State's Teachers To Honor 18 Past Presidents Here Convention Plans Are Completed Eighteen past presidents of the Kc.Ui Carolina Teacheis Associa tion will receive special recogni tion March 23, in the first Gen eral Assembly of the association's ligh.y-first Convention in Ra leigh. Living past presidents will represent themselves and proxies vid stand in for th° deceased A special NCTA committee ha~ planned a program that will show the past, explain the present and predict, the future. In addition, a special reception will honor the past, association heads. Past presidents expected to represent themselves are: Oli ver R. Pope, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mrs. Rose I>. Agrrey, Salis bury; Ur. .lames IV. Sea brook, 1 ayetteville; Dr. .lames A. Tar pley, Greensboro; Dr. Harold L- Trigg, Salisbury; James Taylor, Durham; Hugh V. Brown, Goldsboro; Albert H. Anderson, Winston - Salem; Clinton L. Blake, Charlotte; Mrs. Ida H. Dunean, Salis bury; Dr. S. D. Williams, El!z ab<vh City; and Carleton .1. Barber, Raleigh. Under the leadership of these educators, the North Carolina Teachers Association has grown fiom a membership of less than cr.e thousand to eleven thousand. The organisation owns an office (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Guidance Clinic Is Set Here The members of Alpha Theta Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority are planning a Guidance Clinic, April 8. to be held at First Baptist Church here Junior and senior students from North Carolina high schools are to be invited to par ticipate In this program. The 1960 Debutantes are work ing on registration, program, mu sic, food, and other committees un der the supervision of different sor ors. Music for the program will be furnished by the Debutantes. The consultants will be in the areas of mental health, journalism, medicine, social work, family life and religion, science and math for eign relations and politics Mrs Susie V. Perry is general chairman. Operations Committee Heads NCTA The Board of Directors of the North Carolina Teachers Association in executive session February 25 authorized and appointed an inter im Operatiohs Committee to serve as coordinating agent until the ap pointment of an executive secre tary, The office of secretary became vacant upon the death of Dr. W. L. Greene who served in this capacity for 16 years with efficiency and dedication. Members of the Operations Com mittee, selected from the Board of Directors, are NCTA President W. R. Collins, chairman. Past-President C. J. Barber, Co-Chairman; NCTA Treasurer Dr. Nelson Harris: NCTA Vice-President Lafayette Parker; Classroom Teachers President Mrs Elizabeth D. Koontz, Secretarv. Special consultants to the Committee are Internal fIteia (CONTINUED ON PAGE !» H. V. Brown Seeks Post As Alderman GOLDSBORO Hugh Vic'or Brown, retired principal of Dillard Hi"h School here paid his filing fee Monday as a camdidate for the Goldsboro Board of Aldermen. Mr. Brown thus became the sec ond member of his race ever to make a bid for this city post. Dr M. F. DuEissetle was unsuccessful in the 1853 and 1955 elections. The candid*. 4 * made It clear Chat, he was not running on a “a Negro ticket," but said: "I'm running an a platform of a fair share of responsibility of serv ing the public." He pointed out that if he was elected his po sition would not be one of radi calism. Brown is well-known in educa lionai circles in North Carolina. (CONTINUED ON PAG* S) BE SURE TO BEtHSTEIi. THE BOOKS ABE XOW OPE A The ot,.ndard Printing C£>* 220-P2G G» First Ct. Lou* twtile, Ky. corip Court Denies Sit-In Appeals jij_ */ ; r | *■* |p^f' ** jfTijP • ■ > v yy t . WILKINS' ASSISTANT SPEAKS HERE Dr John A. Morsell. assistant to Roy Wilkin*, executive secretary of the National Association for the Adran '■ment of Colored People, -.poke at the Student Union Building at State College here Sunday night. Dr Morsell, who replaced Wilkins in the address, acquainted Ivs integrated audience with NAAC P activities and the legal and moral points of integration and segregation from the beginning Left to right in photo are: Attorney George R. Greene, integration leader . Dr More'll. Mr - Ralph Couphell. Ralph Campbell, pres, ident of the local NAACP branch , and Dr Net H Harris head of th“ education department at Shaw University. Dr, Pro eta rOfA &5 ? College Will Address 110 nor Pupils The annual meeting of the Crown and Scepter Club will be held at Saint Augustine’s College cn Saturday. April 15. was an nounced by Wiley M Davis, ex ecutive secretary. Theme for the spring confer ence is: “Adjustment, of Today's \r>uth To The Impact of b Chang ing Society" The main speaker will be Dr. Samuel DeWitt Proc tor. president of A&T College, Greensboro. Eight workshop* will He eon ducted, with outetanding scholars shd leaders a* con sultants. Workshops are: it) Scholarship In A Changing Society, t2> Ethics In A Changing Society, (3) Health and Recreation In A Chang ing Society, (4) Economies In A Changing Society, (5) Poli tics In A Changing Society, ( 61 Social Values In A Chang ing Society, (7) Science In A Changing Society and <S > Communication In A Chang ing Society. The Crown and Scepter Club is an Honor Society composed of outstanding students from ac f W Qiiliss*w -1 y& & # # r >422ta§! s|L ? MliliiP%&-- /: . |F ,;F :#S^ f', * & J|iS J[ If f #S^5« GENERAL SEES TAR HEEL ON FAREWELL VISIT— Genera! /. D. White, Commander in Chief, IJ. S. Army Pacific, foreground, pauses to talk to Sp/4 Joseph McKeivet, Jr., (Greens boro, N. C.) assigned to PM Detachment Special Troops, and a member of the USARJ Honor Guard, during an Honor Guard ceremony Monday morning at Headquarters, V. S. Army Japan, Camp Zama. Major General David H. Tulley, left, rear, accom panied General White during the colorful ceremony. The event 'crunched five-full days of activities at Camp Zama and in Tokyo for the USARPAC Commander in Chief on his farewell risit to the Far East. (U. S. ARMY PHOTO). It r. M orrow Kanird An UIV T Alternate Delegate WASHINGTON <ANP' Presi dent Kennedy this week named John H. Morrow, the resigning A merican Ambassador to Guinea, as alternate delegate to the United Nations General Assembly. Another delegate appointed by ihe president for a. UN pest was Mrs, Franklin D. Roose velt. who has served In a sim ilar capacity In the past a»d. has also been a member of the fll, JSfc ! ■ -JBaBEJry i y< DR SAMUEL D PROCTOR C. N. Commission on Human Rights, OTHERS PERMANENTLY ASSIGNED Ti?e other four 17. S. represen tatives, headed by Adlai Stevens son, are permanently assigned. Morrow is a brother of E, Fred erick Morrow, formerly White House aide to President Eiwnhow <CdNWNwi» ON PAGE 8> err:' 1 high schools of North C The club is to encourage ti '** .opmrnt of three qual* it ic HOLARSHIP. SERVICE and CHARACTER in the high school stud'’nrs of North Carolina. (CONTINI ED ON PAGE 2) ODDS-ENDS 1 BV ROBERT G SHEPARD «^ • I)n unto other* a* vnu would they do unto 1011,” PROFESSIONAL ANTIS; News comes that there is a g: oup head quartered in Kinst.or, which is a gainst. jus' about everything. You name it, they are against it. Thanks be to God. it is not likely that these professional anti's will get very far or be able to stem the tide of righteous reaction against all such persons who make it their business to oppose and hate every thing and everybody who would (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Police Chief Killed Curing Gun Battle SOUTHERN PINES Police Chief C Edward Newton was shot and killed Friday night by a man he was attempting to arrest. The 1 killer was then slain in a blazing gun battle with other officers. The husky Newion, 63 year* old. had headed the police force here for 27 years. He was slain by Willie “Eagle Eye" Gray, 48- year-old Negro. I Chief Newton was the third sue : cessive Southern Pines police chief eawMSWOHCEtI ON TAGE «} CROWD AT POLLING STATION Police keep back huge crowds at the polling station in Makadara, Nairobi, where. Tom Mhoya is fighting for an open seat in the New Kenya Legisla tive Council Mboya told a political rally that he is seeking the unconditional release of Jomo Ken yatta. He said leadership of the government would be offered to Kenyatta, who was banished to a remote part of Kenya for his leadership in the Mau Man terrorist activities. (UP! PHOI O). M VOL. 20. NO. 22 Wake Forest Man "Taken” As Tlim-Flam’ Nets 599 Refuses To Hear Lawyers WASHINGTON. D C—The Unit ed States Supreme Court Monday. >n its first action on a southern lunch counter sit-in case, denied a nearing to eight Negro, s and four whites convicted in a Florida lunch room demonstration. They were convicted In Mu nicipal Court in Tallahassee in connection with sit-in* at a VVnolworth Store early in 1960. Each received a sentence of 60 days in .jail or fines of? 300. The Court did not make the im (CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 Loral lllks Initiate Xcw Work Fidelity Lodge No. 277. 1 BPOE of World held Us first Civil Liber ties program at the Elks Temple last Sunday afternoon. March 5. This program was the first in a series of such programs envisioned by the Raleigh Elks to be held in the immediate future on a month'y basis. John Williams, chairman of the Civil Liberties Committee pre sided over (the Sunday meeting. The meeting was opened with (CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 State News —IN— Brief BARNES TO SPEAK AT NCC DURHAM Alexander Barries, veteran journalism and public re lations man. will be the featured speaker and consultant st North Carolina College during National Negro Newspaper Week, March 12- 18. NCC celebrates National (CONTINUED ON PAGE, If North Carolina's Leading Weekly RALEIGH. N. C. SATURDAY. MARCH 11. IQAI PIC CHAIRMAN MAKES POINT — Rep. Adam Clayton Pow ell, Jr., (D.-N.Y.), chairman oi the House Education and Labor Committee, is shown above during a Washington news conference last week. He said he still hopes the present administration will, act to bar proposed Federal school aid funds from localities de fying the Supreme Court's anti-discrimination ruling. On another sub tec t. he said preliminary checks show that a “ first-class scan daF' niav be developing in union-company welfare and pension funds. (UPI TELEPHOTO). R. E. Jones Will Stand Trial In Federal Court The case in which Mrs Mildred B. Payton is suing R, E. Jones, state agricultural extension direc tor, for $50,000, has been moved to the United States District Court. A hearing on various mo tions will be held in Greensboro on March 24 at 2 p. m. Mrs. Payton, former Horn* demonstration agent in Chath am County, with offices In Pittsboro, charged in Jan. that Jones wrote a letter to IT. S. Government agricultural nt fioal* which said she wu in efficient In her job. (CONTINUED ON PAGE V) No ‘Drastic Action* Set By Weaver WASHINGTON <ANP' The nation's new housing chief, M ye&r-oki Robert Weaver said he had no immediate plan* for end < roN'rrNtJKp”oN~ fags *> r CAROLINIAN —— ADVERTISERS __ BUY FROM THEM PAGE I Lawrence Bros Co Horton's Cast) Store Nortli Carolina Mutual Life Sns Co, PAGE 3 Hurricane Pence Ce. PCX Mother * Daughter Stores Washington Terrece Apts PAGE 5 Sunshine Bakery Hudson-Belk Co. Mechanic* * Farmers Bank John W. Winters & Co. PAGE « Turner’s Florist Firestone Stores First. Citizens Bank A Trust Co. Lawrence Bros., Realtors Electrical Wholesalers Dove Music Co. PAGE 7 Thomas Pood Market Weaver Bros. Rambler PAGE S Colonial Store* Modern Finance Corp R. E. Quinn Furniture Co. C. Karl Llchtman Cigarette Pack Used As ‘Bait’ William Earl Harris, a .14-yea r old Wake County man. told offi cer* two strange men tricked him out of $99 here Monday. Harris, of Route 2, Wake For est, said a man approached him in the 700 block of S. Blood worth Street and asked about the possibility of getting "some girls.” The victim said he told the stran ger he riidn t and shortly there rfter another strange man walked up and said he knew where to get some girls This man said, however, that they had better not take their money with them because the place was rough, stated Harris The second stranger took all of their money, Harris said and tied it inside a handkerchief The two gave the handkerchief to Harris, he said, saving that they would go to the place first, while he held the money When the two strangers didn I fCONTINUED ON PAGE 21 Ma 11. Son On Trial In Slaving TARBORO Trial started here Monday in the case of Oswald Hy man. white farm opnator, and his 18-vear-old son. Richard, charged with the rifle slaying of Jesse Ma lone, 16-vrar-old Negro tenant farmer. Tiie shooting occurred January 8 on the farm of B. C. Mayo, about five miles from Tarboro, when Ma lone was killed by a hail of. 22 caliber rifle bullets, fired by Rich ard Hyman. The youth was stru, k eight times and Dr. J. G. Raby. county, coroner, said any one of four of the wounds could have been fatal. Edgecombe County Sheriff Tom Bardin testified that when (CONTINUED ON PAGE 7) WEATHEII The flve-dav weather torerast for JUJelgh, beeinnini; Thursday, March 8, and continuing through Monday, March IS, 1* as follower Temperatures will average near normal. It will be cooler Thursday with a minor day-to-day change through Monday. High and low temperatures expetfed are d 9 and 3*. There will be little ralnfalt M any. PAGE • Piggly Wiggly Correll Coal Co S M. Young Hardware Co Cameron-Brown Co. PAGE 10 Blood worth 81. Tn-h Some Ridgeway's Opticians Carolina Builders Corp Caveness Insurance Agency 7-Up Bottling Co. Dillon Motor Finance Co. Pepsl-Cola Bottling Co. of Raleigh Warner Memoriil* Deluxe Hotel PAGE 13 Ambassador Theatre PAGE IS CAM Promotion PAGE 18 _ Branch Ban kin* & Trust C . Hunt General Tire Co. Raleigh Seafood Co. Arras Realty Co. Dunn * Esso Service Standard Concrete Product* Ce. Raleigh Funeral Home Major Finance Co.. Inc Taylor Radio A TV Se.vic# PRICE 15e

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view