30th Anniversary SPECIAL EDITION Oil Pages SBI Probes Charges At Goldsboro GOLDSBORO — Citizens of this rit\ are anxiously awaiting a re port from the State Bureau of In vestigation into a complaint made tby the North Carolina NAACF Conference of alleged misconduct of a white doctor at the Cherry Hospital with a !9-year-old inmate of the institution. The incident was brought to the attention of State Solicitor Archie Taylor during the last term of Su perior Court by a committee com posed of Revs. B R. Richardson and M. W. Morgan, Charles McLean and Mrs. Levi Hamilton. The metier was brought to the attention of Boy Wilkin*, exeuctive sec'y of the national N.AACP. while he was attending the state meeting, held here. Mr. Wilkins ir said to have told interested persons that they should see that the matter was investigated thoroughly and that no stone should be left unturned In getting to the bot tom of the rumor. The Carolinian contacted Attor ney Taylor and was told that he called the SBI in on tire investi {CONTUft-ED ON PAGE 2) ,'Begining Os New Interracial Elk Group Reported BALTIMORE. Md—From a news report re'eased here recently, there is developing upon the horizon of fraternal worlds a new organiza tion. which will include men and women of all races. Such an idea stemmed from the fact that Herbert E. Jones, consid ered one of the leading figures in Elkdom, and Mrs. Pearl Brown, ai *o active in. the organization made famous by the late J. Finley Wil ton, met with a number Os Interest ed persons and organized the Unit ed Inter-Racial Fraternal Order pf Elks of the World. It wa* net determined whe ther the new organization plans to rival the one headed by Hob son R. Reynolds, or whether it < fCONTINITEB ON PAGE 2) Metropolitan Opera Fans Acclaim Leontyne Price NC Man Gets $16,000 Post President Kennedy announced last week the appointment of James A. Washington as a member of the Public Utilities Commission of the District of Columbia for a term of three years. Mr. Washington i* presently as sistant dean and professor of law st the Howard University fWash ington t School of Law. A life-long Democrat, Mr. Wash ington, succeeds George E. C. Hays, whose term expired June JO. 5981 The utilities post pays an annual . salary of $16,295. p Mr. Washington was born its fCOyiWtiS ON PACK ft I «jjg» • ■'* ; ••v. i■, . _ ■ SPMiaP VUtiMNIMI CCffIIMSTTB* ■»>- TO«w ta* «f (be Hanuilttg ®f t&e Golds ssf ffe* Wilder, widen a*v»uff«6 for the Stale CteaferaK*. Seated, t-rs ©v. M. F. Caßdt, *®*- *• W. Gefiefti, Mw, &e*i l&cmMMu Ex-Sce’y; Bee, I, E, Antette. Viet-Rm.; afire, & 0, **»* W. ft. Storks aw« afire, Ajwwr SWtdis®, Steafitag; Bmmt Ktfwania, lee. CL I*, fwrtre, K ;&=*>. e, k. elbpbt. b«-. b, a. Ek statrdMm, T'tem*.; A, B, EehE sswS C*. it. Atom. 1 S ! AAA CP Await* Report SB| PROB E ASYLUM Gets Execution Stay i 11 1 VOL. 21. NO. I 3,000 Saddened Admirers MOURN DISC JOCKEY Lillington Rites Draw Huge Crowd In death, as in life, Samuel Lee Harris, well-known radio an nouncer attracted wide attention here Sunday, when more than 3, OOC persons a lie tided funeral rites lor him, at the Lillington Grove Free Will Baptist Church. He met his death October 18 a bcut 5:00 a. m. on route 401,. near ! the community of Liberty Springs, as he rammed into the back of a trailer-truck, said to be owned by , the Imperial Casket Company of Rzdeigh. According to information obtained by The CAROLIM | AN, he left his home about 4:30 a. m.. and was on his way j to radio station WFBG, SFu quay, where he has been broadcasting for an early show for about eleven years, j il„ is alleged that he must have j been traveling at a rapid rate of speed, due to the condition of his car and the damage done to 'the other vehicle. The impact is said to have broken two heavily built straps that supported the huge trailer-truck. The steering wheel of his car. j is said to have jammed his breast. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) NEW YORK—An opening-night . ! audience of 4.000 elegantly turned- j ! rut Metropolitan Opera fans gave , Soprano Leontyne Price an ovation ' Monday night for her handling of | her role in Puccini's “Girl of the i Golden West,” grand opera's only ! horse opera. Miss Price, a native of Laurel, i Miss., who made her debut at the ; Met last season. was hailed in her j sixth role at the Met with enlhu | si arms reserved for prim a donnas, j Sharing vocal honors was Rich | erd Tucker, singing hi# 30th role ; with accustomed brilliance, and | Italian baritone Anselmo Colzani. At the second-act intermission, Secretary of Labor Arthur Gold-* berg, who saved the !s«i-tt2 season iby arbitrating & wage dispute be j tween the opera and She orchestra, j went back stage to congratulate | Miss Price ‘T am a connoisseur of 1 singing and 1 love your voice,” A-C--■ Jj '' ' * '* *^ State News Brief MASONS TO MEET IN CITY RALEIGH The 91st Annual Communication of the Most Wor shipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge Free and Accepted Masons, Juris diction of North Carolina, of which Clark S Brown, of Winston-Salem, is Grand Master, will meet in Ra leigh December 11-13. The meetings will be held at Shaw University end Mayor W. G. Enloe will wel come the delegation to the city and Dr. W. R. Strassner. president of Shaw University, will bring greet ings. Three hundred and sixty-two lodges will be represented with »n aggregate membership «f more than 38.AG£ ft RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1961 DEATH VEHICLES These are the two vehicles that caused the death of five persons, Saturday afternoon, in one of the worst wrecks that Watte County ha* had in a long time. The ante was so badly lorn up until it was hard to tell what year it was made. The mail truck was also badly damaged. Last Rites For 4 Wreck Victims HeM Tuesday FUQUAY SPRINGS— This little farm town is still excited over the fact that the funeral of four wreck victims was held at St. Augusta Free Will Baptist Church, here on Tuesday. It was like a calm after a storm when thp four coffins were wheel ed into the church and the Rev. J. M. Jackson started the familiar, "We brought nothing into this African Chief tain Awarded Nobel Peace Prize for "60 j ODBS-ENDS BY «0»E&Y ©. SJfIEPAIUS "Let at nearer and try ear way* mm 3 turn again unto the Lord.” twe nt irnT'ANihvv ks a rt You can look at 20 years from one point of ,r iew and R will ap pear to be a very Short time. The first twenty yeans of the life of an individual are relatively short years, usually they are pleasant, exciting and fruitful years of prep aration for the falter life ahead. Newspapers, like individual*, have their life span. They are born, grow up, reach maturity, prosper and expand or withe*- and become useless. Thi* mostth, the Carolinian celebrate# it# 20th an niversary. This 20th anniversary special edition commemorates this event. A Negro newspaper or, a news paper published by Negroes, must, like everything else that is a part of Negro life, wage an uphill bat tle not only to attain growth, but for Its very existence. The Negro reading public which (cotrnxt'ien oh nun s> COUNCILMAN WINTERS tIX Katelyh City Councilman John Winters is reported “doing nicely"' at Wake Memorial Hospital where he was taken following a severe asthma attack last Friday. Physicians attending Mr. Winter# say that barring any unfonwen de velopments he should be released frees fee hospital this week. world ai;d certainly we would carry nothing out These intoning words seemed far more sacred and heart-rendering when one realized that three members of one family were being funeralized. All of this came to Fuquav as the result of a race between gasoline and destiny, Saturday afternoon, and death won. The (CONTINUED ON PAGE ft JOHANNESBURG, South Africa —Zulu Chieftian Albert Luthull prepared this week to apply for a South African passport in order to accept the 1960 Nobel Peace Prize in person. Chief Luthull, *2. has been re stricted to an area on the northern coast of the province of Natal since 1:159 because of hi# opposition to South Africa# apartheid lews. He learned on Monday that he had won the prize when he came Charlotte Lawyer Will Seek Federal Position CHARLOTTE