Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Oct. 9, 1965, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
T'.c ;t:nasr € iTintin? CD* Near Bit toti worth Street YMCA oo K : SAYS a E WASI&PEb HE IE + ** + + + ** ******** ******>*->«- + •** + + ** >f T T 4 * " XAACP Wants 500 Ministers Youngs Brother Witness late .Sati:: f : i, tanc< i\ J; n , 1 u-' 1 * of 2 Fr.r. leers r;. Pratt at HDD that tier 16- Mlss Mill gone to Un- : ■!'. YMCA s'- returnee! bo: The mot lie’ , < Infer" the r.am who repoi > Born Avene , the YMC.‘ E. Lenoir s':- ■, ported’.;, attend a d met , Mis.' A'-.n-m that O’: the darn- : ■ which .ho ■ =!•: main ' ui: ‘L Sn£ 1 '!.■ . > • plac-" in slapped her GH-U . > Man Roh; And Ben* : - in The ; P.Y ST AF 1 v ’• : ■ Henry Men W b-Knl , . of 2" McK ers Otis L. Parker, .1; . urday, h.*- night ( • . :? eating a bo : lie Leo, name In and s.<l , ' two noli ■, . , McKnlgh.t you air. thh v ” A* -Li- 1 a reported 1 ■: Kni ht w. 1 : ■ • monpv. I need !*.' s lid e ■ and .hi >* 1 it:; ■ llillfn'ld, ' opened !t and .'■ • Dunn his • :;i ■ : Dunn gnabbed * '• shirt and rim. 1 : of tlie case. li the ?! bill e.: : bill kni!'-.-, e just paid Ids it'.i'. i (.loot of ! d: Officer Hi 21! W. signed for roi 'li ter'.. Dunn !!'’■■' ; '•air. *!k ■ j !; jvi a [.on . McKnle;.: . r f: ■ ’’l Id Mr;. - police (See MA: SO. : St Ambi v a bad Kates SIIO,OOO Edifice Were t On dim i.i - ' over t! ■ *•■ and friends ' Rev, Tlion- i of the I 'locos*' ■ ■■ olina, U* • : :1 a nlghlngs, * Ml * linos C! ": Episcopal C: ore" . It can po si .itcd • • building pro. *>: ' broso Church e.to-s i * ; * over half * ■ records dlsclo.-;.- ti at in T*. •• Os 1.904 a Bull !in* started by th* ill Records also shcr ’• • AT ST. AMBROSE 1 .‘EPIC ATtON - Members and friends meet Bishop ; ham as Fraser, of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina ledi.-ttion of St. Ambrose Epis copal Church 1: 1 -* : * ■ . 8.-h Ms, on .Sunday, October 3, Third from right B*i vyon B ’ * Rev. Arthur J. Calloway, rector, talking in it. b! *. The Carolinian O 47 j o ai Traffic Perth: RONER’S JURY FRIES DRIVER j> 4 * * 4- *r * * * * M ¥ ¥ top, Frisk Law” is Protested laming Ilf Chief Pi --The adoption . local “stop, ' ;. - been scored as .id c iuld turn the .: nor bed of tension and turn Ne “seething hat . Watts (Los "k like a picnic.” is recent i Illinois, it was not . Donald Wheeler \i v local branch r .1 “an amazing mls," is the ordln pe units policemen s in public, re r i: cation and search . ' ■ r :. ai£F, V. 2) c)ro Enters Race For ' Mayor’s Post ■ . : D LD, Mass. - For tiir in the history Held. Massachusetts, " announced his can or. Rev. Charles ; ■of Springfield for ■ . made the an on August 30th be - Id, “1 felt It was ~*t t! si - story told.” 1 ■ announcement lib-) a near-riot on July 17th. It i ti: it local police . t: cident when they rurally attacked j iocs and a white they left a local . ' ibis and other ■a police brutality, : idpi'd organize the V n US RACE. V. 2) t* .*fMessers.Sat . * • ;hi ant, F1 sher, ... i Green, the thread *rn for a more ade -11-ting ■ as much evi ct round-breaking for F' or ’ Building v.*as held Br •„*, 1964. Today, ■' fT rears of effort, '■ration now enjoys an tth i! ’le for growth and r a s some 273 mem 1'- j Kc-r. Arthur Callo t . memhers of the ves -1 ' "ltd a. cordial Invitation i aoiic to visit and wor- North Carolina s Leading Weekly RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1965 AT CORONER'S INQUEST - -fhl» scene was taken on Wednesday, M Hie Wake County Commissioners' Room of the Courthouse during the inquest In: >■ to J. Rowland, killed by a car on Thursday, September 23. Around *\ ( • i" : , left to right, are: Wake County Coroner Marshall W. Bennett, 5 ' u . , ; f. C. Wilson, co-owner of Wilson-Ferrell Furniture Company; J. ( % ! ■' Rhodes Furniture Company; E. L. Ralford, executive secretary o; the • chairman; James A. Shepard (partly obscured), real estate broker; Chari* s It. J- i i; itMglng editor of The CAROLINIAN, and Mrs. Millie D. Veasey, president of the Raleigh N AAC P branch. With backs turned at table, left to right, are: Officer C. R. Wilkins, Attornm R. C, Murph;, and Miss Joyce Fllppen, his secretary. (See story). n M® Probable Cause" Verdict In i&kigk’s Eighth Traffic Death BY STAFF WRITER Calvin O’Brian t Markharn, 48, of Durham, walked out of the Commissioners’ Room In the Wake County Courthouse a free man last Wednesday af ternoon, Markham had been cited by Wake County Coroner Marshall W. Bennett to appear before a jury in the September 23 death of Mrs. Fannie Jones Rowland, 50, of 712 S. Sounders Street, who had allegedly dart ed in front of his car at about 4;45 p. m. Two white women testified that Mrs, Rowland had stepped in front of their Volkswagen automobile, which was stopped for a traffic light approximately 50 feet from the Intersection of Sanders on w. South Street. Both women agreed that a Mrs. Sasser, who runs Sasser's Grocery Store, 600 block of W. South Street, was beckoning to Selim, Ak Sheriff Will Speak Hem James W. (Jim) Clark, seg regationist sheriff of Selma, Alabama, Is scheduled to key note the first State Convention of the North Carolina Citizens Council at the Raleigh Mem orial Auditorium on Saturday, October S. Clark, well-known for his alleged brutal tactics in handl ing civil rights demonstrators, was hospitalized early this year and the same persons whom he arrested kept a prayerful vlgU outside his hospital room In the once racially-tense town of Sel ma. Louis W, Bollis, of Jackson, Mississippi, will speak at the afternoon session of the segre gationist North Carolina Coun cil, which begins at 3 p. m. Clark Is sheduied to be the featured speaker for the night session. Playing host for the meeting Is the Wake County Citizens Counsll, It was from Selma, Alabama, that the historic Selir.a-To- Montgomery civil rights inarch took place last March 25. This massive demonstration which (See SKIJsiA SHBRUry, *\ i) Mrs. Rowland to come across while the traffic had stopped. On this corner, there Is a time difference In determining the flow of east and west bound traffic and a traffic light dif ference. One of the women said she did not see the oncoming car, driven by Mr, Markham until it W3s upon the victim, who was looking toward Mrs. Sasser. Officer C. R. Wilkins, who investigated, stated the woman was thrown 75 feet from the point of impact, and said Mark ham's car left 41 feet of skid marks. However. It was later WEATHER T®mperature* for th* next ftv* day*, Thursday through Monday, will average three to eight deftest below normal. Normal high and low tem perature* during th* period wlli b* SS and 51 degrees, It will be 8 tittle warmer over the weekend, while cooler weather will prevail during the remainder of the period. fcMutall will occur about Thursday and again about Monday. POPE PAUL CHATS WITH CHILDREN - United Nations, N. Y,: Pope Paul is shown Monday as he stopped briefly to chat with a group of children from the International School after they presented him with a bouquet from the IT. N.’s rose* garden. Six yeai old Joyce Nkwain handed the roses to the Pontiff. Amer Khanachet, 10, (In robe and Moslem cap) made a short speech oi welcome. (UPI PHOTO), PRICE 15 CENTS determined that ids automobile might, have carried the body some distance, finally grinding to a halt. The jury was composed of five men and one woman. Many questions wore asked the wit nesses by the jui \. The de fendant chose not to take the stand in his behalf. It was brought out during the inquest that had Mr , Howland lived, she would have been charged with jaywalking (walk ing where there are no desig nated crosswalks or green lights). Attorney Romolus O. Murphy, of the lav. firm of Mitchell ;utd Murphy, represented Mrs. Rowland’s family at the hearing. The only witness who took the stand in the defendant’s be half was his cousin, J. Wesley Bass, also of Durham. Officer Wilkins said he had cited Mr. Markham to City Court on a minor traffic vio lation about seven minutes tie fore he received the call to answer the case In which Mrs. Rowland was killed. He further stated ho did de (Bee MAN FREED. P. 2.) Sessions Begin At Winston BY J. B. HARREN EXCLUSIVE TO THE CAROI I MAN) WINSTON-SALEM - The North Carolina NAACPConfer ence wants "00 or more min isters from over Tarheella to attend the Ministers Confer ence division of the 22nd An nual State Convention meeting here Thursday, October 7, at 11 a. m. Ministers and church com mitteemen will hear among others, the Revs. Jack Crum, Christian Social Action Chair man N. C. Council of Church es; and K. L. Buford, a City Councilman of Tuskegee, Ala. The Rev. Odom of the nation al NAACP Church Committee, will also be present to assist with the welcoming, and in structing tlie clergymen at tending the special event ar ranged for the ministers all day Thursday, ending with a free banquet. Each year, many ministers look forward with much interest to this fellowship with the N. C, NAACP ministers and lay men and women, along with national staff officers. Tills (See 500 MINISTERS, P 8) NCC Profs Testify in School Case DURHAM - "Education must jusi pass on culture," a worth Carolina College profes sor ssH<* In Federal Court testi mony Thursday, "but must held to facilitate the changes that are coming.’’ As a witness for the plain tiffs In a suit seeking desegre- : lev 1 -v* -wu« and kro le ssional staffs of Durham city Schools, Dr. Joseph McKelpin said Negro pupils attending seg regated schools “developun warrantedly high opinions of themselves.” McKelpin was one of three NCC professors appearing dur ing two days of testimony be fore Federal Judge Edwin M. Stanley, chief jurist of the Mid dle District, in the suit filed In behalf of the parents of a (See PROFS TESTIFY, P. 2) Civil Rights Worker Is Ist Bishop VATICAN CITY - On the eve of his departure for the U nlted States from Rome, Pope Paul VI named the first full blooded Negro to become a bi shop In the United States. This action took place Saturday. The Very Rev. Harold Ro bert Perry, a native of Lake Charles, La., has been assign ed to the Deep South, where his forefathers were once slaves. Emphasizing the extraordi nary nature of the appointment, sue Vatican press office in its official announcement, describ ed Bishop-elect Perry as "the first Negro bishop in the U nlted States of America." Another American Roman <Bt>e NEGRO BISHOP, P. S) / "« ■ £ yit ' A HAPPY WINNING PITCHER - Metropolitan Stadium: Jim (Mudcat) Grant, who won the first game of the World Series In Minneapolis Wednesday, October 6 for the Minnesota Twins, is also one of the team's biggest boosters as indicated here Tuesday during practice. Grant, the only 20-game winnei on the staff of the American League champions, opposed Don Drysdale and three other pitchers In Wednesday's game. He only allowed 10 hits and 2 runs. Drysdale and the other pitchers allowed ten nits and eight runs. Drysdale had never lost a World Series game before. This was Grant’s first entry and what a victorious one it was for him. (UPI PHOTO 600 Jehovah's Witnesses To Burlington Convention Jehovah’s Witnesses of cir cuit 36 have chosen Burling ton as the place for their sec ond semi-annual circuit con vention this year, according to information given this week by Joseph Taylor, presiding min ister of South Unit congrega tion here In Raleigh. The meeting will be held at the Jordan Sellars Senior High School on Rosewald Street In Burlington, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, October 29-31. Threat To “March On Georgia” Is Renewed WARRENTON, Ga. (NPI) Negroes attending a mass lng last week heard the B»»f Hosea Williams, a leading of integration leader Dr. Mar tin Luther King, Jr., threaten a 120-mlle march on the iftais capitol in Atlanta, after Negroes were attacked by unruly whites for attempting to Integrate a local white high school. Evidently, the threat was hurled at Gov. E. Sanders as much as for the state permit ting the school board in Craw fordville to close an all-white high school and transferlng Its pupils to the Warren county school to avoid integration. A 17-year-old Negro youth, Frank Bates, was set upon and beaten by white parents, after he drove four other Negroes to the Warren County High more TROUBLE IN GEORGIA - Crawfordvllle, Ga.: State Patrol Captain Theron Aldridge, right, refuses a group of Negro students trying to Integrate an all-white school bus this week permission to w'alk along the sidewalk toward the bus. An angry score of townspeople, backs to camera, later pushed some of the students away from the bus and attacked two news photographers. (UPI PHOTO). From Raleigh's Official Police Files; MWW— THE CHIME BEAT BY CHARLES R TONES Do-Good Bro. Gets Slashed Charles Cannady, of 526 Bragg St.., told Officer James E. (Bobby) Daye at 5:23 a. m, Saturday, that he and his bro ther, Roy Cannady, of 406 Smlthfield Street, were walking on Bragg Street when they spot ted a man hitting a woman at the corner of Smlthfield and Bragg Streets. Charles Cannady stated he asked the man not to hit the wo man and the man came at Char les and stabbed Mm In the ab domen with a knife. Cannady, who was treated at Wake Mem orial Hospital and released; stated he had never seen either of the two persons before. More than 600 delegates from the 16 towns and communities that make up circuit 36 are expected. The circuit extends from Elizabeth City, West to Chapel Hill. Members of the local group are making defi nite plans to attend. Others wishing to enjoy the spiritual benefits of this three-day semi nar may contact, Joseph Taylor, 1108 S.’ State Street, for final arrangements. (See OVER m, K 2) School, U| which the white stu dents wap* being transferred. He .; 1 ttlba W' C.u - a T : state troopers/ but not before his shirt h.irt bean torn off and he was pummsled by the crowd. Bates* companions fled. Earlier ai Crawfordvllle, un ruly wdiites also attached some 20 Negro students attempting to board a bus carrying the white students to the War rent on school. Several Negro youths were knocked to the ground, and a Negro civil rights work er, who was taking pictures, was attacked along with other newsmen. The rights worker's camera was taken from him but returned later undamaged by police. In threatening the march, Rev. Williams said; “Gov.San (See RENEW THREAT, P 2) Hold Son in Mom Assault Mrs. Pearl Thorpe Atwater, 50, of 209 Lincoln Court, re ported to Officer Otis Leroy Hinton at 5:49 p. m. Saturday, that her son, Lonnie Everette Atwater, 21, same address, got mad with her because she would not give him money to go the New Jersey. She said he threat ened to kill her with a knife and broke a table lamp, valued at $lO, She also said her son cut at her with the knife in the front yard and chased her into the house. Young Atwater was ar rested for assault with a dead ly weapon and damage to prop erty, {»e® CREWE BEAT. P S)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 9, 1965, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75