Newspapers / The Future Outlook (Greensboro, … / Nov. 14, 1959, edition 1 / Page 1
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Keep Up With The Tit Jfu VOL. 19, NO. 1 - 9 AKAs To The Beta Iota Omega Chapter and Alpha Phi Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority will be host to the Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference which will be held at the Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina in Greensboro April 22-24. 1960. Soror Leah K. Frazier, Region'al Director met with the chapter Ernest Brown Sen Years In Prison F Earnest .David Brown was sentenced to 26 to 30 years in Central Prison Thursday after an all white jury found him guilty of the second degree murder of . , his girl friend. Attorney for Ernest David, 19, said he would not enter an appeal to the State Supreme Court.' The Guilford Superior Court jury of four women and eight men deliberated an hour and a half before returning with their verdict of second degree murder. Thev hawp 4 Via bricklayer's helper guilty of first degree murder, guilty of first degree murder with a recommendation for mercy, guilty of second degree murder or innocent. First Degree Charge Brown had been charged with first degree murder in the brutal beating and eventual death of Fannie Slade Baity on Oct. 4 at the apartment they shared at 113-B Nocho St. Solicitor Horace R. Kornegay said Brown had capped a "history of vicious beating of females" with the Baity woman's death. Two other women told Judge L. Richardson Prever Thursday that beatings given them by Brown when he was drinking caused them to be hospitalized. Elizabeth Brooks said he stomped her and kicked her so brutally about the lower part of her abdomen that she was hospitalized two weeks. Pauline Walls said he once beat her with a shoe, scarring her lip and eve. and again with a wine bottle, scarring her other eve. Fatally Beaten Brown beat the Baity woman with a metal Are shovel which broke during the beating. He de" nied jabbing her face and head with the broken handle, but he was unable to explain how the deep cuts and holes resulted from a beating with the flat side of the shovel. rtcs! | tun GREENSBORO, NOR vU' .. ...fi!" ,-/A .<& | Host Mid-Atlantic recently to formulate plans for | the annual event. Pictured above is the Steering Committee which is composed of the Basili of Beta Iota Omega and Alpha Phi Chapters and the chairmen of all Regional Conference Committees. Reading from left to right: Sorors, Loretta F. McKee, Couritenced To 26-30 or Murder V His attorney argued to the court that Brown had no trouble until he was drinking and that he was not as morally responsible as a person with a better background and chance in life. Judge Preyer said that anyone in his right mind knows it is wrong to take a Are shovel and beat someone to death. "He may be a good fellow when he is sober, but he is a danger to society when he is drinking," Judge Preyer said. The maximum penalty for second degree murder is 30 years. Second degree murder is unlawful killing with malice but without premeditation. Thirty-eight A & T. Seniors Are Doing Practice Teaching Thirty-eight seniors at A&T College who plan to enter the teaching profession are now getting on the field experience under the college's Practice Teaching Program. S. J. Shaw, director of student tcen-iung, said mis wees tnax the students are pursuing the program in 16 different communities in the State . The assignments in the Greensboro public schools include: Clarice Sherard, Ester Troy and Alfred Keys, Lincoln Jr. High; Walter Wade, Claude Pelzer and Nathaniel Wiggins, Dudley High; James Snipes, Warren Pinkett, Alice Sessoms, Milton Baker and James Poster, | J. C. Price Jr. High; Gloria Scales, Caldwell Elementary; Virginia Harper, Jonesboro Elementary; and Myrtle Brown, Charles H. Moore Elementary. Alphonzo Williams has been assigned to Immanuel Lutheran College. Other assignments include: Franklin Spencer, Thomas (Continued on Page 4) ?THE? L? rH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, I \? / Ir- ^1 iff 11 5 : Regional Confer tesy; Geneva Holmes, Housing; Anita Rivers, Social; Dorothy Jones, Breakfast; Ann Chavis, Registration; Susie Taylor, Program; Lualgia P. Ferguson, Chairman, Steering Committee; Leah. K. Frazier, Director, MidAtlantic Region; Lucille Piggott, Basileus, Beta Iota Omega Chapter; Carolyn Humphrey, Harris-White Wedding Date 'Announced ( Ht j m 7'. ' ' & ail MISS GWENDOLYN HARRIS I Mr..and Mrs. Clyde J. Harris of Greensboro, N. C., announce the engagement of their daughter, Gwendolyn, and First Lieutenant John H. White, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter White, also of Greensboro. The wedding is planned for December 26 at Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Catholic Church. The bride-elect is a graduate of Bennett College and is employed as an instructor at the James B. Dudley High School here. Miss Harris formerly taught in the public schools of Newport News, Virginia. Lt. White, a graduate of the Agricultural and Technical College of Greensboro (A&T) is now serving as an electronics instructor with the United States Air Force in Waco, Texas. ^hoeSA?FE sidefoVogt^WN side! R< utl NOVEMBER 14,1959 snce Here 'nn'f ii'imh1 ' Tirr inii Finance; Margaret Phillip Publicity and Printing; Ic aeiiKiiis, wuricsnops, lYiargan Alston, Basileus, Alpha PI Chapter. Chairmen of committees n< shown are: Sorors Eva Mille Exhibit; Ann Davis, Luncheoi Julia Ruth Richmond, Musi Sallie Jones, Kits and Souvenir Final Rites Hejd Mrs. Elizabeth I Funeral services for Mrs. Eli abeth Jane Marks were hel Wednesday November 4, at 2:C p. m. at the Hood Chapel AM Zion Church with the Rev. R. J steadman, Pastor officiating Near the cross was sung b the choir and resolutions wet given by Mrs. Annie L. Fry Eulogy was given by Rev. R. I Steadman. The interment ws held in the Green Grove Cent tery. Mrs. Elizabeth Jane Mark the daughter "of the late Mac and Fannie Vestal was born i Moore County, August 15, 18' and departed this life on Satu day, October 31, 1959 in the L< County Hospital, Sanford, N. C She joined the Hood Chap AME Zion church at an ear age and was a faithful memb until the end although she w unable to attend regular in r cent years due to her health. She was married to Mr. Jam Everett Marks April 22, 18 and to this union were born children, one who preceded h in death. She was a devoted m ther and was kind to all wl she came in contact with. She leaves to mourn their loi 10 chlidren Mrs. Cora Glad J. SAUNDERS 1 SPEARS AT BI In the current cold war t tween democracy and comm nism, democracy has the great potential to survive, J. Saunde ouro t-/"1 -ininninrt nii4V* iv^uuiug, awa?u-** uiuuig auui and professor of creative litei ture at Hampton Institute c clared in an address at Benni College last week. Mr. Redding, at present leave on a Guggenheim fello ship, spoke on "Neutrality a Neutralism" at the Frids morning chapel assembly. ad The Future Outlook I ooft PRICE 5 CENTS Baha'u'llah Observe 142nd Anniversary The 142nd anniversary of the birth of Baha'u'llah, founder of the Baha'i Faith, was observed on Wednesday evening, Nov. 11 by the Baha'is in Greensboro and throughout the world, according to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States. H Born in 1817, in Teheran, of j one of Persia's most illustrious Bj and wealthy families, Baha'u'|g l^ah, a descendent of Abraham H and Jesse, during 40 years of I exile and imprisonment, exI pounded a gospel which interI preted the spiritual meaning of I the ancient scriptures, renewed the reality of faith in God and established as the foundation of human society the principle of the oneness of mankind. XT Jr. A xnnwiUltr igf ijio av? v v.u i, nic naocuiuij la states, fulfills the prophecies of et the Old and New Testaments as hi well as those of the Qur'an regarding the coining of the Proot mised One in the end of time, r, on the Day of Judgment. His 11; ami is not to destroy but to fulc; fill the Revelations of the past, s. (Continued on Page 4) I For ; nam) jh<: '1 wr e, {. 5Bt ' i. iBSI^^BF- - <81 I 7Q ^ ' ~*VjS -e *r ~>.< y -. ^v^Bp^v. 'y T^ ; "^5 I 3S MRS. ELIZABETH MARKS eCross, Everett M. Marks, Archie es D. Marks, John A. Marks, Miss 98 Fannie Louise Marks, James 11 Marks, Miss Ann Elizabeth er Marks, Mrs. Maggie L. Lynn, ,0- Mrs. Minnie Martin and Luther tio W. Marks, 23 grand-children and 21 great-grand children, 1 ss; brother, Ivory Vestal and many jr& I lCldUVLS rtliu illCWUO, 1EDDING SNNETT >e- He defined neutrality as "a iU- political posture or policy haver ing juridical status" and defines ed neutralism as "an intellectual .or attitude." An equation of the a- two, he pointed out, is highly le- questionable, but added "yet it ett is an equation which westerners are prone to make." on "Neutralism," said Mr. Reddw ing, "Is a state of mind which ? nd permits the neutralist to avoid i y making moral choices. It is the (Continued on Page 4) ~~
The Future Outlook (Greensboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1959, edition 1
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