32 Ministers Are
In Times Con
AROUSED
UNSOLVED
f
VOLUME 40 No. 11
yoting Starts
^rday For
Ministers Prize
;^tlp ta Wcdnc8d«y ■ non a total
82 ministers had been nominat
edSecond Annual Minis-
Sjrt Vacation Popularity Contes*
f;th« Carolina Times which gets
i^er^way this week. With nomi-
t^ns.Continuing to comc in by
mail. and being brought to the
fmns oKice the number, is ex-
^Wd.; 16 reach 40 before the
rcgulaf vote coupon
>jbv Jinnus Vote cpupon are
Aifljl riljl'ied in thi; week's issue
o( the Carolina Times and will be'
)iubli.‘ih(^ each week for the con-
ytnipnce. of those wishing to vote
r, thcir-*>/avorite' minister.
bifi^^Graitd ,PriM- is a free
Vound' t^^ to the Holy
iRdlrjriite.j (CCQnd prize it k free
rfiund tfip to Bermuda
pS'ltte thijrd price is a free air-
pl*»ip round trip to New York.
Twenty per ccnt commission will
be paid non-price winners.
CQnte.stant rill receive 5,-
OOO'Hiiinis as scoit as he is nomi
^atvd: FUt^thn* (Credit will be giT;n
indiratetf on th^ announcement
rlnt; iA this and etch i«suc df'
le earotinl'^iftes fpr e»ch resu )
lar TOte and etch Bonus vote cast
frf. t^ehalf of a ■ Minister.
•Those nominated «o to Wednes-*
dhr noon are as foHo«*'s;
j Fdtlowing is a list of the nomi
nees «nt6red as of this week:
;ev. Ja«. Wertz
yCh*irlotte 5,000
Irfv. R, L. fi]u:lk.S _
Dnrham 5,00o
Bfe't'. Z. I). }Iarris
'?)»r'!i]^fH ......1.,.; 5,000
Iftv. J'H. Jones
V nsnvllle, Va. 5,000
Kiv. H. J, Cobb .
'' Burlington 5,000
R*v. H. M. Kidd
• ' Gary.sburg 5,000 j
Rev. Clyde Johnson
; Weldon , 5,000!
Rev. G. A. Gilchrist
- Littleton 5,000
Kev. F. L. Bullock"
Enfield 5,000
Rev. D. P. Lewis
Henderson 5,000
Rev. W. L. Jones
Greenville 5,000
Rev. C. L. Faison
Henderson 5,000
Rev. R. L. McKnight
Henderson 5,000
Rev. O. B. Burson
' Henderson : 5,000
Rev. J. R. Manley
■ Chapel Hill 5,000
Rev. K. O. P. Goodwin
■ Winston-Salem 5,000
Rev. K. L. Brodie
Louisburg 5,000
Rev. J. M. Mangum
Frnnklinton 5,000
Jam.es Burchett
^ Rl«Jg«way , 5,000'
Rev. ijfohn R. Dungce
Hendersim . •.>.•> • 5,000
Rev. S. O. Dunston
^ i-fluisbnrg 5,000
Rev. L. T. Daye
. Mebane 5,000
Jlev. A. D. Moseley
-Durtiam 5,000
Rev. W. T. Bigelow
• Durham 5,000
■R«v. j. H. Thomas
Efast Orange, N. J 5,000
Kev. Walter Yarbrough
Fvanklinton 5,000
Hev. W. J. Hall
. Brooklyn, N. Y 5,000
Hev. I. W. Choatp's
• Dui'ham 5,000
Bishop M, T. MUchell
Baltimore, Md. 5,000
)^v. A. W. Lawson
('Durham ’ 5,000
itev'. J. A. Brown
Henderson 5,000
Bev. .T. H. Murphy
Henderson 5,000
DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1963
RETURN REQUESTED
PRICE: IS Centf
Death Finislies
Ibr Victim of
Agony
Flames
RAPES
Failure of Nice
To Catch Man
Remains Mystery
CIUPEL HILL — Death ended
alm^ a month of agony for young
Davii Craig who was burned from
his waist up in a fire 'A^hich all
bitt destroyed his family's home
near hpre a month ago.
Craig, 22, died in Memo-rial hos
pital on Monday after having spent
nearly throe weeks suffering from
injuries received in the fire.
Doctors reportedly amputated
his hands last week in a last ditch
effort to ,save the youth’s life.
But he died Monday.
Funeral services were schedul
ed to be held on Saturday at the
Mt Zion Baptist Church in Chat-
I ham County.
The youth is survived by his
moth^r and approximately 17 sis
ters and brothers.
^
Boycott List
]Sarrows to 7
(ms Chamber
YOUNG hero — Mrs. Mary
Pool* Chcsinuf, i*or«l«ry to
ikt director of «tud«nt nurses
at Lincoln hocpltal. smiles «i
h«r ton young Daryl Wayne
playMlj |»oint* toy pistol at
phclofraph«T aitfr hit motliar
•xplataad to tlM Tlj^ES how
h«r ion calli^ her on ilit taU-
phona to raporf an amargency
at tha homa la»t weak. Whan
tha ..Chastnut's baby sittai,
Mrs. Cora Edtrardi, suffered
hallway of the Chestnut home
on Fsyelterille road last
Thursday, young Daryl, sens
ing something was a.miss, went
to the telephone, dialed "0"
a n.d ^oM the long distance
operator that "Miss Core" was
..a?
up. and that he wanted to
■peak to his mother. The
operator. Miss Louise Knowles
who works at the Southern
Bell long disfttnce facility in
on Tuesday means that North
Carolina will retain its gas
st*r was trying to report a : chamber at Central Prison for
serious e mergency, got his j at least two years more,
mother's name and the tact j The committee voted against
that she worked at Lincoln !' a bill to replace the death pen-
hospitid from the boy and fi ally with life imprisonment,
connected'him with her at J A measure to abolish capital
hoipital>^ When Mrs. ChastnutW punishment was defeated i n
■TMtmS- Ja*na»i .sho «{ter Ja debate on -the
ton in the house, Mrs. Ed- i house floor. It seems lik,pltr' tliV
-wards on tha floor dead from
a heart attack, and her seyen
. The list of Durham stores
under boycott by the Durham
Youth MAACP and CORE nar
rowed to seven this week as the
two organizations continued a
campaign for wider employment
opportunities in the stores.
According to Isaac Reynolds,
of CORE stores remaining on
the boycott list as oi mid-week
were as follows:
Sears, Thom McAn. Roscoe-
Griffin, Robbins, Walgreen’s, ]
Beverly Shop, and the Royal
Clothing Co.
Removed from last week's
listings were Belks, Kress, Ellis-1
Stone-Thalhimers, the Shoe Box
and the Rialto theater.
o
Reynolds said that Belks, j
RALEIGH — The vote by the | Kress and ElUs-Stone-Thalhim-;
House Judiciary Committee 1 ^ ers had all agreed to cooperate ^
with CORE and NiAACP ij» em
ployment of Negroes in non
traditiottal jobs in the stores.
However, Reynolds would not
say why the Rialto theater had
been removed from the list. He
as
N. C. Penalty
McCOY
Funeral Held
For Victim of j
Durham Shooting
Durham'# Kegro community
expressed varying reaction* to
reports of a wave of rape* com
mitted against white w*men by
a suspecied Negro min.
The reactions have ranged all
the way from outrage to
skeptical disbelief.
Perhaps tlie moat common re
action has been one frust
rated bewilderment.
Durham Negroes are frankly
puzzled over the failurf of po
lice/to come up with any sub-
^gtfimal clues in the case. At the
I same tinte they are becoming
j more frustrated daily as the
\ ' “Ncgr)” label is fastened more
'5^ securely to phantom suspcct
White he remains at large and
his real identity goes undis
closed.
The majority opinion in the
Nfegro community would wel
come the capture of the suspect
s u that the racial onus could
be removed from the public
mind.
With each new unsolved case,
the daily press and other com
munications media are imijeiW-
ing the image of a Negro rapist
in the mind of the conununity,
Durham Negroes feel.
According to reports, the
rapist ha* struck twice in the
past ten days, the latest being
a bold, daylight assault on the
wiie of a Duke intern at her
home.
The mood of the white com
munity was not so easy to as
sess by the TIMES, but it is
known that the latest series of
reput »■ lias aroused considet-
able anger among whites.
There were reijorts that some
a haart attack and fall in the | Durham, raalised the young-
months old drughter, Valerie,
asleep in her bed.
Others Spent More—
Than Adam Powell
Former Rep. Carroll D. Kearns
of Pennsylvania and a memb’- of
the House Education and Labor
Committee reported expenses of
more than $2,000 for a trip t irougli
seven European countries. This
trip was made last year after
Kearns failed to win nomination.
The reported expenses of, ■ i,
Kearns were revealed during the
controversial discussion on the i ®
spending of $1,543 by Rep. Adam
Powell of New York on a £uro-
pcFrnrip made la.st summer with
two womf'n staff aides.
Other facts revealed during t..e
controversy were that most com
mittee members and staff aides
list only expenditures under the
See POWELL, 6 A
Senate committee. It w^Juld
have removed the possibility of
parole in all capital cases, in-
pliirting l^r.st offense.
See BOYCOTT. 6-A
Don't Adjust to Jim Crow Editor
Of Louisville Paper Tel’s Students
Frank L. Stanley, Sr., editor- may be insanity, or the loss of
of the Louisville normal mind, and yet it may
urged North be an Inspiration, the loss of
Carolina College students to self in ardent love for others,'
“become maladjusted" with re- “he told an overflow audience,
spect to problems of human so- address was the feature
ciety as he spoke at the col- college’s assembly in ob-
lege s weekly forum Monday, servance of National Negro
“I want you to acquire some Newspaper Week, commemorat-
o£ that ‘Magnificent Madness' jng the 136th anniversary o f
that Robert Patterson writes the Negro press,
about when he says: 'Madness See EDITOR, 6-A
Measure to Make A Crime of
Illegitimacy Fails to Pass in State:
many of the latest attacks have
See RAPES, 6-A
WOMAN ATTY. TO
SPEJAK AT SAINT
JOSEPH’S SUNDAY
EDITOR STANLEY AT NCC—
Frank U. Stanlay, (leeond from'
Itft). edItor-puWisner of th*
Leuitvllla (Ky.) Dafandtr, r»-
laxti with a North CtroHn* Col-
'lag* group fellewing • Juneh-
•on on tha eimpvw Monday,
March 11. Earllar ha dellvarad
th«-forum aisembly addra** In
obtarvanca of National Nagro
Newspaper Week.
From f*ft to right: MIm Owy-
tanni Horten, editor of NCC's
Ctmpu* Echo; Stanley; Mill Jean
K. Norrit, advitar to tha Echo;
and James L. Walker, president
of lha NCC studaiit gsvarnment.
promised an explanation later.
The theater, which has never
..admitted Negroes since it was
rw npimad as an “art house"- was |
the-targets! degionstrations byj Funeral services were held in
proposal will be brought for- [ CORE and NAACP during boj^- Durham on Monday for a 39 ye^
ward again in 1965. | cott. | old man who was shot to deatli whites had talked openly of
Sen. Charles Strong, Guilford I The campaign against the late last week. , orex"^ut\^g * he*” sis^c\”w^^^
Republican and a minister, spon- stores seek to have the stores em He was Lacy Mills McCoy,
sored the measure killed by the ploy Negroes in non-traditional 809 Glenn St McCoy died in ^
positions and provide them stantly on last Friday mommg uurnam ponce nave ^
with opportunities , for . being from a .22 calibre bullet wound come the target of expres^
promoted the same a's -'other in hfjs chest. ' and, inexpressed complaints ^
TiX'o men were arrested by many whitei rebiding in the
Durhom police thortly aftar tile Duke VA hospital area^ where
shooting, one charged with the
killing and the second held as
a material witness.
Police identified the man
charged with the slaying as
I James Henry Saviod, 27, of 1205
Scout Drive. Savoid was book-
RALEIGH — Sen. Lunsford ed for first degree murder.
Crew’s plan making it a misde- At the same time, Shelton
meanor to give birth to, or fa- Pettiway, 16, of 210 West Enter-
ther, two or more illegitimate prise St., was held as a mater-
children was defeated by a vote jai witness.
26-18. I Police quoted Savoid as say-
Opponents generally agreed in^’ that he fired the rifle, but
that ways should be sought to only to "scare” McCoy.
The traditional Women's Day ,.educe illegitimacy and rejected i The shooting took place at
will be celebrated at St. Jo- the Halifax lawyer's plan. * approximately 10:50 p, m. on
seph’s AME Church March 17,' The vocal opposition was led Thursday, March 7 in front of
with two services'- I Ijy Sens. Richard G. Long of the home of Shirley Adams, 20,
The guest speaker will be Person and Perry W. Martin of 308 East Enterprise Street,
Attorney Juanita Jackson Mit- Northhampton, who criticized who told police McCoy had
chell of Baltimore, Maryland, the bill on legal and moral, come to her home earlier to
Her subject for 11:00 a. m. grounds. I drive her and another woman
Worship Service will be, “No “A bad mother or a bad somewhere.
Gaints in the Land.” Music will father is better than no mother | ^he Rev. C. R. White, pastor
be furnished by the Senior or father at all.” Sen. Martin of Russell Memorial, officiated
Choir of St. Joseph's under the argured. “An ill birth does not at the funeral services held for
direction of Joseph T. Mitchell necessarily mean an ill destiny. McCoy on Monday afternoon
with Mrs. Minnie W. Gilmer at This is a social and ecomonic
the organ. Mrs. D. A. Johnston problem, not a penal problem,
will preside. i “ ' ,
A special program has been Mother of Prominent
prepared for a 4:00 p. m. Forum I
Hour, again featuring Attorney | Durham Physician
Mitchell. Music for this pro
gram will be directed by Miss Duried in Virginia
Afrika Hayes. Music Instructor, « . ,
North Carolina College. Mrs. Pocahontas H, Randolph, Hillside High School s stu- other highly celebrated athletes
Attorney Mitchell will dis- 79, passed at Lincoln Hospital at; dent body and faculty were j to appear on the program,
cuss registration voting and noon on March 8, after a short; treated to a most unique and | Long, a graduate of Durham
segregation in schools and pu- illness j interesting program Monday, High Schooi. is the secood
blip piacss 1 A lifetime resident of Richmond, morning when four representa-, four-letter man to complete UNO
A native of Arkansas, At- V-rqinia. she was living at the | tlves of the Fellowship of Chria-
torney Mitchell was educated in home of her son and daughter-in ^ tian Athletes made appearances
the public schools of Baltimore; law. Dr. and Mrs. Robert P. Ran- and bnef talks during a special
University of Pennsylvania, (A. dolph. Jr. of 305 Pekoe Avenue | assembly. .
B.); (M. A.) University of Penn- at the time of her death, having: Former University of North
sylvania; Bachtlor of Law. Uni- corn.c to the city during the latter i Carolina Coach, and former
versity of Maryland Law part of the year. Coach of the Philadelphia Wa^
School, 1848 and admitted to Other survivors are: two sons, riors (professional l>asketball Karpal. wrestling coach at tht*
practice law in the Court of Ap- Walter W. Randolph and Detcctive team) Frank McGuire was the j United States Com! Guard
peals for the Fourth Circuit and .S-rscant Frank S. Randolph, both | star attraction of Christian | Academy of New Haven, Conn,
the U. S. Supreme Court. of Richmond. Virginia; one daugh- j Athletes who visited the local Hillside publicity chairman
A Militant champion of civil ter. Mrs. Roberta R. DcMar of j school. Undsoy A. Merritt. pr«*id«l
rights, in 1942 she directed a New York City, and several grand- i Albert Long, a Durhamlte, I during the special aasrmbly,
march of 2,000 citizens which children. and former great footbaB. and remarks were miHk> bjr
resulted in the appointment of The funeral was hold on Mon-1 basketball, track, and baseball Hillside Athletic Dttrctw Ru»-
the Governor's Interracial Com dsv, Mwh II at the Ebenezer player at UNC. 'spearheide'j the sell Bluat, aad Prineipat J H
See WOMAN, 6-A | Baptist Chun-h in Rirhmond. ! pmsraxn and arrang* H for the LticUo.
See FUNERAL, 6-A
T. V. MANGUM, prominent citi-
i«n and husioMsman, is a candi*
data for City Council Ward*
No. 2 in StatMvillo. Cijctions
«fill b« hold an March 23.
Hillside High School Students,
Faculty Hear Christian Athletes
since
Other great atWetes who
took active parts on the pro
gram included: Don Shenick,
defensive linebacker with the
Baltimore Colts (professional)
footlMiU club and Coach Paul