Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 29, 1952, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
; f< , y . . . 1 i _ . . ; SPARKED NCAA REGIONAL MEET —Even though The Penn sylvania State < oUege basketball team garnered ottly the satis faction nt sa«>K «»i» tht con solation game during the re t entlv completed National Cot legiate Athletic As ot iation re gional tournament at the Coli seum. State College. Raleigh, Hardy Williams. iu hi m cap- The State-In Brief... Klansjnen Indicted. On Trial LUMBFMTON Four alleged Ku Klux Klausmen were indicted by the Kobe son County Grand jury here .don" day on charges, of violating an 18H8 .statute forbidding* membership tr< secret political organizations. Indicteil were (F. Stonp and t url St.oue, Toe Byrd erf Fairmont, and To..- >, . ,\who Ison ci Lumbert-on. They wm- i.u-djU.-t to trial at .1 spec ini term of Su peri-n- ( oini In-!'. W i'diHC'day. Tin. i'oni 'a 1 • if* 'ijiiug It. iv > !;>• >n <• < iet> no-n acrest* ed i <•!; 27 ami charged with b ire Khnismen twelve ot tie- 1 tend: iidi’aolagt wf e provision ,a the law ivfnch allows immunity from prosecution. New Building For institution RAi.FIG n The- Budge! Bureau said this week it; ex pects u» a(iv«*rtisi '. : *f ids soon on a building at North Carolina State College and two biddings at the Negro division of the Slate School for the Blind here. Woman Dies Os Fire Injuries HIGH POINT Mrs. Louise ,\lc Ilona id, il, critically burned in a 1 ire at SOI !ay lor Street- Saturday night, .Continued on page SO *$ • v,.«£ Prm Photo SerGr.e “COULD HAVE BEEN ME” __Th!t* could possibly describe the feel ing* of Pvt. Curl Oglelre<‘, left. «•( Htj. Co. 7!oth Tank Bmtlftllon, UUs Airborne Division, us he shows his denied helmet which fell off during the kmm pwaclMite jump at Comp Drum. New York recently. Sharing Carl’s relief U Sgl. Ilarr.y Ceßdrovrskl of the IJtli who, with thousand* of other Ole, tinged the jump to jise|»ave tbenhewei for Bu joint Amp t******* asoyfedb ■!■ iifrrrfiTiil|-iWM<wiaiir<ir ! tain of the team pictured he;,* with I’enn State Coaeh Elmer Goss, center, and eo-c.i gain Jay Mellahalt. showed himsell t>, he i'ormidibh. coo ■ ~der, llis teammate Jesse Arm-lie. was high-scorer in the game against both N C Stale v olie e and Kentucky State with ‘.'.l omuls j.-er game. (Photo euurte,, News md Observer), T| r-njiY- THE CAROLINIAN 10c Per Copy c ~c WortH iVlorc jL**~**<- F w | VOLUMN XJ RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA WEEK ENDING SATURDAY MARCH 2‘J. 1052 NUMBER 19 5,000 Expected At Teachers Meet _ __ ________ - _____ ___ _______ Jfflg UPmi 3|§gP| IJjpp f|§||| &§Ss§ fH ARMED ROBBER DROOP NABBED AFTER 'CAPER' \ianv Publicity - Shv i j » j Durhamites Said Fo Have Been Victims ! DURHAM (Special) lt is | felt locally that police officers have succeeded in apprehending members of a robber trio which has been labeled "The Terrible Three" and which has been ter rorizing local residents for the past four months. This feeling was brought it ; hold by the announcement tills . week that the three armed men who robbed a Negro resi dent had all been captured on Tuesday. The arrests fol lowing a robbery-stabbing at tack upon Clinton Lucas Mon day night. Those hold in custody this week 1 and said to be members of the, ! Infamous "Three" are William W. j Weaver, 17. Albert Caesar, 20, and j | Bonnie Leo Parker, 20. The for-! me;- two were arrested Tuesday, j while the latter was arrested Mon- j ; day night near the scene of the j ! jobbery. All three have denied j ! the robberv charge, FOLLOW SIMILAR PATTERNS Even though few if any of the ! robberies by armed bandits have j ; been reported to officials, it is j u. known Met locally that a series j :of such robberies have occurred I which have followed the same pat - ; urn within the past four - month ; ; pc-nod. Upon leaving houses of ill repute, the victims have been I way-laid by men brandishing pistols aiui told to "ante up i and shut up A quick frtsk u,r ... the Victim would follow : (Continued on page «i I CONFESSION OF j Imam termed a i TWIN CITY HOAX WINSTON - SALEM -Local po- : lice this week labeled the man i who "confessed" a still unsolved i murder here last January a! ’ crack-pot.” Investigations, however. are! continuing in the case which 29- j year-old John B. Crawford has i ! said he is the murderer. Crawford, already found to be j mentally incompetent, told a jail j house trusty early last week that j he had “something on’’ hi:-- mind ! and wished to speak to the Coun-! t.v Sheriff, Ernie Shore, about it, i Crawford told Sheriff Shor' j I hat it was he who shot and j killed bill eoileetor Horace O. ; Tulbut, Jr., on January 4 while the latter was making collec tion rounds. Crawford, who has been in , the county jail here several | weeks awaiting- transfer to the j 1 State Hospital at CSoldsbcro, j wa* picked up at the request of relatives who are attempt- j ing to rain admission for him at the Goldsboro institution. In his "confession" Crawford j i <aid that he killed the bill col- i j lector .but denied playing any; j rale in the murder of a taxi drt- j j v «r which occurred some few days ! ! sarlier in the same neighborhood J Local polict officers believe that I | both murders were committed by i j the same person because the .same ! i sun was obviously used in the; j two. Ballistics reports reveal that; j both fatal bullets we:e fired from ! | the same aim. Even though he "confessed" | i ‘last week to the slaying- of the j i bill collector, Crawford this j j week Ik wm<lltu4 owl of tit» sltaaition. mtf denying M fee | fete .over CiyjiC-3 Z SXSU twya&Kf -v-.-.. f MAKE RI ANS FOR CHURCH j EVENT Organizational plans for the coming combined con gress of the Laymens’ Assoeia ! tion and the Con-fraternity of j Christian Doctrine, the largest Catholic Convention ever to be ! j pKI ||F osMsm , SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER— Dr, C. Waldo Scott recently was iiamed to the school board in. j Newport News, Va,, becoming the Sirs* Negro to assume such a post in over half a century. A native of Atlanta and resident of the Virginia eity since he was I 20 years of age, I)r. Scott is the husband of the former Miss Mae Hamlin of Raleigh, N. C. He Is | on the staff of two hospitals in the Virginia Tidewater area ; North Carolina One Os 2Southern States With j I Equalized Teach ers Pay 1 WASHINGTON -Despite claims that Negro schools ami teacher salaries arc- being equalized to those of whites, only two southern .-rotes pay the same annual salary to botn groups. They are North Carolina and Louisiana. That fact was revealed in a slun ! v< : v made by the New York Times, , a leading daily newspaper, of ; some 1.7 southern states which ob .-e.ve strict segregation of the ra ces in their public schools. .Pointing out that these states are going ali out in an attempt to equalize schools, the survey | acknowledged that many persons i believed, the reason for this is fear "teat the U. S'. Supreme Court held in North Carolina, were formulated by the above group. The combined congress will be held at Durham May 2-4. Mem bers of the organizational group are, left to right, Mrs. Shepard j -Storey, Father Francis A. Rlc- HOSPITAL AND ’ ORPHANAGES IN ENDOWMENT $S Duke Fund Helps , Charity Spendings RALEIGH A number of l hospitals Utilizing Negro ps~ tronage and the North Caro lina Colored Orphanage at Ox , ford were listed among the 10?) hospitals and 41 orphan ages receiving appropriations from the Duke Endowment this week. Trustees of the Endowment, meeting here, allocated a mo unts equal to SI per day that charity care is given in the hospitals during the year. Included among the Negro hospitals receiving allocations from the Endowment which is now in its 27th yea* are: Comin(i nil y , Wil- ! raington, *13,000; Gaston Coun ty Negro Hospital; Good Shep herd, New Bern, $2000; Jubilee, (Continui d on page tt) si will outlaw segregation in the, r j schools, o ! The survey, which covered alO ! i year period, disclosed in. part: v "hi Florida 10 years ago i white teachers received an uv •erast annual salary of $1,158, j while Negro teacher* got $507, , ! Now while teachers average tj $5,084 and Negro teachers $2,- • | 354.” This means that there j sttll in a discrepancy of $3lO 1 between thje average salary s j paid colored teachers and | i:! white. V i in discussing money allocated I sjfor operating expenses for Negro j r | schools, the survey said: * ■ ' fte year s *so Fmrm;, :; - } earthy, general chairman.; Dr, Norman Cordice, a Durham den tist; amt John Cassidy. Church ami laymen from the area Ma ryland to Florida will partki pat*'. Jmim- WBm ’ «oiw : ' 'Al'fj.v jSr ojL*J M TO CONCLUDE SERIES —So prano Camilla Williams, priina donna of the New York City j Opera Company, will conclude : thelyceum series at North Caro- | lina College when she appears i there in recital Monday night, March 31. Miss Williams, two time winner of Marian Anderson j j awards, has been listed among the nation's top - flight artists ( since her memorable appearance ; in "Madam Butterfly" in IMA ,$17,404,165 for wr>ti*r children and; j $2,521,867 for Negro pupils. Today I the operating expenses amount of :$63,225,000 for white children and i $15,817,460 for Negro children.'' | •in Georgia the average salary; jof white teachers increased from I i sl,Oll in 1941 to $2,229 in 195,1. j ! During the same period the salary j tor Negro teachers increased from ] 12461 to $1,795. The aver age col- j ! lege education lor Negro teachers i jin 1941 was two years, Today it! i is: four years. : '•Georgia is planning a large-j ' scale building program. Much of j | the money to be secured from the |, I State is to -go for new buildings! (Coatiaaea on page 8; J TWO MEMBERS OF FAMILY ABE HURT IN WRECK Train Rams Into Bus At Crossing; Sister And Brother Hurt (Special To Carolinian) ■DURHAM Two persons, both from the same family were pain fully. if not seriously, injured v'hen a Seaboard Airline Railroad freight train rammed into the school bus one of the victims was driving at a crossing near here Monday I Injured when the train ram med the bus he was driving was Junius Tituberiake, 17- vea r-olti student driver, and his nine-year-old sister. Sa vannah. . Both were taken to a local hos | piial where they received erner- I gcficy treatment for superficial ! bruises and soars. | The accident occurred when ! Timberlake’s bus rolled onto a i grade crossing as he was carrying i; ■ bus-load of students to a Dur ' ham County School. The train i rammed into the front end of the ; vehicle, tossing the driver from his seat and against his sister (seated nearby. Investigating officers quo! <■ d Timberlake as saying that rain clouded his bus window making it impossible for him to see the i approaching train. ANNUAL MEET OF STATE GROUP SET APRIL 3-5 Prominent Speakers Will Take Part In 71st Annual Event RALEIGH "The Role of the School in a Democratic Society v.il! be the theme of the 71st An ; riaal Convention of the N C. Teachers Association being held April 3-5. Four general sessions | .-.re scheduled in the Raleigh Me | .norial Auditorium. Thirty - three j group sessions will be held at ! Shaw University and at the Wash ' iugton High S< Uooi. Several prorn ; irient educational specialists will -peak to both the general ses sions and the larger group meet ings. Five thousand teachers are expected to attend. CONVENTION OPENS WITH DELEGATE ASSEMBLY The First General Session will take place at 300 p.m. April 3rdi m Memorial Auditorium. This will I be an important business session i i f tin delegates and will feature reports from important commit-! tees on program and policy. The Second General Session wii) he open to the public on the evening of the 3rd and will feature President W R. Straws aer of Shaw University in a weleeotne address; Prof. R. E. j Jones of A. and T. College in j a response; and Mr. A. H. An derson, NCTA President w'ith 1 his annua! message, |>r. Mor- l decal W. Johnson, President of j Howard University, Washing ton, S>. €. will be the keynote speaker for the opening pub- j lie session. Ris interpretation j of the convention theme wilS be of interest to all who may hear him. The ideal public is invited to hear Ur, Johnson. Friday April 4th will be given ; over to group sessions throughout : the daylight hour;;. Sectional groups will have priority of meet-! iag places from 9:OQ ■ 11:60 Fri- • (Ceaftt&ved oa page- 9) t I “DEATH CLAIMS' I DR. ROBERTS) 1 RALEIGH Last rites for the I late Dr Pete;- Franklin Roberts, ; were heid in He- Chapel of the - 1 Raleigh Funeral Home, Sunday, i March 23, at 2 p.m. The services jv ere conducted bv Dr. O S. Bul- I > OR HOBEK'rS lock of the First Baptist Church, i.i which the deceased had been member -since early manhood. Father George Fisher of the Sanit Am in.-.. Episcopal Church and. ; Rev C. R. McCreary of the Ober -1 lin Baptist Church assisted, arid i gave interesting talks attesting to ; the attributes of the deceased. Dr, Roberts was the son of the Sate Dr. Nicholas Franklin Roberts and Mary Ortney • t ook, liotu'i is, and was born ' in Raleigh August 10, ?.BSri, j , He attended the public .' schools of Raleigh ami later (Continued on page 8) j Shaw University. He gradual- M Carolinian Si— ""V, i ; j|3HOT€ jf j!j|||.> Ifckuh ■ By Shirley Q't I.ST!ON; Does the fact that local theatre accommoda tions for Negroes is both lim ited and inferior affect your 1 theatre - going habits? : • ANSWERS; ; Mr. James Taylor, business, Ra* 1 I. igh: Yes, I rnos> certainly do think that they ' iericed by having MR. TAYLOR to climb mourn , era-bie steps. and ■ ther, 'a'hvfj finally there,_ be un aeit- to luta. riio-.t of the dialogue 1 lierefotv, accommodations fce- I ing as they are for Negroes. { think tv. ice before going to i the t heat re Mr*. Mason Avery, practical - nurse. We-:', Raleigh; No, it docs not affect my the-’ ; Mia* mum; habits. Inasmuch as j efl the same or equal accomoda- MRS. AVERY j lions given otii I era. | i ht due time Negro patronage j will grow to the place where it i will be in the position to demand mere and. belter facilities. j Mr, Dudley Hinton, receiving BB The condition and lack of first-M§ class theatre accommodations turally ca u s«H I MTt. Hinton’ " iro trade. Umrfl wo-u 1 d he ncSf : reason why there should be thidH • tolerance. The luck of convenieriJH ! ces, however,' makes It necessary® ; fur persons to participate in seif-Ira 1 discrimination at tuna,, j§§
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 29, 1952, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75