Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 17, 1965, edition 1 / Page 1
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%Vhliney Voiiity Tetl#State 9 n 'r.l^.7T Cb ‘ SOUTH CAN’T AFFORU PREJUDICE In Shootings: Barnes Bound Over BY CHARLES R. JONES John Wesley Barnes, 46-year old resident of 716 Fayetteville Street, across the street from the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium, was bound over to Wake Superior Court Tuesday, April 13, on a charge of shooting his 27-year-old brother Marshall Barnes, and wounding two Asheville school teachers, here to attend the 84th session of the North Carolina Teachers Association at about 1:- 45 p. m. last Friday. Barnes was released and cited to Superior Court on Monday, April 2 r r TO§|gp.'.:; JOHN W. At the time John Wesley shot Marshall Barnes the two teachers Misses G1 ady .* Pearce Forney 35, and Lucill Burton 49, were stand ing near the au ditorium on th Fayetteville Si side, when the\ were struck by pellets from a shotgun fired from across the street. Marshall Barnes, who also lists 716 Fayetteville Street as his home, was struck in the chest and arm. Miss Burton had wounds on the scalp and forehead, while Miss Forney received left arm wounds. The trio was treated at Wake Memorial Hospital and released. John Wesley Barnes was charg ed by Patrolman E. O. Lassiter with assault with a deadly wea pon. The cop said he was driving his motorcycle in the 700 block of Fayetteville Street when he heard a shot and a woman screen. Upon arriving on the scene, the officer found the two women and Marshall had been shot. When the officer entered John Barnes’ house, Barnes readily admitted the shooting, adding, “I shot my brother be cause 1 had warned him not to come to the house again.” The shotgun was confisticated and Barnes remained in Wake County Jail until his preliminary hearing Tuesday. Both the Barnes brothers have very long police records, having been in trouble with “the law” numerous times in the past.. John Wesley's record stretches back to the early 1940's and Marsh all first received a mug shot in 1963. but it could not be learned just how long his record streches. It is expected that Barnes will face trial during the April 26-May session of the court. It could not be determined ' whether the two school teachers will return to Raleigh as witness es. but reliable sources think they will. Mmpmmmmmgm. ‘ CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERSI — ——-p— BUY FROM THEM PAGE 2 Hi.rtm's Cash Store I* At IE 3 .'ijihnrn Pontiac, Inr James O. (Mr. Contact) Blount, i!< altor t ern Watch Shop Correll Coal Co, V. kite's Oil Co.. Ine. Washington Terrace Apts., Inr. Madame Armstrong f* ’t; e s Hiicbon-Beik-Efird s John W Winters arid Co. PAGE S Raleigh Seafood James Sniders Tile Co. Pepsi-Coia Bottling Co. Biltmore Hills Aniburri Pontiac. Inc. Cross Poultry Co. Ivey’s of Raleigh Newsome Rooting Co. ■ r Branch Bunking and Trust Co Hudson-Belk-Eftrds of Raleigh Reedy Mixed Concrete Co. PAGE 1 Weaver Bros. Rambler, Inc. 8G Auto Sales 4 Rawls Motor Co. ' Perry’s Grocery and Market PAGE * Colonial Stores Acme Realty Co. Lender. Otl Co R. E, Onion. Furniture Co. PA«F fl A anti p stores CwnmaHity mr In Death Os Rev. James Reeb: Indict Selma Trio Post Easter Action Set On Vote Bill WASHINGTON, D C. Presi dent Lyndon Baines Johnson's voting rights bill was put aside 'by Congress Tuesday until after the Easter holidays. The way was cleared by the Senate, however for action on the measure after it returns to work on Wednesday, April 21. Meeting briefly was the House Juidicary Committee, which then suspended its closed door consideration untii after April 28. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) NC Library Clubs Plan Convention i OXrORD The Association of North Carolina High School Libra ry Clubs will hold its State meeting May 1, at West Charlotte Senior High School, Charlotte. The theme for this meeting is, "Driving Towards Better Li brary Clubs: Books The Ig nition Switch.” Registration will begin at 9:00 io 10:00 a. m, and the General Assembly will begin at 10 a. m. The afternoon session will con sist of five chatter meetings, name ly: Session No. I—" The Role of Stu dent Assistants in Helping the Classroom Teacher to Best Utilize Library Materials.” Session No.2—“Librarianship as as a Profession. Session No. 3—“ General Role of Library Assistants. Session No. 4 “Stimulating Learning Through Audio-Visual Aids.” Session No. s—“Library Clubs In Our Changing Ssoeiety.” This year’s meeting promises to be one of the best Library Club meeting held. i Goodman's Ladies Shop Hunt General Tire Co. Estates Building Co. PAGE 10 Carolina Builders Corp. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co of Ra!ei„h Rid' i wav’s Optician. Inc PAGE 11 M. H. Jackson Mechanics and Farmer, Bank Terrace Insurance and Realty On. Central Drug Store (.instead Grocery and Transfer Co. KUIX Roy’s Drive-In Cleaners PAGE 13 N. C. Mutual Life Insurance Co. Dunn's Esso Service Lincoln Theatre Aecepiance Mortgage Co., Inc. PAGE 14 Jet. Car Wash Carl B. Mims Plumbing and Heating Contracting Co. Capital Coca-Cola Bottling Co. ot Raleigh, N. C„ Inc. Ready Mixed Concrete Co. It. 1,. Dresser, Inc. Carolina Builders, Inc. PAGE :•* Smitty’s Balt and Tackle Slu-t Fisher Wholesaler, Inc. j PAGE i;> I Tire Sales and Service Co. j Taylor Radio md Electrical Co. ! Consimuriiy Drug Store j King Cole Motel ‘ Km. Lucy F. James LOCAL WOMAN CA USED HIM TO BE ROBBED, MAN SA YS THE CAROLINIAN VOL. 24, NO. 23 North Carolina s Leading Weekly KKK WIZARD BLASTS LB] Mordant on : Robert Shel ton, of Tuscaloosa. Ala., speaks from a makeshift platform here April 4th during a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan. Shelton, the Im perial Wizard of the Klan, accused President Johnson of “using his office to establish himself as a megalomaniac, a man who con siders himself above God and thinks only he is capable of being judge, jury and prosecutor Ku Klux Klan members stand on a ridge behind Shelton as he speaks. (UPI PHOTO). Onweicoms ['loo Wizard Takes Issue With Gov. HEMINGWAY, S. C.—At a news | conference just prior to a Ku Klux Klan rally here on Tuesday, April AT A Sets ; 62nd Annual Convention ATLANTA, Georgia The new Convention Auditorium at Hot Springs, Arkansas will be the site for the 62nd annual convention of the American Teachers Association scheduled for July 25-28, 1965. The theme for thus year will be “Educa tion: The Foundation of Our Amer ican Dream.'’ This theme will be explored by a bevy of nationally known educators, each an expert in his own respective area of pro- | ficiency. The banquet session is J scheduled for the Hotel Arlington, j The convention is expected to ' draw 500 educators and visitors, j Affiliated local are entitled to one ! official delegate each, according to i announcements from the executive I secretary, Dr. J. T. Brooks, and j each delegate representing these j locals is entitled to one vole in the Delegate Assembly. The American Teachers Associ ation currently has enrolled up wards of 30.000 annual members in 37 states, the District of Columbia, i and the Virgin Islands, Organized in Nashville, Tenn., in 1904, irt. has been in continuous existence since i that time and has active participa tion in such significant national and international organizations as j (I) the American Council on Edu- I cation, of which it is a constituent member; <2) the National Eriuca- j (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2> ' RALEIGH, N. C„ SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1965 (CONTINfFD ON PAGE z) 13 Imperial Wizard Robert Shelton GEORGE HAITI! Ugon stfvicKt*nls B'larp i'irst in C«ni|idiiion BY RICHMOND STEWART James Robert High, Jr, a junior j at the J. W. Llgon Jr.-Sr. High ; School, took a first place award in the District Sconce Fair recently held at Duke University in Durham for his exhibit: in the Physical Sci ence Division. The fair is sponsor ed by the North Carolina Academy of Science. Another Ligon junior, George Haith, scored first in the j State Trade Contest. High used as a theme, “The Construction uni Experimen tation of a Laser" which be [ stated was a devise for creat ing a coherent beam o£ light, ' White Msii Out On 10 grand Bails SELMA, ALA.—The alleged slay ers of the Rev. James J. Recb, white Boston Unitnrifn minister here were indicted for murder Tuesday, April 13, and arrested later in the day by the Dallas County Sheriffs Department. The three white men arrested and indicted are: Timer Cook, 4t O’Neal Hocsie, 30; and his brother, William Stanley Hog gle, 36. R. B. Kelly, 30, a fourth man, was not indicted. The three men quickly posted bonds of Slo,oO'l each. Circuit Court Solicitor Blanchard Mc- Leod, said the trail would be placed on the regular session of Dallas County Criminal Court, which will open on .May 10. However, another court official stated it would probably be Octo ber before they would be tried, be cause of the heavy Criminal Court Docket for May. All three, and Kelly, have been charged also in federal warrants, with violating the civil rights of the late Rev. Reeb. They had been free un der city and federal bonds of $12,500 each before the Tues day arrests. The Rev. Reeb. who took part in civil rights aeth i ties here during the month of March, was beaten on a local street, on the night of Tuesday. March 9, and died Thurs day, March 11, without ever re gaining consciousness. They were the latest persons in dicted in Alabama violence. Mrs. Viola Gregg Liuzzo. a white woman from the north was the vic tim of night riders on the night of March 25, as she was headed back to Montgomery, Alabama, to take (CONTINUED ON PACE U ' JAMES ROBERT HIGH, JBL He was accompanied by his chemistry teacher, Mrs. S. V. Perry, The son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. High, Sr., the scholarly lad has interest in becoming an engineer or a physicist. At Ligon. he is a member of tlhe debating society, Student Council. Mu Alpha Theta Club ar.d the National Honor Socie ty. George Haith worked with the skill of a professional and won fiist place in the Auto place Divi sion in tile State Trade Contest rt> (CONTXMKIEO ON PAGE St} j‘i Was ! Enticed:’ W. McCoy Officer W. E. Kidd was told by William Edward McCoy, 50, of 322 ! E. Cabarrus Street at 2:15 a. m. | Monday, April 12, that he was in ! Edna’s Alnight Clover Ccafe, 213 i W. South Street, when an unknown woman invited him outside. Once outside, he declared, he was led between two houses, where an unidentified man punched him in the stomach. "‘As I bent over.” stated McCoy, •’someone grabbed my wallet with S 5 in it. w hich I had in my hand.” Other than the woman and the man, who struck him in the stom ach, McCoy said there were four other men standing around him and they all ran after the one-sided fight-robbery. He identified the woman, who enticed him between the two houses as Miss Lillie Mae Brown, of 718 S. Dawson Street, and said I he thought the man who punched him was Larry Dennis Brown, of 614 Cannon Street. “It was dark in that little al ley,” stated Mr. McCoy, and he declined to make positive iden tification when Larry Brown was brough before him. Brown told the cop, “I don’t know anything about it." It could not be ascertained just | what action was taken in the case | of Miss Lillie Mae Brown. Six Winners Os Phi Beta Kappa Listed The annual Phi Beta Kappa writ ing contest, which is open to Ra leigh and Wake County high school seniors, this year produced the fol lowing winners: Robert Shepard, 223 Haywood Street, Garner; School: Garner j Consolidated: Teacher: Mrs. R. P. ! | Newkirk; Essay: ‘The Day Ameri | ca Slept." Johnson Dawson, Route 2, Dur | ham; Teacher: Sister Mary Immac ulata; Sehoo: Cardinal Gibbons; Poem: “On A Lonely Street.” Lee Elliott, 2714 Kittrcll Drive, j Raleigh; School: Needham-B/ough- j ton; Teacher: Mrs. Phyllis Peacock: Shorty story: ‘‘Night Offering.” Miss Clara Mineey, Route 3, Fu quay - Varina; School: Fuquay- Springs; Teacher: Mrs. Jeanne , Shaw; Essay: ‘The Horror.” Miss Harriet Dalton, 8 Caroline Avenue, Forest City: School: Peace; Teacher: Mrs. Donald L. 1 Thompson; Essay: “Analysis of Chaucer’s Pardoner." William Allen, 201 S. Harrison Ave., Cary; School: Cary Senior; i Teacher: Mrs. Clare J. Marley; Poem: ‘The Old Lighthouse.” The six students and their teach ers will be guests of honor at the Annual Banquet of the Wake County Phi Beta Kappa Associa tion on Monday night, April 19th, at 6:30 p. m. in the YMCA on Hills boro Street. All the prizes are of equal rank. The actual awards will be book.-, especially chosen to cultivate the | recipient's interest in literature. Dr.H.L. Trigg Renamed To Education Bd. Governor Daniel Killian Moore j Tuesday reappointed Dr. Harold L. I Trigg, formerly of Raleigh, to the State Board of Education, for a term expiring April 1, 1973. A former president of St. Augustine’s College here, fir. Trigg is now a professor of ed ucation at Livingstone College, Salisbury. Tuesday's appointment marked Or. Trigg's third full term as a board member. He was first named in 1949, and again in 1957. A member of the N. C. Council on Mental Retardation, Dr. Trigg also holds the following positions: member of the board of the Learn- ' trig Institute of North Carolina,! and Die North Carolina Cotnmis- ! sion on Higher; Education Fa oil- j ities. . j PRICE 15c “INVISIBLE BARRIERS MUST BE REMOVED" Standing is Dr. Whitney M. V oung, Jr., executive director. Notion al Urban League, who addressed over 1 000 delegates and ether members of the North Carolina Teachers Association on Thurs day night , April 8, in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. On the plat form were E. B. Palmer, executive-secretary, NCTA; John H. Lu cas, Durham. NEA director; M. M. Daniels, vice-president NC TA; Dr. N. H. Harris, treasurer; Mrs. Geneva Bcwe, recording secretary; Mrs. Ida Duncan, and Dr. S. E. Duncan, president. Young urged white and Negro citizens to remove the invisible bar riers now existing between them. Over 1,000 Teachers Hear Young, Others Over one-thousand delegates to . t'he North Carolina Teachers Asso ciation's 84th Annual Convention heard Dr. Whitney M. Young, Jr., as he addressed the group Thurs day evening at Raleigh Memorial ! Auditorium. Dr. Young said that it is necessary that the visible bar riers be removed by white people who erected them. The invisible ! barriers are obvious to the Negro— ! fear, apathy and indifference. The j white and Negro people today ] should be responsible for removing the invisible barriers. The South, Young stated, can no longer afford the luxury of prejudice. It is quite clear that j Negroes can not be kept third class without keeping the whites second class, even in the baekwood states. It would he naive to assume that the present gains will assure us of equality automatically. The Ne gro at best now stands on the periphery cf the main stream. Dr. Young said that out of one • ! i million youngsters who are out of work, 500.000 are Negroes. er is the only teacher enjoying the DON’T BE A “SLACKER” (An Editorial) Those of us who have been fortunate enough to register and vote, have, at least, a remote responsibility to our brother Ame ricans of Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and other States, who seem determined to deny one group of Americans the right of democracy as guaranteed in OUR Constitution. On Tuesday, May 4, voters will go to the polls to state their choice for the Board of Education, City Council, and Municipal Judge. Unlike the above-mentioned States, here we are privileged to go to the polls in peace and harmony, without fear of the billy clubs, the tear gas, the horses, the dogs, and malice of politically evil-minded fanatics. However, our vote is of no avail if we don't use it, anymore than the Mississipian, Alabaman, who is denied the right to regis ter and vote and who can’t exercise his right, although he is us ing every just and right means to do so. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 8) WEATHER' Temperatures for the next five days, Thursday through Monday, will average J to 8 degrees below seasonal normal In the north and around 3 degrees below normal in the south. The normal h 4 gh and low temperatures for t.h« Raleigh area will be, 73-47. Rain.all will average a quarter to one-half ireb. some scattered showers wi' oc cur, mostly on Thursday and again on Monday, with only day-to-day changes in temperatures. From Raleigh's Official Police Files: THE Oil USE BEAT BY CHARLES R. JONES Stabbed In Back With Butcher Knife Miss Alice Mae Alston, 30, of 713 Ellington Street, told Officer T. T. Street, Jr., at 3:49 p. m, Monday, that she had an argument with Robert Julius Miiliken, 62, of 339 W. South Street at his home, “and he stabbed me in the back with a ■butcher knife." Mr. ivmiiKen, who said he, “only hit at heir with the knife, was “hauled off" to the Wake County Jail, charged with assault with a deadly weapon. Miss Alston received treat ment at Wake Memorial Has- Vital. He claimed that the Negro teacb stntus of society as European teach crs. The white teacher does not en joy such social status. To the teachers he said, “Yours is more than a job —- yours is a labor of love, making the child leave his hostile shell, get rid of his defences. Yours is the job of getting young Ne groes today to become as excit ed about marching to the li brary as they have been about marching to the courthouse; and you must set the examples by marching in the areas of leadership and as volunteers in the community. “We must not forget that Negroes began protesting when they were shipped as slaves into the country. We must not forget Nat Turner, Harriet Tubman and others who protested with the tools that they had in that era. When we talk of re-training, get ting grants, it is important to have good teachers who are militant and willing to do an “un-glamorous” (CONTINUED ON PACE ?) VOTE TUESDAY! Correction! A story in our issue of April 10, which referred to Dr. Mary H. Scott, should have read, “Dr. Scott To Address Teachers On The Trends of Education.” The CAROLINIAN regrets the mis information. Says Girlfriend Used Bottle; Won’t Si*?n Walter Wester Dozier, 39, of 613 Quarry Street, reported to Officer B. Brinson at 12:08 a. m. Sunday, that his girlfriend. Miss Lilly Mae Pulley, of 1508 Oakwood Avenue, struck hhn in the head with a bottle dur ing a “fuss” at her home. Although Dozier was treated for head injuries at the hospital, he “did not want to sign a warrant a* gainst his girlfriend.” He admitted that he is not sure of the correct address or, Oakwood Avenue where the woman lives. 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The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 17, 1965, edition 1
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