Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 6, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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World News Photos ■'~ 11 " ' ■ 1 ■ 1 FIRST NEGROES AT NAVY WAR SCHOOL—WASHINGTON. D. C.—The flnt Negro officer* to be included In the student body of the Novsl War College at Newport, R. 1., will attend rlion at the college this fall, the Navy announced March 26. Left to right, in file pictures, are Cmdr. Samuel L. Gravely, Jr. of Richmond, Va., and Li. CVr. Oeer*e J. Thomneoh. of Los Aneeles (UPI) GETTING READY TO REALLY TEE OFF—The above is one of the many operations now going on at the Tee-Off Country Club in preparation for the 2-Par Golf Course that will aeon be In operation. The beauty of Spring can certainly be appreciated aa one beholds the dogwoods as they put on their white purity. It Is a treat to drive out and get a look- The management Is gratified at the anticipated mem bership that will enjoy the leisure and relaxation of this elub atmos phere. Membership cards may be procured at the office of The CARO LINIAN, 218 E. Martin St., today. A detailed folder may also be gotten explaining details of this country club. PROPOSE OmL RIGHTS ftmm <* RepubH tu Rtoatan, miihn President Kennedy of net delay enough. pro* pooed sweeping legislation to eorry out the recommendations of the aril Rights ConunMon. They offered e ehrtl rights package. railing for new Federal laws In the fields of votiny. education, employment, ho”«<ny and administration of Justice. iITPII PICKET STATE HOUSE— North Jersey InteyraUonists picket Statehoase to protest racial Imbalance In Enylewood schools. 250 demonstrators participated and heard speakers rap Got. R. J. Hughes. . „L>Cc DOG UIafEBSES DtMONSTRATuii.i . oi.ce uses trained dog to help disperse demonstrating Negroes in Greenwood, shortly after Negroes completed voter registration applications. The Greenwood area has been the target of an intensive voter regtsra tien r-moalgn among Negoes. (UPI) LITTLE BROTHERS MEET BIG BBOTBEB—WASHINGTON. D. C.—Sen Edward Kennedy, D.-Mass.. brother of the Preddent, and • member es the Big Brothers of America, an ergs wire rise dedicated to aiding ■nderprlvhcgtd children, meets two little broth cm, Stephen Heehaws them ohppe^shi^TlM^^'srsthen SEARS-ROEBUCK TARGET OF NCTI ; + National Guard Plans To Implement New Mandate The Carolinian ■ m am——**—***—msmmMMMMMmHHMiIIMHiIMMIIHMiIHMMMMiIHHMIMH——■— North Carolina *s Leading Weekly VOL. 81, NO. 23 RALEIGH, N. C, lATURDAY, APRIL 6,1963 PRICE 15c Court Ruling Bans Seperate Hospitals IDENTITY MUST BE DROPPED GREENSBORO Two sections of North Carolina law were de clared null and void Monday in a federal court judgement filed in an integration case. Judge Edwin M. Stanley ruled that Lee Porter. Jr, 12-year-old Negro of Durham, shonld be trans ferred as his parents requested from Cherry Hospital at Goldsbcsw (coMxwutn on PAon s> »Y .. • Hampton Students ■’* UpTnAnns \ HAMPTON, Va. - Scores of Ne gro students Monday gave a peti tion to Mayor George Bentley catl ing for an end to racial discrimina tion In city offices and complain ing of police brutality. , Bentley met with 67 Negro stu dents of Hampton Institute in City Council chambers while several hundred Negroes paraded in front of City Hall in an anti-segregation demonstration. Bentley assured the Negores the city would tolerate no form of bru tality. “If your claims are true the facts can be brought out in court,” he said. Nine Negroes face a hearing April 10 on anti-trespam charges resulting from a sit-in dembnatra tion at a drug store Saturday. The Negroes charged that police had threatened demonstrators Sat urday and Sunday with police dogs and showed favoritism by frater nizing with “agitators” who heckled the demonstrators. (CONTDrCKD ON FAGB t) Hero Braves Neuse To Save White Girl Tragedy can always bring men to their knees, but courage can of times allay some of it or at least make it a litlte easier to bear. That is what happened Sunday when Carl Pierce rescued 11-year-old Ann Prince, from the swirling wa ters of the Neuse River. The little white girl had gone there with a family to enjoy the day on the banks of the river fish ing and the spring weather, that Sunday afforded. Witnesses to the rescuing and a drowning related how Ann fell from a sand bar and In no time her body was swept 125 feet Pierce described her as looking like a doll, floating down the river. There were others who were re- ODDS-ENDS BT JAMES A. SHEPARD •The Lord Is ear lodge. He will save as." ASK TOD* PASTOR Will you please ask your pastor has he read or heard about bow pastors of churches are actively participating in our all out effort for freedom and equality in all parts of this country? Beginning in Montgomery. Ala., these ministers endorsed and min ister led demonstrations have been and are being carried on in every section of the United States. And what is more Important, they arm getting results. Segregated trans portation. segregated recreational facilities, segregated public sating places, segregated schools and ev en segregated churches have be come integrated bacauac es the bn THROWN OUT OF MOVIE THEATRE—Negroes who were trying to gain admittance to a local movie theatre in Knoxville. Tenn were stopped by white spectator*. An unidentified white boy I* »hown pulling three Negro girt* out of the theatre. (UPI) Local Firms Extend Welcome Delegate* to the 82nd session of the North Carolina State Teachers Association will find themselves in different surroundings from those ported as having seen the girt go ing down stream, but did not make fCOMTINWED OH PAGE S) CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS Bin FROM THEM PAOg * Rartaa’s Cash Mars KKr “ Mac Josephs Baathara Bell PAGE t ■wdson-Belho—Eftrd’s Wears • - ISr Stars Saha W. Winters sag Ca. hi* • Colonial Maras R. R Qotea Fa ratter# Ca. FAGS 7 AAF Marat RetUc-Levlae FAG* S Ft pal-Cola Rotates Ca. es Ralelsb Carolina Builders, lac. Paten Mai Warner Manorial# RMgsways opticians, fee. FAG* a Meat Flaao Oesnaay Raleigh Funeral Rome Mepheaaoa’s Mo* Co. Thomason CaS lilac OMameblle FAG* IS ZaaShm Qrm FoaMmOtm * RoM Weaver Rraa.. RsmWav Bawls Mar or Co. Ralstsh trMnS Wodhteftow Terraco Apia., fee. " Ralelsb Tractor A RaMpawnt Ca. AA Ante gaits Sanaa ra Molar Compear Jays Aiarif oral WahMer-RMhe Cartts BiMMiisl Ca. FAGB B with which they are a custom ed to being a part Due to the fact that the Memori al Auditorium is being renovated the session have been moved to N. C. State College. Convention headquarters will ba in the Reyn olds Coliseum. The several divisions and discus sion groups will be meeting in ma ny buildings on the campus. Ses sions are scheduled to get under way Thursday morning and will end Saturday. The political activity seems to be In the Classroom Teacher Division Mesdames Bessie H. Allen and PAG* II Waystee Furattara Boats Barro. Inc. Lowe's Soar or Griffis Shoo Co. Belly Gay I’AGE II Arnold Jacob’s Toga# Goodman's J. J Fallon Co. Standard Concrete Frodnrta Ca. FAGB IS Broaden Fruit S Produce Co. Fine State Creamery Sou Hi arn Fumllur, Wholesale Co Commonlty Florist Central Drug Store Wrann-Fharr FAGg IS Carolina Fewer A Light Co. G. S. Tucker Bros.. Inc. Patterson Travel Service Cmstrad's Transfer A Grocery Capital Bargain gtore : PAGE 17 Tire Sales A Service Daniels' t'lothlnf Store Helton Homes Ce. National Budtet Service, tec. National Ass's of Collos* Women Bargala Box Price’s SbeU Service FAGB IS Dona's Been Service Bunt General Tire Co. Fenneys Jean's of Raleigh Lincoln Theatre Emma Jane Dram Shop Provident Finance Ca. WaSe Ante Service FAGS IS Fire si esse Store* PAGE SS Iveys at Raleigh Juanita Corbin are fighting for the presidency. Mrs. Margaret W. Wil son and Oscar H. Hinnant are bId fCONTINtIKD ON PAGE I) Rocky Mount Church ROCKY MOUNT The Rev. D L Blakey, pastor of R t John AME Zion Church, along with the offi cer* and. members, i* ready to re joice in the feet that "With Go.i All Tilings Are Possible." The con gregation is planning to move into a modernly equipped sancutsry on oi about April 21. The spirit of the people was ex emplified Sunday when more than $2,400.00 was reported as having been raised to aid in the comple tion and the buying of furniture. The building has been under con struction for a number of years and there were those who despaired of it ever being completed. The Rev. Wakey was able to corral the membership and to get the aid of ' .V ith Carolina Mutual Life Tn- MAHt. HISTORY-lhc*c arc Icen-Oems wlw be- opportunity U> meet Mrs. Lynaoa wife sf the vice-president at the United States, Ss she visited here »sirdar .with her haahM* Tta are reported ss having been the enly sack graaps t# haw ted _*S.‘.I 1 -- .. -Lady Bird” L-r. Niki Neal, Billie Tacksr. Mn. Jshnsen. Mrs. MaMs Wright, Jaaa Csfidd MgsW Cefteid. Jr. Delegates Plan Bbycdfp Picket Line Schedule! The Mg story coming out of the meeting of he North Carolina Tea cher* Association could easily be the fact that members of the orga nisation are being sliced to boycott Sears and Roebuck, due to the fact that the management and the com pany have been mum on an inci dent reported to have created ra cial disturbance. According to Interested persons and .Dr. Charles A. Lyons, Jr. whose six-year-old daughter was said to have been “yanked” out of a rest room at Sear* Roebuck Com pany's Cameron Village store Feb. 14. no word of apology has come from the management of the store Guard To Select By Army Standards Only^f It is believed that when the last reading of the law passed by the general assembly this week, re pealing an old law that barred Ne gores from becoming members of the National Guard, that another one of the discriminating barriers will fail. It is to be remembered that there has been much discussion on the matter and Negroes have pointed out that if they have been called upon to take up arms to fight for the country they should be permit ted to enjoy some of the benefits derived from being a member of the National Guard. Adjutant General C. T. Bowers told The CAROLINIAN Wednes day that as soon as the proper in formation was sent to his office he would draft a directive and aend it to the Comander-in-Chiefi of all unit# with the proper instructions as to how the law should be im plemented. He also said that any pemon who in the opinion of the Cononander in -Chief, would make a good mem ber that his application wtiuld go through (he proper channel and would bo given the attention due under the rules set out kg the U S. Army. The examination is prepared by State Elks In Drive ■ For Votes GOLDSBORO - The first part ' of an extensiva drive to register Negroes in the eastern counties of the state will get underway her* when the N. C. State Association of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks es the World open It* 1003 session at First African Baptist Church. May A The registration drive is being sponsored by the Civil Liberties Department, headed by Alexander Barnes. veteran newspaperman, of Durham L. E. Austin, editor, Ca rolina Time*. Durham, will open the drive as he addresses the Civil Liberties meeting at 8 p. m. The editor ia expected to tell the Elks that for 100 years the Negro has waited for flrstclass citizenship and his patience has been abused and in many instance* confused with the promise that it will event ually make him a flrstclaas citizen. Dr. A. R Moaeley who heeded the department for a number of years and now pastor of ML GI (rONTINUKD ON PAOB I) surance Company and the project will soon be completed. The edifice is designed in Gothic style and adds a touch of dignity aid reverence to the commum.y. It is located on the corner of At lantic Avenue and Goldleaf St. The building will be air conditioned. It has an imposing sanctuary which will be equipped with modern church furniture including an or gan and a piano. The basement will be used for educational purposes and aa a fel lowship hall There will be many clasi room* that will serve to ex pand the Christian education pro gram Bishop W A Stewart, residing (CONTINUED ON PAOI t) or from any represen tative-VMhe company. Dr. Lyons is said to hakOiif' the following letter to the QBBMT' and ia reported to have nofievfjr ed any reply up to Tueeday of this week. The Manager . Sears Roebuck and Company-* - Cameron Village Raleigh. North Carolina Dear Sir: 1 ' This letter is written to uiR at tention to and to express mg> top concern over s humiliating iralflont which occured in your itorOBOBT day, Thursday. Feb. 14, 1963. < CONTINUED ON PADS O the Army* and is said to contain an intelligence test like any agarag* school test. According to jpopral Bowers one does not have je bad previous military experiaUa to qualify. „ The repeating of the old mm Is said to have met the appiOH! of practically all of the law 'tOfter* and there has been little om» ad verse reaction on the parCef-Ih* general public. -- TO SffAK HERE—L C Aas- Un. MKoc - Pubtiahjsr. Carotin* rijto JSdjMri nOOWKyiJ St aUTeSSr The meeting K betag held la the internet of thf drive to eeltaet clothing. DESIGNATES INCF MONTH —Mayor J. G McCachern of Concord reading a proelaaiation designating April as T7NCT month. W EATHKH The five Say weather forecast (« the Kalelsh area beatnnlns Thursday April 4, and continuing through Mow day. April A la aa follows: Temperatures will average S to M degrees shove normal. Risk SBd 100 temperatures M and 4d. Warns Thors day not as warm Friday and Aainrdav Warmer Sunday and Monday. Wldet] scattered showers ocrurrtllV' Tliursdaj and near Ihe roast Friday.Af show Monday and will average lAlsck S Ir.s
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 6, 1963, edition 1
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