glp|ni ii g j XEIVI jP*!* |* 0 y Chuck Everything «* Until You've Chuckled V/it h Bub Burnes' LAUGH OF THE WEEK in this newspaper Taylor Hearing Held;Decision Awaited MASS RAPE REVEALED ’Sf i YQUNB WOMAN SNATCHED FROM Belli! OF DISASTtR in rescue ' 09 4 ■ IfSfefc, I st a: ? N ; :• ?-A’f 4 IS . ' :? -pSP*,- 1 I -.lv, ■* ®? .vns. '• • ' '<:?£ | FROM BRINK OF DEATH — Miss Paulin.- MrKoy of Fayette ville, said suff< ring from a head ailment, was snatched from the brink *f death by rescuers as she perched precariously on a cat-walk on the Cape Fear Ri ver Bridge earl> Sunday niorn SHAW UNIVERSITY OPENS WEST CAMPUS -- The first load of equipment from the sev eral administrative offices of Shaw university has been mov ed into the former Rex Build ing', acquired a year and a half ago. Moving of the offices is the first step in pitting into opera. As v ffIKK s fr -.-■■■ ■ -•■vWi-miii jgi v^”t*~ v t / i§Ss®a? Twin City Man Heads New Group Wi N STO N-SA LE M (AN P) K. David Cole, pastor of spen cer Memorial ChureSi here, and a teacher at the Winston- Salem Bible College, was elect ed president of the newly or ganized Tri-State Evangelistic Association recently. Organized at a meeting held (Continued on X>age 8) also are the corridors leading to the east wing, to serve as an administration building, and a west wing, in which the student grill will be located. A separate unit in the rear of the central wing is being con verted to dormitory use and will house between (JO and 90 „ students. AFTER MATH OF HEARING Cong Htulations on a case well presented and best wishes for the future were in order in Superior Courtroom of Raleigh’s Wake County Courthouse Satur day evening after a hearing was presented in the case in which Raleigh Attorney Herman L. Taylor was charged with un ethical conouct. In top photo oiseernable are Attorney Allan Langston, renter, Raleigh attor CQMMITTTEE TO RENDER DECISION ! CONCERNING TAYLOR THIS WEEK I Bv UN HOLLOWAY RALEIGH The three-man i | committee composed of member* : of the N. C. State Bar who 4:>ent I a full day Saturday hearing char j ges and defense on allegations | j that Raleigh Attorney Herman L ! I Taylor had been unethical in re | lations with clients, is scheduled ! to render its decision in the mat- I ter within the next week. The decision of this committee. j will greatly influence the dynamic I young lawyer’s professional fu | ture inthat if the findings of the j committee uphold charges brought ; by the Bar, recommendation will j possibly be made for Taylor's dis barment. On the other hand, if the, charges are found unsubstantiated,! SHAW U, MAKES READY FOR i EIGHTY-SIXTH ACADEMIC SESSION | RALEIGH - President William i R. Strassner announced that the | 1951-52 academic year at Shfcw | University, the 86th annual ses i sion. will begin with faculty con- - i Terences on September 32 and 13 lat 10:30 am. in the University | Library, Dr. J Henry Highsmilh. : State Department of Education i will address the faculty on the 1 i 13th. About 150 freshmen are ex pected to arrive on Thursday September 13th for a four-day orientation program under the, direction of Faster P. Payne, Dean of the College. Upper classmen will arrive on the j nth. | Formal opening exercises will ney representing Taylor: Dor- j ham Lawyer C. .1. Gates, a wit ness, and a member of the pan- i el of three lawyers hearing the j ease leaving the podium. Others i were spectators. In photos at ; bottom, Attorney receives eon- i gratuiatiom and wishes from Attorney Gates and CAROLIN* j IAN Fayetteville representative ; F. J. Burns, (Staff photos by j Lin Holloway) Taylor will be able to continue! his spirited fight for human rights | throughout the area. committee members Acting as chairman of the I Bar appointed committee hearing the charges brought against Taylor was Attorney | Albion Daim of Greenville, N. €.; who was enpaneled with Atlornies Jennings King, Laurinburg and 11. M. Robins, Asheboro, Presenting the Bar’s charges against the 32-year-oid law yer, fa*her of two children, w'as State Bar Secretary Ed ward Cannon. The charges preferred against (Continued on page 8< be held on September 19 at 10 a.in., in Grenleaf Auditorium W R. Collins, president of the Shaw Alumni Association will deliver the principal address. The opening will be terminated with the Uni versity Reception. New faculty members in clude: Thomas Edward White, A.8.. University of Pitsburgh, M.A.. American University, Washington, D €., Instructor in Economics; The Reverend Grady Davis, A.B», Shaw Uni versity, 8.D., Andover Newton Theological Seminary, and currently having completed requirements for the PhJ)., Boston University, Instructor (Continued on page 8) 4 White Gls Rape Young Race Matron Seven Gls Sought In Criminal Attack On Mom of 2 Children CARTHAGE Despite failure to find facts leading to the iden tities of four white soldiers who raped the wife of a Negro mem ber of the Armed Forces near here lust month, the sheriff who first lifted the veil of secrecy from the case this week promises j that his office will do all in its power to bring the men to jus tice. Sheriff C. J. McDonald, who this week reported the mass rape, has revealed that he has been in conference with Ar my otficiais In an effort to gain a lead on the Gls involv ed in the atrocity. THE ACTUAL CASE Revelation of the case in which | a young Negro was forced to watch four white men criminally ; assault a friend of his family was I made by the local sheriff, who i further revealed that Army offi ■ rials contended that they were unable to aid the investigation j because they would have to be ' picking seven men out of 100,000. The “100.000" men referred to j are members of ground and air Army units who were engaged in I 'he mammoth maneuver Exercise | Southern Pine in the area last * month. j WAS LEAVING CHURCH According to Sheriff McDonald, i Mrs Lula Mae Aries, wife of a | New York soldier and mother of ! two children, was returning from! I a church event on the night of j August 15 in the presence of an | other woman and a youthful fam ily friend when the assault oc i curred. Mrs. Aries, the other woman (Continued on page 8) Farm Honors Accorded 5 From State 5 North Carolinians ; Win Over Entries From Five States GREENSBORO --- Five Negro youths of North Carolina have been selected over contestants of five other states to receive top honors at the 17th annual con vention of New' Farmers of Amer ica to be held October 1-4 at Atlanta. Ga., it was announced this week. In addi'ion, Frank Battle of the i Philip High school community m Edgecombe County has been se lected over contestants of five other states, to receive the sec tional 11. O. Sargent Award for his outstanding accomplishments on the farm during the last |n years. Battle received the Modern ! Farmer degree in 1938 and the Superior Farmer degree in ; j 1943. j Y'ouths who will receive nation* I al honors, their school, and con -1 test division in which they were i selected, are Samuel E. Williams. ! Henderson Institute, farm and 1 home improvement; Robert Pul i lium, Davie County Training I School, dairying on the ho | farm; Joe Odum. Catawba High ! School, soil and -water manage j ment; Laform Bullock, George j Washington Carver School at | Pinetops, rural electrification, and | Zan Withrow, Green Bethel High (Continued osi page S) < y^v s -MPlit •'•'iWw -■ •" ,v' Baja> - *gEj£ffiyy ~’ -t v - •• v J iv •? '• <^|B|g£ SHE CAN SING TOO ln addition to being a talented pianist and a '‘looker" as above photo indicates. Amanda Am brose, a St. Louis product who In. c. high school head MAKES SPECIAL U. N. STUDY • Special To The CAROLINIAN) WHITAKERS - A singular lion : or has been accorded a North Ca ! rolina High School principal by the United Nations organization and Columbia University. New York City. The Rev. J W Wiley, Sr , prim I eipal of Swift Creek High School Nash County, was during the summer sessions at Columbia selected one of forty-four Colum bia graduates to pursue a special six-week course under sponsorship of the United Nations Committee :on Education The purpose of the course is to formulate plans for teaching the principles of the United Nations in the public schools of the nation. ONLY TWO NEGROES Rev. Mr. Wiley is one of the two Negroes selected to pursue the ; I course. He is the sole North Caro linian so honored, the other Negro being a native of Virginia. One definite purpose of the study, it was learned, is to la miliarize students of aii ages with the member-nations of the UN. Rev Mr Wilev says "the princi ples of the United Nations must be taught to the youth of the I world through tin schools to be successful". | SWIFT CREEK ENROLLS 501 The Swift Creek school had an opening enrollment of Sol pupils last week despite the heavy de- I mand for farm labor at this season l of tobacco grading and cotton I picking. This community, which l has a substantial number of land j owners, is making a conscientious ,j effort to keep its children in j school, according to Principal Wi ! ley. j \ The school is making use of N. C. DOCTOR, 11, FINED PLACED ON PROBATION IN NARCOTICS RAP By Staff Writer j ROCKINGHAM A small, i greyed, 71-year-old Negro physi- I cian was accessed a tine of SSOO | and placed on probation tor a j period of two years foilowin* a ! hearim' in Middle District Court ; here Tuesday in which the physl ’ cian was charged with violating Federal nareoites statutes Fined and made a ward li- I able tothc court was I>r. Fred I>. Quick, who has been prac ; ticing medicine in this vicin ity for forty years, and. in view of the many statements •made in his behalf, is held it* high regard throughout the area and in the profession. Dr. Quick was specifically char ged with issuing post-dated pres jcr .)tions for narcotics to two white persons he admited he knew as dope adicts. Dr. QuieU denied allrga ‘tions, however, that he was aware of the law involving narcotics prescriptions and that he realised no monetary 1 gain from his act. MORPHINE PRESCRIPTIONS i The aging physician was. char ged with giving five prescriptions for morphine sulphate to a white : man resident of Lilesville, about | eight miles from here. He was ! charged also with giving two pre | script)ons for a less effective drug ■ ; to a white woman who lives a -1 Cardovia. four miles from here i i In both instances, the prescrip , I turns were (post-dates, being made 11 for consecutive days from June 6 - through 10 this year. > FEDERAL MEN MOVE IN Attention was first focused on i Dr. Quick when Federal narcotics -, agents discovered the eonseeutive : lv post-dated prescriptions at a t! Winston-Salem drugstore -1 Just why both persons re -sj. reiving the prescriptions chose i to “trade with" the same drag ;ius been wowing audiences all over tile \\ cst Coast, can also hold her own as a singer- Miss Ambrose is eont**mp!aUr»g a na tional tour, J. W. WILEY, SR. visual education this year for the first time and will soon occupy ■four additional classrooms and a new lunchroom nearing comple tion There are 145 4n the high school dcipnrtmont end the school uses five busses one of which caught fire they day we visited the school. The let of Rachels is as follows; Misses Eunice Jones, Lu cy Whitehead Ros t Arrington, Mrs Viable Williams. Dorothy R Small. Hazel Nelson Logan, (newt Laura B Thorpe, a native of El berton, Ga Meliie M Harrison and Louise Hatirs Men are R. L Harper, James Buffaloe and Rich ard Lucas. Lucas will handle the ' school’s athletics. firm and located some IM miles away from where they received them could not be dc i termined. * POPULARLY SUPPORTED 1 : Dr. Quick, immaculate, soft spoken. and confused at the ehar . ges drew populai support from lo >; cal citizens, many white persons 1 included The white support ac | corded the iphysician prompted (Continued on page 8) : I At f OfTIOIV* ;D E¥ MET—Jose >, phine Buck, distinguished young ! concert singer, looms as the Ne gro artist who will possibly i break the Metropolitan Opera’s infamous jintcrovr policy. Miss Buck, who was auditioned by rj Dr. Boris Goldovsky, the Metis radio commentator, has received flowing prasies from many sour ces affiliated with the Metrajpnl iiu.u.