< J® ,/Nf - , m *M '■ ~ I? rJi S '.** -Mb i jT »•!{? lit ’«#*s& 11/a SB ar*§fe ‘jO* » **WR if J? M*Jr # * 3T* *% IF t - I %#*'£? M # *i- #4w& W* •*• j$ W#P&f? ’# WW' IT*® jrfc I®*% S w v 4?*%. W*§i ■ # «•, # fir % ja /“' -j;- Jt ««* ar.'SP*' «> ,w lr .$ v»'*» jp** ~r-:|? &: :•<.«r ,y’ , lk *& UJf $ %*. «.t U/ If 0' J? % Jy- J§' *•«*" ik f ,Jfcj »•" £ S tl if &■ 4- j* A* ’& jjs S"JT $f ! f i r •?*» mpt wiiix f:/t!!'f|??y p RE[) DUNN—-Robe, t Caddy, 45-year old Dunn railroad employee, was. being held in tat Dunn jail this . v. eek in connection with the slay ing of liis wife, Mrs. Annie Gaddy, ‘ about. 40 ? a highly respected citi/ -n in this free xur’-enoered to Dunn police p.r. iv Sunday night port told them if omrnx.-ti <»• Paye M TEACHER FEAR ANNOUNCED I! ••' C ‘ \Y MR. C tJJLOWAV . . . Ik. ini ... Drives- Siliero Barber First uzl go Mim in 1954 GOLDSBORO The strong herd of the law reached out and ■f d C sides Dixon Spence.2l - white youth, here Mcn o'' y morn tie p when he was given a hearing for the death of Wei ton Calloway, 33. who died at Prr rott Memorial Hospital. Sunday. aj;.-r h« v-im been the victim oi s tv. o-car collision at the corner of Adkin and Bright Streets about 12:30 A M., the seme day. Spence was first held under a SSOO bond for reckless driving, but when the case was called for trial, bond was set at $2,000 and the de fendant was taken to jail, in de fault of bond. The investigation officers L. W. Pate and Coroner Raymond Jar man testified that CaUowav died as the result of multiple injuries wniefa be received as a passenger in a car that was being driven by his wife. Mrs. Alice Murphy Cal loway, lf> The car in which the Calloways' Prominent School Teacher Funeralized mm, nan r. fkazusr * i THE CAROLINIAN VOLUME THIRTEEN ~ Isim&b S&* St x 4, 4PAk Iwwi?^9K 4tt inj| W 1 -? SI • . AfiSß “aa2 -„| ~CT-T • ■ftffcr 1 ’iPWBf «». »>• ti***.' T J - ■»»■ -'• - ■«*»» -**'•**■*' ’- - &rv? vr '.-ryK “SJdRf jy««aK i i«>o'..'. : . :■ ;-'-» ... , go.- , .^,.. J( .-,„...... ;.,, r J' : ■«.• - .... ■; ~' .;..' "' f " _ ." v ,<, ..’ v ,- .•■* -'■-i ;%«?•'-' | * + 'k + 'k+ 'k' as "a unique ap proach to relieving the pressing i t-eachei thonage in the nation's ; public schools was announced at : ' department of labor last week by Mrs. Alice K. Leopold, director, women's bureau qnd Dr. S. M. • Brownell, U. S, commissioner of i education. The -Ti-oposed program, geared: to individual community needs.' would help insure steady flow of ; quo lifted people into the teaching nrf fessior. on a long-term basis, according to Mrs. Leopold. The plan was developed over a period of months by a committee composed of representatives of 23 I national organizations, including the National Council of Negro. v, omen, and was co-chaired by Mi s. Leopold and Dr. Brownell. It proposed to recruit, train and deliver to the nation’s school : corns, qualified women, holding bachelor’s degrees, but without previous professional preparation or experience in teaching. Also eligible, under the recom mendations, would be people hold ing temporary teaching certifi cates and wishing to qualify for full certification, as well as men wishing to enter the teaching pro fession for the first time. Dr. Brownell claimed that ther* is a shortage of 70.000 elementw, teachers in this country, and this new teacher-training program is proposed to prepare teachers to fill this shortage. When asked if there was a shortage of Negro teachers, the iCONTINUED ON PAGE 8) i TAUGHT 38 YRS.; | RETIRED J MAY Funeral servicer for Mrs. Nan Perry Frazier, 307 E. Cabarrus : street, were conducted from the St. Paul AMT: Church here. Sun day afternoon at 1:00 P.M. The pastor, Rev. L. S. Penn officiated : and burial followed in Mount | Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Fraizer, who taught in the ! Raleigh Public School system for : 38 years, succumbed after a brief Illness, lasting less than 48 hours, Born in Raleigh, Mrs. Frazer i was the daughter of the late | Charles and Nnn Manly Perry.! | She was educated in the Raleigh j Public Schools and Shaw Univer ; sity, from which institution she! | received the degree of Bachelor of ; Arts. She attended summer school | sessions at several North Carolina | colleges and attended summer (Continued on Page 81 j, HiO. News In Brief jl A. AND T. COACH CHARGED || GREENSBORO A warrant' I charging Mathew Brown of the A. | and T. College coaching staff with | larceny of school property was is- i I sued recently according to the! | sheriff’s office here. The war | rant, unserved, due to the fact | Brown, whose Greensboro address j is 1106 Salem Street, is out of the *, city with indefinite plans about j returning charged him with lar- i RALEIGH, N C. NUMBER XXXV ’NEW FARMERS’ MEET IKE President Eisenhower seems to be enjoying himself as he receives Francis N. Thompson, of Groom, Md, national president- of the New Farmers of America. Officials of the. organisation visited the Chief Executive «t the White House test week- iNewspreas Photo) Clinton Police Officer Held On Booze Charge CLINTON —■ Apparently s po liceman’s salary was not sufficient for a 27-year-oid recently ap pointed race cop, who ts now in serious trouble. According to Police Chief I„ Crummie. one of ho- tU partmenCs Negro officers James Faison, was arrested at Hlghtown, N, J.. v itb ten case* of non-tax-paid Siijuor in his 1950 Chevrolet as it was headed towards New York City on the New Jersey Turn* ! pike last w eek, i New, Jersey police reportedly; 1 tcletyped Chief Crummie about j 12:30 Friday morning, informing him of the arrest of Faison. Identification was confirmed by the Clinton police badge that was found in Faison's pocket. It, has been learned that the po liceman was on a vacation, and had taken his wife to her home ai Goldsboro. He allegedly got the 6C gallons of whiskey in half-gallon fruit; jars at Princeton in Wayne Coun ty. The officer had come to the j Clinton force with many favorable recommendations as to his char acter and was apparently making , an impressive record here. He was appointed on July I. 1954. It is alleged that he and anoth er recently installed cop in Clin ton had occupied the same house ! and that the second officer wan 1 moving out and Faison needed ad ditional money to buy furniture for the house. The case is said to be still under investigation. Chief Crummie stat ed that Faison was definitely re- cent- of state property according to the officer. The property, ath letic equipment and several pieces of furniture, was reportedly found in an attic at the Salem Street ad dress after Magistrate J. C. Strickland sent s deputy to re move the furniture from the house in eviction proceedings. The case will be turned over to th: r me and SBI investigators have been notified. (Continued on Page 8) Iseved of his position. A Clinton attorney, Jake Turlington, former member of the FBI, stated that when he and his party were going to the I.inn’s convention in New York some weeks ago, his car was stopped by the New Jer sey police and looked over for f Continued on Page 8) NMA Prexy Praises Ruling By ALICE A. DUNNIGAN WASHINGTON fANP)—In his | , final adress to the House of Dele gates of the National Medical As- 1 - social,ion, last week, Dr, A. Porter; , Davis, the outgoing president. ! praised the Supreme Court, for its TWO BOYS DIE IN SAND PIT ! ELIZABETH CITY The bod ies of two 12-year-old boys were recovered tram the waters, of a sand pit in Pasquotank County Tuesday night at 9:45 by Coast , Guard personnel, ending a long search for the youngsters who had not. been seen since they left home around 2:00 p. m. Tuesday after noon. The youngsters, Norma,n Biff ups, youngest son of Mr. Harrison Biff ups, and Tyronne Jackson, Bis I ups’ grandson and the son of Mr. Benjamin Jackson, had drowned when they apparently - stepped in water over their heads and couldn’t get out. They could not swim. When found, the hoys’ bod ies were about 30 feet from the water’s edge, some six feet apart in water from four to ten feet deep. i The sand pit reportedly was the t largest of several in a group neai ] Pitt’s Chapel, about two miles off 1 VZeeksville Road and five miles , from Elizabeth City. j l When the youths had not re- i turned home between 7 and 8 p. m. Tuesday, and members of their families could not locate them, the Highway Patrol and the Coast , Guard were called on for assis tance. (Continued on Pare 8) 1 'UNITED WE STAND' — » Dr. Frivols Btichmao Hid* fureweE to Mr*. Mary Method Stethune, ttsmAer mnd first president of the National Council of Negro Women of America, at the close of the Work! As sembly Cor Moral Rc-Armament, Held at Oux, Switzerland Speaking as the representative of 18 million Negroes in America, Dr. Bethune declared “Caux is providing os the way to unite the nations of the ! world May we stand united until this idea reaches mankind everywhere." With her stands Mrs, Minnie Rogers, and at right. Prof, Richard Brown, of Blue field, West Vs. (Newspress Photo! WEAVER NAMED |TO SHAW UNS¥. President William R Strainer i announced the appointment <>f Mr, D. W. Weave: as Business Manager of Shaw University to replace Mr. G. E. Jones whose resignation be comes effective September 1. 1554. ; Weaver received his elementary ! and secondary education at hi - r.u- I five home Wlnlon, N. C„ at the ; Waters Training School and the ! C. S. Brown High School respect ! ively. He is a graduate of Hamp j ton Institute wlie-e he received : the Bachelor of Science Degree in : Business Administration, and has .done further *or It aJ Cornell ! University. j Mr. Weaver is a membe; of the , Executive Committee of the I American Association of College i Business Officers, the National ! Education Association and served !on the Building Commission for 1 Tennessee State University. I iCONTINUED ON PAGE 8! ! __ _ _ .... Principals And Supervisors Support i Court Decision In Durham Confab | i . HENSON HIGH !H NORFOLK | OVER HOUSING 1 NORFOLK, Va. (ANP) —White ! families have beer, on the run to Norfolk and nearby places for ai ! most 100 years, to keep their ; neighborhoods white, but they are i getting tired. The last drama of this phase of race relations is being played in a new neighborhood here called Caronado. Tension between the. races has mounted to such an ex tent during the past 10 days that a. race riot might be touched off any day. The glaring headlines in the newspapers tell the story of Cor onade. a newly development in I Norfolk, county near Norfolk which was formerly inhabited by | only white families. One headline (Continued on Page 8> recent decision on segregation in the public schools. ‘This,*’ he said, “its an example of what there is possible to do, when there is consecration, bank-; ed up by abilities and money.” He also praised the National ! Association "for the Advancement! of Colored People for spearhead ing this fight, and spoke of the physicians’ participation in this; ores nidation. He urged The approximately 2,-! 000 delegatee in attendance to strive to make the medical field so attractive that more youngj men and women will be encour- 1 aged to enter this profession. It, was a bit hard when those young people had to be trained in segregated schools, he said which set up s double standard and gife them an inferiority coin -! plex. There is a "dissipation of menial effort,” he continued, "when we must, start from so low in order io attain heights that are so necessary for a physician’s career. He advised members of NMA (Continued on Page 8) Fight Far National Baptist Head Looms SAN ANTONIO, Tex.. (ANP)-- Fnr the first tune in the 21 years 1 of his presidency, the Rev. Green L. Prince, president of the Na tional Baptist Convention of America will face a contest when he runs for reflection at the an nual meeting Sept. 7-12 in Jack sonville. Fla. The contender will be Dr. P. S. Wilkinson. 49 year old president of the American Baptist Conven i tion of Texas, a state wide organi- I station reputedly possessing 90,- 1 000 members. 1). W WEAVER NCTA Executive Praises Stand DURHAM N. C„ iANP)—One' hundred and twenty of the state’s Negro principals ar.d supervisors' have unanimously approved a re- I solution favoring “wholehearted support of the Supreme Court d< - • cis io n outlawing segregated schools." The resolution was approved without a dissenting vote at the closing session of the fifth annual Principal-Supervisors conference held here a:. North Carolina Col lege last week. Irr. W I Greene, executive secretary of the North Caro lina Teachers Association, pa rent organization of the prin cipals-supervisors group, said he thought the resolution was “good index of the feelings of the membership of the North Carolina Teachers Associa tion." In the resolution, the principals and supervisors said, “ . . . We ; pledge ourselves to wholehearted! ! support of the decision and standi I ready to work cooperatively and: ! faithfully for its implemenation.” i The group voted to send copies of the resolution to the Governor’s Advisory Commission on segrega (CONTINUED ON PAGE 8) BISHOP ORDERS MIXED SCHOOLS LITTLE ROCK. Ark. 'AWT Bishrop Albert L. Fletcher, head of he Roman Catholic diocese of j Little Rock, last week declared i that Negro students will be ati -1 mined to white parochial schools , m areas where the church has nor, provided separate schools for Ne groes. The new policy was revealed In. a pastoral letter read in churches of the diocese, winch covers all I of Arkansas. Calling on his parishoners to be cairn in accepting the policy, the prelate letter read in part: “There is nothing to get excited; ! about. I am merely outlining what has been the constant teaching of the Church.” (CONTINUED ON PAGE 8) The Baptist Minister’s Union of j Sa. n Antonio comprising 49 j churches in that city was the first, j organization to toss Dr. Wilkin- j son’s hat in the ring. In a special;; i meeting last Monday held at the First Baptist Church, Dr. C. Wil- j liam Black, pastor, the Baptist: Minister’s Union, of which the': . Rev. E. J. Wilson is president, > i, went on record as. feeling need for j -a change in leadership. - j Rev. Wilson in a statement ex-1 ■ pressing the sentiment of the | 1 reroup said: j HABBIS CHEER COURT EDICT LITTLE SWITERLAND - - Rab bis from North Carolina and Vir ginia concluded the third annual Jewish Leadership Institute Sun day with a resolution endorsing the Supreme Court decision out lawing segregation of races in the nation’s public schools. Governor William R Ira stead of North Carolina was informed by a resolution that the North Carolina. Associa tion of Rabbis fully approves the ruling. Umstead was also urged by the group to put the ruling into ef fect in North Carolina immediate ly. The North Carolina Associa tion of Rabbis sponsors the in stitute an an educational and re , ligjeus retreat for the rabbis and teachers of Sunday School in North Carolina and adjacent * CONTINUED ON PAGE 8> ROXBORO HEATH INVOLVES GIRL MARRIED MAN ROXBORO A 20-year-old woman, Miss Roberta Woods, has admitted that she was the person who fired a 22 calibre bullet into the head of her boy friend, Coy Lee Oakley, 24-year-old married farm hand of the Five Oaks Com munity Sunday morning. She is being held on a charge of murder. The confession was reportedly made to Sheriff C C. Holem&n after he placed evidence befor* her to convince her that Oakley could not have beer, killed whila they were scuffling for possession of the weapon at a tobacco barn shelter as she had previously re ported. The incident took place at approximately 12:30 a. m. Through an examination of the (CONTINUED ON FACIE *! THIRD NEGRO MAY GO TO DC DETROIT (ANP) With two Negroes already serving on Capi tol Hill, it looks like there might be a third. State Sen. CSmrlee J. Diggs, Jr., recently became the first Negro : to over win a congressional nom ination i« the history of Michi ; g»n. if be should be sleeted tn No vember over Gordon Knight. Re publican nominees and only a switch in the traditionally Demo cratic district could keep burs ; from winning he will join Wil liam L. Dawson of Chicago and Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., of New York, as one of three Negroes serv ing in Congress Diggs swamped George O'Brien, veteran of more than 15 years in the United States Congress. While Diggs was piling up his record victory, 19 other Negro candidates in state- and local con tests won nominations. It was the largest field of sue (CONTINUED ON PAGE g) “In considering the needs of the National Baptist Convention, our Union is joining with others in feeling that the convention needs a wider representation In national, international and world move ments as well as a more effec tive buildup its many of the states throughout the nation.” “Knowing the local, national and even international demands which are being made upon Dr. P. S. WilVissvU, his undertaking of the whole Cfoietfcau movement, iqMrmfri&m is* tics id