Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 23, 1960, edition 1 / Page 1
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Of)er_SemJohnspn s Nomination: Deep South Happy '•-■•■ -- : . —. VOL. 19. NO 41 Shaw Loses Business Mgr. + + + + + Hh + JPois&Munis Lead Salts Fouad A.Her 20 Gallons 01 Deadly ‘Moonshine' Seized AlexanderTo Assume Post At A And T Harvey R Alexander, business manager at Shaw- University, has resigned his position, according to a statement made Wed morning by Shaw's president. Dr William R Strassner Alexander, who came to Shaw University approximately 2 1-2 years ago, will reportedly become administrative assistant to the pre sident of A and T College. Greens boro He resided at Sl4 S. Wilming ton Street He wall assume his new position on September 1 Married and the father of two children. Mr Alexander receiv ed his B. S. degree at the Uni versity ttf Chicago, Evanston, Illinois in 1947; and the M. S. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Selma Man Kills Wife, Seats Son SELMA This Johnston Coun ty town was startled early Wed. morning when it was reported ♦hat Redmond Johnson, 43. of S Massey Street had shot his wife to death and beaten up his son. Mrs. Fannie Johnson, 38, was hilled about S a m. after being shot five time* with a .38 cali bre revolver. Johnson, a former mental patient at the Goldsboro State Hospital, was still at large at CAROLINIAN pres# time, and a .n&nhunt was on for him. His son. David Johnson about 20. was said to have been beaten by Johnson and reported to be a pa tient at the Johnston Memorial Hospital Chief Percy Moore of the town was reported to be out of town for the next five days, but Don Broad well, clerk of the court here sup *- Plied the facts to The CAROLIN IAN’. 5 Golfers To Seek A Re-Hearing GREENSBORO A petition for a re-hearing by the U S. Su preme Court in a case in which | five Greensboro Negroes were con victed of trespassing on a local golf course will be filed soon by a Houston, Tex., attorney. Jack Atkins, father-in-law of one of the defendants, said Thurs-! day he will ask the high court to : reconsider its 5-4 decision to dis miss the appeal by the Greens-i boro golfers. If the present decision stands, the five defendant* I will face a 15-day sentence in Jail, given in Guilford County Superior Court in February I of 1958. Atkins said his petition for re-1 hearing would be based on several | points. i Defendants include Dr. George j C. Simkins, Jr., son-in-law of At- j kms, Leon Wolfe, Joseph Studi- j vent, Samuel Murray and Elijah (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) i North Carolina's Leading Weekly RALEIGH. N. C. SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1960 ;' r—?*' ? ■ j 4 11 5 - 1 A , * -#| » .» MiG f» 1 * •* ! JL —' V ■ , ■*' JN# “-.s J i'i , I? tfL | >. ' „ , | : 'l# Y/ ~-r. ! A •j I Pi ATf OPM FOP w Wfr* ■ """"W " . ,*•*..:* :«2 «' " • '*■ ;,*<%. bRELDOM VIGIL. Other members at the "March on the Convention Movement lor Freedom Now" look on a-. Miss Pa tricia Hall, front, oi Berkley, California displays sign alter parad ing outside the Sports Arena at Los Angeles, scene ol the Demo cratic National Convention, for 30 hours. ( UP! TELEPHOTO). Xaiion*N SMiarmauisis To Itoelacsier Aug. 2- I ROCHESTER, N Y. The Na tional Pharmaceutical Association will hold it? 14th Annual Conven tion in Rochester. N Y., Aug 2-4 at the Sheraton Hotel. Delegates will attend from 22 states and the District of Columbia The program will consist of both scientific and business papers The list of speak ers includes persons from educa tion. manufacturing, retail pharm acy and management. Included among the speaker* •re the following persons. Mr ODDS-ENDS BY EGBERT G SHEPARD ""Love worketh no 111 to his neighbor." SUPREME COURT READS NEWSPAPERS We believe it was the late Will Rogers who once made the classic statement that, the U. S Supreme Court reads the newspapers, meaning of course, that that Court keeps itself informed about nation al trends, public opinion and of what people are thinking and doing Because this court keeps It self alert to all matters affect ing- the public will, we fee! it cannot hut be impressed by the recent endorsement given the sit-in demonstrators by the Na tional Democratic party during Its convention in Los Angeles last week. The endorsement and the likli hood of a simular approval by the Republicans next week at their convention, could prove of great significance when the si!-in tres pass cases reaches the high tribu nal. Having been made aware of which way the tide of public opin ion is leaning, it does not appear (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) T. E. Shatter. District Sales Manager, McKesson and Rob bins; Dr. Howard .1 Schaeffer chairman, department of Medi cinal Chemistry, University of Buffalo; Mr, J J. Feinglass, *| Executive Vire President and Mr Paul F Chandler, Public and Personnel Relations, both of the Daw Drug Company, Ro chester, New York. Dr G Alexander Galvin of Ithaca N Y will be the speaker at the annual banquet Dr Galvin j practiced pharmacy prior to study- I mg medicine On Wed. Aug 2. the Association will be the guest of Kastman Ko- j dak Company for a tour of their j plants and a series of lectures. N APPLAUD KENNEDY Front-running Senator John Fitzgerald is applauded, above, after addressing the North Carolina delegation in Los Angeles, California's Staffer-Hilton Hotel early last Tuesday The sen ■tor told the split Tar Heel delegates that he realized a majority of them favored another can "date, hut asked then support it he was nomi nated. Kennedy won the Democratic nomination ( UPI TELEPHOTO), Alamance Officials Raid Still; Operators Escape BURLINGTON - ABC Agents destroyed two stills Friday near the Crossroads Church section of Alamance County where they found 20 gallons of hquoi contain ing poisonous lead salts. The operators of the still, apparently aware that a raid was about to take place, were not there and no arrests were made. Donald Mason, manager nl the Greensboro ABC Board said agents destroyed the two stills, one with a rapant' ol 18ft gallons and the other with a 220 galioan caparity. Date Announced For Riot Trials HIGH POINT - The trial of 2 Negroes who were arrested in con nection with s not m a park here last month has hern docketed fnt the next nry term trial of Munici pal Coi, t Drive Os i Dr. Lake Is 33 G’s Off i Dr. I Beverly Lake, an out j spoken segregationist, not. only ! lost his bid for the democratic i gubernatorial nomination to Ter- j i ry Sanford but had to dig into his i pocket for about $39,000 in cam- j paign expenses. On final spending reports filed Friday with the Secre tary of State, Lake said he re ceived 571,572 tn contributions for the two primaries and .| paid out §121,479, Sanford, meanwhile, reported that he spent $125,501 and re ceived contributions amounting to i $121,479. | The iast. ppport. showed $17,033 jui expenditures and $18,209 in contributions for Sanford, while Lake listed sll 572 in expendi tures against $11,019 in contri- j : buttons. Sanford and Lake met in a ran- ! I off after John Larkins of Trenton and former Attorney General M alcolm Sea well lost out in the first primary. PIC PRICE 15c GHANA'S WORKERS DEMONSTRATE Thousands of workers demonstrated recently (or more pay during opening ceremonies of the T. H. C trade union hall in Accra. The new budding was opened by President Kwame Nkrumah, whose They also destroyed a 100 gallon j -team boiler and a 220 gallon wood- j on barrels containing 1.000 gallons I of fermenting mash ready to run j through the -tills. Nearby was l,2ftft gallons of spent mash -which had already j been run through the stills. Mason estimated the stills had beer, operating for two rnonth- A number of person:- have been killed in the Piedmont section of . the state by drinking the poi onous ! moonshine" which contained lead j salts. The defendants, Withe John son. 21, and Miss Helen hal ed for a jury trial after fohn raine Lilile, 17, were schedul ed for a Jury trial after John- j son requested it *\ed The young lady pleaded imlty to charges against her hut court officials derided io eontinue her ease and try them both together. Johnson was charged with du- : orderly conduct and resisting ar rest, stemming from s rock-throw ing riot at Washington Terrace Park. Miss Little was booked on similar charges. The riot was touched off when . a Negro couple attempted tn darcr in the park pavilion where dane ing was not allowed Officers stop- - peri the couple from dancing and a riot followed, 1 1 Browne Becomes First Os Race To Hold S. C. Office In 60 Yrs. FROG MORE 8 C < ANR'—The election recently of Leroy E. Browne to the Beaufort, County board of directors over two white opponent* has. surprisingly evok ed no bitted comment from whites here. Browne, 43. a graduate of Hampton Institute is the fu-st. Ne gro elected to public office here since 1900. Many had assumed that there would be resentment a jjj| RAPI D AND STRANGLED Standing alongside the bn dy of Miss Nina Thoeren, a policeman checks the walls for fin gerprints. utter she was discovered raped and strangled July 12th. The body of the 19-vear-old girl, strangled with her own capti pant', was found stuffed beneath a budding on the Los Angeles City College campus where she was a student Police arrested Raymond W. Clemmons Negro, possessor of a long court record, who allegedly confessed to the crime. Miss Thoeren was the daughter of a Hollywood screen writer w ho wrote “Act of Mur der" ( UPI TELEPHOTO). mong the whites vver his election j Almost the opposite is true While it is doubtful any whites would have preferred Browne to a white man, mapy are taking a I wait and see attitude. If they're Mahalia Jackson Among Those Injured In Wreck ST PAUL, Minn Miss Maha !ia Jackson, labeled “The World's Greatest Gospel Singer" by many, was among over 30 persons injured wh.cn a train plowed into a truck Monday. She and two companions were riding in a drawing room, one of the cars that did not over turn The Milwaukee Road's Hiawatha ! passenger train plowed into a semi trailer truck and derailed with i grinding violence injuring between 30 and 40 persons. All escaped critical injury, how- | ever, and the truck driver—who j had "a feeiing of death as the j train came at me" was un scratched A half dozer cars, of !he 13- rar Chicago-bound train jack■ nifed as they hurtled through the crossing near suburban St. Paul Park after the diesel units smashed into the truck. Most of the cat's remained up- j right although off the tracks. Oth er cars and four diesel units flipp ed on their sides. The train hit the truck at MO p m just as the trailer cab, oc (CONTLNUED ON PAGE, Z) 1 picture stands in (he foreground. The hall, built at a cost of about $420,000, Wris a gft trow the government of Ghana to the workers for then loyalty tn the struggle for independence. (UPI PHOTO). not enthusiastic about, it. neither are they hostile, 90 PERCENT NEGRO Negroes comprise 90 per cent of the population of St, (CONITNUED ON PAGE 2) ADVERTISERS BUY FROM THEM. PAGE 3 < enHal Drug Store Horton j Cash Store Hurricane Fence Co. PAGE t Washington Terrace Apts.. In, Federal Acceptance Corp. Sunshine Bakerv PAGE S Hudson ft. Ik A Company lames Ji Wilson Raleigh saiings A Loan A-- ! n the Capital Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Piltshurnii Plate Glass < 0. PAGE « Carolina power *■ Light Co First-Citizens Bank A- Trust Co, S. M Young Hardware Bankers Fire Insurance Co. PAGE * Colonial Stores, Inc Taylor Radio <V TV Service C. Karl Lichtman Madam Farrell Modern Finance Corp S F Oulnn Furniture PAGE 9 P*b!ie Service Co., of S. C Eftrd’s of Raleigh Mechanics A Farmers Bank Southern Delegates Satisfied LOS ANGELES- Several South ern governors expressed their sur ■ prised delight last week that Sen Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas wa; chosen as the vice-president) a nominee by the democratic party chieftains. They said that Johnson was virtually (he only possible choice who could prevent de feat and defection for the dem ; oerafic patty in the south “Now we'll add the south to tire democratic victory.’ Tennessee ; Gov. Buford Ellington said "whereas u was doubtful we roulri have carried many states m the (CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 Candidates Seconded BY Many LOS ANGELES <ANP) Ne gro political personalities played important roles m t,he Democratic national convention here that re sulted in the nomination of John P Kennedy, Lyndon B Johnson and the adoption of a strong civil 1 rights plank last week. Several o! the nominations were seconded by Negro support ers. (CONTINUED ON PAGE D State News Brief MEETINGS ATTRACT THREE FAYETEVILLE ln attendance at the 7th Annual Southeastern World Affairs Institute spon sored jointly by fifteen top civic and religious organizations and held a* Black Mountains, North Carolina, July 22-24, will be a family team. Dr. Clarence A Chick and Mrs. Helen T. Chick, (CONTINUED ON PAGE 25 Firestone Stores Int. Thomas Food Market PAGE 10 Ridgeway's Opticians Carolina Builders Corp. Caveness Insurance Agency t-Up Bottling Co. Dillon Motor Finance Co. Pcpsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Raleigh j Warner Memorials ! Fayetteville S» Baptist Church Deluxe Hotel Bloodworth St.. Tourist Home PAGE 1! Wake Tire Co R F Goodrich Co. ; Sure-Fit Seat Cover Center ; Griffis Food Store i Goodman's Ladies Shop i PAGE IS Standard Concrete Product* Co. Raleigh Seafood Co. Acme Realty Co. Raleigh Funeral Hons* j Dunn’s Esso Service Center ! Hunt. General Tire Co. Ambassador Theatre Gem Watch Shop | Rhodes. Inc i Branch Banking &■ Twist C®.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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July 23, 1960, edition 1
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