Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 3, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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World In Pictures f '*’**mt Jg I gpl g|l ;‘ }-;'■- i™||¥Bp|egi^.;.;: “;i : i \ j , - s k &: *tC ,-A*iitlmL^^^M r ' ' The New York chapter of the Winston-S-alem Teachers College Alumni Association which presented a check of SSOO to help worthy athletes. They have given this amount several times before. am. 0 <%' «■ i \ ii - £' k 3A% ‘ ;a Dr. I. Gregory Newton. Durham. N. C’.. consultant with the U .S. Peace Corps, talks with Nathalie Mack, left, Switzerland, S. C., and Peggy Rogers, Graham, N. C„ both students in the A&T College School of Nursing, about joining the corps. •• Louis Armstrong and Marlene Dietriek (left) give a high society version of the “twist" at the Riviera Hotel, in Las Vegas, while a sparkly Eartha Kitt (right) is shown in Sweden with Jan Malmsjo, her co-star on the Swedish TV show' "Cascade.” - ..... Dr. Glenn F. Rankin, dean of student* at A&T College, welcomes Mrs. Eva Martin of Atlanta, and Dr. J, B. Jones, of Houston. Texas, to the annual conference of the National Association of Personnel Work ers held at the college last week. %t v l CL Mrs Alvista Perkins (right) watches Charles H. Bynum, director »f intesgroup relations for the National Foundation, receive s2s® March of Dimes contribution from Mrs. Daisy McFadden. They re present N. T. Girl Friends. Inc. CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS Bin FROM THEM PAGI 2 Eureka Realty to. Horton's Cash Store Ihonus Food Market PAGE 3 Public ersice Co. of v C , 1r- To*v» & Country Furniture Co PAGE i Community Florist Gem Watch Shop Hudson-Belk Efird's Cartrr’f toe. Meehanlcs & Farmer* Bank Southern BeQ PAGE « Major Finance to Amertran Credit Co Auto (nntranre Service Wlmbertey Electric Co. VP & G Upholstery Company Ntna’s Grill The Fabric Shop Larry's Cut-Rate Gro A Mks Meehstth** A* Partners Bank Stephen’s Appliancv Company Maim’* Furniture Company Ounston’* Texaco Service Carpet Center Capita! Vacuum Store Charles Store Hunter’s Grocery Browsing Barber Shop .Joy’s Americas Or ' Raleigh Faint & Wallpaper Co. Edenton street Cleaner* Capital Bargain Store Peebles Grill & Hotel Washington Terrace Apts., toe. Buffalos Coospan?, 4 Builder* Raleigh Fnmifnre Co. G. S. Saeker Bros., toe. PAGE ? Cprreil Coal Co. into Discount Company into Insurance Service Weaver Bros Rambler CAGE 8 ! ( olouiai Store* H. f. Quinn Furniture. to. ; I H Brown PAGE 9 \A I* Food Store: Llghtner Funeral Horn* I instead Grocer* A Transit! Branch Banking & Trust Co. | P’.iiE 10 Washington Terrace Apts., tor Radio station WIXE Hepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Raleigh t..afmig a Poultry Co, toe Otllon Motor Finanrc Co. | Seven-Up Bottling Company ! Carolina Builders Corn Ridgeway’s Opticians. Inc Bloodworth St. Tourist Home Deluxe Hotel Warner Memorials I PAGE 11 ! Lawrence Br.os. [Capital Ice and Coal Co., inr ! Southern Whole'*l» Co. Carolina Power 6 Light Co. 1 Lincoln Theatre i Joe Murnicfc’s Promotion PAGE IS Rhode* Furniture Acme Realty Company Plegly Wiggly Standard Concrete Products Co. Raleigh Seafood Company Raleigh Funeral Home Rust'General Tire Company Dunn's Esso Service ! Central Drug Store I Firestone St- re* LOLtIBVIIIQ , Ky, 0 United Fund Critics Are Rapped By YMCA Board Loan Shark Fined •v',• • - • • gsliisiißiiiilliyHSiHM&HttilßUH&iiiiitliaMMMiHMiiiitiiiiiiiiililiiliZiHM VOL. 21, NO. IS Hold-Up Man Robs High Ft. Loan Co. HIGH POINT The enticing ad vertising of companies that specia lize in lending money could have been the reason why an unidenti fied man staged a holdup here Sat urday and fled with several hun dred dollai-s. According to information furnish ed local police by Mrs. Frances Hicks, white, cashier, a Negro is alleged to have entered the .office of Liberty Loan Company, shortly after noon Saturday and in true western style and did not even speak, but indicated to her that she should make some paper money a vaitable to him. Mrs. Hicks alleges that she did not speak either and while looking down the barrel of a pistol, extend ed over the counter, she emptied the cash drawer and gave him the money. Once he received the mon ey he is alleged to have stuffed it into his pockets and then it was that he spoke. He is reported to have told her to lie down on the floor. She described him as "clam and quiet" and being about 25 years old. One pack of cigaretts could have been the cause of it all. Man ager H. R. Simpson left momenta rily to get a package and when he returned found the damage had been done. f CONTINUED ON PAGE it SEGREGATION REMAINS: City System Takes In O’Kelly School Mr. Fred A Smith, Supt. of Wake County Sch:>ois, told an over- j flovv PTA audience last Monday . evening that, beginning next. Sep tember. the Berry O Kelly H’gh School in Method would become a part of the Raleigh school system. Mr. Smith said although the Ber ry O'Kelly School would be operat ed as a unit of the Raleigh Public Schools, Negro students in that section of Wake County now’ serv ed by the school would through an ; arrangement worked out between | the Wake County School Board and 1 the Raleigh School Board con tin- j ue to attend the Berry O'Kelly j School. Replying to a question asked by Ralph Campbell, president, of the Raleigh Branch, NAACF, Supt Smith said that an effort would be: made to operate* the school on a segregated basis. Mr. Campbell's question was raised after the superintendent had described the area which would served by the Berry O'Kelly School. Within this area are schools now attended soley by white stu dents. In some instances, Negro children must pass these all-white schools in order to reach the sesgre gated school at Method. The Wake school head said that under the new arrangement, ele mentary students living in Method WEATHER The five day vveafher forecast for Ihe Raleigh area beginning Tlnirs d»*. March Ist, and continuing through Monday, March sth, is as follow s: Turning much colder tonight and Thursday with continued rather rulii weather through Monday. Rain ending near coast early Thursday, with rain again abou* the weekend for this area. riiurrli Leader Writes President: ■JrW MJryeti ««tints EZxeeuiivv Slower To r ree ftvtt amprint*ateti 31 in intern President John F. Kennedy was urged this week to use his power to bring about the release of two min isters "who are languishing in southern jails." Alexander Barnes of Durham, a leading Republican and director of public relations and social service for the AMEZ Church, in a letter to the Chief Executive urged him to seek the release from Alabama and North Carolina *s Leading Weekly RALEIGH, N. C„ SATURDAY. MARCH 3,1962 Attorney-General Says; WE WIL OBEY Loan Shark In Extortion Fined SSOO ROCKY MOUNT One of the ) most outrageous disclosures was j brought to light here in Record* : er's Court when Bennie W. Pol lard. white, local grocer was tried I for lending money to Negro em | ployees of the City Sanitation De j partrnent at a rate of 25 cents i,i --; ten i on t+ie dollar. He was tried by Judge Sam Ar j rington and fined S3OO in one case, m which he plead nolo contendere. Ho admitted to police that he had | been lending small sums of money I to Negroes and getting 25 percent j interest for a two-week period. State law requires that a person ! Sending S6OO or iess at a rate great er than six percent ha'v a license I from the State Banking Commis (CONTINUED ON PAGt ») , would have the option of continu- j img riding school busses to reach I | the elementary segregated school I I in Cary or. they could be assigned j the city of Raleigh. When he was j to the nearest segregated school in I pressed to name that school, he | said it would be the Oberlin Road School. Mr. Owen White questioned the ! idea of students being assigned to a school within the city and yet having tihe privilege of attending ! the school in Cary if they desired ] to do so, Mr. Smith said that ar | rangement had neen made because ; the students may have become at- ICONTOiUED ON PAGE 2) Driver Goes Free After Hitting Sian i _ DURHAM Rushing a patient to a hospital can prove as seriou* to an uninterested person as it is to the person that is being taken to the hospital That is what happen ed here Saturday night when Lloyd Neil Price, white. 37, 1004 Dwire Drive, Raleigh, is said to have struck Erasmus Heck, 50, of j 231 Miami Blvd. with a car. Price told The CAROLINIAN i i Tuesday night that he was not de- I I iained hy Hie police, whom he sl i leges told him that Heck had been I : drinking and that he was not re ' sponsible for striking him. Investigating officer, state troop i er J. A. Phillips is said to have stat ed that Keck had been visiting a | -isler, who lived across the street ! from him and that he was return j ing home, when struck by the car (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Louisiana jails, of the Rev. Fred L. ShutUesworth and B. E’tci Cox, who "dared to be men" in their fight, for civil rights in the South. The full text ui the 3a: net leuer follows: 2515 Fayetteville Street Durham. North Carolina February 28, 1982 Honorable J. F. Kennedy. President United States of America J% . ■■**/ ■ , i, ..>. ••• '■■■ ■ ' Air M-, , <> ? A 1 ‘ #4 t \ I VyJI / w' 1 w / M.;ltelllfe : v '•••# '/1 SEQCTCENTFNMAI, SPFAK f'H —Shown above is The Rover rif J MAi>ha!l L. Shrparn. pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Pa., who opens the Sesquicentenni.il Celebration of the First Baptist Church of Ra leigh, N. C„ on Sunday morning, March 4, Dr. Shepard, in addi tion to being one of the country’s foremost Baptist clergymen is also widely known for his civic, political and social activities. Foreman Checks Racial Situation in Mississippi i Mi., JACKSON, Misa. George Fore man, president of the Sampson Co. branch of the NAACP, Clinton, N C., is down here. t,o get s first-hand look at the racial situation, he brought with him two of t.he young people who have been quite active in the demons!rations against racial discrimination, Leonard Hill and Miss Rena Moore. Mr. Hill is president of the youth organization of the NAACP in : North Carolina and Miss Hill is | said to have done a remarkable job in recruiting young members and also those who have participated in many of the demonstrations. Mr. Foreman is quite active in this area and is know to be an ar dent Republican. He laments the fact that he will not be able to at tend the North Carolina State Re publican Convention, which meet* in Durham, March 2-3. Forsythe Hospital Includes Negro medic For First Time WINSTON-SALF.M Dr. Joseph , M. Walker. Jr.. 58. Winston-Salem j surgeon was among 38 doctors nam- | ed to the former all-white medical : staff of City Hospital, marking the ! first tirhe n Negro has had such a j privilege here. This means Dr Walker was ex- i t Washington. D. C. . Dear Mr. President: j During your campaign, ir, 1060. you were very generous In the use of your kind Influences to have Dr Martin Luther King released from ' prison. I am quite sure that every believer in human decency appre ciated this gesture. However, ho has been imprisoned many times since and you have not had either PRICE Isc /> / / Bus Decision Os High Court law Os Land’ Attorney General Wade Burton told The CAROLINIAN Tuesday that he had no comment on the de cision of the United States Supreme Court striking down segregation, as it applies to transportation. Mr Burton said that he had not read the derision thorough ly and in view of the fact that it nas the opinion of the high rst court of the land that the people of North Carolina were law abiding citizens and he had no reasons to believe that thev Mould attempt to riisobe' the order of the hodv. When asked why he had no com ment to make he said; “Any com ment i might make would be an impropriety and certainly I am co il g to abide by the decision of the court.” He said that there bad bten no trouble in North Carolina, over the seating of passengers, on buses and other modes of transportation and he did not feel that there was any reason for alarm over the most recent decision of the high court. The court left, no doubt in the minds of anyone as to where it stands on the entire matter of seg regation on any vehicle, used for the public transportation of per rons. It made it clear and distinct that persons riding on public con veyances should not and must nol be forced to sit iti certain places because of their color This decision seems to have made it clear that the more than 200 freedom riders arrest ed and prosecuted in Jackson Mississippi, for allegedly dis turbing the peace, were unlaw fully tried and convicted. Robert L. Deaton, supervisor, Ci (CONTEVUED ON PAGE 2) ODDS-ENDS BT ROBERT G. SHEPARD "The Lord God ia a *tin and shield ” THE SAME PEOPLE At a recent meeting of a group of Negroes gathered to discuss ways and means of working out some current problems one of the speak ers mentioned the fact that it was always the “same people 1 ’ found at all the meetings regardless of the nature and type of problem. What he said was the sad truth lit is siways “the same people’’. It reoNnmjED on page 2) lended privileges by the Winston- Salem Hospital Commission to per form surgery, bis speciality and as sign his patients to a hospital room. It only took five minutes to as sign the more than 150 other phy sicians in a Tuesday meeting of the Commission ! the time or the urgency since be j coming president, to intervene. This letter comes to inform you j that there are many people who ! question your sincerity in this ges ture, in view of the fact that the Rev. Fred L. Shuttleswortfo, ano ther minister, and the Rev. B. El ton Cox are now being held fox (CONTINUED ON PAG® 2) STUDENTS HONOR WAR DEAD College students of the “Turn Toward Peace" movement march through Arlington (Va.) National Cemetery on route to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier where they placed a wreath. More than 1000 strong, they have been picketing the White House against atmospheric nuclear testing. Carrying wreath is David Finke, ol Oberhn College, co chairman of the Student Peace Union. Says Citizens Body Was ‘lllAdvised’ The board of management of the Bloodworth S , .;c- <p t Y-T'.’CA has released a resolution strongly opposing a report ; h • rs by the Raleigh Citizens Association on February 22 and ; -rned on | the front page of The News and Observer In this report the United Fund : ! was criticized as a channel through ! which "the poor contribute to the j amusement and advancement of the rich." The resolution adopted at the | regular meeting of trie YMCA j board has stated that, this and other i statements in the report released ; by the Raleigh Citizens Association | are “misconceived, ill advised and j at variance with the true facts C. A. Haywood, Sr., chairman of ! the board, presided and the reso | lution was adopted after a full dis | cussion of the report as carried in | the local daily. j A number of Raleigh’s leading j citizens who comprise the Boar-! of i Management was present when j the actual vote of repudiation of th i report was taken. Some of th re j are members of the citizens group ! and claimed that the report was t to | work of a sub-comniittce, rnaniiv i one member and that it had not bc-cn adopted or approved bv the ; group. Members of tiic Board pre sent when the resolution of pro test was adopted include: I . .1 Carnage. J. W. Eaton. R. II Toole. .1. A. Mann. \ E. Broun. C. C. Smith. Jr.. Dr. L. I Me faulty. C. N. (. ohle. < R. I ra j zer, and E. I . Raiford, general secretary and member evoffi cio. The United Fund is a fnnd-rau i in? organization and a: -c. ts priv.vc 1 agency members raise the bud ! gets It does not ret the politic of these agencies and it is t fa unjust to criticize th Fund f. . c v ! Youth Rescued From “Well The State School for the Blind I and Deaf on the Old Garner Road, ! was the scene of near tragedy. Tuesday afternoon around 4 o'- clock. Clifton Williams, 8-year:,- old of Warren County, blind stu dent- was playing on the play | ground in the rear of the gym : building and plunged several feet into a partly filled abandoned “well”, Garvin, Dayton Saunders, th school electrician, in an interview ! with a CAROLINIAN reporter re wwpMi '*s > j ~.. «*• ; /*\* - f' -" * v - 1 ’•* \--\ -X rKH f., Jifclr Ipf! •** 57 UDENT RESCUED FROM "WELL" Clifton Wit hams, 8-year‘ofd student (left ) at the State School for the Deal and Blind, Garner Road, Raleigh, his rescuer. Garvin Dayton Saunders, (right) electrician at the school and the scene of a sup posed well the hoy fell into shown in lower photo. Saunders pull ed the hoy from the 9 to 15 'foot well Tuesday at. 4 o'clock, after he alarmed the campus with cries for help. (Carolinian 1 Photos By Jeffries). ; work of the agenci<\< Mated A. E ; Brown Any just criticism should | be taken up directly with those in : voiced and they vdl be given a | hearing” he continued The most strongly opposed im- I plication in the Citizens Association was that “agencies which perform i a real public service should be put i on the public pavroll end their ox- I ponses paid out of a special pro ' g-ressivc income us’’. Our taxes air (CONTINUED ON P AGE .!) Man Bound Over On Rape Chare t V With the g. j elm ■ - I d her own tlc V, ill 'llH . C o:. .Hum, Fiction. W nim: : ■ rui -t! : :e --j Cab n Gilt and lie v. a bon 1 ■' ■ l or to W.ii.f Supei .el : ■ i on The entire t. - i fail y t.-h A man c I vr •• X j. •• - picked uu ■■' ' 11 tun cih.f-i'e uid - f in jail tor speeding on Pujh- Load (( nr, ,»m i • i , v latos 5 ii.it "; ■1 1 ■ n |U - near the ar< a found : mm : CU.; .m Being tr-ar U<■ sour :. n,.;l first made 1, u to rescue lie ire <y !r •m ■" 11-.: I into Idr ill !, I. ■ e .i inches m arum i could just touch tic ’ ■ Iruui which lie dcsci :bc>’ - ; i • >• ct to grip- In sh 1 u i : ' cr tendants v. ho supm.; > i • I': • i ON IIN i Ell ON I \(, i
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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March 3, 1962, edition 1
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