Wake Boy, 15, Held In Rape-Assault Attempt THE CAROLINIAN VOL. 20. NO. 4 Schools Are Boycotted In North Federal. Stale. County Crackdown: 88 Caught In Liquor Raids Undercover ‘ Work Nets NO Arrests GREENSBORO Suppliers of poison whiskey were cracked down on Sunday night by federal, state and county agents in a series of bootlegger raids in three counties. Eighty-eight warrant* had bees issued by early Monday, SC being tn the High Point- Greensboro areas, charging pos session mad sale of poison liq uor. Many person? have died in recant months, reportedly as a roeolt «f drinking the whiskey. fCOWTEWTKD ON PAGE 2} FREED —• Mrs. Hattie Gib eon Hallowell, 83, left, pauses outside Civil fail, New York City, last week after her release. The aged woman had been con fined to fail for thre years after she failed to make an account of her late daughter's estate. Judge Anthony P. Savarese, who sent her to jail, was horri fied to learn she had been locked up so long and almost forgotten. (See story on inside). Singing Fest Set By Ushers The Interdenominational Ushers i Association of North Carolina will ! ocesent its First Annual Choir Fes w # iva! here Sunday. December 11, 'or the benefit of the Home for the tged and Unwed Mothers. According to an official of the fCONTINUED ON PAGE 2> Next Tuesday Ms Election MBufg* Go To The Polls And Vote! PUPILS REMAIN HOME Third grade school teacher. Miss Edna Bryanton, of Detro i. Michigan's Guest School, surveys her near empty classroom last week as only 8 pupils out of 32 reported for clasess. The high absenteeism was attributed to white parents who are keeping their children out of school in protest over the transfer of 314 Negro students into 3 predominantly white schools there. (UPI TELEPHOTO). Raleigh Plays Host To NC Beauticians 9 Convention Hundreds of beauticians attend- | ed the state's largest educational ] clinic for beauticians, here last j l”li Achievement Hay Attracts Over 1.000 FUQUAY SPRINGS The Fu quay Springs Consolidated School was host Thursday, Oct. 27, to the Achievement Program where more than, 1,000 club members and na CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS - —-BUY FROM THEM |PAGE 2 Horton's Cash Store t ivelU Beauty Shop PAGE 3 The Capital Coca-Cola Bottling Co. PAGE 5 John IV. Winters & Co. Htidson-Belk Southern Bei! Tel. A Tel. Co. Raleigh gatings A Loud Assn PAGE 6 Colonial Stores. Inc. First-Citizens Bank A Trust Co Taylor Radio & TV Service R. E. Quinn Fnrnture Co. Modern Finance Corp. page : Winn-Dixie of Raleigh. !nc. Dove Music Co. Community Florist Martin St. Gaundron-.af Macon's Barber Shop » Central Drug Store PAGE 8 Blood worth St. Tourist Home Ridgeway' Opticians Carolina Builders Corp. Caveness insurance Agency 7-Up Bottling Co. Dillon Motor Finance Co. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Raleigh Warner Memorial* Fayetteville St. Baptist Church RALEIGH, N. C„ SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1960 week. The affair was held at the YMCA and sponsored by the Ra leigh Chapter of the National Foun rents witnessed the activity. Also highlighting the annual event was an address by Dr. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2> Deiustr Hotel PAGE 9 Mans Piano Co., Inr (arolma Power Ac Light C o, Firestone Stores Sunshine Bakery City Finance O K. Clothing Co PAGE 10 Harris, Wholesale, Inc. PAGE 11 j Goodman'* Ladies Shop Miss Vi-, ian Burt Umstead’l Gror. Ac Transfer Co, ! Oils Russos Hatters & Cleaners i Brook* Appliance Co. | PAGE 12 Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co Mechanic* & Farmers Bank Public Service Co., oi N (. PAGE 13 Varina Wholesale S M. Young Hardware PAGE 20 Hunt General Tire Co Dunn's Esso Service Raleigh Funeral Home Acme Realty Co. Raleigh Seafood Co. Gem Watch Shop Standard Concrete Products Co. Amfourn Pontiac, inr. dation of Trichology Science, an interracial organization whose pur pose is to elevate the standards of the beauty profession of America. Beauticians listened with in tense interest to the lectures and demonstrations on the new trends of beauty culture by the famous Juiio Pabon of New York City, featured artist. He was assisted by Eugene Webb a* Philadelphia, Pa. who taught Fantasies in Modern Beauty Culture and introduced fall and winter hair fashions. NEW CULTURE TAUGHT Dr. Donald Collin Stokes official instru ito.* for the National Foun dation of Trichology Science of A merica. Division of Medical Thera py and Technical Beauty Culture instructions, was a guiding factor io the success of the occasion. He {CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) ODDS-ENDS BY ROBERT G. SHEPARD "Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth.” VOTE - BUT BEFORE YOU VOTE —THINK Next Tuesday, Nov. 8, is Deci sion Day. Either Gavin or Sanford will be elected governor of North Carolina, either Kennedy or Nixon will be chosen for oar next presi dent. jou owe it to yourself, yanr j-atr and to your nation to cast your baiiot next Tuesday. There is hardly any real i e&son you who are registered, ran give for not voting. Even if you. we {CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Students Stay Home In Protest DETROIT, Mich. Again Mon day pupils of three Detroit grade schools did not. attend classes in protest against the transfer of Ne gro pupils to their schools. School officials *4 Guest, Mounter, and Noble grade fB '•hoots reported that there were no incidents when the Negro pupils entered the schools for the fir*t time, but said the boycott is evident of the disapproval of white pa rent*. Mass absenteeism began Friday {CONTINUED ON PAGE *) Award For Heroism To Mrs. Stitch PITTSBURGH, Pa One Silver and 21 Bronze Medals for heroism were awarded her Friday by The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. Mrs. Rosa M. Stitch of Louisville. Ky., widow of former third rank ing welterweight contender Rudell Stitch, was the recipient ©f the Silver Medal. Stitch, 27-years-oid, drowned {CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) DP MM M)MM OP BPII TP* ... Dr Nm/n Drrhrr Pint. It.. In/rf-t^r. ; loader, is frosted by his wife and children, Martin, HI, 3, end Yolanda, 5, on his arrival at Cham blee, Va, hat week. Dr. King was ref eased from a Rmdsvith, Ga., prison under a $2,000 appeal bond on a charge at not having a Georgia driver's license. (XJPI TELEPHOTO ). * ‘He Made Me’ Kiss Bible, Woman Sap WILLOW SPRINGS Bobby Lee Walker, 15, of Willow Springs, Route 1, in Wake County, has been arrested and charged with assault ing Mrs Lue Winnie Fellows, 45, of near here. Walker k> accused of attempt ing to rape Mi*. Fellows, ac cording to Deputy Sheriff W. L. Pritchett. The. woman said she was also forced to kiss the Bible by the youth and swear she would not teli. The officer said he would have to confer with District Solicitor Lester V. Chalmers before deter mining whether Walker's case will b« tried in Wake Superior Court {CONTINUED ON PAGE D Collision Fatal For 2 Women Two Rocky Mount white women were killed instantly Monday morning as a heavy tractor-trailer truck plowed into the side of a car on Highway 64, near Raleigh The automobile was so bad ly damaged that eranes and wrecking bars had to be used to pry apart the wreckage before Ihe bodies of the two women could be. freed. The driver of the truck was allegedly Rufus Edward Smith, SO, of Stantonsburg. Smith Is colored. The dead women were indenti fied by the State Highway Patroi (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) State News —m— Brief I NCC EDITOR TO APPEAR ON PANEL IN CHICAGO DURHAM Miss Cynthia Jar man, editor of the Campus Echo, student newspaper at North Caro lina College, will discuss the writ ing of feature stories on a pane! st | the annual meeting of the Associat ; ed Collegiate Press in Chicago, No vember 21-23. Miss Jarman's selec tion was announced by Dr. Fred Kildow, executive secretary of ACF, which has headquarters at. the University of Minnesota. The NCC newspaper has been A member of the Associated (CONTINUED ON PAGE D PRICE 15c GOLDEN TO APPEAR ON "SOCIAL ACTION" PANEL AT NCC—Harry Golden, famed editor of the Carolina ISRAELITE. will appear on a “social action" panel at North Carolina College at Durham, Thursday, November 10, in connection with the col lege's Golden Anniversary celebration. The panel, titled “The Col lege and Accelerated Social Action," will feature: Dr. Douglas 8. Maggs, Law School. Duke University; Dr. Stephen Wright, presi dent of Fisk University ; Marion Wright, vice chairman of the Southern Regional Conference , Linville Falls, N. C.; McNeil Smith, Chairman of the North Carolina Civil Rights Advisory Committee; Dr. Asa T. Spaulding, member of the North Caroline Civil Rights Committee: and J. Nelson Strawbridge, Chairman of the Durham Committee on Human Relations. County’s Teachers Hear Dr* Greene ! GARNER The first meeting of ! the Wake County Teachers Associ i at ion was held last week at the 1 Garner Consolidated High School. After the devotional period, the president of the Association, E. L Sanders, Sr., introduced the speak er. Dr. W. L. Greene. Dr. Greene, executive secre tary of the North Carolina Teachers’ Association, gave a brief history of thp develop ment of Hie NUT A from the mid-thirties to the present. He -also pointed out the importance of the members of the state or ganization taking part in ma jor decisions which affect each member, ] Dr Greene stated that he could only go as far with the organiza j ‘ion as the teachers would help Fayetteville Flerie Finally Quit* Fust FAYETTEVILLE Police were called twice lr-st week to the Friendship Baptist Church here in an effort to stop two brawls, cne of which was a free for all in volving the entire congregation. Legal action came when the trustees asked that the preacher, Rev. J, W. Simpson, be restrained from using the pulpit. The trus tees claim that on Oct. 17 Rev. Simpson resigned, but has refus ed to leave. The trustees, too, complain ed that “The pastor engages in loud and profane conduct while on the church premises and he did engage in physical combat with other ministers and members of the church.” They have obtained a tempo rary injunction. A show-cause hearing was scheduled for Monday before Su- him to go. C. J. Barber, principal of Gamer Consolidated High Sschool, gave the group a sketch of the testing program currently going on in North Carolina. He pointed out sev eral important facts of which all Ni gro teachers are becoming a ware. The new teachers in Wake Coun ty were introduced by Mrs. C. D. Nebnam and Mrs. F. H. W'hite, sup e. visors of the County. During a brief business session, it was decided that, each school would send delegates to the East ern Piedmont District Meeting which will be held December 9. in .Varrenton The new teachers in Wak<= Cour■ (CONTINUED ON PAGE S) perior Court Judge William Y, Bickrit, hut attorneys for both I sides in the squabble report that an agreement has been reached i lie minister will resigin. The i hearing has been canceled. T. Marshall May Defend Dr.M.L.King ATLANTA, Ga. The Rev Dr Martin Luther King, Jr., who was granted bail and freed this week from confinement in Reidsville State Prison, will have the assist ance of NAACP attorneys on Pi* appeal of his case. D. L. Hollowell, Atlanta attorney who is in charge of the case in which Dr. King was ordered to serve four months of a probationa ry sentence for failure to possess a Georgia driving license, is a veter an of NAACP legal battles in thi* state. On ihe appeal he will hate the active assistance of Thar good Marshall of New York and of George N. Leighton of the Chicago law firm of McCoy. Ming and Leighton. Some years ago Mr. Leighton was prest (CCWTTNTnEn ON PAGE ft $85,000 Church Is Dedicated SILER CITY The offiows and members of Corinth AMK Zi on Church, led by the pester. Rev. L. I£. Williams, climaxed a week long dedicatorial service, of the £85.000.00 church edifice, when Bishop R.. L. Jones dedicated it, at 3 p. m. Sunday. The service* were partici pated in by all of the presid ing elder districts of the Cen tral North Caroline Confer ence. The Rev. T. J. Young, who has charge of the Raleigh District, began the oerewsonioa on Monday night. The Rev. G. D. Glover, Red Spring's, spoke for the Lauritv burg District Tuesday night. H was associated by the preaudit* (CONTimJSD ON MSI r t