TWO FINED IN BALLOT DENIAL ‘I " ' Jifj?: ; > * < '&sM %* * - i i v Vy • • ONE MORE INKI I.V BEAR— TWs Bear cob was -ss hard for Shaw University's Homrconiins Qacen to handle as ;h< Shaw Blear eleven proved for Morris Brown, The title bruin, who wax &*%s& ' > ip3Sw®'' fttfrin ■ : IK' ■*~‘ : >- ; •', .^|r'- ts^*r"'i>*'^:. - \t r u ' *** ' FINE BRUNSWICK REGISTRARS 525 IN PRIMARY CASE Wilmington—Fine -of jJN . .irh were levied against two Bi •..•*•- wick County registrars in fed eral Court at Wilmington Tur. day after the {wo had be t n charged with depriving Ncg’ sidents of the county v <;, e to register in the Spring primar ies. Similar charge.'. *gair.;-t »•* other registrars in the ;.anv county were dismissed. The two who were fined y Judge Don Gilliarn were Rum. D. .Holden of Supply and Milton Curtis Murrell of Bolivia. The two against whom the chart;'. s were dismisesd were Miss- Annie Nelle Ful-ford of Supply and Dougins H. Hawes of Bolivia In fining the two who wen' adjudged guilty Jude/- Gilliam expressed the -belief that they had shown no “intent of violating flic i Continued on back page) RUMOR DR. Hf V II! READY TO RESIGN PALESTINE POST PARIS—(ANP)—Person ■■ close to the situation say that Di. Ralph Bundle had been on the point of resigning if the security council of United Nations ad journed without acting to reduce peace in the Palestine debacle H* was said to have written a note to one delegate sayv? ' this is the end of the truce.” Or. Bunche is reported to have felt strongly that unless th,j coun cil backed up his demand with .« strong resolution, the situation -n Palestine would explode again in to a genera! wai Sever*.! Jewish ’leaders in tV United Stales have eritieired Dr Bundle for submitting and .stand ing by the report of the hie Count Bernadette who was assi rated by persons as vet uneap tutrod and vajounishpd. Dr. Bunche blamed the Israeli for failing to give adequate pro tection to the miss ton and be cause of this, ho was severely criticised bv American Jewish on back page'? Similar dubhed 'Sh:i“tv Rr,«r, " was branch to the Jlntw<’r»ming <.<■!r braf««M) I■' i»r DeiiOts lltoii b Shan a.l.!inn>u.s and proißinmi physician of .Vwport. Tenn Hold in 5 him ■> . bo\l. fHo% 1 :tn jtr from SHAW M UMNI ROVIIT) jSo \lnmn! King «>id Queen -I Shan I'ntrrrvKy'f He roe com in; Celebration received congratula tions above from President Ro 10-r*. p, ttanirl of bha« and Its lie A I'nrlongc, President of the Now York Shaw Dub I hi-- scene was a part of half-time activi ies at the shaw-Morris I'rmtn gam< front left *o iigb* arc, Mr. Itir longc, President Panic!, Miss Gwendolyn I.igon. Alumni Quern prof. I". A Marriof*. Principal o* Garner Scht-oi. 'tomn• King; an?! Mrv A. Atm.rnvtg. att'llflanl THURMAIS M WS INVJTIAG HA SHE NEW YORK : ANP ) Gov. J, Strom Thurmond tA South Carolina, who is running for the presidency on the Dixie crat ticket, denied here last week that he had invited Gov. William H. Hastio of the Virgin Islands to visit him. In denying; the invitation, which was published .in daily last week under the by line of Ted posta.n. Negro writer for the New York Post, the Dixiecrat's top candidate said: "! did not gro. It is news to me." know Gev. Hasbe was n N**- His denial, by- telephone fttc.tn Columbia, S. C.. added. "I wouidn, not have written gro. Os course, it would have him if I knew he was a Nc been .ndiculous to have in vited him." The governor further added that he had no personal knowledge k’l .having sent out a letter tout that his office sent irsty letters out in viting governors to visit him at the executive mansion, 1 1Votimssivc Parly In 25 Radio Broadcasts i DURHAM The Progressiva Party has taken to the air foi the i final week of campaign activity and j has siros ?o radio broadcasts scheu j ulerl throughout, the state, Miss ! Price, party chairman and camti j dale for Goverm», announced here | Sunday. In addition, Henry Wallace, pro i gressive Prrfvidontial candidate 1 will give addresses over national ! network stations almost every i Cootianed oh page eight !r with the de ’ vs! '’micot. p’-Ogrr ; ,j and history ;t*{ N.ijhvillc. It ia caller! the mot.heu church" ■of Ne-'ro B■ i ,*s in this aecti>n, bocau:--’ it wa?> in 1848 that 500 N, c-. in-mbers of the Bap* j test CiiHrth (white) wi* vlxvv bv ! nnjtu:-i! ■ l •mu and establish td the l !'■ jitis* Chu.iii 1 - ored) <>t» Pearl near Walnut S‘„ l now known as 10th Avenue north, i with the Rev Nelson G. Merry las the first pastor. 'Those days even ms now. were i days of great, issues and problems. The newly established Negro :church beine the fust in this seo j tion to fake .such action natural , I.v fi• -’-d the imagination and en (O-ntmued on back page) lil SIM SS SCHOOL CELEBKATFS 6TH ■WMVERSARV The .- ixtii Founder's Day eelebra ] lion of Payne'.- Business and Secrc i tarial School wn - held at the Blood | «•? rfh Street. YMCA with a lunch i eon October u; a; ?, o'clock. Cues* ! sp-ckiT tor iho '.(a i-jion was E. L ■ Raiford, - xccit.ivi -ccrctary of the ! YMCA- Raleigh N C j Payne',:- B ! ..«*ii:ess and Secretarial School was founder) October 18 |IP4? by Mrs Sad ye J. Swain arid • has grown steadily ever since This j years' enrollment represent.s tee ! lergest in the history of the school : Gradual?-: are located throughout the United States, serving in many ’ joffic-’. and l-u -ti'esses of various ; j kinds Many who could not return •: to the school for the celebration s :scm letters expressing felicitations - i Several special projects pertain ■ ing to the school's development pro gram were outlined. Most notable • I was th? library development plan. ! Several books have already been 1 ! received at the school and the li fjbraiy through contributions of in tComintied on back page) PLAN PROTEST 9 •‘m.lHa H 111 %& I tbs %0 i in, J,..y: "I!"!!, 1 !'1 . jHgaaaaaßMH THE CAROLINIAN ’ . . > . . , . ■ , ! . ~ 16 Page* VOLDME XXVIII KALEIGIi, NORTH CAROLINA WEEK ENDING SATUKiLAA . Qf’TOKtiK at), lAIB _____ NO. 17 NURSE GROUP DROPS BARS PICK NEW HAMPTON HEAD N, C. NURSES ADOPT MOTION TO ADMIT RACE ! W>lming’ton The North Caro- j Una State Nurses Association : voted to open its membership to qualified Negro nurses in the State at the Forty-sixth Annua! Convention of the organization held last week in Wilmington. Following a lengthy discuss* vi a /notion to take the step w * j placed before the body by its j President, Miss Kdna L, lieinze:- Hng of Winston-Salem, and was j passed by a vote of 52-22, The action of the N C Nurses j organization is in line with sim ilar steps taken by other state : groups in th: past and is in l keeping with the policy of the 1 American Nurses A, - • itnn The providing of eligibility for ; ' Negro nur ;es marks formal a.;- • 1 ion upon a request made by the • . North Carolina Association of R< | • gistered Nurses, Ine.. who voted : last June to request membership: I in the state and national nurse.- ' j organizations. The charter of the North Caro- 1 I lina State Nurses Association was j • amended last year to make pes l sible the admission of Negroes to membership. As a result of the action of the * ; body the number of slate nurses j i associations which bar Negroes j j from membership has been re- j : duced to, eight, REPORT MEETING SLATED FORT BY CREST CROUP • The second report, meeting in | i the Community Chest Campaign j : which began on Monday will be j I held at the Blood worth Street. : YMCA on Thursdav night, Oct > ' ! her 28, i The final report meeting is i ' scheduled for Monday night, Nov. 1 jl at 8:00 p in, when ail,units are i 1 expected to reach their goals, j W, H. Trentman. general cam- ; ipaign chairman told workers a* j | the beginning of the drive that! ; the agencies of the Chest are de-1 i serving of the support of every-j jon ip Wake County and urged; i all workers to rail on each and i ! every citizen in order to reach ! ! the quota. Agencies of the chest include: I | Boy Scouts. .Child Guidance ; Clinic, Community Council, Farm j | Commission. Girl Scouts. Salve- ' ily Service Society, Interracial; j lion Army, Tuttle Community! ! Center, Bloodworth Street YMCA j ’ and the YWCA. j A partial list of campaign work- j i ers and their units Is as follows: J | Business firms: A E. Brown, * ! Captain: J. A. Mann. A. J. Tor- ] Iner, Mrs. Annie Currie, L. H Ro- j i berts, Zack Ellis, Ross Fowler, j ;J. I. Stredwick. E, Reginald j j Swain. - | Special Gifts: Attorney F. J j Carnage. Captain. J. W. Eaton, j i M. H. Crockett, Prince Simmons, i ID. H Reid, L. H- Roberts, J. j I Stredwick, C. R. Frazier. j Clubs and Organizations Mrs. J W. S. Lockhart. Captain, Colleges, j i Dean C. D. Halliburton, St.. Aug-j listing's College W K, Quarles,; Shaw Universkv. Residential: Miss Mave K. Li- { <*onn, Chairman, Unit 12. Mrs E. ■P. Boyer, chairman, unit 11. (Continued on back page) NORTH CAROLINA’S LEADING WEEKLY BOASTS OF “PERFECT -CRIME”, IS JAILED IN AUTO DEATH OF PAIR LOS ANGELES (A.NP) - Because Paul Martin Graver,- 32, once boasted he could commit the "perfect crime/' he found himself under arrest last week charged with suspicion of double murder. His suspected victims were his wife. Mary, 33, and their daughter. Martha. 8 who had been found by Upland plblice dead in Graver’s badly damaged car.. The alleged accident occurred neat the Village -of Upland. The ear was found; resting against an eucalyptus tree. The mar, hd only a few minor injuria#, but Mrs, Graver died W few hours after she had been removed to « hospital without regaining con sciousness, She suffered leg and skull fractures, besides many cuts and bruises. The child died instantly. Police at first believed Graver's sAry of the accident, but later found evidence which led them to suspect he had delib erately crashed into the tree, He had told them that the child had been pinned beneath the car and he had lifted it off her. According to Upland Police Chief Eugene Mueller, the first suspicion ihal the accident might have been murder, came when it was learned the woman was not Graver's wife, but the wife of Ignacio Warner of Washington, D. C., sal d to be Negro, They had foet-n living together in Los Angeles, Recently they sepa rated, but she rejoined him day or two before the tragedy. Warner is also said to be the child's lather. Police plan to hold an autopsy t».J ascertain if the victims had been killed before the car crashed into the tree, SASSAC SLATES DECEMBER MEET FOR WILMINGTON Wilmington will be signally honored when the Southern As sociation of Secondary Schools and Colleges, for the first time in 1 jts history, opens Us sessions at Wiliiston, a school on the second- ; ary level, on December 8. The meeting is scheduled to go through December 10 The occa- j toon promises to one long remem- ! wcred in this section of the conn- 1 try. Dr, Raphael. O’Hara Lanier, former U. S. Minister to Liberia ! will be the sneaker for the open j ing session at Williston Industrialj School. Dr. Lanier's appearance in 1 these parts will boos special in -; terest to all local educators to- i gether with those in the adioin- | mg counties. Though quite a ; young man, the distinguished | Tar Heel has rendered admirable | service to his country and race. Before being appointed U. S ; Minister, he was acting Presi- J dent of Hampton Institute. Hb i academic training has qualified ; him to till with great distinction j the following other offices: Assis-! tarn director of Negro Affairs Na- | tional Youth Administration: Dean of Hampton’s Faculty, and special assistant Bureau of Ser vices, UNTiRA. There is little doubt that such an exemplary character will -have a message well worth hearing The. Association has as its naa~ ; jor objective the development of j high and colleges for Negroes and ; to maintain a harmonious rela- ! tipn between them. Its member- j ship includes 63 colleges -and ; universities and 146 secondary EChools. It Is the Negro division of the Southern Association of Colleges and Second Schools, and is gov- Contlnned cm page eigSit LONE PICKET BLASTS JIMCROW IN HAWAIIAN ILES Honolulu (ANP) Ben f. j Johnson, a well known Hono lulu doniractor, has laker* the j colorful cloak off our Ha waiian "paradise". He is pres ently waging a campaign against the increasing jsrrt crowism in the Hawaiian island, especially in the city of Honolulu. ; Johnson appeared last | week on Hotel street with a sign reading "We fought for democracy—this Jim Civ.w must go." He charged in an I interview that most of the Negroes are being diserimm aied against in the bars throughout Honolulu, and es | cially on Hotel street. "I am i going to picket these places as often as f con get info town frtm rpy ‘business in i Wabiawa". he asserted- I ** Johnson also wrote a letter to the odilw of the famous Star-Bulletin m which he | said, in part "We, a* Ameri can citizens, whose flesh and fciood have fertile?) the soil j in every land, ar# confronted here with a coniagScus dis ease that is rapidly growing worse racial fear and jitn crowism. "How can anyone infected with this disease here call themselves true Americans?" Moron is Named As Acting Prexy Os Hampton Inst New York Alonzo G Moron, genera; business manager of Hampton. Institute has been nam ed acting president of the school and temporary successor to Dr. Ralph P„ Bndgman who resigned ♦•he post under fire L A A’itUo: The . ;,*! n took pi* :a at; meet ing of the Hampton Inoatuit Bpard of Trusees conducted in New York City last week and provides at least a temporary head for the institution which has operated since February under an '"interim administrative commit tee" of which Mr. Moron was chairman. The appointment was announ ced by Dr Channing H Tobias, chairman of the Trustees Board, who stated that. Mr Moron will continue to hold office until a permanent president is selected for the 80-year -old institution which is listed as one of the na tion’s wealthiest fpr the eduea Protest March Is Planned By N C NAA CP Chapters Raleigh Although, the Na-! Horn! Association for the Ad I vanerment a! Colored People may j he plagued at times with internal dissention the organization is so-; 3idly united behind a poky of j Combatting discrimination and j unequal facilities, local members 1 of the organization were told 1 Sunday. Speaking at, a meeting of the j Raleigh. Branch held at the Mar- ; tin St. Baptist Church,. Kelly Alexander, president of fire N. C. j State council oJ NA-ACF Branch- j es also predicud intensified ac- j t ivity for equal rights in the state j during the corning year Lashing out at unequal school facilities, employment opportune- * FISK U. ARCHIVIST ATTENDS MEET HERE D- Dwight. H. Wilson, Flake j I University archivist, arrived in j | Raleigh Tuesday to attend the j i 12th meeting ot the ‘Sc*- ! cic-ty of American Archivists j i which is being conducted at the | Sir Walter Hotel. ! Features of 'he three-day meet- j ing which will be held Wednes I day through. Eriday will include j touts of the University of North j ! Carolina and Duke University , iarchives and libraries as well as, i lectures by outstanding authori-1 | ties in the field. j Dr. Wilson, who assumed the ! Fiske post in April, has since un ! covered many important and in- i | tcresting documents concerned 1 I with the early history of the uni- ; j versify. 1 One of the more interesting of SINGLE t A COPY lUC , tion of Negroes, t Although official confirmation could not be obtained, it was re- L ported in reliable quarters that . Dr Benjamin E. Mays, current i pres> vent of Morehouse College, be,. offer ;i the post of . p tident of -iampton. Ho'.'ever, i',o action up >n this i l offer is expected before the ena i | of the current school year. - ; Mr, Moron, the new acting -.! president, is a native of the Vir ; : gin Islands where he served as - ! commissioner of public welfare. ; | For a number of years he served ! a.-- manager of two Federal hous - j ing projects in Atlanta, Ga. He is a graduate of Hampton, . holds the LL. B. from the Har -1 | vard University Law' School, a i M A. in social wogk from the :i; University of Pittsburgh and the i | Ph. B in sociology and economics - from Brown. He is also a mem* - her of Phi Beta Kappa. ! ties and representation of Negroes on noii'v-making bodies m the | state, Mr. Alexander told, his aud* j ience that members of the assn ; elation plan a “March on Raleigh" , durjng the next session of the ! state legislature in the capital. The march on the Capitol, Mr 1 Alexander stated, will be con ! ducted in an orderly and peace ; lui manner, but will be aimed at I dramatic pres entation to the k ! gslatrns and to the state of the desires of the Negro citizens for a [state FEPQ abolition of jimerow laws and for the recog nition of Negroes‘on policy mak ing bodies in the state and local governments. (Continued on page 8, Ist Section) i these was a previously unknown ! and unpublished letter written jby the abolitionist and martyr, ; John Brown, to a relative ot an : earl;, Fiske faculty member. The only Negro attending the ; sessions. Dr. Wilson .is a native !of Raleigh and the son of the j late Rev. A. J. Wilson, who pas ! tored here for a number of years, i I Prior to accepting the Fiske ; post. Dr Wilson spent a number | of yeary hi the National Archives ■ in Washington, D. C., arid later [went to Italy as archival consul tant to the Allied Commission and ! deputy director of Allied Force Records Administration Archives. He also directed the reorganiza tion of the Allied Commission Ar chives in Rome.