.f THE CAROLINA TIMES «fA—$ATU«DAY, PHRUAItY 10, m2 DURHAM, N. C. -Brief (Continued From Front Page) ATLANTA STUDENTS STAGE I^ROTEST WALK AND Picket ATLANTA, GA.—More than 100 students from the Atlanta University Center this week 'staged a protest walk and , t>lcket line around the Georgia ; State Capitol here. Two groiqis of Negroes and whites had tried to sit integrated in tile House and Senate Galler- • its. Negroes going to the House Gallery were told that they .didn’t have to have passes, but 'when a white teacher from jBpelman Colleg*. Dr. Staunton fLynn, $at with them, three State ‘.Troopers asked him to leave.- , Pr. Lynn told the Troopers that he had no pass, and therefore yat in the unreserved or all-Ne gro section. When Lynn was •sked to leave, the whole group l«ft. tive Director of Dr. Martin Luther King’s S. C. L. C., and William Kunstler, American Civil Liberties Union lawyer of New York City. The two men arrived in Bir mingham to attend a Federal hearing on a writ of habeas corpus seeking, the release of the Hev. Fred Shuttlesworth and the Rev. J. S. Phifer. well, construction on the diop- ping center will begin about the first of 1963. He said the center wiU attempt to house as many of the uprooted merchants as possible. He expressed hope that the housing area will bb under con struction before the year is oul. f JOB UNTT DISAPPOINTS IfOHTH CAROLINA NAACP CHARLOTTE, N. C. — The 155 delegates attending the an nual meeting of the North Caro- ilna State Conference of KAACP Branches here this week voted unanimously to register ♦heir ‘‘disappointment and dis- (atiafaction” with the Presi-. dent’s Committee og’ Equal Employment Opportunity. ACLU MAKES APPEAL IN BEHALF OF ALA. NEGRO NEW YORK—The American Civil Liberties Union this week urged a federal appeals court to rule that a Negro was denied a fair and public trial because it was conducted in a racially segregated courthouse. “Segregation within the halls of justice mocks the judicial process and the entired trend of current Supreme Court opinion,” the civil liberties group asserted in a friend of the court brief on behalf of ; Willie Seals, Jr. “This is a I frontier question in the law,” the ACLU said. Seals, a Mobile County, Ala bnma, Negro, was convicted in 1058 by an all-white jury of raping a white women and was sentenced to die. •NCC SECRETARY ARRES’TED AT SOUTHERN DNIVEHSITY BATON ROUGE, LA. — Dion J)i»mond, a Field Secretary of the Student Nonviole'ht Co ordinating Committee, was ar rested here today when he step ped irom a taxi onto the campus of Southern University. SNCC Field Secretary Dia mond w«s arrested by Southern University Campus PollPempn Althoueh he had been Invited to thu campus by .SfndPnf Body president Murphv Jackson, he was charged with “trespassing ■nd disorderly conduct.” His bond was set at $4,000 00. DmMTNCHAM i^tnnnvT RF«T»ttH»VT TNTFrmATFT' PT(WMT'Nin'HA,M. AT,A. — Thp l)oHyi Houw* Bestaurnnt. which rn“n**(i on Jnnnarv 'n J»trmin4>h(»m MimiHpal A’^nort Hev. Wyatt Tee Walker, *xec«- TOPS fN QUALITY LOW IN PRICE! 57 Plym. 4-^ W93 57 Merc. 2-^ 895 57 Plym. 4J>r 895 57 Ford 4-Dr. 5 Plym. 4-Dr 695 55 Stud. Wmg. 595 54 Dodse 4*Dr. .... 495 14 Ford 4-Dr 395 53 DeSoto 4-Dr. ... 395 53 D«df • 4-Dr 325 53 Plym. 4-Dr 195 53 Dodgfl 4-Dr 325 52 Dodge 4-Dr H5 51St«d. 4-Dr 195 49 Chev. 2-Dr. . . 145 51 M«rc. 2-Dr. ! 195 University Motors, Inc. OPEN tlL 9 F.M. •OA W. Main St. Phon'i 6S1-8931 N. C. Dtaler No. 19M METHODISTS TO TRY TO INCREASE MEMBERSHIP NASHVILLE, TENN. — The Central (Negro) Jurisdiction of The Methodist Church will try to increase its church memt>er- shin by ten percent during a Bish(rp.s* Evangelistic Crusade in the lurlsdidion March 11-18. McmfMjrship of the Central Jurisdiction, which covers most of the United States, is now 3B7.340, according to the Rev. Dr. W. D.' Lrster. Nashville staff memb“r of the Methodist General Board of Evangelism. In addition, several thousand Negro Methodist are members of churches In other jurisdictions of the denomination. automobiles to the Ford Motor Co. line because they atiociAtf Ford with Ford Foundation philanthropies which have bette- fitcd Negroes. “One of the major feari of Btt>lt CUm, the companies today,” says Market Ushers boards. WW0 wM acHve in White Rock 9aptitt Church and the North Carolina Interdenonninational Uahers Association. He waa a mamber of the church’s Moore Trustee and -Appointed (Continued From Front Pago) place a retiring member of the board. He is believed to l)c the first Negro appointed of such a post in the state. Negro citizens of Orange County were generally elated over the selection of the young cducfltor. Commenting of the appoint ment, the NEWS OF ORANGE COUNTTY, said: “They bhe County and State Boards of Welfare) are to be con gratulated for their foresight Adviser Gibson, “is that if they go after the Negro market they will lose whie customers.” Gib son thinks that this is silly. 'Fven in the South there is cvidoncc that white people do no.t care what companies do to cultivate Negro business as long as it doesn’t interfere with their way of lifa Marketing a tooth paste is not the same as en- 'X>uraging a Negro to come to a fashionable hotel.” The sophistication of appeals to the Negro market Is increas ing, but still leaves much to be desired. Says Frank Seymour, general manager of Detroit's Ne gro raido station .WCHB: “Too many advertisers have failed to grapp a simple point: ask the Ne gro for his business with court- He was district supervisor of th|t State Ushers organization, a group in which he had held membership for a long number of xears. He was also a member of the American Legion. Noel saw service in France in the U. S. Army during World War 1. The deceased was born in Roxboro on Septemetor 16, 1897, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. * • • f f Bob Noel. He atteaded tlM irubHe schools of Roxboro and came to Durham in 1920. He was married shortly >after- wards to the late Miss Beatrice LaRuth Womack. He made'his home at 304 Piedmont avenue. Noel was a veteran em(>loyee of EUikes Cleaners. He is survived by one son, Charles B. Noel, Jr., of Durham; one daughter, Mrs. Margaret Noel Venters, of Waxahacia, Texas; one sister, Mrs. Maggie Coley, of Roxboro, and several other relatives. The family will be at the Charles B. Noel, Jr.''residence at 1607 Fayetteville St. during the Ijereavement. “Movie (Continued From Front Page) it lias reached on the issue at press time. The Youth Chapter of the NAACTP Monday jiight asked the City Council to defer action on its requests for integration of the Carolina Theater until- after a meeting of the Mayor’s Committee on Human Relations. The (Jommittee meeting was an nounced Monday afternoon by chairma^ Paul Hardin fw 4 p.m. Wednesday in City Hall. How ever, he declined to comment on what mi^t be diseuwed at meeting. ; Mayor E. J. Evans said' Mon day night the meeting was (Jtsign- ed to give all sides an op^tortu- nity to negotiate the theater prob lem. Youth council members las^ waek told the Ck>uncil th«t they were prepared to bring oh a law suit against the Council’s Comit- tee of the Whole if no sftisfae- tion was given within a reason able length of time. . Ralph Luker, spokesman fqr the NAACP group, appeared Before the committee and urged action and warned that continued in action would force a law suit. “The appointment of the csy and respect. Don’t talk principal of Cedar Grove school • - long a leader in his com- muniy - will serve very well as down to him and cut out the Aimos ‘n’ Andy bit.” Like many mT-keting Experts, however. a funnel tO' Negro citizens on Snymour believe^ that the pro- what is going on this realm” | gress the U. S. Negroes are mak- Webb is a rvative of Greens-ling toward economic and social boro, and received the B. S. and I equality will eventually make ■Master’s degrees from A. and ;n('cial appeals unnecessary. Me T. College there. j irerticts that wi^tiln 15 years —— I Negro radio stations will die oUt. “I guess”, says he wryly, “we’re going to fall victims of progresi.’ -Income (Continued From Front Page) Canada. The U. S. Negro popu-j iation, which now stands at 191 million, is increasing 57 per cent | faster than the rest of the na- j tion. I From Camel to Dodge, many big U. S. advertisers now. su-1 bstitute Negro models in their I ads for Bbony (cir. 700,000), the nation's leading Negro magazine. | According to Time, last year Ebony carried ads from 57 of N. J. CORE MEMBERS aRWrS‘TED IN CITY HALL SIT-INS FNGLBWOOD, N. J.—Eleven OOR'E members were arrested early this week after an all- niaht sit-’in at Englewood City Hall to protest de facto schoolj sei*regatlon. Bond was set at $10 but all refused to pav and thus remain ed In Jail. COBiE organlied « picket line outside the ctiV Jail in support of those arrested, i ('’bntinued From Front Paga) Miss Bonner ssid the chief and another patrolman started to pull him away by the arms when Frink a^ked what was wron|. She said the chief then re plied he was arresting Frink for “illegaf picketing.” According to the girl, as Frin'f w.is a'bout to protest tlie the nation’s top 100 advertisers.! char"" chl^f s'"''»hed him In Another barometer; 20 years the mouth with his fist, and ago, only three U. S. radio sta- hauled him off to the police car. •ions offered programs tailored , she continued: to Negroes. Now more than 600 Frink dropped his hat as they do. I were about to get into the car .. 1 » ! and apparenly reached for U. Approaching the Marke | Experts dispute how best to ■ approach the Negro market Professor Henry A. Bullock of ifC- -ing him into the car, and drove (Continued From Front Page) ^cc IflM to deletmlhe^ •vbiti* opposition to Supreme Court iecisinns h»d “snuffed out newly- won ’’a'ns of Ne?roes in the po lice field,” or whether Negro po- 'icomen had “become a perma- ’’.pnt and increasingly important oart of the southern s;cne.” Rudwick found that NeRro offi- 'ors still were subject to discrim nation in that many agencies for- •jade their men to arrest white of- '’enUcrs;—failed to award credit "I'l prnmotion on a scale equal ■vith white officers; and usually ^ssicned Necro officers “oxclu- ively to Negro neighborhopds.” ’Texas Southern U. argues pHnk has been cl«irge4: with that Negroes resent as conde-1 scending the use of Negro models ^ andspecially adapted radio pro-, grams. He advocates a broad ap-, ^ ^^50 bJ>nd. His case ed to be tried in W peal that sells to both whites and Negroes, such as Revlon’s use of Negro Singer Harry Belafonte on TV. But Harlem’s D. Parke Gii>- son, an Independent marketing adviser, argues that “the Negro not lofrfi at epeeiel 4#»rket- Ing as a form of segregation, but rather as recognition.” A- greeing with this view is Harvey C. Russell, first Negro vice presi dent appointed by the Pepsi Cola Co. Russell has encouraged Pepsi to use Negro models in ads and placards, employs 16 Neero field representatives - in cluding Cleveland Brown Foot ball Hero Jimmy Brown - in the company’s regional offices. Purchasing Patterns Negro buying ha'bits differ demonstrably from those of whites. Time .says. Because they nre barred from eating out in many places, notes Ebony, Publisher John H. Johnson, Ne groes spend more per capita for eating and drinking at home than ■’whites do. In search of ways to achieve status, Negroes are very conscious of quality and brand names, often pay more than whites on the same income level for their shoes and cloth ing. One Nogro marketing specialist insists that his people Perry said that if all goes have shifted away from other "Renewal (Continued From Front Page) ing for everyone, and we will pay the moving expenses,” said Perry. “We expect there will be chaos for a while, but we plan to keep everything under con trol,’’ he added. Court next week. ^ Shortly after Saturday Jlf^bt’s incident, the plcketers reiwrtfed that whites grouped up before he theater box office begAn shouting, “go home nigger," and t^hrowing small, articles a.^ Fearing mob violence, they a- bandoned thie picket lines. On Sunday,. they witM the Justice Department for an In vestigation and early this wetek requested protection ftotti Governor Sanford. On Wednesday, Edwards, t4-. ported that FBI agents Chrl«s Miller, of Elizabeth Cltyi iitid Robert Moretta, of Rocky Mount, arrived to Investigate possibili' ties of Edenton police yiolating- criminal statutes in Saturday’s arrest. They questioned Frink at length. 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