% THE CABOLZNIAN ftALEIOB. K CL SATURDAY, OCTOIBBK *S. I*W 2 IN MEMORY OF DECEASED MEMBERS—The Junior Trustee Board of the Manly Street United Christain Church, organized by the pastor, Reverend T.C. Ham an s, in November 1957, and since that time has been active. The board eliminated its Summer outing and instead, on October 16, visited the places of interments for its deceased members. They are Mrs. Helen Ruth Rand, Social Committee; Mr. John Burnette, Treasurer; Mr. Delrna Wilder, Financial Secre tary; Mr. Mack Smith, Sick Committee; members not shown are Mrs. Lucy Blue, Mrs. Gladys Smith, Mrs. Alberta William, and Mrs. Evelyn Franklin. ROAD DEATH (Continued from page 1) James Matthews, to Apex Branch Hospital. Thi trooper stated that apparently Partin fled in attempt to avoid aulhv t ties, The highway patrolman said that several witnesses re ported that a caravan of cars, loaded with young Negro men, including the car driven by Par tin, was driving toward Apex returning from the Sanford Drag Strip at speeds in excess of 100 miles an hour. Th -.v.-ra allegedly driving reckless: _nd had narrowly escaped wrecking prior to colliding with White's automobile. The officer stated that he was parked on U, S. 1, north ot the wreck scene and observe : hugh cloud of dust rise when the accident occurred. In the ear with Deputy Ma r shall White were his wife, Mrs. Barbara White, his da-igh.e , Miss Susan Whib, h : w., Marshall V V l‘r ••be: . .A Partin, broth. r '• ar.< • Clinton White • i; •! 2d h > : t at Shew Uni versity v r x>rtt*u to lie a pass nm. e Par;»n car. They ■ rmor injuries. The car cy ■ m<-.' ,■ r ••• is a I-..; ■ . ini •■ter, - dam aged at a- . oxtn.atoi , v n O.OC and Par;. •• -. esti mated at At CAR 01 IN': State off r L to local. OIR : 17 (Conti -.;:; . r 1) and aske ( > • the regal.-: ;i cc, ■-! clos ing, was txc .rc: a , . mi home. V. . : ol the jury v.nlch decide- the s»; - mt’.-; fate in cluded: f. ’ ••• it;, /?, n. Bran *om, l Mann, Mrs. B. N. Dili::. 1 'her " t, md O. C. Smith.. Princ': «' Ct.il-- , accord'rv to Corone, Bom, U, took thi. stand to ■ 1 . incidents which he knew on the afternoon in Question. Investigating officers of the town's police department, in cluding the chief of police, were also on hand to testify. Miss Harris did noi testify at the inquest. She did, how ever, concur with everything presented in evidence. The jury deliberated some 20 to 25 minutes before rend ering an unanimous verdict. ELECTION (Continued from page 1) A special invitation has been tended to members of the • II - I Seagrams Croum scafri% s ■w Smn / Crown _._______ AMtHJf A!? BLIXDtD WHISKEY */ /■*>■«»? UtmA* 0 &mr Y llw%t I HWI •.N"l» •* 1 |'MM«. saksso v.h*sk£v. s« proof t: «utmi sp • :j £ with Raleigh Precinct commi ttees, members of the Raleigh Citizens Association, and all registered voters in Raleigh and Wake County. The record of the recently adjourned 89th Congress, which has been called "the greatest in American history,” will be reviewed and questions regard ing the coming elections will be answered. YOUTH. 18 lContinued from pure l) told him to use .. t«i«. hone in the lobby, but he want, d to use the one in her office, ttv op erator stated. ”1 talked iii- boy i- 1 civlne me the hammer and n arched him and found a sharpen'. .1 piece of wood in his peso Aon,” (pockei), Turner stated. Turner put the boy in his squad car and started Lack to Raleigh : "iih him. He started the vouth toA: him, “ihe Ku KLux Kir i i. mu: 'i an I ' a-r . , ; ;o r ■>; i. -■ .-ak in- . A. i, A i same > ::• a e,; - the fu ler sc d ' r a pi • ’nr tliv • , a-t.- - ■H r .it i- v. tiv ;i ■ - r. t t ': o r b ■ ' one ■ t .nr! t; ■ .*' r OH .- * kO'i'-p ))V. .!*OTTi L-r.'. U, dMb, iu. him b •-1i • : A • ;h hi i r .- bv. ' • irdt ■ • • ' :,cc pvl - ... o’; ;v ,vav and v .v.y.-d on t! • ;. V“r-'. at," Tuin. . ’tt . . r l l -,.ck him t-: f< . -e tin --- .siia the -a ... soy, - ed. •A true!- div.'er up;o i ectly a".- 1 was hi trov.h;.- and :v - od, go: a ,22 rillt Lis tiuck ar. ' .s • over to the car," Lur-ur “Tlr* boy yelled at t’ c truck di t’-er to “leave h‘: -do:. ' ck driv er” and s’ay back and I yell ed to the driver tha; he (the boy) diii’t l;a-e mv gun, that I still had it. “AS ‘ s -S 1 URIOCi. > doc: :.. tli truck ,h ivei • uhi i»t in vo i • . . , tl.-e fw relocl-n-i it.' T‘ • driver fin ally cot -he do - op- • - i told young L .ishtr.gion it Ir cddr.’t turn the officer’s gun loose '.>■ would shoot nirr:. Another mo torist then helped place hand cuffs or. Washington while Turn- er held him. Turner said he was so played out that he didn’t get the name of the truck driv er or the other person who had helped him. The youth was committed to DorotheaDixhos pital. ‘BACKLASH’ (Continued from pise 1) as an “extremist.” At the same time, three Ne groes s eking to run as inde p.: ic nt. candidates in the Mis sissippi general election had their petitions turned down by the State Election Commission. The petitions were rejected on grounds that they did not have > nough signatures under .i in state lav. boosting sig natnie requirements for inde pendents. The rejected candidates were the Rev. Clifton Whitley, Holly Springs; Dock Drummond, Kos ciusko; md Mrs. Emma Sand al s,Jackson? Lawrence Guyot, FDP chair r. ? t, reacted to the Commis sion ruling by announcing that p--i.it ;.,n would ’.v fried n fed eral co -rt to challenge the 1966 legisl, live act. In x hicago, Mrs. Ohio Clark ■ publican running f< >r stnte sen'lor in the 24th district charged that lioi party's fail . i'-' to support her woulu like ly cos’ he: Hie -lection. M . Clfmk i- the ii/st \-'-- ;,p.o woman ov.-i noirtj->! 'ey hr-i oarty to jun !or r «ute Semite-rial post. £h- elod *. a; i , .blicun in annou; ing o u-■ c u>. 1 ■ a l -:. . s,.a.- a na .•nal candidal’s, :Ni! Ito come candi dates. M -anv.htt'--, in A.i -a:a, ,T, k I.ane., ei; air man, Fub-.-a Count. (Aa Dvr.-jcrat • c party , charged that the party 1 .. :m-. 'Ohi -< ecobinate fe i ye-emor, Lester G. Maddox, aa 5 ai, a secret nact to sun oort three- Negroes limning for da- ■ ate- legislature—then at back c»n his word, Maddox called a newspaper report of the meeting “a sln istf.i plot” an<- said he could not vote for the Negro candi dates. Turnei said he was an.a red ; heal Maddox announce that he would not vote tor some Dem ocrats when he an oath to do so. L an hile, the while lack lar-i was aiding candidates a c:os» the nation who opposed far. housing legislation. Ronald Reagan, Republi can candidate for governo. of California, was improving his chances of election by indicat ing his opposition to open hous ing laws. His opponent, Gov. Edmund G. Brown, was hurt ing from “backlash” identifi cation with racial disorders In Los Angeles, G kland, and San Francisco. In Chicago, Republican can didate Charles H. Percy said the white backlash would hurt his Democratic opponent, Sen. Paul H. Douglas, in the Illi nois Senate race. Percy, who deplored the backlash, has switched from opposition to open housing laws to support of them, as long as slngle-farnily residences are excluded. Sen. Douglas has supported open occupancy laws all the way. Openly capitalizing on the “white backlash” vote has been a write-in candidate for U. S. Senator from Illinois, Mayor Robert Sabonjian of Waukegan, who has termed rights march ers “vinos” and “Junkies” and urged that mothers of illegiti mate children be locked up. Sabonjian won the applause of segregationists when he de nounced the NAACP for alleg edly sparking the recent racial disturbances in his city. In Maryland, Democratic candidate for governor, George P. Mahoney, was banking on his opposition to open housing laws to win him the election. * * * He who is the friend of all humanity is not my friend. , —J. P. Moliere. RALEIGH LEADS (Continued from pace 1) continuing payments. In the case of youth under twelve years, SIOO pays a junior life membership, also payable in installments.) Greensboro was second with four new subscribers and 11 re newal payments in the branch headed by Dr. S. A. Simpkins. Winston-Salem reported three each--new and renewal. A to tal of 54 new life memberships were enlisted over the State. The Raleigh branch NAACP received the Kelly Alexander Life Membership Aw-ard given for leadership In the life mem bership area. C.A. Mitchell received for the R e 1 d sville NAACP branch a plaque for the greatest increase In regu lar memberships. All NAACP branches are expected to secure life memberships from indivi duals, lodges, churches, fra ternities, sororities, labor un ions, etc. The Kelly Alexander Life Membership Aw-ard w-as insti tuted by the National NAACP Of fice to honor Alexander for his 18 years as the dynamic leader of Tarheel la’s NAACP Confer ence, and to stimulate the en rollment into the life mem bership honor society on tne part of persons who have felt they could not afford It. Many have taken the nod to life mem berships when it was revealed to them that only a dollar a week (saved) will make the pay ments after the first SSO down. There are more thanlß,ooonow enrolled. Another first for Raleigh and Tarheella is that of having the convention hosted (for two pub lic meetings) in the United Church (predominantly white) whose minister is an officer of the local NAACP. After adopting the Rev. J.T. McMillan’s theme of “Rainbow Power,” which he said “means all races blending together for justice and love, peace and harmony in tills Nation,” the sixty ministers pledged to re turn to their fields and start in earnest a program to enroll NAACP memberships and register and vote their pari shioners. In his annual address to the 23rd N.C. NAACP convention, President Kelly M. Alexander Sr., said, “Negroes cannot do enough for the NAACP because NAACP has done so .rucii for us over its 57 years of light ing forth*'cqur:)itv toII Ameri cans.” tnr'e all i. member reminded that NAACP “has been a training school for most of the Negroes who are now occupying prominent places in the national government to day.” While renouncing my part nership with th<- “black power” advocates, Alexander warned: ‘ We inns' be sensitive to the irr.patiencv if Negroes in this Stub for r. re rapid x< reps in transLiL;, Civil Right: into meaningful results in education, employment,.,.ana full demo cracy,” reding: sr w-> will <\w tinue to work within the frame work cf :he L.S. Ccnstitmion to achle •• our goals of full ■ •eerie:.'' , called for an x> '"tress •'d (.p-and-dCiin.: on ’■=r»"'t -f ’- -• dNAACl'leader - ' • mat the err.i-pov- *~ ’ -v.-C:' urns rear• the needy ai i:.i ended. ‘•Job M:\rket Informat !<>r. Bu reaus” vere cited • « :\t rjes through which NAACP can as sist Lie unskilled and unemploy ed in securing the jobs and, or training to better f> m for upgraded or pro.- r.f : . Ibis is being dor. in Ch-viotte to advantag - Among the celebreties feat ured on the star-studded cor.- ve.Aton program were: Bishop Stephen G. Spootsvvood, NAACP board chairman, who keynoted the Ministers banquet at First Baptist; Gloster B. Current, field director, who spoke to opening mass meetings at Ig nited Cliurch; Thomas M. Am mons, U.S. Dept. Labor; Walter Things You Should Know gs% illJSr 1823-1913 V -—JF| Born in slavery in mapyl anD/She escap- to TO THE FREE NORTH AT THE AGE OF TWENTY- FIVE /THEN, WITH A REWARD OF £ 40,000 ON \J^\ HER HEAD,SHE RISKED HER LIFE ON NINETEEN £ SECRET TRIPS BACK INTO THE SOUTH GUIDING J MORE THAN 300 SLAVES TO FREEDOM VIA THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD*/WHENEVER A RUN AWAY FALTERED, SHE POINTED HER PISTOL AT HIM/ SAYING,"YOU'LL BE FREE OR DIE f* IN ALL HER YEARS SHE NEVER LOST A * PASSENGER*/ ( E. Wrenn, Jr. of HEW; Dr. Stephen J. Cornett, Jr. of HEW; John G. Hays, also from HEW; Albert L. Thompson, FHA (In tergroup Relations); Atty. Don ald R, Hollowell, Equal Employ ment; Atty. Kenneth Holbert, Equal Employment Cornm.; John M. Brooks, NAACP Voter- Registration; Sherrill Marcus, NAACP Youth Director; Jack Greenberg, NAACP Legal De fense Fund Director; and Robert L. Carter, NAACP Counselor. Fayetteville To Host NC Bapt. Confab FAYETTEVILLE - All roads lead to Fayetteville for the pastors and messengers of the General Baptist State Conven tion of North Carolina, Inc. The annual Session of theGBSC and the Laymen’s League will meet at the First Baptist Church Fayetteville, the Rev. Dr. C. R. Edwards, host pastor, Oct. 31 through Nov. 3. The general theme of the Con vention will be: “The Church's Ministry in a New Dimension.” Sermons and addresses in keep ing with the theme will be de livered. There will tie reports from the General Board, the Execu tive Committee and other of- 1 ficials. Addresses will be given con cerning the Convention's four objectives: The Central Or phanage, State Missions, For eign Missions and Shaw' Uni versity. On Wednesday evening, Nov. 2, the featured sermon will be given by Raymond Harvey, pas tor of the Greenwood Baptist Church, Tuskegee Institute Tuskegee, Alabama. Music will be furnished by the Shaw Uni versity Chorale Society, under the direction of Hubert Walters. Thur sday’s featured address ill be given by Samuel Proc to. of the U. S. Institute for be:. ice to Educators, Washing ton, D. C. The GBSC of North Carolina is composed of more than three hundred and thirty thousands Baptists. J. vV. White, Ashe ville, is the President of the Convention. O. L. Sherrill, Raleigh, is the Executive Secre tary. Wmk Fewer’ is Scored By G, Werner AKP )N, Ohio—Cries of “block lower” are threatening to '■ i x.vr: or:' the civil lights mover:, nt, A.-- ;tant Secretary of al.o O■ y • L-P weaver has : cl a led’ . V, ■ ev j that ;hc black pc i con opt might upset “the calm and reasoned philosophy of nonviolence, of in tell i gent protest, of the vise use of the law and public opinion.” Mr. Weaver, in a speech at the Centennial Celebration of Akron’.? Wesley E. Church, noteo lb-’, thr go.b jf American NV.rCi.-s -..-as long been “topar tietpuu, i.ot overthrow, “The goal is a,, equitable Cur.- L-.iu, American economy, in housing in educational and social opportunity...and it will nor be- achlei ed by substitut ing a ‘molotov cocktail’for rea son .and negotiation.” He added thet “black chauvin ism ’ can’t bo substituted for “white chauvinism.” “When you attempt this,”he said, “you alienate the broad community support of all groups which have been forged togeth er in a common pursuit of jus tice through., .nonviolence.” Mr. Weaver asserted that the emphasis in human rights Is now shifting from legislates and courts to communities In the fields of education and em ployment. ■ I WWW TO BCrW^-l—.» MHkMMMMMk llna College, give assistance to three exchange students from the University of Wisconsin's Marinette Countv Center during the early days of the Wisconsinites’ enrollment at NCC, Under terms of the exchange, Wisconsin students will spend the fall semester at the Durham institution, and NCC students will spend the spring semester at Marinette. Misses Alston and Thorpe were the NCC students who spent last spring at Wisconsin during the first year of the program. The Wisconsin students are, seated, Susan Sawyer, education major; Linda Zoellner, a sociology major; and, standing, Patrick Faucette, who is a music major. ' _ s ilSfc Jlllil l^ ’ W- - 'J* Wm * % A -fl« . •> 1 *f\ ■■ jg | u yi i |f m I OPEN HOUSE—Leaders at Fayetteville State College greet two students during a recent open house at the home of Dr. Rudolph Jones, college president and Mrs. Jones. Faculty member, from left, are Dr. J, W. Seabrook, president-emeritus; Mrs. Jones, and Dr. Jonesand James Walker, Student Government president. The college is beginning its S9th year with over 450 freshmen. A. Phillip Randolph Details His “Fr eedom Budget” SIOO Billion NEW YORK--The eyes of the nation were focused on a Kar len: church, Wednesday (Octo ber 26). when A. Philip Ran- Club News FRIDAY EVENING BOOK CLUB MEETS The Friday evening Book Club met Oct. 21, at the home of Mrs. Mable Young. After busi ness was over new officers were installed with Mrs. Nora Lockhart presiding. Mrs. Mildred James gave a review which was enjoyed by the club. We were served a delicious dinner by the hostess. Guests: Mrs. Mildred James, Mrs. A. A. Cooke, Mrs. Pattie Lou Higgs. President, Mrs. Mary P. Lane; vice-pres., Mrs. Roberta W'ard; secretary, Mrs. Mary Bryant; treasurer, Mrs. Elea nor Burch. Members: Mesdames Nancy Devane, Esther Michael, Omha Haywood, Omelia Johnson, Car rie Laws, Mildred Chavis, Marie Moore, Pinky Hall, Miss Reba Lane, Mrs. Nora Lock hart, and Mrs. Eleanor Burch. The next meeting will be Nov. 4, with Mrs. Mary Bryant. dolph gave the details of his intricately developed proposal describe the budget designed to deal “not only with where we must go, but also with how fast and in what proportions.” The budget, formulated with the assistance of a number of the nation’s leading economists, measures costs against re sources and is “not only a call to action, but also a schedule for action.” The “Freedom Budget” leaves no room for discrlmina For Your Insurance Needs See . .. LEWIS T. LIGON 812 Hadley Road —Raleigh, N. C, Dial 834-4781 SALARY REPLACEMENT RETIREMENT MORTGAGE EDUCATIONAL HOSPITAL INSURANCL FUNERAL INSURANCE TO AGE 80 - 1 —gem OPEN HOUSE KINGWOOD FOREST Saturday 10:00 to 3:00 Drive out Cross Link Road to Kingwood Forest and pick out your new home. All new, 3 bedrooms, 1 or baths, with or without carport, all city conveniences. Veteran moves in for only SIOO.OO. FHA requires about $500.00. Monthly payments as low as $92.00 includes taxes and insurance. Raleigh s newest and finest subdi vision in this price range. Barefoot Realty & Mortgage Co. REALTORS LAWYERS BLDG. PHONE 828-5432 NOW SERVING THE WHEEL CHAIRS COMMUNITY WITH . walkers Convalescent Aids Giving maximum Rental or Sale comf ° rt - C onv«- DELIVERY AT ALL icnce * nd mobil It ity to the con- TIMES! valrsccnt. elderly jff {s Day or Night Service and h .ndic«pp-d ] Jsm£ WATERPROOF and BACTERIOSTATIC HOSPITAL BEDS iljP § A AII,ABLE Phone 832-8538 $ COMMUNITY DRUG STORE 600 S. BLOUNT ST. RALEIGH. N. C. tiors in any form, because its programs are addressed “to all who need more opportunity and improved income and liv ing standards—not just to some of them.” Bayard Rustin, Executive Di rector of the Randolph Insti tute, indicated that the budget spells out a “specific and fact ual course of action, step by step, to start in early 1967 toward the practical liquidation of poverty In the United States by 197V’