Winst.on-Salt.-m, H. C. 7/20/Cotnp. - ■% ' ■ ■% I ■ I Negro Police Officers Capture Bank Robber in Raleigh Dr. Massie Quits Presidency of N. C. College Cbc Carafe \r^eTBUTML&BRHSEDT) VOLUME 43 No. 4 DURHAM, N. C - SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1966 PRICEs 15c U.SCourt Blocks Segregation In Macon, Georgia Park Veteran Teacher Succumbs at Johnson C. Smith University CHARLOTTE—Dr. Algernon O.- Steele, veteran teacher at Johnson C. Smith University, died on January 17. Dr. Steele joined the faculty of the University in 1932 and continued in active service un til his death. He was professor and head of the Department of Religious Education, chair man of the Division of Hu manities, and Dean of the Chapel. Before coming to Johnson C. Smith University, Dr. Steele taught science at Mary Allen Jr. College in Crockett, Tex. He was a favorite speaker be fore college students and youth groups for many years. Dr. Steele was the author of two college text books. He was born in Mocksville, N. C. and was a graduate of Johnson- C. Smith University, received the A.M. degree from Northwestern University, the B.D. degree from Garrett Bib lical Institute, and the Ph.D. from the University of Chica- NCTA Completes Plans For Notable Banquet Jan. 26 NCC Cafeteria To Be Scene Of Benefit The North Carolina Teach ers Association has completed program plans in connection w-ith the Notables Benefit Ban quet which has been re-sched uled for Wednesday, January 26, at 7:30 p.m. The event, sponsored by the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurauce Company and North Carolina College at Durham, will be held at the college cafeteria. The banquet speaker is Jos eph M..Hunt, Jr., chairman, N. C. Highway Commission, who will represent Governor Dan Moore. Recognition of the hon oree, Mrs. Josephine Sharpe, will be made by Mrs. Geneva Bowe, NCTA Secretary. "The Occasion," will be discussed by Dr. S. E. Duncan, president, N. C. Teachers Association, who will pay tribute to the late Dr. William Sharpe, donor of the more than 4,000 acres of Ham mocks Beach Property. Greetings will be brought by Dr. Asa T. Spaulding, president of N. C. Mutual Life Ins. Co., representing business; Dr. J. S. Stewart, member of the Dur ham City Council, representing Durham officials; and Dr. S. P. Massie, president, North Car olina College at Durham, repre senting education. Responses will be made by Dr. H. L. Trigg, member of the State Board of Educaion; Dr. J. W. Seabrook, retired College President; and Mrs. Edna C. Richards, executive secretary, NCACT, who will present Mrs. Gertrude Hurst. Mrs. Hurst is the wife of the caretaker of the Sharpe property, and recom mended the North Carolina Teachers Association as the recipient of this gift of choice land. The 4,000 acres In On slow County include a beach island on the Atlantic Ocean front with more than 850 acres of land and four miles of straight, level, frontage as a beach. Other special guests will be presented by E. B. Palmer, ex ecutive secretary, NCTA. .1 DR. STEELE go. Smith University conferred the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1948. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Fletcher Steele, and two brothers; Elihue of Washington, D. C. and Leon of Albany, Georgia. i \'m A I «■ NEW NCC TRUSTEES AND CHAIRMAN—Three new mem ber* of North Carolina - Col lege's Board of Trustees and Bascom Baynei, right, a mem ber of the Board for 16 years and Its chairman, are shown prior to th# Board's meeting on the Durham campus Wed D. C. Woman Gives SI,OOO to $50,000 Drive For Kiftrell College as Project Gets Underway Reports from the office of the treasurer of the Klttrell College Foundaion, I. O. Fun derburg of Durham, are to the effect that the $50,000 cam paign recently launched in be half of the school is meeting with success and gaining mo mentum. With the first report of the campaign workers set for Feb. 16, when the Founders Day Program will be held at the college, Bishop George W. Ba ber, chairman of the Trustee Board and presiding prelate of the Second Episcopal District, members of the Foundation and Dr. Benjamin Faust, presi dent, declared in a joint state ment this week that the half way mark is being eyed with Senate Confirms Appointment Of Robert Weaver WASHINGTON The U. S. Senate confirmed the appoint ment of Robert C. Weaver as Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Develop ment by a unanimous vote. Weaver, 58, has been head of the Housing and Home Fin ance Agency which will make up the biggest portion of the new department since 1961. The nomination by President Johnson last Friday ended a long - awaited announcement from the top executive's office. As the first Negro of the Cabi net, Weaver, who had been promised an appointment by the late John Kennedy since 1962, was approved by the Banking Committee, 14-0. Thc President said: "After looking over 300 outstanding potential candidates and talk ing to literally dozens of peo ple about him, I have come to the conclusion that the man for the job is Robert Weaver." Commenting on Weaver's operations over the past four See WEAVER 2A nesday, Jan. 19. Appointment of the new members and reap pointment of Baynes was an nounced last week by the office of Gov. Dan K. Moore. The new members are, from left: Malcolm H. Hunt, of Ral eifji, vice president and gen great enthusiasm. Great impetus was given the campaign last week when It learned that a check for sl,- 000 had been donated the foundation by Mrs. Marie S. Wilson, a member of the Metro politan A. M. E. Church of Washington, D. C. It is felt that Mrs. Wilson's contribution will encourage other members of the church to make sizeable contributions to the campaign. , Mrs. Wilson, who is well over the 80-year mark, is a former teacher in the schools of D. C., and for 24 years wm employed by the Veterans Ad ministration. She is the great niece of the late Bishop Jamea See KITTRILL, 2A Says City Can't Resign Trustee WASHINGTON The U. S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that the city of Macon, Ga., could not resign as a trustee of a park to avoid desegregat ing the facility. Acting on an appeal brought by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund in be half of six Macon Negroes, the high court was divided, 6-3. The park, known as Bacons field, was established in 1911 by the will of the late Georgia Senator Augustus Octavius Ba con as a park for white women and children only. The Macon case bears a strong similarity to a situation in Philadelphia, Pa., where Gi rard College was established by an old will as a school for white orphan boys. Legal Defense Fund Director- Counsel Jack Greenberg, who argued the Macon case, said he "hopes the decision will lead to speedy desegregation of Girard College." Sen. Bacon's will perpetual ownership of the land by the city, and establish ed a trust fund for mainten ance of the park. However, Negroes began us ing the facility in 1963 after court decisions had made it ap parent that the city could not operate a segregated park. eral manager of the Electronic Products Division of the Corn ing Glass Works; Mrs. R. S. Ferguson, Taytorsville, a for mer member of thrf State Sen ate; and Robert J. Brown, a public relations consultant of High Point. (f SsSk . 'iß ♦% r*^ MRS. WILSON IfS ' t^Kp ll SAD EXPRESSION Glnnada Thomaa Whaeloua hanga hl« h»ad In ehame after police ar retted him In Ralei(jn Tuesday after he robbed the Northalda Branch of Flrat Citiiana Bank and Trutt Co. in Raleigh. Whaeloua, who has bain con victed on other bank robberies was arretted about a half hour after ha held up the bank for W,099.50. Photo , c Veteran Patrolmen Make Quick Nab Of Holdup Man RALEIGH—An alert window washer who had the presence of mind, when he saw a mid dle-aged man run out a bank, jump in a car and hurriedly' drive off and two unusually alert police officers played the leading roles in the capture of a bank bandit here Tuesday around 10:00 a.m. It was only one-half hour after Ginnada Thomas Wheel ous. 46, an ex-bank robber, had entered the Northside Branch •>f First Citizens Bank and Trust Company, walked direct ly to the tellers window of Mrs. .Mavis Johnson, pointed a pistol at her ordered her to, "Give me all the money you've got" and escaped with $4,099.50 that he was captured by Offi cers Joe Winters and T. T. Street. Winters and Street captured Wheelous near the city limit line on the Hock Quarry Road. He had 53.500 in currency fold ed in various pockets of his clothes. Wheelous was convicted in 1949 of robbing a branch of the Durham Bank and Trust SHUTTLESWORTH Raps Georgia Legislature For Failure To Seat J. Bond CINCINNATI, Ohio The Georgia Legislature's denial of a seat to Rep. Julian Bond is an act of "legislative tyranny," the Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth declared Jan. 13. "It appears that the segre gationists in Georgia are still trying to tell Negroes who can represent them and who can't," the civil-rights leader said. Shuttlesworth is president of the Southern Conference Edu cational Fund (S.C.E.F.) and secretary of the Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence (SCLC). He commented on Bond's situation before leaving for Birmingham, Ala., in re sponse to reports of police brutality against young demon strators there. He praised the residents of Bond's legislative district in Atlanta for picketing the State Capitol and otherwise protest ing his exclusion from the Leg islature. "Bond was elected by these people," Shuttlesworth said, "and they have a right to be represented by him. That is the main issue in this situation. This is a test as to whether the vote is going to mean anything now that we are winning it. If Negroes elect representatives to office, only to see them barred by other office holders who don't agree with their views, where are we?" The Georgia House of Repre sentatives voted not to let Bond take his seat because of public statements he made In support See SHUTTLBSWORTH 2A W« ■ JnQ| ■V' ! I * (Staff photo by Ken Cookt OM ICIvliS I. I. STKKKT \M) JOK WINTKKS ourtety Ntwi And Obterver /yPOOLB Company in Youngsville of $4,- 800. In that robbery he was arrested within an hour after White Rock to Present First Annual Human Relations Inst. White Rock Baptist Church will present its first annual Hu man Relations Institute here February 11-13. Sessions will be open to the public.. One of the nation's foremost Littell, professor of Church theologians, Dr. Franklin H. History, Chicago Theological Seminary, wilf be the keynote speaker and chief consultant. "Local Churches and Syna gogues Seeking God's Way in Race Relations" will be the theme of the institute. Dr. Littell will speak first a t3 p.m. Friday, February 11, at a minister's session. He will also address the fello'wship banquet at 7 o'clock Friday evening. He will lead a study session on "The Relevance of the Christian Message and the Local Church to Extremism" at 1:30 p.m. Saturday. His final message will be delivered to an assembly at 3 o'clock Satur day. The Rev. Lorenzo A. Lynch, who succeeded Dr. Miles M. Fisher as pastor of White Rock Baptist Church last October, is in charge of overall planning for the institute in coopera tion with a Steering Committee headed by N. B. White. Registration begins at 2:30 Friday Feb. 11, at White Rock he had committed _ the crime. He was later sentenced to 15 years in federal prison for that robbery. It was around 10:15 a.m. when Raleigh polige radio dis patcher, W. E. Radford, was notified by telephone that the First Citizen Northside branch, located on Person Street had been robbed. Immediately road blocks -were set up m all toads leading out of Raleigh. In the meantime, Jack Poole, who had been wash ins windows at the Person St. Pharmacy where he is employ ed. had observed the man hur rying from the bank and had the presence of mind to get the license number of the car in which the bandit fled. Less than a half-hour after the road block had been set up Officers Winters and Street apprehended Wheelous near the bridge over Walnut Creek on Rock Quarry Road. The officers reported that they had stopped 15 or 20 out going cars before Wheelous See BANDIT, 2A 0 1 DR. LITTILL Church. Study sessions in five areas will start at 1:30 p.m. Satur day. Among the topics to be considered are: (1) "The Bible, The Christian Message and Race"; 2. The Relevance of the Christian Message to the Lo cal Church and Extremism." 3. "The Relevance of the Christ ian Message of the Local Churches to the Ghetto (pover ty) and their local Implica tions", 4. Politics as a Christ- See RELATIONS 2A Resignation is Made at Board Meet Jan. 19 The following statement was issued by Dr. Baseom Baynes, Chairman of the Board of Trus tees of North Carolina College at Durham here, Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 19. "At a regular meeting of the Board of Trustees of North Car olina College at Durham, held January 19, 1966, Dr. Samuel P. Massie submitted to the Board of Trustees his resigna tion as President, effective June 30. 1966. After due consideration, the Board accepted his resignation with thanks for his services to the College and wished him well in his future endeavors. Dr. Massie requested the Board to grant him a leave of absence as President, effective February 1, 1966. The Board granted his request with full salary. Due to Dr. Massie** resigna tion and request for leave of absence, the Board appointed an Interim Committee effective i February 1, 1966 to carry on the duties of the presidency in his absence. The Interim Committee is composed of Wil liam Jones as Chairman, Dr. Helen Edmonds, and Dr. W. H. Brown. At an early date the Chair man of the Board will appoint a committee to make recom mendations to the Board for a President of the college to be gin serving on July 1, 1966." Don't Buy Them American Firms Selling South Africa Sardines NEW YORK When a 15- ounee oval can of several well known brands of sardines in to mato sauce is purchased, there is a good chance that it was packed in South Africa, The need for marketing of South African sardines under vv, '-known brand names, re flects the business ingenuity some firms have begun to use, due to the failure of the fish supply off the California coast. It is likely this approach is used because of the current climate of Negro attitudes to ward South Africa and the fact that while Negroes are ! 11% of the total U.S. popula tion, they buy over 50% of all the sardines sold in America. During the past 15 years sev eral of the largest and most modern- canneries from well known fishing ports such as Monterey, San Diego, and San Pedro have moved "lock, stock, and cannery" to South Africa where fish of the same specie are in vast abundance. Meanwhile, the State of Maine continues to be the only sizable producer of canned American sardines and has not been forced to look to foreign lands for its raw materials., A 1 though Maine does produce "ome of the 15-ounce oval cans, the bulk of its output is still the standard quarter size or l well-known flat can. A Maine canner recently ad vised his customers to look for "Maine" on the can if they wanted to be sure of buying an American product and if they could find "Maine" to loof for the small print to make sure what they were buying. The South African sardines have already been boycotted in many countries throughout the world because of the apartheid policies of the Sotith African government. t FBI INVESTIGATING THE TUSKEGEE SLAYING TUSKEGEE Student* and citizens are still at fever pitch over the recent slaying of a Negro youth' By a filling Sta tion attendant. Sit-ins, block ins, picketing and various forms of demonstration! to highlight their indignation at the killing and demands for ap priate action on the slayer. Samuel L. Younge, Jr., 21, a student at Tuskegee Institute and a civil rights leader was shot to death by Marvin Se grest, 67, a white gas station attendant. Segrest has been charged with Younge's murder. The FBI Is currently investi gating the matter.