came to Dur- in 1921. On April 13, 1937, he was mar ried to the former Mrs. Annie B. Peeples, who survives him. Rowland bbgan work at North Carolna Mutual life insurance company’s home office in 1043. He was employed by the firm at his See RITES, Page 8 A total of 74 beauticiaaa were nominated in the Carolina Tiipei' Beauticians subscription and pop ularity Contest this week at presa time Tuesday noon. Nomiiiations were cbntinulng to come in from-- all sections of the ^te and winl be listed in next week’s issue. Several beauticians were nom^ nated by friends from two to six times. One received 11 nominat tions, but the contest manaipr, A.[ E. Hart, stated that it was against I'he rules ta designate by name how many timas a particular be)uti- cian it nominated. Voting in the contest will not get undeway until the September IB issue of the Carolina Times when a coupon will be published and remain in each issue of the paper for the entire six weeks of the contest. ’/riendt, relative* and customer*’ of a baaifl'lelan may yet* Wi>lr» tawrtOr -at di ^iclii cdu^idn' from a copy M tha Caro lina Timet and writirtf the name of their favorite beautician on it; ''hen mail or bring it ^ fha Con- tett Msnagar, Carolina ‘^imtt, 436 Eatt Pkttigrct-v Straet, Durham, N. C. In addition to the regular cou- T.ott Don votesj extra bonus tqtes will be given for each subscirotion ob tained by or for a beautician dur ing the six ^eks of the contest. Renewal of ^d subscriptions will count the same as a new subscrip tion. Those nominated up t* press time this week are as follows: Miss Hazel Ragland, Aiiglef Miss Janie Graham, Maxton Mrs. L. M. Reece, Laurinburg Miss Margaret Pemberton, Rock ingham Mrs. Ophelia Thompson, Aber- d-n Mrs. Flossie Fergerson, Pinehurst Mrs. Lula Therdgill, Southern Pines Mrs. Inex Goodwin, Fayetteville Mrs. Iona Clay, Greensboro Mrs. Ethel Harvey, Fayetteville Mrs. Ema Peterson, Clinton Mrs. Mamie Mack, Dunn Miss Cleo Howard, Roseboro Mrs. Helen Plater, Sanford Mrs. Elizabeth Coleman, Greens boro Mrs. Willie Smith, Greensboro See CONTEST, Page 8 MRS. LENNON Police Mal(e Quid( Arrests of It Youngsters; Burton Scliool Damage is btimated at $2,000 Shock was the reaction registered by Durham citizen's thi'i week to a rampage of raa- dalism in which II young boys, ranginj; in agts fnnn 7 to 14 brought $J,000 worth of dam- We Saw It Coming Last. Rites Held For Prominent Baptist Layman A capacia ;rawd Mt nicrfc thaQ 1,000 i|aidi*Wtjgi Tommie Lwjis Rowland, protntaenrt^^y sim^yielipping the Durham Baptist layman, at -Mt. Vernon Baptist Church last Sun day. Rowland was fatally stricken suddenly at Charlotte last Thurs day, September 3, as he attended the Lott Carey Foreign Mis sion convention. He was 54. MISS BENNETT NEW YWCA STAFFERS — Pic tured above are two n*w addi tions to 11»e Harriett Tubman YWCA staff in Durham. Top It Mrt. Claire Lennon, of LeOrange, Ga., veteran educator who begint dutiet as residence director. At bottom It Mitt Shiriey Bennett, of Bracey, Va., • June graduate of SiiMiMtt Collew. Mitt Bennett ■ it atittant-Frvgram Director and ram Director an« Tee**-Age Health, Physical Eduaa- |4 _ I age to Burton elementary school. I The vandalism occurred over the Labor Day w eci-eiil. on Sunday and ilonday. By mid week, six of the younggters had» ' had been confined in the County HiJLIl 1 UKlALj detention home and five others returned to their parents but a- waiting actioi by the juvenile- court. Quick apprehension of the youngsters was made through the swift work of Detectives Frank MtCrae and C. I>. Cox, who drew praise from the De- partment for their swiftnes in solving the cate. They were notified of the acts on Tuesday morning and had placed the youngsters in custody by Tuesday aftertioon. All of the youngsters lived in the Bur'ieit school area, and all but two i^ended the school. E. W. Mldgette, Burton school principal, told newsmen he was “shocked’*'o leam that the young sters had taken part in the wild wrecking party at his school. Similar exprettiont came from other tchool official! and cit- iient throughout (he city. Dr. Walter Brown, newly elect ed president of the school P. T. A. said, “how can react but with horror and alarm and wonder a- bout contributing factors to such behavior? However, he said he expected the PTA's program for the year would reflect its concern for the impllcattont of problertM raited by the incident. According to Detectives Mc- Crae and Cox, a group of fiwe youngsters entered the school on Sunday evening, did minor dam ages and Uft after taking some frwik tfce tion and Recreation Director. See SHOCKBD, Page 8 Mt. Vernon Plans Addition Of $150,000 Education Plant } _y,ernon Bap^ Church, located at 1000 South Roxboro Street, will erect a new education al building, it was announced here Monday by the pastor, the Rev. E. T. Browne. The present main building was erected in 1941. It houses the canc- tuary, pastor’s study, church office and a basement which is used for Sunday School and other church auxiliaries. The need for an edu cational building to provide reli gious and recreational training for the young people of the church has long been felt Rev. Browne stated. The total cost of the new struc ture will be $155,000 and is to l>e erected on the vacant lot adjoin ing that on which the church structure is located. Work is ex pected to begin October 1 and is expected to be completed in little less than a year. M. A. Ham is the N. CINCLUDED Mass Attack Illiteracy In To Be Waged On Four Dixie States BRASSTOWN—The first mass attack on illiteracy among adults in this country will be made in the Carolines, Alabama and Eastern Tennessee soon. It vt^ll be made by The Lite racy Moyement in the South east with Alabama cooperating and will offer more than one million adults an opportunity to learn to read and write or to re-Iearn skills they may have forgotten. The lessons will be given as a public service over a special group of 10 commercial tele- vition ttationt which will cover North Carolina, South Carolina and the eattern third of Ten nessee. The state educational network, with three telecatting outlets, will cover Alabama for the Alabama Literacy Move ment which will begin at the tame time. The movement, an outgrowth of the highly successful pilot program over WBTV in char- Hotte last winter, was announced iy Mayes Bshrman, head of the Literacy Division of the John C. Campell Folk School at Brasstown, and director of the Literacy Move ment in the Southeast. Between now and January when the first lesson will be presented by the participating commercial television stations, hundred.s of volunteers workers will be needed, to cover So wide an area. “And - there is every reason to- believe that they wi^l volunteer”, said Behrman. “E^erience, first over the educatijnul station in Memphis, Tenn,, and last winter over WBTV in Charlotte, has deary demonstrated that adults who missed the opportunity to learn to read and write early in life still want to learn.” “What is equally important,” said Behrman, “the experience has shown that the modem medium to television can be used with com plete success to teach reading and writing to adults. This re presents a major break-through in the technical problems of teaching adults.” “This movement^” Behrman said, “will give adults their second chance.” In the area to be covered — North Caroling South Carolina, Eattern Tennett^ apd\Aitbama— there are mor^^Vlun eiU. million adultt(35 years of age or over) who are clattified as functional liliter- atet. Thit meant they have fewer than five years of public schooling and, generally, have great diffi culty with even the mott elemen tary readnig or writing. One person out of every five in the area, then, has difficulty with effective reading or writing. There are more than 200,000 adults in the same, area who have never had any formal education. In North Carolina, nearly four adults out of each 100 have had no formal education. In South Caro lina, five per cent of the adult population missed school. In Ala bama, 4.5 per cent of the adults did not get to go to school at all and in Eastern Tennessee the per centage is 2.7. /I architect and S. 0, Gantt and Son, When completers the educa tional building wil^ be one of the finest in the city with three stories that will house a chapel, Sunday School rooms, oflkes and other departments necesaary for a well- rounded church prpgram. Rev. Browne took over the pas torate of Mount Vernon January 1, 1948, following the resignation of Rev. J. H. Thomas. Since com ing here the church has grown numerically and spiritually. Dur ing his pastorate a farm has been purchased which is used at times I for picnics and other church out- See MOUNT VERNON, Page 8 | In our is.sue of Satunlay. Augu:^t 1 we endeavored to warn the people of Durham in a front page story that the Hayti section of the city was ht-coiniiig infested with gangs of young )(ilitnis. W’e fiid this because we felt it was our bounden duty as law-abiding citizens to not only upbjid the law hut to do our i)est to aid police by alerting them as to what we had dis covered to be a fact. In spite u( our warning, there were many citizcn.s who “pooh poohcd" the story as being e.xag^rated. Thanks to Durham’s police department, for the most part immediate action was taken to halt the trend toward dWre- gard for law and order which we round to be existing in setQC sections of the city of Durham. It U ^he duty of a newspaper to keap ita Royara aa tk* pulse of its constituency so that it may know wWt ia foiac on among sdl segments. Unless it ckiea thia, it eiMMot iatar- pret correctly the feelings, attitodea, hopca and aspir*t*i na» of the people it endeavors to senre. Bacsnaa wc 1un« doaa this very thing we saw coming the typa of rabid vaedaBaaa- which occured at the Burton F.lementary SdooL Not os^ this, we now predict that unless thia city oMkaa aa emasssyla of the eleven youths who were involved there will ba aaora such acts to follow. Practically vvery Negro section of Durham is already sprouting gangs of irres|)onsible youngsters who have no le- gard for adults, law and order or the church. Although, for the nio.+t part, such groups have not quite' reached an organized state they do roam the streets and operate in numbers the same as organized young hixjdlums in larger cities. We think this was definitely proved in the Burton School caee as it has been in some others about which we have bean informed. We do not attempt to say here who or wli^ ia raspatwiUa ^ I for the vsuida^.sm which occorrad at Barton rViaa iilai j Sdltoot. Our gref^est concern, idtd that of 4vasry raapartahla ciOlzoi of Qvrham, should be to put forth every effoi^ to sea to it that it does not hsippen again. Wbaterer remady it takea to halt the trend toward lawlessnass wfaicb exista ■matu certr.'n segments of Durhsun’s young people abouU be ap plied and applied with due diligence immediatciy. Aa an exsonple for others, the youngsters wha did tba ihuaga sit the school and all others should be made to underataad that they cannot get away with such condoct withoat Mffcriag With this in mind we call upon every individual agen^* ipr good in the city of Durham to cooperate with our policc der partment by reporting even the slightest case of lawlessnesa or disregard for the law wherever and whenever it occurs. TmTlred of You... "Wife Tells Hubby Before Firing Fatal Blast By ALBERT E. HART AND CHRISTINE KELLY Roosevelt Worthy, 52, was sit ting serenely on the baekporch of Lincoln Hospital to Graduate 9 Nwses in Exercises on Friday MftS. OSBORNE Commencement plans are now being completed by the Lincoln Hospital School of Nursing for its Fifty-fourth rraduating Class The four days of activity begin Friday, September 11, with a re ception at 8:90 P.M. honorin,' the members of the graduating class at A. B. Duke NurseS’ Residence, Asistant Director for General Ad ministration. National League for Nursing', will deliver the Commen cement address Monday, Septem ber 14, at White Rock Baptist Church at 8:15 P. M. his home at 1918 Lutheran SL, Greensboro, last Sunday moming. It was a rainy dismal mining and this large metropolitan city wa* just gettiog into the swing of th windup of the long Labor Day weekend. Somewhere nearby a cfaorch beQ clanged through the miaty gloom calling the faithful to worship. But most citizena went al^d. rest ing watching television eating Sunday morning breakitst. B a- cause of the inclemaacy of tha weather it wa^ a bit quieter thaa the average sabbath neom. Suddenly a loud retart shattered the gloomy quiet. Neighbera The finals speaker received her| j^rugged the noua o« as aa auto formal traning at Columbia Um-| or a cJap of thua- versity, where she earned the bach- elor’s and master’s degrees. Mrs. Osborne has had broad ex- The noise came froB • shotgna perience in institutional and public! fired by Lillie Mae Bynum Wor- health nursing. She has been on; thy’s reported commoa-law wifa. staffs at the Harlem and Lincoln | hospitals, of New York, Freedman’s i of Washington, D.C., and Homer G. j Phillips hospital, of St. Louis. Mo. She was a consultant with the Na tional Nursing Council for War service during World War II, as sistant director for General Ad ministration of the National League! for Nursing since 1954. j She is life member of the NAACP | and the National Council for Negro i Women, active in a aumber ofj other community organizations and; a meml>er of Alpha Kappa Alpha i sorority. ; Some nine graduates are to re-i ceive nursing diplomas at the ex ercises. Graduates, and their home 'terinlnatinf MCn^Xi September t«wn», are Maurice Otelia Blount, i 14. ' } Suffolk, Va.; Ruby Bell Barden, Mrs. Estelle M. Osborne, ft. N., See HOSPITAL, Page 8 The man was rashed to Riehaid- son Hospital where he died aa hour later. According to police reports Lillie Mae Byntun had been caU- ing herself “BIw. Worthy” f« several years. However, she said on Sunday that she was aat B^I- ried to Worthy, oScers aid. Police said she aad Werthy had argued before the shootiag. They said Worthy accused bar of taking money aad “spaadiag it oa other men.’* FoUowiag Um arguaant. oartrt said she retaraad ta Iba baafc door with the gun. patalad it aat and pulled tba trigger. Juit hefoM* firing. aceenliag«la aSMta, ab* told Wortbir “rm al accusing me aC tU^ I S«T MMBOO. Pa«B a