Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 3, 1960, edition 1 / Page 1
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The jt .neurc Printing Ci>« With Jack Wait die: Man. Wife And Children Are Badly Beaten : *"-'^ w " %WAW -"" V -''’~ W * V,:,y '* : *^^ V^^^^*^^*^**VV&XiZ*****Z*^iiu****i*l^--——-— -——-mi——i ~ VOL. 19. NO. 47 Former St. Aug. President: . Dr. Trigg Takes Livingstone Post + + + + + + + + + Kills Lover, Then Self NO Couple Found Dead In An Auto SCHENECTADY N Y— A mar, and woman from North Carolina were found dead of bullet wound? Saturday in a oar parked in a lot near a rooming house. District Attorney Morris M. Cohn said the case was an “apparent murder-suicide Dead were Miss Sweelie Mae Bright, about 40. of Hamid, N C.. and Brady L Utley. 27, of Rockingham N C . a con struction worker, Both were Negroes. Police said the pair apparent- L’. had been sitting in the car for about two and a half hours be fore the shooting at 8 37 am A witness told police she saw the woman throw her arms around the man shortly before three or four shots were fired (CO.VTTKTiIO OS PAGE 50 12,000 Attend: Shriners’ Confab Is Concluded BOSTON (ANPi ln one of the largest conventions in the sfl-year eid history of the Ancient Egypti an Arabic Order Nobles of the My stic Shrine, approximately 12,000 Shriners and their guests converg ed on histone Boston. There was gaiety when the Shriners marched in military pre cision for three hours along Bos ton's winding streets Estimates place 'he parade watcher* at 75.000 But at a erucia! period In A merirau history and African (CONTtNTTEB ON PAGE *) BATING ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL Surrounded by Spanish Harlem crowd, Robert F. Kennedy (center) partakes of a snack in a restaurant August 24th As campaign manager tor tvs brother, democratic presidential nominee Senator John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy barnstormed the upper east side of Manhattan Community, delivered amadhm tmd shook hands all around. (OFI PHOTO). FAIR S HAKE FOLLOWED Soviet Deputy Foreign Min 'ster Vastly Kuznetsov, left, prepares to shake hands with Thomas Kama, permanent Congo delegate to the U .V. le*f week at an emergency meeting The Congo made a stv point demand that it he given a controlling voice m the operation of its affairs (UPI TELEPHOTO). “Operation Employment’’ Planned By The NAACP OBJECTIVE; To Eliminate Discrimination in Employment CHARLOTTE—The North Car olina State Conference of Bran ches, Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple) will launch on September Ist Operation Employment'', a Free dom to Work Protect, which ha: as its objective, the elimination of discrimination in employment. Kelly M Alexander. President of the North Carolina Conference of RALEIGH N C SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 3, 1960 NAACP Branches, said Monday The first phase of the pro ject will concentrate on em ployment of qualified Negroes in state, county and city gov ernment*. Federal agencies operating in North Carolina are also included in the pro ject. Alexander said that job discrimination in government is sufficiently important to re (CONTTNCED ON PAGE *) Dr. Trigg Now Professor Os Education At Salisbury SALISBURY— Dr Harold L Trigg joined the Livingstone College faculty Sept 1. as proles sor of education in the division of Education and psychology accord to announcement made this week by Dr. S E. Duncan, A distinguished educator with long and varied experiences as teacher and administrator Dr Trigg is a graduate of Morgan State College. Baltimore, Md , with the M.A. degree from Syra cuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.; and the Doctor of Education de gree from Columbia University, : New York City. His experience include, among others, principal of the Berry O'- Kelly High School, Method. N C and principal of the Columbia Heights School, Winston-Salem N C From 1928-1929 he yei ver ** with the North Carolina State De partment of Public Instruction as (CONTtVTIEn ON* PAGE T) Chief Petty Officer Admits Assaults in Va, NEWPORT NEWS. Va. Four members of a Negro family who were beaten early Saturday by a Navy Chief Petty Officer they had never me? were reported in good condition Monday. The victims were Hugh Pope 42; his wife, Daisy, 3fi; his daughter, Jane. 14. and Patricia Le , 15, a visiting re lative. They were attacked with a ODDS-ENDS BY ROBERT G. SHEPARD “Give not that which is holy onto the dogs " TRF CHICKEN AND THE EGG* You are familiar with the old question, "which was first, the chicken or the egg " When you sav the egg was first, you then face the task of explaining where the egg came from We certainly have ne inten tion of trying to answer abstrt the rgr We know it must have preceded the chicken, so 1* must have been first. Put ting first things first i* really what we have In mind in writ ting this little Hem. Knowing so firmly that the e- j quality of man is basic rand funds- \ mental. God. the Creator of man. {CONTINUED ON PAGE S) CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS PAGE S Blount * Gror*rv * Marks* Horion's Cash Store PAGE J Central Drug Store Southern Bel! Tel. A Tel. Co Major Finance Co. PAGE 5 Sudson-Seifc & Company Macon's Barber Shop KalclSh Savings <fe Loan Asi’n PAGE « I’msteail'* Grocery & Transfer Fisher Wholesale Modern Finance Corp. ft t Quinn Furniture C Karl LSchtmas Taylor Radio & TV Service First-Citizens Sank & Trust C«. Colonial Stores. Hoc. Martin St. Laundromat PAGE 1 Electric si Wholesalers, Inc. ! Sunshine Bakery O K. Clothing ! Lake Wheeler Marine fterotee i Firestone Stores, tne, A Si P food Store* ; Laited Kent-AU* PAGE B BlwieaoriJs St, TouHnt 8«m ®ts#«ray*s ©grtfeisa* D*. TRIGG jacfe handle in the Pope bem« early Saturday as they w er* sleeping. All suffered cute *• boat the bead and body. CPO Claude E Washington, 35. a Negro from Philadelphia, was held under $25,000 bond on & fel onious assault, charge. Washington told detectives Saturday he had gone besers fol lowing an argument with & girl he had met earlier in the evening Del W B Weaver quoted Wash ington as saying he had suddenly become possessed with a desire to do violence to someone The ehief told detective® h* <CONT*NT7KI» ON PAG® lb Woman, 34, Kills Girl Over Mate IJSXTNOTON A *4-ye».r~oki •Negro woman was sentenced Fri day to 10-2(1 years in prison after pleading guilty to the slaying of a teen-age girl. Mrs. Willie Mae Pope w*e charged with second * degree murder in the dsath of Miss Oeleres Itavis, I?, following a tCONTB«rtI*» ON PAG* 8) BUY FROM THEM Carolina BtuMers Cerp. Cavenes* tnsuianca Agency 1-Vp Bortiusg Co. Dillon Motor Finance Co Pepsl-CoU Bottling Co. of JUleigte Warner Memorial* Fayetteville St. Baptist Church Deluxe Hotel PAGE 1J O Neal Motor*. Inc. Stephen* Appliance Co. LAW Tire Co. PAGE 12 Ambaiiidar Thaatry Washington Terrace Apt* Gu* ftuato* Hatter* A Cleaner* Community Florist Branch Basking L Trust Co. Carter’s, lac. Runt General Tire Co. Bunn's Etro Service Cent** Raleigh Funeral Rome Aeme Co. &*s*s*st Smlskhl Co. : Standard Concrete peers ac t# g®. | Gem Watch Shop PAGK IS Tee-Off Club pa m » But 1* Wholeaals WaJkar-HiaJtlJL la*. s fn FILE OUT OF BUS STATION The above persons are shown filing out of the all-white : ch counter at a Greyhound Pus Station in Memphis. Term., last week after being refused scr ee. A white youth on the left is shown watching the procedure (UPI TELEPHOTO) . PRICE 15c Jacksonville, Fla. fiasiai Uprising One Os Many Throughout U. S. JACKSONVILLE. Fla. A Jacksonville municipal judge sent enced S 3 persons Monday for tak ing part in a weekend of racial strife that left at least 65 persons injured and <■>•**' d"*d and resulted in property damage and ‘’drastic" police measures. Shortly after the rapid-fire hear ings. a white construction worker attacked and injured a white stu dent, Richard Frank Parker, 25, who was cited by Judge .John San tera as a mam "inciter of the vio lence. MAN IS KILI.FD The city’s first death was re corded Tuesday when Edward Davis, 27. an ex-convict, fired shot* into a service station, then died when his automobile, pursued by police officers, crashed into a utility pole. A State News —IN— Brief LOCAL 7MCA WINS AWARD RALEIGH The Public Infor mation Award presented monthly to a United Fund agency has been presented to the Bloodworth Street YMCA for the month of August Established three years ago, the award encourages and recognizes outstanding service by United Fund agencies in accounting to the public for the expenditure of Unit ed Fund dollars The formal presentation wsa made Tuesday at the Hillsboro Street YMCA by Karl Hudson, president of the United Fund to E. L Raiford. penera! secreta ry and C A Haywood, presi dent of the YMCA. Former per fCONTINUED ON PARE T) Chatham G'nty Fair To Open September 5 PXTTSBORO Dr Albert L Turner, dean of the North Caroline College law School, will serve as critic judge and present awards at. the Talent. Contest finals of the 11th Annual Chatham County Ag ricultural Pair, according to R G. Bryant, president. Beginning with » "Mia* Picd sa«nf.” Beauty Pageant at 8:15 p. m »w Labor Day, Sept. S, activities will continue through e«t the week. The fair it held annually at the fairground# in Piths bore Talent and beauty contestants are expected from Alamance. Dur ham, Guilford, Harnett, Lee, Moore, Orange, Randolph, and Wake countic*. Activities scheduled are &$ fol lows; Mon. Bepi 5,7. SC p. m.. Gates open: 8.15 p m, “Miss Piedmont” Beauty Contest (Eliminations). icaawoaraip « fa©* *> mao riding with him was hurt i in the smash-up. In other racial developments: —A Negro and a white svmpa '.hirer w-ere charged in Memphis Tenn . with interfering with pub lic worship and disrupting church services for their pa-* in a Sunday '‘kneel-in" attempt to integra’e a church service. The arrests were believed to he the first sirce the *IO,OOO Ex per led: “Philly” Ready To Host Baptist Meet PHILADELPHIA > ANP > -Final plans are completed for the ar rival Sept. 6 of perhaps the. big gest National Baptist Convention U. S A . Inc., in the history of the 80-year-old denomination. Over 80,000 delegates from 48 slates are expected to con verge on the city’s hotels and motels for sessions which get underway on Sept. 6. Some will stay with families which have volunteered as hosts. Others will be Quartered at the Benjamin Franklin. Sheraton. Penn Sherwood, A delphia and Bellevue Strat ford hotels. HEAD FOR UNITED NATIONS BUILDING A Rus sian plane-load of Congolese delegates to the United Nations. Ss suriry Council is shown last week after their Soviet 71,-18 plane (rear) landed at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland after being diverted from Idlewild Airport in New York because <jf a low mailing Identifiable are Congo Vice-Premier Antcim Gimngm (holding satchel), and Ghana Ambassador W, M. Q Halm (next to him , wearing bow tie) who met the group at the airport. (PP7 TELEPHOTO ) krmel-in” movement in churches men? *o Integra’. e lunch counters —A teen-aged NAACP member was 'or.' icted in Winona. Miss, of disturbing the peace and resisting arrest for riding in the white sec tion of a bus The vouth. Johnny Frazier. 19 acted as his own attor ney and cross-examined Sheriff Karl Patridge who arrested him ' ; There still remains a problem o! ■; housing women delegates accord i ing to Dr Primrose Funches. na tional field worker. Dr. Funches said there has. been no difficulty I finding quarters of male deie j gatps. but that most families seem ! unwilling to house female dele gates. Principal issues at, stake during the forthcoming meeting will be. the election of a president and the Convention's resolution that, the United Stales make available to the Gongo Government, federal aid during the present crisis <CONTINUERS ON PARE S>
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 3, 1960, edition 1
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