NEW RIOT HALTS DANCE Officer Suffers Possible Broken Nose; 20 Nabbed The lure of Rock Roll music ir.d the failure of some Individ ia!s to constrain themselves ir- a ;risis brought terroj to dance fam at Memorial Audlwrium Monday night. The dropping o' a whiskey hot tle, in the mid die of ithe floor and failure of the believed owner to cooperate with '*s:'%'% the police set off a clamor that & ended In one man 1 being shot in the ' foot, one police officer beaten - and mauled, oth ers bit. scuffed SELLERS and and manhandled, and twenty persons booked at the local po lice station. The trouble la said to have started when Officer W. G. Arnold picked up a bottle, be lieved to contain whiskey and proceeded to arrest one Ann Howard who gave a Durham address, for displaying whis key in public. She was not too desirous of having the officer take the whiskey and then re onesting her to accompany him to City Hail Her resentment sent her alleg ed brother James Howard, who po lice are said to have believed to be a woman, to her rescue. James began protesting the seeming ar rest and actually detained it, for Commission To Be Asked For Funds The Raleigh School Board is finding itself in a tight position to provide money to furnish class rooms for the children of its grow ing population. It has long since been known that two of its new residential sections are bursting at the seams, when it.' comes to chil dren of school age. Bllferrawe Hl!T»-R eehenier Heights project has been placed in the number two spot of the building program and work might have been started bad it not been that one of the sub bids is reported to be out of list with prevailing prices te that field. The North Hills project is causing a second look, due to the fact that the program is geared on urgency and the school needs of that com munity have zoomed past the an ticipated growth. The contract has been let for Bilt more Hills-Rochester Heights, It is (CONTINUED ON PAGE Z) ODDS-ENDS BY ROBERT G. SHEPARD “Do not frustrate the will of God.’ 1 POST MORTEM We have finally finished going through the Carolinian's 63-page, 20th anniversary edition. Besides from somebody forgetting to num ber tile pages, we think it repre sented a pretty good effort on the part of the Carolinian's manage ment and staff. It is hardly likely that anything comparable to it lias ever been seen in these parts. We think the reading mate rial was good, pertinent and quite Informative. The Carolin ian's readers were given the opportunity not only to read about the individuals, groups, organizations and facilities which keep the wheels turning {CONTINUED ON PAGE t) State News Brief I)R. GRINSTEAD TO SHAW H. Dr. S. E Orinstead, Director, Baptist Student Work, National Baptist Convention, Nashville, Term. will gpvak at Shaw Unit'd'- 1 sity in Grecnlcnf Auditorium on * Friday, November 3. at 12:00 noon. The public is invited. WHISKEY CHARGES ARE MADE KALEIGH—Two Policemen made three arrests here last weekend on whiskey charges. At 205 E. Cabar rus Street, Officers Norman Artis and A. L. Grifiny picked up Charles L. Oates, 26, of B-30 Washington Terrace and charged him with ille gal possession for sale of two quarts of tax-paid whiskey and 23 fans of h^rv At 212 1-2 W. South Street, they arrested Mrs. Lbzie Mae Dunn. 30, of that address She was jailed un der st SSO bond for possessing a quart of non-tax paid whiskey. Mis* Ivory Bullock, 40, of 408 Montague Lane bad two quarts of j HBK-tax-paid whiskey. She was i failed under bond cf SSO. (CAKRMVW ON RAGE 2) sometime by attacking the police. When the dusk settled down Ar nold was suffering from bruises, abraisions and general disorders as the result of having been han dled by James and many other persons. He was also minus his gun and other particulars that are used by police. The irony »t the whole mat ter was that James Sellers, 22, (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2> JLHesged M § 1 1 1 ia if s e s** 4 Monroe Youth Is Released MONROE—Richard Crowder, 10, s defendant in the trumped-up kid nap case against Negroes and Free dom Riders in Monroe was releas ed on $1.6,00 bail last week. Arrangements for posting the full sum ir, cash were made by the Committee to Aid the Monroe De fendants. The Committee to Aid the Monroe Defendants also sent a trailer filled with food and cloth ing to the needy and hard-pressed colored community of Monroe this past weekend. Its chairman, Dr. A. (CONTINUED ON PAGE t) Leader Praises Governor The state president of the Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People said Satur day his meeting with Gov. Terry Sanford on Friday was encouraging and productive. "I was impressed with the sincere approach made by the governor to the problem of Ne gro employment,” said Kelly M. Alexander of Charlotte, A NAACP delegation met with the governor to discuss the use of race as a criterion in job selection for prh ate industry. The group presented the gover nor with a written plea urging de segregation of the files of the State Employment Service. They also asked for a legal study of a North Carolina law which provides that Negro and white "militia" be en rolled separately. Southeastern Dist. Women Hold Meet LUMBERTON -■ Five-hundred women, members of the Southeast ern District Home Demonstration Clubs, came into town Wednes day and held the 17th annual ses sion of the federation. The theme “Today’s Home Builds tomorrow's World”. IThd pvmHpV;, of »oiU *Nfo we Wisely Raleigh Ssblmwl Company Raleigh funeral Home Raleigh Savings * Goan Ass'n Electrics! Wholewders, Inc. PAGE 14 Lincoln Theatre PAGE 15 Freeaer Pnr.-.h speedy Wasn Triangle Specialty Co. Baiter's Shoe Shop Mary Carta? Palnf Shop Wllson-Perretl Furniture C». Capital Bargain Store The Globe Unlit#-Levine G. S. Tocher and Bro*., !ne. R. B, Stofcrs Ccmeret* deitfrseter* N. C, Finance Corp. Shoe Mart PAGE X* WHAL-tV end StsuSte CiraHu Jpower & Light Co. North Carolina *s Leading Weekly ficers are looking for a suspect who is believed to be in Nash County. No warrant had been issued, how ever. The fatal shooting occurred on the parking lot at Parrish’s Market here about 9:30 or 10 p.m. Satur day, Hopkins said. High was rush Tt is expected that there will be an outstanding array of Baptist dig nitaries whose sole purpose will be to observe only. The program is be ing arranged for the enjoyment and inspiration of all who attend. Only registered delegates will partici pate in business ses*ion*. The public is invited. Baptist CouvMttan; Underway At Jacksonville JACKSONVILLE —The 94th an nua! session of the Gerseral Baptist State Convention, Inc. and Lay men's League Convention, got un derway here Monday when Baptist converged upon this militaristic town. Registration began at 1 p.m. and Rev. O. J. Rooks led the opening session, with devotions. The meet ing opened on at* theme, "Our God In Time:- Like These”. The first sessions featured the Laymen’s League. Miss Willie M. Brown .spoke on “Christian Etiquette". She discussed *ho good manner: of a Christian in times like these. The role of the laymen in the Baptist Church was treated by R. 1,. Peterson, while Mrs, Nell L. McCrackens talked of the motivating actions that make a league move. This session clos ed with the appointment of easnmittees. The executive committee met at 4:00 p.m. It was then that the aeen da of operation was outlined and everyone was apprised of what the organization would do at the ses sions. The evening session was address ed by Dr. P, H. Johnson. He told what advantages arc to be obtain ed by having a trained laity. He dwelt on the fact that trained lead ership needed trained followship. The convention sermon was preach RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1961 ed to Wake Memorial Hospital and died about 15 or 20 minutes after he was admitted. Hopkins said no motive had been discovered in the shooting. High, who lived on Rt. 4, Zebu lon. is survived by his wife, Mrs. Rosa Mse Hihg; three daughters, Eva Mae, Ada Denis* and Evera, all of the home; his mother, Mrs. Marie High of Zebulon; nine sisters, Mrs. Lynn Washington of Peters burg, Va,, Mrs. Margie Pretty of Baltimore, Md., and Mrs. Magnolia Richardson, Mrs. Alice Daniels, Nliss Cora High, Mrs. Thedoshia Mitchell, Mrs, Katie Mials, Miss Dorothy High, and Miss Cores High, all of Zebulon, three broth ers, Otis of New York, James of Durham, and Otha of Baltimore, Md. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. at Beavers Chapel Christian Church with the pastor, the Rev. Young, officiating. Burial will be ia the Wakefield Church Cemetery. ed by Rev, B. L. Boone, Windsor. Music was furnished by the Dr. J. A. Nimmo Singers, Greenville. It is to be remembered that the name (CONTINUED ON PAGE 25 Bus Integration Effective WASHINGTON— The chairman of the Interstate Commerce Com mission said Mondnv the o would be prompt and efficient enforce ment of new ICC rules against rac ial segregation tn bus transporta tion facilities. Chairman Everett Hutchinson said any violation of the order, 11 WEATHER i WEATHER The ftve-flay weather report for Raleigh, beginning Thursday, Nov vcmbet 2 anil continuing through Monday, November 6 Is as follow*: Temperatures will average about five decrees above normal. Warm weather will be followed by cooler temperature* on Friday and con tinuing throughout tho weekend. There t* a chance of showers on Saturday and again Monday. Nor ma? high and low Mmiwtitsm will be 77 and £1 decree*. Citizens Comment tin Election The coming vote on the Bond Is sue is causing much concern among race people, throughout the slate. From a survey made by the CARO LINIAN most of the proposals will carry. However, there are some who fed that some of the items can wait until more urgent causes and needs have been taken care of. Dr. Grady D. Davis, dean of the school of religion at Shaw Univer sity, said: ‘I am greatly in favor of it. I feel that the issue has eco nomic, educational and cultural CCONTJNUEC ON PAGE, Z) Baby’s Probed A seven-months-old girl found dead in a house about two miles east of Knightdale last week died of pneumonia and neglect, Coroner M. W. Bennett said Monday night. Coroner Bennett ordered an autopsy after the badly decom posed body was found by the child’s aupt, Mrs. Janie Leee Kearney, about 2:36 In the af ternoon. The mother, Mrs. Lucy Mae Giles who was located *in Raleigh later in the day, told Coroner Bennett the baby was alive when she left home that morning about 8:30 She said she gave the baby a bottle of milk. Dr. L. J. Kassa, pathologist at Wake Memorial Hospital who per formed the autopsy, said that his examination showed the baby had been dead from 18 to 24 hours when it was brought to him. Domestic Relations Court Judge Mason P. Thomas Jr. said that his court was conducting an investiga tion into circumstances in the ba by’s death. PROWLERIS CAUGHT AT WAKE HOME Sheriffs Deputies reported Thurs day the arrest of Willie Junior Hall. 24, of Raleigh. Rt. 2. on a charge of attempted first degree burglary. Deputy L. W. Kelly said Carl B. Dickerson of Hodge Rood, some eight miles east of Raleigh, was awakened about 2:4S a.m. Thursday by someone cutting the screen on his window. Dickerson switched on some outside lights, Kelly said, and the prowler fled across a field. Dickerson grabbed a shotgun and gave chase, halting Hall on the other side of the field.