Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 1, 1958, edition 1 / Page 1
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CATHOLIC SCHOOL INTEGRATION CITED HERE • H MISS BARBARA MORGAN Mm Morgan Featured By A Magazine Can school integration in the. South work? The governors of Arkansas and Virginia say It won’t, hut. the students of Cathedral Latin High School, Raleigh, prove that it does, according to a national Catho lic magazine, Ba rbara Morgan. 16, of Raleigh, and one of the 33 Neg ro students at Cathedral Latin High School, was calmly Intr grated Into the student hody of 120 students, four years ago. Barbara was "seared” when she started school hut soon felt acre pled when she was he fr!ended b.v a white girl. .fu.h a few months following the Supreme Court's momentous rie ■ ision in May, 1954 Eishep Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh ordered the tPONTJNURD ON PAGE 21 Seawell In Defense Os Court Stand Airy Gen Malcolm Se»w»M made an impromptu defense of his stand on the Supreme Court s de segregation decision Friday night before the State Bar Association Seawell told the attorneys they "should have no doubt as to what the law of the land is.'’ Hr said that the Supreme Court decision is the law and “we in North Carolina are confronted with facts not with figures at this time” Dr. 7. Beverly Lake, former * distant attorney general, in the principal speech, said that the dc < ision is the law of the land "only in the sense of the false doctrine that tire judges do in fact." He urged the lawyers to join him in “unalterable determina tion" to oppose the theory that the desegregation decision is the law of the land. New Catholic Pope Son Os /ami Parents VATICAN CITY •- An Italian skilled in Vatican diplomacy, An gelo Guiaseppe Cardinal Roncalli, was elected Pope Tuesday night. He has chosen to reign under the name Pope John XXIII. St, Peter's church bells and hells of .100 other Roman rhurehes rap? out a carol of triumph Pope .John succeeds Pope Pius XII who died re cently. Hundreds of thousands of peo ple in St Peter's Square roared an ovation as the Patriarch of Venice became Pope at the f>?r of 76. Hus election ended three day:, of intense suspense centerinr around a deadlocked conclave lathered to choose a. successor lo Pope PiUS. The new Pope has been de scribed as a jovial prelate, bid has never hesitated to make bis views known, even when I bey might he unpopular. Hr is the son oi a modest farm ICONTPvtIED ON PAGE ti FUNERAL DIRECTORS' EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETS The Executive Board of the North C»p«. |1.«» Funeral Directors Association held its annua! one-day meeting at the Blood worth street VMt’A h ere Tuesday, with A. Haywood. Sr. extreme right, front row. serving as host mortician. Plans were •MKHiite* for Hie IJMW state wwiiof the dale „f which will he anno '-'H Two Get $l,lOO In Daring Holdup : Q L I N I A Is ■ VOL JR. NO. 5 SATURDAY, NOV. 1. 195* RALEIGH, N. C. PRICE 12c IN N, C.; ELSEWHERE 15c Parents Sue Va. Governor Ike Ignores Youth Flays Golf As Students Seek Talks ! WASHINGTON - Leaders of a "youth march for integrated ! schools' failed Saturday in an i attempt to get through the White ; House gates to deliver a statement jto President Eisenhower. The I group, which included singer Harry i Ftpbfonte, went to the White House ! as students from the fourth grade | through college marched down Constitution Avenue to the Lincoln Memorial. A spokesman said about 6.0 W students had been scheduled to participate. Those who appeared at the W-H, firms* were barred by White House polio as a largr i rowri gathered. Harter, .love. | a white college student from Orangeburg, 5. C first askeil the police that he be taken to the Chief Executive | When the police politely declin ! od the request. Jove asked that he j and the others be. taken to th (CONTINUED ON PAGE '!> | Long Terms Ordered In Halifax Case HALIFAX Two men were , sentenced Friday to 25*30 years in j prison for robbing and heating j 73-year-old Hobgood farmer this j summer. Balter Smith 35 and Wit liatn Ogburn, 33. both of the Scotland Nerh area were con victed of second-degree bur glary and larceny. They re ceived t-2-year sentence* on the larceny charges to run concurrently with Ihr burgl ary sentences. Both gave notice of appeal after j ’heir sentences were announced at j the end of a four-day trial in Hal { Ifax County Superior Court. Both n had pleaded innocent They had originally hern charged with Mrsl-degrrr burglary in the beating and and theft of Sl3O from C < . Tyne* on the night of Aug. 25. •fudge .1 Paul Fri/.r.elle fixed appeal bond at *30,000 each, they were unable to raise that amount. Witnesses testified that the two men forced their way into Tync.s home after shouting that another person was in distress on a nearby highway. Tyncs said Smith held a idiot gun on him while Ogburn hit him with his fists arid later with a ‘ blackjack. North Carolina’s Leading Weekly TIIIUWAN IN HARLEM Former President Harry S. Truman is seated next to his favorite musical instrument—a piano—while New York governor Avereli Harriman stands beside him as they are in- Hr-viewed by reporters at the Hotel Theresa, New York City, last Wednesday. Councilman Earl Brown is standing at Hardman's right. Truman arrived in New York for a campaign tout through Harlem (CPI PHOTO). Dr. King Honored Upon Return To Montgomery MONTGOMERY. Ala - Inte- ( snation tenders honored a mend -1 ; ins Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., j Monday night with a “tangible | j exxprc&sion of cut, love.'' King recovering from a stab wound inflicted by a j woman in a Harlem depart- j merit store Sept 15, arrived i here by plane Friday to be welcomed by some 100 Ne groes amid cheers and tears. Rev Ralph D. Abernathy, pas- ; for of Hie First Baptist Church, j j headed the welcoming delegation j ; and promised “tangible expm* j sion of our love will come later.' Abernathy, one of King’s Lieu- \ I tenants m their integration fight j , fold the group “we are thankful j i for Goci sparing the life of Rev. ! King. Your return will give us j additional strength to continue our struggle.'' King told tnc group "we live I in a time in which deeds of aw- j | full consequences have become | possible I have had time to think 1 while, recovering and I believe. that the roots of my conviction* have become deeper, that the way to accomplish what we are seek ing . . . lies in non-violence. “I have come home to re join the ranks of yeu who are working ceaselessly for mir crusade for freedom for all men," King said, “This is the first time I have ever been nervous. I am only sorry that a deranged woman injured herself tn seeking to injure tne ..." New York police arrested Mrs. Izola Ware Curry, 12, after Kins whs stabbed in the chest, with * letter opener as he autographed copies of his book. She has been undergoing psychiatric care at x New York hospital ~—~~ CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS BUY FROM rHEM PAGE J Raleigh Seafood Cunipiy.* G. 5 Tucker A- Broi. liu Wlnn-llixl* Store* Southern BHI PAGE 5 Mr. John W. Winter? Hudiion-Belk Compan.v RhodCi Furniture Company Surety Exterminating fn PAGE S Colonial Store; N. c. Products 8. M Young Hardware I n Gem Watch Shop Wake Finance Company Acme Realty Company Capital Goan Company Mr. C. Karl Clchtraaii Family Shoe Store. Raleigh Funeral Home PAGE 7 A. A-. P, Super Marker. Ambassador Theatre Raleigh Commission House toe The tlooii System Indtislrn) Bank PAGE >; Riot'd worth SI. Tomisi Horn* Mechanic!. Ac ,'armn; Bank Heater Weil Company i , avrrn»ifi InsUianpp Agptify repsJ Cila Bottiini in of Raleigh t’arolifi.* «Jorp Wat?OD'i A h**)llltf,y Co.. I*l f; Uimtead Transfet Co roerd litor* BUlni! Motoi* Fliurt* Conti.if'v Dttmi'k &jmo fcefvicc Almond,Two Others Are Being Sued NORFOLK, VA. White pa rent* in Norfolk filed suit in federal, district court Monday ask ing that tilts port city’s six inte gration-closed schools hr returned to local control so the plantiffs children can be educated. Die suit named Gov .7 Lindsay Almond, State Attv.- Gen. Albertis S. Harrison. Jr.. Norfolk school superintendent J. J. Rrewbaker and each member of the Norfolk a»-school hoard as defendants. " ft was the first direct action taken by white parents in Virginia for return and re opening of schools which have been closed by Virginia anti integration laws. The nine white couple? who filed the suit contended their children were being denied equal protect ion under the law by being depriv ed of public education. (CONT-NUED ON PAGE 2) Fifth Bonus Honey Week Underway The fourth week of the current Church Bonus Money Month be gan Thursday, October .10, and w ill pnd at midnight Wednesday, No vember a. This Month ends mid night, November 12, There are six weeks included in the Bonus Money Month m order that additional churches may have a chance to enter and try for top cash awards. Rules of the contest arc listed on nasc 2 of each edition. Church members participating should look on the front page each week lor a list of CAROLINIAN advertisers. Patronize these merchants and turn your receipt* or purchase slips over to a representative in your church every Sunday morning. Awards given to < hunches are: SSO, first: s'.’s, second; sls, third, and $lO, fourth. Those merchants who advertise m The CAROLINIAN appreciate your business and we. urge you to trade with them regularly, fCONTfNUHB on page ,n i Ridgeway's Optieiaiu. Warner Memorials 1 Deluxe Bote PAGE 5 ! Sander* Motot Company | Obion Motor Company | O'Neal Motor*. Inc : PAGE 12 Pirst-Clti'ccna Bank A Trust Company New Lincoln Ci'e O.K < nothing Company Heroin's Cas’i Store Famous Bakery Hunt General Tin- Conran,' MsrHn Street Sell-Service Laundry PAGE U 5. B Kress * Company Mr. Joseph Winters R E. Quinn Furniture Company Davis Flower Shop Taylor Radi , vTV Service , PAGE 1! Perko Cleaners A. A. Hodge, Contractor PAGE 11 Splr & Span Cleaners Nash-Eteefe-Warreo Inc. i Pisgly Wiggly Store , I Sure-Fit Seal Cover Center Wholesale Slectrir Supply (n. , I Mr. James O. Blosmt | PAGE IS | Raleigh Furniture Company Johnson-!jmhr Company i Carolina Power lachl Company ' Johnson-Lambr Company SFSDFSĎSDSFDS Winston-Salem Railway Station Robbed By Two WINSTON-SALEM Two col ored men held uu the ticket agent ! at. the Union Railway Station here Friday and escaped with $l,lOO in checks and cash H. A. Tesh told police he was i alone in the huge terminal when i the two men. one of them armed, ’ walked up to the window and ask- i about train fart s to New York j Hr said one of the men pok- i i cd a. gun from under a brown j i sweater he was holding on hi? I I Ex-City Solicitor Defends Four In ‘Booze ’ Case Here » BY CHARLES R. .IONIS With .the former solicitor of 1 City Court as one of their de fense attorneys, four Raleigh resi i dents walked out of said court ! "free as birds' on liquor charges growing out of several raids on I the recently-formed Press Club, j 305 W. South Street The case was tried last Thurs- I day before Judye Charles OTIn • gen Grimes, acting judge. Former solicitor Robert Mc- Millan, Jr. teamed with Attor ney Stanley L Seligson to free Warnclla Cody Lytclt, 40. Wil j Ham If. Bryant Sr.. 48. Wil liam H. Bryant. ,lr. 37, and NAACP Head At Monroe Seeks Kids’ Entry At White School MONROE - School official; here are studying the request of a local Negro leader for transfer of his two children from a Ne gro school to an all-white school. Robert Williams, president of the local chapter of the National Association for me Advancement, of Colored People, and his wife appeared before the school board at a special meeting Monday night to present the request. Board members discussed tbp request with Williams at Hie meeting but took no ac tion. They p-omised him a derision following an investi gation by the .school super in - State News —IK— Brief _ REV. FLEMING TO SHAW RALEIGH • The Reverend John W. Fleming, director, Christ ian Education, General Baptist Siato Convention of North Carolina will be the guest preacher at Shaw University vespers in University Church on Sunday, November 2, at 5:30 p m. The Reverend Mr. Fleming has served In his present posi tion for severs! years. He con tribute* articles frequently to the Baptist Informer. The fob lowing appeared ill some recent issues: “Quality Not Quanti ty." 'Totralts in Contrast: Marcus Garvey and Marlin Lu ther King;" and "Charily Be gins at Home.” He is a graduate of Shaw Uni versity and holds the B. D. and S.T.M. degrees from the Graduate School, Oherlin Ohio. LUMBERTON HOSTS VTA MEET LUMBERTON The fourth Di strict of the North Carolina Con g-css of Colored Parents and Teachers wiii convene at the Hilly Branch School. Lumberton. 6 miles couth on highway 301 Saturday. November I. Sessions will begin promptly at *0: a. in B. C. Mcßee is fhc prp*idf»nt r»f thp opgflfH&ation. I (CONTINUED ON PAGE {) arm and demanded the check.-, and about 8700 in cash con tained in a single mamla en velope. Tesh said the pair warned him to stay put, but when they walked out he cried foe help and his call was answered by other railway employees who telephoned police Tesh. 41. and the father of three, was too badly shaken up to give an accurate description of the two bandits. Miss Henrietta Biandshaw. all i facing some form of liquor violations, i City Patrolman Rudolph F. Ter- 1 1 ry. testifying for the prosecution,: > said he first, visited the club on I 1 September 28, at which time he! > reported that he arrested Lytell j i for possession ol tax-paid whiskey j ■ for the purpose of sale. He aiso j ' charged Lytell with operating the club without a city license, for which the defendant was taxed court costs. The defense based its a r< - proneh mainly on the fact that (CONTINUED ON PAGE .1) tendeni who will report (o the board a( it* in xl regular meet- j ins- Williams is seeking transfer J of his children from the third and j fifth grades of the Negro school j to the all-white East Elementary j School. Monroe’,, school system j stilt is segregated. Under North! Carolina’s limited Integration a j few Negroes have been admitted j to white schools at Charlotte, j Winston-Salem and Greensboro 1 v-e; SPOKESMAN FOR CHURCH "MIXERS”—This is a eloscup of Robert Mostly. 52, the spokesman for the group of Negroes that at - tempted to attend the Pulaski Heights Presbyterian Church at LiHl® Rock. Ark., recently. Mfinely (old a church elder (hal (hry had been invited to attend the church. The elder replied, however, "Go on h»rk, you areo i wanted here, von jusl came. in cause trouble." (.UPt TELEPHOTO j. TESTING SEGREGATION POLICY lt* a mass test «>f the new segregation policy on buses a! Birmingham. Matotna. Negroes are shown as they wait to hoard a cits bus there last week. Thirteen persons were ar rested and charged with breach of the peace under a law which leaves segregation seating up to the driver’s discretion. The ease is expected to loom inlo a. bus suit which may eventually wind up in the United States Sti riremc Court (UPI TELEPHO IOi. Kasper To 3 Cities Before Trial KNOXVILLE, Tmn Segre gationist. John Kasper said her* Monday he and candid niSa of the sVHIB v . fifty would hold ralties in Ar.fif'nfi Cleveland and Chat tar, oora Tuc scia’y, Kasper said he was making 3 round of the jslaitc with the un called "wheat bread” party candidates be fore lie went on trial Nov. 3 in Nashville lor inciting to riot. The candidates arc Ler Foster, a Knoxville contractor, who is running for governor as an in dependent. and Toni Googe of Knoxville, who is running for state senator. Kasper s,aid she troupe "which includes several other boys." will CCONTtM'ID ON ruv.l 3) Kills Own Sister JACKSON. .V ft * sh vcar-olfi bov shot and killed Siis sister while playing with an i ’unloaded" shotgun Monday, i Sheriff l. I rank Outland j | said that Lottie Mar Robertson | *>. was killed Instantly from » i blast in the head, lie said j i Nathaniel Robertson fled to * ; nearby cotton field where h<s : mother was working <o report | the tragedy. The mother. Mrs. Map Clan - i ton Robertson, told officers bei\ j son did not, know the gun was j i loaded. The boy was released j ! to the custody of his mother
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1958, edition 1
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