Raleigh Speller, Daniels Cousins, Clyde Brown € mmmm men to learn fates j'" ; i,/ ' Vj| | STUDENT—.Miss Virginia mar Phillips. 11)51 graduate of Palmer Memorial Institute, Sr daiia, inis entered the School ot Journalism of tti*• I Diversity ot Wisconsin under a I.effislativc Scholarship. She is permitted to take sophomore subjects al though a rreshnnn. Negro Catholic Priest In S e rm on Series At Raleigh £ fey 2 UiW';A ' fflffl 4% A * - ■ ms& : •■'- •-: A l'' • ~ - ■'.i A‘ : % ‘ * f ' i fci#a AS®*® j&gjiitltl, -M Pi ( HARM < ONSU.i WNT—One of America's most versatile per sonalitiesis i oij I,a f our, who lias Rained stage fame as l.ou Swarar. aertess; has become a noted col Gov. Scott Keeps Hands Off UNC Football Bias i RALEIGH (io-.c nor Ken Scott this .v< ck announced a Po licy of "hands off" in ’the currently unsettled problem involving the segregation of N-gr o University of North Carolina students . 1 foot* COED BECOMES FIRST WOMAN EDITOR OF V C. V. NEWSPAPER Margaret E. j “Peggy '* Morgan. Boston. Mass- . Samar, (center r has become the first woman in North Carolina THE CAROLINIAN * j 10c Per Copy S —1Worth More _ i V()U , ME ,X IvEEK ENDING SATURDAY OCTOBER 13, 1961 RAIEIGII. NORTH CAROLINA NUMBER 48j SIX Gls FACE RAPE RAP unirust, and is now in great de mand as a charm consultant. Miss I,a Tour is also a famed lecturer, having made many ap pearances in North Carolina ••■'l games played by the univer sity's team. Governor Scott says that the problem is one for the Univer sity administration to handle, not (Continued on page 81 College’s history to edit the stu- ; dent newspaper, the Campus Echo- The N, C. College coed j lives at 118 Walnut Avenue, ; Boston, and is a graduate of I FIRST PAROCHIA L APPOPTEE IN STATE ILL SPEAK DURING EVENT Fortv Hours Devotion Will Begin At St. Monica’s Church At Raleigh October 14 RALEIGH - The Reverend Pe n•' Carter, assistant priest at Christ the King Church in High Point, will deliver a series of ser mons during Forty Hours Devo tion beginning October 14 at St. Monica's Catholic Church here. The evening devotions will be gin at 8;< K) pm on October 14. 15 and IG, The devotion will open after the 11:00 u.m. High Mass this Sunday. The Reverend John S. Dillon. O. p„ is pastor of the local church Father Carter has received the distinction of Tieing the Clinton Woman Winner in 100,000th Stove Contest • CLINTON When Mrs Helen Wadsworth, homemaker of Clin ton. Route 5. decided a quit cook ing with wood and buy an electric range, she never guesesd the de cision would be worth $216.25 to her. Hut this week she got exact ly that, the purchase price of the ra ng*, I’he Sampson County farm; woman purchased the 100.- 000th electric range to be in stalled in the territory served t y Carolina Power and Light Company. Since August t, a vigorous range-selling cam paign had been waged among 58 1 dealers in the territory with a $l5O prize as the re ward for the dealer who made the 100.000th sale. That dealer was Flake's Sales and Service of Clinton, operated by John H. and R. 1... Flake. Es tablished service station operators, they have been in the appliance business less than six months. The award came as a complete the campaign refere Thomas B. (Continued on page 8! Jerimiah E. ffurke High School for Girls, Boston, Missi Morgan is shown here with assistants Delores Parks, left, Richmond, V’a., and Cleopatro Bso«dj»ax, right. Seaboard (N€). first Negro priest to receive a parochial appointment » n North Carolina He is the son of a practic ing physician in Virginia, and was ordained to the priesthood in May of this year in Buf falo. New York. In his youth the priest studied at Tuskegee Instituet, Alabama, and later obtained a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Michigan. While at the university he became interested in the Faith, and was received in the C atholic (Continued on pag’’ ALL SAINTS GAME TO BE PLAYED ON | FRIDAY NIGHT | RALEIGH - The dab and time of the annual "Saints Classic"; which pits the "Saints" of Saint Augustine’s College here against tlte “Saints" of Saint Paul s Insti ; tute has been changed, it was an-; : nounced by officials of the local I j school this week. The game which had been set ; for Saturday afternoon at 8 p m ; ; will be played Friday night a* 8 p.m. at Chavis Park. In last Saturday’s play, the; Saint Augustine’s team won a 6' (Continued on page 8) Football Is Lau RALEIGH Beginning in this week's issue, and .soiled■ i tiled to run through the remaining four weeks of the high school football season is the First Annual Caro j linian Football Contest. This contest, open only to students attending high [ School Athletic Association football play, and offers 1 school in the state is based on the correct selection of , ■ winning teams in weekly North Carolina Negro High | weekly cash prizes to students making the correct selec- ; ! tions. In addition to the cash prizes to be awarded students ; | on basis of selections, the CAROLINIAN is also award ! ing a prize to the High School through which the largest j ; number of copies of the publication is sold during the j contest period. For complete information on the football contest, see . ! pages 1 and 5 in the Second Section of this week's issue. , jMEN OF CAMP CAMPBELL ADMIT CRIMINALLY ATTACKING WOMAN I Paratroopers, To Be Returned To State To Face Trial In Mass Criminal Attack CARTHAGE Six white para troopers have confessed the mass j rape of a Negro matron near here j i and will be returned to the area i |to face military and possible civil-; j ian trial during the weekend ,ii; ! has been learned. The six men, stationed at Camp Campbell, Ky„ confessed fßi** ■ •. : v W TflpßajjgWy" . * •/*;• ■ ' • ■ ijjj* r . | J ’ I I m \ ». .jt. *f -A . : SERIES HERO Monty Ir vin, center, outfjeid star (or the I New York Giants, has proved himself one of the "Cinderella' hoys of the 1951 World Series. Irvin became the first player to steal home In a Series game on Saturday, and for good mea sure, also stole second base dur ing a clash- His booming, hat, prior to Wednesday’s game, had accounted for 13 hits, including a triple and a two-hagger. Here, Irvin is being glad-handed by skipper Leo Durocher fright) ( and the “little corporal" Eddie ; Stanley, left. Playoff hero Bob by Thompson can be seen in the i rear. Irvin ended the season , leading the National League in t runs batted in and led his club in hatting average. Contest inched to officials at the Kentucky j ramp that they criminally as- i sauUed Mrs. Lasla Mae Artist, ! resident of Carthage and New j York, as she was returning ' from a e!*«rch meeting near here on August 15, The men. who were in the area (Continued or» page 8) FEDERAL COURT HEAR ARGUMENTS FOR 4 DOOMED TO GAS CHAMBER Attorneys Taylor and Price Scheduled To Present Arguments Before Tribunal RALEIGH The fate of four North Carolina Negro men. doom ed to die in the lethal chamber at the State Penitentiary here, will be decided in the fourth Cir cuit Court of Appeals at Rich mond. Va. Friday when the case are to be argued. The cases to be heard by the Federal tribunal are those involving Bennie and Lloyd Kae Daniels, youthful cousins convicted in Pitt County lor the robbery-slaying of a white Greenville taxicab driver; Ra leigh Speller, who was con victed of criminally assaulting a white woman in Windsor and Clyde Brown, convicted ot the rape ot a young white girl at Winston-Salem. in all tnree case, convictions have oeen upheld oy the North Carolina Suptemc Court, and the U S. Supreme Court has refused to review mem. Lavvyi-is loi tile lour then car ried Ill'll' light back to Federal ■ cou*t tmougti jKHi.ior.s for writs oi naoeas coipus. They contended that Negroes were discriminated again .it tne selection of juries that tried tile four, federal Dis trict Judge Don Gilliam lecently dismissed their pet., ions The law : yeis then appealed tus decision to the Circuit, Court. Assistant Ally. General Ralph Moody, Highway Commission Gen eral Counsel Brooks T iers and E. 'O. Brogden, Prison Department lawyer, will represent the State at the heading. TAYLOR, PRICE LAWYERS Scheduled to argue the eases for upholding* the appeals are Attor neys Herman L.. Taylor of Ra (Continued on page S» Master >#| /Jjjj |p| Isaiah Hansford of Winston-Salon. V < ||gg|Mß9B'> : '. V- 'Halil &H (rißht) accepts the salutes of trm.v personnel t- SP» na pert J»>. ''. Y. during » ’•etrrat parade m fly <•;. >.•-■.-* nfiei Vi i»»i» SMSs^ &sjc el«J't*s«r which time he saw ire. t;-r all 'Hff the ML.. .>. ’* k world, and recently Miii‘i! a tenure ft !{ years 'WS. 3»' at West Point, The ItVywir-nld soldier will * retire in California. ■■ f.L. •'. ‘ - ' **• . >.. •** ;. .;„>..**■»■ ..-&>,«»&• "-> 7 --." v-siw&L*.. • cH*r.• •.*•' • scTffwiiOTPW^ Football Results A. &. 'l'. 20 Hampton 7 Va, State 02 Shaw 0 St. Aug. 6 Smith 0 Va. Union 26 Howard 6 Morgan 7 Lincoln 2 F’ville It) St. Pauls 0 Bilefield 2.6 W-Sahmi 12 \V. Va. State 20 Ky. State 0 Albany 25 Ala. A & M 1•* j Md. State 52 B’klyn 0 Is. C. State Vi Claflin 0 '" Slf Ji ili ll:i|l a ■ /-.i. m mm t * M fe|6f J 1 -:f J 9 |p|| J§ 1 ~® ** i Tm : S ptfe * ■' ! L. :4H ' ‘** " * ' i , !?^wi 1 | fc*>.f»i»-••• 4'W %> #» *»iP*rt32iS |p-«, 4 SiM : : ?^Biifci«B ■ " ■ Sjri , I>., £ I amigliM %&'Vs'%&%% i yki %§&m*Wi, ' *• ' - .' V^Vf mw i kj ,- s%* Hka %'.. »a Xavier 25 Grumbling 7 Cheynev I'el. State 0 cTntral State 55 Taylor ) Fisk ;’>:s Knoxville 2 Texas 21 Jackson <> ; Fla. A. & M. Ik Ft. Valley 0 Vorhees 57 Bettis ( > | Tenn. State 52 Allen 0 i Texas Col. 18 Arkansas 1 •.* Tuskeege 12 Clark 7' I Norfolk St. lb Morristown 6 it Happened in Carolina Escape Injury REIDSVILLE - Drivers and all pa.'St nj<ei s .•scaped injury Monday when a school bus of the Roc'k ingham County School .System at'ci au automobile colidcd at the in tersection of Vance and Lindsey Streets here. Police said Curtis Taylor An derson, Route l. Eton College, was driving the bus. and the car was : driven" by Albert Trumlcy of Ftt 4 Heidsville. According to the re port. tin' bus was crossing Lmd s, y uii Vance at the caution light and struck the front of Trumley's car. No charges were made Had The Brew REIDSVILLE -• I in Montgom ery 40, $ cab driver, has been indicted" on a charge of posesshrg nontaxpaid whisk# for the purpose of .sale, police disclosed this week. A report said officers raided Montgomery’s home at 117 Ridge .. Street during the week end. found 30 gallons of botleg whisky in half-gallon fruit jars stored in the basement of tile house. The whis ky was seized and Montgomery was • laced under arrest. Later Montgomery, who ope r.tes his cab business under tho name "Lem’s Taxi," was released under a bond of $250 pending .. trial in Recorder’s Court hero next week. FVim-Flam Action DURHAM A slim-slam artist wa- reported here Saturday. Police officers said that Ervin I Continued on page Hi

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