DOTH CLAIMS 2 0T STATE'S LEADERS FIRST OF RACE AT GA. TECH. — Three Negro students, the first to enter previously all-white Ga. Tech, leave the infirm ary at. Ga. Tech, after their physical examinations. All newsmen were barred from the Ga. Tech, campus by Ga. Tech. President Edwin Harrison. The integration of the university was without incident. (VPI TELEPHOTO). Rites For Mrs. Aggrey 2P. M. Thors. !n Salisbury .. '-aw* - MISS YARBROUGH Ligon Girl Passes 1 st Merit Test Principal Herbert E Brown of l W Ligon High announced Wed nesday, that Marilyn Yarbrough a 'anior, has beer, given recognition for her high achievement !n the initial gtage of the seventh annual j National Merit Scholarship compe- j tition. She has been named semifinalist 1 n the 1961-152 Merit Program as a i result of her outstanding perform- ! ance on the National Merit Sehol- j #rship Qualifying Te—A fast, stra- ■ tegic move by the NAACP last week saved the life of a 15-year-old j Monticello (Ga.) boy scheduled to j die in the electric chair Friday : (Sept. 22) for killing a 70-year-old white farmer. The postponement followed a motion filed by the NAACP for a new trial which will be held on October 6. The Association's motion was grounded on an on the-spot investigation which re vealed that: 1. No Negro has served on a jury in Jackson County, where the crime was committed and trial held, for j more than 40 years. 2 The court-appointed, attorney failed to raise pertinent constitu tional issues. 3. There is a possibility that per- | sons other than trie young boy were involved m the murder. The slaying took place in Monti- - cello. Ga,, following « quarrel last j June between Preston Cobb and | Local Ass n To Continue “Boycott” The Raleigh Citizens Association at its mid-month meeting held at the Bloodworth St,. YMCA Thurs day evening. Sept 21. decided to i continue its campaign of "selective | buying" which was begun here last 1 spring. This campaign was direct ed against chain food stores. Taking notice of the fact that al though some minor gams were made, the effort to have Negroes j refrain from making purchases, in j chain, food stores which refused to up-grade Negro employees had not ! been successful, it was decided that a new approach to this problem I was doubtless needed. . I (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) HAACP Plans Slain ,?f«w GOLDSBORO The Oodsboro Branch, N.AAOP, Is making all- i out, preparations for the annual convention of the N. C. Confer ence of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Pec-pie (NAACP) which meets here October 12-15. This will mark the first meeting of the civil rights body in this city and the first in Eastern Tarheelia in several years. State president Kelly M. Alexan der. Charlotte, and Charles A. Mc- Lean, Winston-Salem, field secre tary, have announced a full four- ODDSEHDS BY ROBE«T G. SHEPARD •*Thon wili keep him fn per fect peace whose mind is staid on Thee.” SENSIBLE AND REALISTIC The recent request of the Civil Rights Commission for faster ac tion on the school desegregation problem is both sensible and re alistic. Almost 8 years have gone by since the U. S. Supreme Court said that segregation in the public schools was unconstitutional and called for its end. Yet in spite of that ruling, only a fragment of this segregation has been ended. The idea now proposed by the rights commission that each state where school segregation exists submit a desegregation plan to the federal courts within (5 months will certainly mean an eventual end of this un-American evil. It is note worthy that the commission in this <.v, vv approach u- recognizing 2nd calling for an end to school segre gation to schools in the North, South, East and West. This is note worthy because this vicious and undemocratic practice in one form or another is carried on in every region in this country. It is to be hoped and prayed for that the Congress will speedily a (COKXIffS}EO*oj7 FACIE 2} Frank Coleman Dumas, the white farmer. FOUND GUILTY IN 45 MINUTES An all-white, all-male jury' de (CONTINUED ON PAGE Zy Ask N. C. Scions To Support Marshall WASHINGTON —Senators Sam H Ervin and B Everette Jordan of North Carolina have been asked by Kelly Alexander, chairman of the state NAACP, to vote for the confirmation of Thurgood Marshall as a member of the Second U S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Marshal! was nominated Satur day' by President John F Kennedy just, as Congress headed into the closing hours of its 1961 session (coNTi? talon page z> ATTORNEY MARSHALL ! day program beginning with thp i ministers' conference Thursday, October 12, under the .toint direc tion of Dr. Grady D Davis. Shaw 'University School of Religion, dean, and the Rev O J. Odom. New York., national NAACP church '^ t , , CHANGES SIGN Metropolitan Opera Soprano Lucira Amara end four youngsters (left to right: Roberto Garcia. 6; Charles Selig. 10, Sheryl Sullivan, 11 and Kenneth Lee, 101 change Times Square sign to Inter faith Square. This is in prepa ration for Inierfaith Day ceremonies on the 30th Annual Inter faith Day., Sunday. Sept. 24 at the Mall in Central Park. Sidnei Z. Seartes, president. Interfaith Movement, Inc., announced tb* I Interfaith convocation will be a memorial to the late Secretary general of the UN, Dag Hammarskjotd. Mayor Wagner will pro claim Interfaith Day at City Hall on Friday, Sept , 22nd, at 10:1 s A. M. Funeral Held Tuesday ! WILMINGTON—Historic S' Ste , pkens AME Church was bedecked I in mourning, the high, the low. the | rich the poor, the halt and the | Isme came to common grief here \ Monday when the ;-?t rites were i held for the churchman, the frater i nal brother, the humanitarian and the commoner. Di. George Downs i Carnes, Tuesday, 2 pm 1 The Rev C L Su-phons. ;.. ui . elder of the Wiimmgtor. Di»- j trict, was in charge of the last sad j rites and d:s; layed a sombre ex i pression that toid the huge audi ! cnee. which filled every space m i the church. That one of the Tail j cedar of Lebanon" had her;; t ;t 1 down. Due T o the prominence of the I ceased, both in cnurch and state, j many persons journeyed to the port I city to pay their last respect. Speak -ler after speaker extolled him for h:s virtues -ir.d lamented tit' fact that he was no more The opening (CONTINUED ON FACE 21 rtF CAF NFS Man Held On Two Charges Os Forgery Probable cause in the char:® of forgery was found against Jnsepo Smith. 33. of 1022 Walnut Ten ■' after he had received a pv"lin ■ ary hearing from a local Justice |of the Ppace. Smith was charged w>ih two separate counts of forgery. H- is alleged to have forged the nan - ' of Luther Wilson of Bern, . d S> on a check m the amount of . 50. He is also charged with :>• . .n : the name of Charles R. Wi'eou of [Strain Street, to a check m the amount of $47.50. Constable W. H Emorv. who Smith .tailed under $! .000 hope Smith was bound ovc- bv >he Jus tice of the Peace for trial i Wake Superior Court PRICE 15c secretary The ministers wui be feted at a banquet a!, the close of their conference dav. The convention organization w ill be held on F riday morn - (CONTINUED ON PAGE T