Dute xmu Ubr A.&T A CbeC#in FOR THiRTY YEARS THE OVTSTANDim WEEKLY OF THE CAROUNAS Entered a$ Second Clou Matter at the Pott Office mt Durhwtn, Horth Carottns, ufid«r Act of Mctreh 3,1879. VOLUME so — NUMBER 18 DUIUIAM. NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MAT IS, 195S PRICE TEN CENTS Weak Reply In Hospital Charges Some $841,000 worth of new buildinxB were dedicated «t Lincoln Hospital in Dnrham iast Sunday as approximately 1,800 persona fathered on the hospital lawn to hear a dedica tion speech hj Duke Universi ty’s President Hollis Edens. Top photo diows Dr. Edens addressing the gronp. Second photo shows Lincoln Norses Glee Club. Lincoln Hospital prior to addition with annex seen ^rom North is seen In third photo. Fourth idioto pictures, left to right, hospital drectw W. M. Rich, W. J. Kennedy, Jr., mas ter of ceremonies and chair man of building committee; Dr. Edens, and Dr. Alfonso Elder, North CaroUna College President who introduced Dr. Edens. Bottom photo shows Dnrham County Manager, Oeorge Kirkland and turning over kejrs to new building to Dr. Clyde Donnell, trustee, presi dent irf thft.hospltal. See story, this issue. Staff photos by STANBACK. Grievances Aired in Meeting Wliicli Bars Tiie TiMES ASHKVILLE Mrs. Virginia Holloway, Ipcal beautician, restated her charges of mistreatment as a patient by thcf nursing personnel of the Victoria Hospital at a meeting of the grievance committee (rf the hospital board held Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Holloway had previously made charges of negligence in attention to her needs and ver bal abuse in a signed statonent dated March 25, foUbwiag her discharge from the hospital having been admitted some ten days prior. The beauty shop operator had also charged in liier original statement that the hospital refused to re-admlt her. According to one observer {M^sent, the attractive 29 year- (Please turn to Page Eight) VoteonAstieviiie TVi^roposai is ASHEVILLE The decision on whether wired” television service shall be permitted in Ashe ville was delayed indefinitely as a result of a court order signed by Superior Court Judge Zeb T. Nettles prohbit- ing balloting on the question as was scheduled for the gen eral election held Tuesday. Judge Nettles’ order follow ed a hearing held Saturday in the Buncombe County Courthouse. A group of radio station operators and TV sales and service sought the injunction on the grounds that the City Council’s procedure in submitting such a question was not according to the State statute governing the same; and on the groimds that information con tained on the ballot was not suf ficient. Defendants in the case were the City Council and the Muni cipal Board'of Elections. Judge Nettles’ order prohibit ing a vote on the TV issue this past Tuesday was appealed to the State Supreme Court. As a result of the failure to get a vote on this issue in the general election, it is not known at this writing whether Com munity T-V System, Inc. will continue its efforts to secure the right to operate suclwa service here in Asheville. “Wired” TV is a service of signal distribu tion offered to TV set owners on a fee basis for the alleged pur pose of “offering better and wid er reception" to those who want to subscribe to such a service. Such a service as offered by tile Community TV System is being opposed paritcularly by those planning to operate TV stations and by some TV sales and service dealers in this area. Should the City Council and the Municipal Board of Elec tions win their appeal or change their procedure to meet the ob jections of the plaintiffs, it is possible that the issue would be submitted to voters in a special election. Efforts To Clear PW's Suspected Of Red Leanings NEW YORK Permission to interview re leased Negro prisoners of war at the Valley Forge Hospital in Pennsylvania Imuj been re quested by the National Asso ciation for the Advancement of Colored People in a tele gram to Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson. , Upon their return to this country the men assigned to the Valley Forge Hospital, among them a number ra Ne gro soldiers, were originally the victims of a seemingly of ficial suspicion that they had succumbed to the Communist propaganda while in the custody of the enemy. The accused men have hotly dened this allegation and have asked vindication. White cited the statement by Pfc. Roger Herndon that “the Communists tried to show us they had something, but they had nothing compared to wlurt' we have In the Unted States.” This statement by Hemdoa, the NAACP leader said, “is ail the more remarkable in that in his native Florida he would be denied many rights of dttoendilpp.'* The NAACP, White told Sec retary Wilson, “wishes to ascer- certain the facts and do what it can to prevent injustice being done men who fought valiantly for their country.” GROUP BUSTS FIRING OF YMCA HEAD • ASHEVILLE The local branch NAACP has gone on record as “con demning the unjust and un reasonable action” which the Committee of Management of the Market Street Branch Y. M. C. A. took in dismissing its executive secretary, Hugh A. Johnson. Johnson was reliev ed of his post on March 27. The action taken by the NAACP was contained in a resolution adopted by the branch in its regular member ship meeting held last Sunday. Reverend M. R. Donald is presi dent of the branch NAACP. The resolution as adopted stated tliat Johnson was “dis missed for the sole reason that he was an outspoken and mili tant fighter against discrimina tion and segregation.” Johnson is co-chairman of the Buncombe Coimty Committee for Negroes and also an execu tive committee member of the local NAACP. Johnson was recently appoint ed the Director of CAROLINA TIMES’ Western North Carolina Bureau with offices in Asheville. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ¥ ¥ Fate Of Doomed Four Up To Gov. Umstead Scenes from the Sixth Dis trict Omega Psi Phi regional meeting at Columbia, South Carolina, April 24-26 shows: 1—Dr. Matthew J. White head of Washington, D. C., keynote speaker at Sixth Dis trict Regional Conclave Omega Psi Phi Fraternity held at Columbia, South Carolina, April 24, 25, and 26. 2—John F. Potts, First Vice Grand Basileus, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity presenting plaque to Attorney J. Alston Adkins of Winston-Salem, N. C. tor outstanding contribu tion to the FraternJ^y.l 3—Ralph M. Gert of Rock Hill, South Carolina, present ing plaque to John H. McCray, Editor of LIGHTHOUSE AND INFORMER for his crusade for freedom in South Carolina Civil Rights fight. 4—Miss Cynthia Brown of Henderson, N. C., second priie winner in^ Omega Sixth District Talent Hunt Hnals held at Columbia. South Caro lina, April 26. Miss Brown was a candidate of Zeta Al^ia Chapter of Henderson and Ox ford, North Carolina. N. C. WEBSTER Ex-A. & T. Off idol Indicted On 23 Embenlement Raps DW15 COUSINS, SPEUa, AND BROWN SUTED TO DIE ON »IN RALEIGH The fate of four men now awaiting execution on death row in Central prison here is left up to the State’s Chief Executive. Unless • there is a com mutation of the death sen tences imposed on Bennie and Lloyd Ray Daniels, cou sins, Raleigh Speller and Clyde Brown by Governor William B. Uxnatead the four are scheduled to die in a mass execution in the State’s gas chamber here on Friday, May The date of the execution w^ actually set \^en Federal Judge Don Gilliam signed t>a- pers vacating stays ol execution he had granted for the quartet some time ago. While the stays were in ef fect, lawyers for the doomed (Please turn to Page Eight) GREENSBORO N. C. Webster, long-time bursar of A. and T. College, was indicted here Monday on 23 counts of embezzling $116,- 121.18 from the college cof fers. Webster, 51, served as bur sar of the college for some 30 years up until his dismis sal last month for “irregulari ties” in his office. The indict ment, returned by a Guilford County Grand Jury, covers only a five year period, how ever. Last Monday evening, Web ster rested in the Guilford County jail under a $15,000 bond, after having been ar rested at his home at 219 North Diidley Street. His trial is sched uled for a special Superior Court term here June 1. ^ Webster’s indictment cornea as a climax to a three-months intensive investigation of the college’s finances by a team of auditors out of the office of State Auditor Harry Brld- (Please turn to Page Eight) Saiisiniry's Rose Aggrey Elected New Head Of Women's CIuIk ELIZABETH CITY Mrs. Rose D. Aggrey, promi nent North CaroUna educator and civic worker succeeded Professor Ruth G. Rush as state president of the North Carolina Federation of Negro Women’s Club last week. A cash tokm of “grateful ap preciation for seven years of Itig^y successful and meaning ful service" was given outgoing President Rush, former dean of women and now psychology professor at North Carolina Col lege, Durham. Mrs. Aggrey, former pro fessor at Livingstone College and later Jeanes supervisor of schools in Rowan County with headquarters at Salisbury, had been active in federation work for many years. She was editor of the organization^ Journal, a job she will continue to hold un til a successor is named. The new federation president is the widow of the late Dr. J. K. Aggrey, noted missionary educator. An 11 point resolutions’ plank calling for the integration of Negroes and women into all phases of state and national life was adopted by the organization. As released by Miss Rush of Durham, the federation’s retir ing president, one of the chief points in the anti-segregation plank stated: “Resolved, we go on record as. definitely opposed to segregation in- schools, public carriers, public Ubrarles, r«»- taurants, hospitals, parks, hotels, tourists homes or eabkis and qefl (Please turn to Page Bight)