Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 9, 1960, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Ten March On Capitol THE COROLINIAN VOL, 19, NO. 39 Trespass Laws Facing New Tests 4.+++++ + + + + + During Jmlg 4th Weekend: 31 Die Yiolenty In Carolina 1 Students 1 Ordered To Move WASHINGTON Ten Negro , students staged an Indepersden e ( Day march on the capitol siep? urging Congress to grant Negro servicemen and veterans “imrouni- j t,v' from southern segregation lav ? Poller broke up the demon stration after lit minutes how ever, tinder a lav which bars sign carrying and passing nut bandbilis on the capitol grounds The students all neatly dressed left quietly when told of the lav j Thev had carried sign? resdm? Why Aren't Negroes Free?' , j fCOMIM tD ON P AGE S» id own Cases: Supreme Court To 1 Hear 7 DURHAM Nortn Carolina's j Trespass laws, upheld last week by the U S Supreme Court in a golf course integration suit, face a new test before the State Supreme Court as an outgrowth of Negro sitdown demonstrations NAACP attorney? for five Ne groes and two whites convicted F’lday of trespassing at a lunch counter have filed notice of appeal ; fCOSTMIEB ON PAGE T) State News Brief . NEW GENERAL TAKES OVER AT BR AGG FT BRAGG Br:g Gen George 5 Kpeidel. Jr recently named to command XVIII Airborne Corps Artillery, arrived here recently to assume his new duties. He suc ceeds Brig. Gen William A Harris who has open assigned to V Corps CCONTTNUED ON PAGE 21 CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS buy rHEM PAGE » Horton & Cash Store PAGE 3 Roseee-Grlfftn Shoe Ce First-Citizens Bank and Trust Co. PAGE 4 Cameron-Brown Co. Sudson-Beik The Capital Coca-Cola Bo trims Co Bankers Fire Insurance Co. PAGE h Federal Acceptance Corp. Public Service Co. of N. C., Inc. Firestone Stores Pittsburgh Paint A Glass Co Mechanics and Farmers Bank PAGE 8 Colonial Stores Modern Finance Corp. R E Quinn Furniture Co. Odom Cut Kate Cloth ms C Karl Lichtman Taylor Radio A T Servlre PAGE t* Sunshine Bakery Efild's of Raleigh PAGE it) Bids*way** Opticians FIRST PRESIDENT Shown above is a portrait of foseph Kasa Vubu. leader oi the Ahako Political Party, who was last week elected First President of the Belgian Congo Voting was 1 4$ tor him against 43 for rival candidate Jean Bohk Vuhu is 43. His election completed the Congolese Republic' legislature tust ' six davs before the. vast cntral African Territory becomes indepen dent after more than 50 years of Belgian colonialism. (UPI TELE PHOTO). Raleigh’s Women Voters Announce Future Plans The women of Raleigh really came of ace Mav 28 and June 2.S when they went to the polls in great numbers and voted Credit for this was due to the fart that women were organized into s group called Women for Grady j Davis” i Although Dr Davis was not e lertrd. the women felt that they had won in their effort to get the ; neople nut to the polls and that :hev should cotnmue their task of getting Raleigh citizens of voting age registered Mrs Vivian Brown, who was the chairman of The Women for Gra dy Davis railed a group of women I together recently and announced ' the disbanment of the organiza Carulina Builders Cr.rp I (.avrri'w Insurance Agency i 1-Cp Booling Co ! Diilen Motor Finance Co l Pepsl-Cola. Botltllg Co of Raleigh Warner Memorials Fayetteville St Baptist Church Deluxe Hotel I Bloodv-ortb St Tourist Home PAGE II Goodman's Ladies Shop The Shoe Mart John»oVi-l.*mhe co. I S M. Young Hardware Thomas Food Market PAGE 16 Rhodes. Inc Standard Concrete Products to. ! G $ Tucket & Bros. Ambassador Theatre i Acme Realty Co I Hunt's General Tire Co Branch Bankln;; and Trust Co. ; Kale.'jh Funeral Home Gem Watch Shop j Raleigh Seafood Co. ; Community Florist ! Dunn's Esso Servicececter RALEIGH, N. C SATURDAY. JULY 9, i 960 tion and stated that their was an immediate nerd for another wo men’s organization Mr- Bertha (CONTINUED ON PAGF 21 PIC TESTIFY IN JACK S Dkt -Staten Inland Beyrouth President Albert V Mamsealco (left) and Bronx Borough Brest , dent James J. Lyons shake hands with Hu! an Jack (right). Bor j ough President of Manhattan, after testifying in Jack's defense Wrecks And Drownings Take Greatest Tolls North Carolina ? July 4th holi-j day traffic death toll climbed to ; at least 18 for the 78-hour period, 1 sending the ,-tate to near the top in the nation for highway deaths , 31 died violently altogether o'er the w-( kend The North Carolina Motor Club had predicted that at least 16 per sons would be kill'd on tar heel roads during the weekend which ended at midnight Monday but with 111 hours left, the total had already reached that mark Tt c figures compared with 9 killed during the 34-hour holidav last year PTA Congress Announces 22nd Season Os Its Camp The 1960 campmc season will, mark the 22nd anniversary of the : PTA C imp for Children, held at Fi ankhnton Center (formerly Bricks Rural Life Center', Bricks | The girls period of 2 weeks will be held July 17-30 for aces 7 -12 inclusive and the boys' period nt 2 weeks July 31-Aug. 13, ages 7- ' 12 inclusive. The ramp b sponsored under the exclusive direction of the j N. ( Congress of Colored Par ents and Teachers with Miss j Mildred Martin of Henderson In Policeman s Death: SnUriircd To Slip lo (*as f liamhei* CHARLOTTE The death sen tence imposed on a Negro convict ed of killing a young policeman presents the Stair Supreme Court with a case in which the prosecu tion carefully skirted the touchy capita! punishment controversy. Prosecutors explained after the all-white jury convicted Mallot Faust that, they had refrained from discussing flip question in the couiLoom The jury deliberated a Another hie weekend killer was drowning* which claimed at least 7 lives in North Caro lina Jour persons were shot to death and two others were fatallv stabbed, pushing the st olen! death toll tor the state to at least 31. A late weekend accident claimed the life of 3-year-nld Sir -o phm of Sanford who ran nttoe path of an oncoming trick Mon day night pear his hor d Andrew' Orkney E> net 1 72. of Swansboro. died Monday of inju ries received Friday in a head-on (CONTINUED ON PAG! 2) . as ramp director Miss Martin is assisted bv a staff of dedi rated counselors, who are all college graduates and who i have art undersl anding of children and the objectives of the camp. Many PTA unit? and nthe: tr .■1 crested agencies and parents wi "end some child to camp for tin ! rich experience | Franklnvon Center r- conve* |en*ly located 17 miles j Rocky Mt . with north and sou* (COVTtKt'EI) ON PAGE 2) bout an hour Friday before hndin the 21-year-old man guilty of fir?' i degree murder in the death < white policeman John R. Anna? .Judge Jack Hooks sentenced Faust to die in the gas ehambei Sept. 2 hut the execution will probably be delayed because of automatic review by the <ll preme Court which will not (CONTINUED ON PAGE Tt in Genera/ Sessions Cowl, A e\v York. June 30th. Mayor Robert Wagner also was among the five top-ranking city officials who took the stand to defend jack, who /s on trial on conflict ot in terest charges ( UPI PHOTO)’ Member Os 71 Active Years DURHAM The officers and members ol Kyles Temple AML Zion Church, Dunstan Avenu under the leadership of the pa;- tor, Rev. George T. Thamngton have designated Sunday. July 10 as "E. D. Barnes’ Day" at the church. This is being done in re cognition of 71 years of activ membership in the AME Zu Church- He joined Willis Creek AME Zion ( hurch in 1839 at the age of 12 and has had a eon tinous membership ever since. He started the church at Sel ma and it was named in iv honor, Barnes’ Chapel, in 190' He ininc' l Si, .James AME Zi<>- Church, Farmville, in 3921 anO remained there until 1921. when he joined St. Mark Chureh, here At the insistenre of Bishop L. W . Kyles, he was one of the founders of Kyles PRICE 15c KENNED \ATIrVC hi EON Senator John E Kennedy (D.-Ma s.s >. kit ;* hown •)' he si te nd* a lunt h on In <a•- k<n honor of the African Diplomatic Carp' Hr r. t. njfi to Syl! t f.t mrtg eenfr. rt/v ‘ • v a->rt p=,>on (r.rw-/ Pham, representing the Belgian Congo Ken nedy eard that -ifnea « fn-• need /* education and It >s now our opportunity and challenge to help Africa toward that goal (IIP/ TELEPHOTO) Decomposed Body Os Va. Ice Cream Salesman Found WILLIAMSBURG. Va Th« badly decomposed body at a New port New s ice a-;-rr. salrr.jnar ini;.sine mi *'« June 23 v.i.v found iate Saturday in a wood* d ate,-, near here. H- i!r pr,r.-r ,„:d 'W C may have been the victim ot foul ■ play State iuvesupators pi.in'vd ian investigation where the body j v.as found, live miles from Wiili i amsburg. j a u uck owned by the Best -Eve. | Ice Cream Co. of Newport N* vs Noblm s employer, was parked five fppt froi the body. Thf body war. on a remote forest trail. State Trooper Lonnie Craft said authorities had not. been able to determine how long Noblm had ;-en dead Only bones remained >f the head and hands and the rest .1 the body was badly decomposed Craft said there was a large hole 111 the skull. The trooper said the wound and the unusual circum stances of the man';- d'vth led in vestigators to suspect murder. Noblm still loiri money in his pockets and robbery u is I apparently not the motive r~~" ~«j i ! j jj|p ® j I E. D. BARNES (raft vi 1 d The body was taken to the state First Lunch Counter Protest Held In City [JRG. Va Ne- Groups of three or four N>- lrh courier sit- E roes sat quietly at each place anetv a* d dive There were no other customers and employees were ordered *n in this r.oitr- jrwro behind the counters At the People s Drug Store, white yy V> oolwu-t h patrr , ns apparently anticipating ■ c bioie '1 !' < < Negroes’ arrival, filled ail the ■ oon as tne Ne- (CONTINUED ON PAGE Tl FREDERICKS!?! groes staged iun downs at. three v. stores Friday to such demonKiratioi <•1 ri Virginia city Managers of F and Grant's Dru their counters as groes took scats Woman Succumbs Alter Being Shot In The Neck GREENSBORO A 20-year-old woman died trt a local hospital Saturday afternoon about an hour after being shot in the neck ar.d chest, with a 12 gunge shotgun. Guilford County sheriffs dep uties held Charles W. Milton 22, in the death of his wife. Mrs. Flor ence Milton. Officers said Milton shot once through a wall of their home, re- Local Girl Addresses Natl Meet JANESVILLE, Wis < ANP' Some have lost jobs, homes and even their lives 'n the struggle for ; civil rigntr in this country. For a Id year old gn 1 from Ra b igh, N. C.. losing a sweater dur ing a lunch counter sit down dem onstration was a gieat sacrifice, a? great to her as loss of a job might b-- to another. TELLS OF EXPERIENCES Mir* Barbara Lightner, a Wisconsin visitor for the re cent National Association of Student Councils’ meeting at Janesville, told of her experi ence as a sit-in demonstrator ] in he*- home town. The teenager has comoleted her I junior year in Ligon High School, i a school for Negroes. “Being a Negro and living m the j South, you can't stand aside from the race problem.’' she explained. | (CONTINUED tars PAGE 2) Temple Church in 1928 and has remained there since. He mov d his business to Wash ington. D. C.. in 1931 and immedi ately began working in Galbrath Church. He later worked at Trin ity Church, where he promoted a building program that later made Trinity one of the outstanding ehurches of the nation's capital He began business as a building contractor in 1909 and has made a tremendous record as a builder of churches, from South Carolina to Maryland. He lists practically every Protestant denomination as having been customers of his at one timr or another. A special Community Bible Class is scheduled to be held at 9 30 Sunday, when T J. Atwater, vet eran Sunday School teacher, will have charge of the class. Mr. At water is believed to be the last (CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 medical laboratory in Richmond tor autopey loaded the single hairetl shotgun and then shot his young wife. The shooting occurred Just out -1 side the. etiy limits in a rural area. ODDS-ENDS BE ROBERT G SHEPARD “Bleaied is he whose trans gression is forgiven " WHERE DO WE STAND? A friend of ours recently saw • group of youngsters pull the als*-m on a fire alarm box There was no fire, >t was Sun morning, church time, the alarm box was near the church on one of the city’s busiest thoroughfares When the fire truck* re spondrd to the call they found no fire because there hadn't been any fire. However, imnr lives had been endangered, taxpayers money had been wasted and a great deal of fear and apprehension had been aroused. When this friend of ours was asked if he knew the person or [ persons responsible for the call, he gave their names and addresses They were later arrested for turn | ing in a false alarm. Since that time our good friend j has been subjected to a great deal 1 of name calling and abuse by sup posedly law abiding Christians, j These persons have said that *l - though ne saw and knew- the young 1 men who committed this unlaw ful act. he should have denied j knowing anything about it. Some j (CONTINUED ON F4GR 2}
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 9, 1960, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75