THE CAROLINIAN
RALEIGH, N. C„ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1967
2
proficiency in printing, commercial art,
clerk-typist, restaurant practices, com
mercial cooking office machine repair,
and indusrial machine maintenance.
When you ask, when will this Sullivan
Utopiap dream get underway? It has been
underway for two years and the program
is being adopted in widely disparate parts
of this country, and even in Watts and
the people are going strong for it. What
is the basic philosophy? Self-help and
the pride that goes along with it! We have
had sit-ins, fight-ins, argue-ins, butt-ins,
big hreat-ins, big brave talk-ins, march
ins, riot-ins, pass-the-hat ins, and bold
attempts at bluff-ins! When our so-called
leaders attempt to array the Negro race
against the white race on merely racial
grounds they are trying to “bluff-in.”
Within recent weeks we have read about
threats our so-called leaders make in serv
ing notice on the white power that unless
certain demands were met and met at
once, there would be more riot and rioting.
That is a species of rabble rousing which
amounts to trying to bluff the white man
by boasting of a power we do not have.
It helps to explain the phenomenal growth
of anti-Negro organization and the Ku
Klux Klan never had it so good before
with subtle Negro threats as their rally
ing cry. Ku Klux Klan membership drives
are sweeping the country with 5.000, in
HUSBAND
(Continued from Page 1)
her, due to her age, could not
understand why she took leave
from school and Durham to seek
employment in far-off Cali
fornia.
It was reported that she met
Mr. Bradford in California and
they were married. The de
tails surrounding her death
were not available to interested
persons in Durham.
TRIAL
(Continued from Page 1)
sat on the side of the bed, on
or about Jan. 29.
Even though the police rec
ords snow otuy four witnesses,
dullard Rogers, Dorothy Thom
as, Otis Hinton and Hunter, the
crowd was evidence that the
case has a wide interest. The
trial was postponed until Feb.
28, due to the fact that Ste
wart’s lawyer, of record,
George Anderson was called to
Superior Court,
Stewart is expected to save
an avalanche of mute witnesses
when he faces the charge of
assault with a deadly weapon
due to the big bunch of blue
cards, which were with the
warrant. The cards are said
to have been a record of the
many encounters he has had
with the police, over the years.
ROXBORO
(Continued from page l)
Durham. Attorney for the de
fendant was Blackwell Brogden
of Durham.
Clayton had been charged
with manslaughter and with hit -
and run driving following the fa
tal accident near the Allensvllle
School on Jan. 21, 1966. He
pleaded guilty to the hit-and-run
charges and was placed on pro
bation on that charge.
According to testimony from
State Highway Patrolman Joe
Wright, the young Allensvllle
schoolboy was walking along the
shoulder of the road en route
home from school when he was
struck by a car driven by Clay
ton.
Clayton, according to testi
mony, failed to stop at the scene
and continued for about one
mile before running his car into
a ditch. The officer said when
he confronted Clayton at the
scene he could smell the odor
of alcohol on the defendant.
Defense attorney gave notice
of appeal on behalf of the 52-
year-old industrial worker.
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EDITORIAL
(Continued from page 1)
Byrd’s Virginia and 8,000 in North Caro
lina, and the drives are just getting un
derway. While our most prominent lead
ers are making their subtle threats, the
Reverend Mr. Sullivan is training Ne
groes by the thousands Co WORK IN by
preparing themselves to take over their
share of the good jobs that are going beg
ging. Instead of griping from early morn
ing to dewy eve, hoping under the breath
or a federal hand-out of some sort, Sul
livanism is working with the masses that
our white and Negro educators have for
gotten and forsaken, the people farthest
down! The Philadelphia centers alone
have waiting lists of thousands who would
rather work and be trained to work than
stand by and wait for what is to all in
tents and purposes a government dole!
The Reverend Mr. Sullivan is finding that
the old gag that the Negro would rather
beg than work is so much “bosh.” There
will be no integration until the country
gets done what Sullivanization is doing
Who will rally the race to the support of
the Reverend Mr. Sullivan, even as the
leaders rallied the race to the support of
A. Clayton Powell? THE WORK-IN
HAS GREAT POSSIBILITIES. How
ever, “mum” our leaders may be, Sullivan
is the man of the hour! His program will
rise!
TEACHER
(Continued from page 1)
the finished product.
He said Brown would sell to
Smith by the pound and that
Smith would sell to Charles
Bryant, placing the marijuana
in penny match boxes, referred
to as "nickel bags,” which sold
for five dollars each.
Epps said the weed was be
ing taken to Brown’s home for
curing purposes. One lard stand
contained molded marijuana,
believed to be about two yea; -;
old, indicating it was impro
perly cured, he noted.
Epps said Durham police de
tectives Tom 'licks and W. H.
Upchurch were instrumental in
bringing about the arrests,
working with the SBI and Fed
eral Narcotics Division agents.
Also participating wore Pamli
co and Craven County authori
ties.
MRS. MURPHY
(Continued from page 1)
which she said she had just
found and that It contained a
SIO,OOO bond, which had been
verified by a bank teller, as
bona-fide. She told the two
women that she had been told
by the bank teller that he
would give her the cash for the
bond and she should find some
friend or friends, to share this
suddent wealth with.
As an act of her good-intent
she is said to have given the
second woman two rolls of
money, as evidence of her faith
in the two women. The trap
came when she told the wo
men that she had to leave a
certain amount of cash with
the teller to pay the insurance
op the bond. It was then that
the two strange women began
to conjure up a plan to raise
the supposed tariff charge.
Mrs. Murphy was asked
whether she had any money
and she told them she had only
$38.00. She was then asked
If she had any money in the
bank and her reply was no. It
was declared by the strange
women that it was tragic that
she could not share in this once
ln-a-lifetime find.
Mrs. Murphy then decided
to go to one of the loan com
panies and make a borrow, to
raise her part of the needed
sum. She left the $38.00 with
the two strangers and made it
straight to a loan company,
where she perfected a loan,
out of which the interest was
taken and she returned with
$191.00, which she gave to the
third woman. She has not seen
the two women since and row
finds herself gvpped out of
$229,00
MRS. POWELL
(Continued from Page I)
secretary, Miss Corrine Huff,
popped up many times this week
along with that of the recent
ly enthroned prime minister of
the Bahamas, Lynden Findling.
Huff Enterprises Ltd., an Ad
am Clayton Powell happening,
that boasts a onetime beauty
queen as president and a prime
minister as an Incorporator,
seemed destined to remain
shrouled in mystery.
House investigators said they
had no plans to Inquire furth
er into the operations of the
firm, which oblingingly paid for
the freight and mail delivered
to Powell's yacht, "Adam’s
Fancy,” in the Bahamas.
They said they were interest
ed In Huff Enterprises only for
what It could tell them about
the Miami-to-Biminl travels of
the Harlem Democrat and his
25-year-old secretary-travel
ing companion, Corrine Huff.
Miss Huff, who was “Miss
Ohio,” a few years ago In a
Miss World contest, lent more
than her name to the Bahamas
based firm. According to the
owner of an air taxi service
it was her signature on Huff
Enterprises checks that paid
him for deliveries to “Adam’s
Fancy.” One of the company’s
initial stockholders was Lyn
den Plndllng, prime minister
of the Bahamas. The vice pre
sident was C. Sumner Stone, a
top Powell aide.
Stone said he hadn’t the fog
giest notion of what Huff En
terprises enterprised. He said
he had never received any
money from it and in fact,
has had nothing to do with it
since he was asked to put his
signature to the incorporation
papers two years ago.
Stone said Pindling got in
volved because a Bahamian
citizen was needed to incorpor
ate in the Bahamas and because
he was a friend of Powell.
ELKS
(Continued from Page j)
staff.
Congressman Galifianakis
was singled out, due to the
fact that in his letter of reply
.0 the Elks’ request for jobs
said that he appointed persons
who ate and slept his cam
paign. The Elks were appre
hensive of his saying he con
sidered only qualified persons,
when they compared the quali
fications of many of the Ne
groes, who supported him, along
with those of persons he carri
ed to Washington, including Jake
Nurkin.
Congressman Kornegay was
eyed because of the fact that
his office is said to be easi
ly accessible to Greensboro’s
self-appointed Negro political
leader Russell. It was felt
that Negroes wanted more con
sideration than a close friend
ship with one.
WHITE MAN
(Continued from Page 1)
Another White man, Henry
Floyd Parker of Atlanta was
wounded when his own pistol
exploded in his hand and a
third white man was reportedly
beaten by the Negroes.
HUMPHREY
(Continued from Pace 1)
"curbing or diminishing racial
prejudice is within the realm
of possibility.” He stressed,
though, that this could come
about only "if we accept the
goal as one of the compelling
measures of our time.”
The Vice President stated
that the racial conflicts now
facing the world were surely
as "deep seated” as "tensions
and minunderstandings arising
out of religious differences
(which) long seemed almost in
surmountable.” He added:
"Now we have seen the move
ment of ecumenism among
Christians and a new atmos
phere of understanding among
Christians and Jews. If re
ligious discord, once so intense,
holds the promise of solution,
I think we can hope for pro
gress in alleviating other types
of conflict too.”
Mr. Humphrey decried the
term “black power” as caus
ing "needless consternation
and confusion." He said that
there was no real consensus
as to what black power meant
and what it sought to accom
plish. However, he asserted
that to the extent that black
power expresses the desire and
intention of disenfranchised Ne
gro Americans “to participate
in the political processes of
this nation, or to achieve In
dependent economic status or
to become meaningfully involv
ed in the life of the communi
ty, it is in accordance with
the democratic traditions of
our country.”
Turning to the riots inWatts,
New York, Philadelphia and
other etties, Mr. Humphrey laid
their basic cause to "a tragic
gap separating promise from
performance In many crucial
areas of public policy (which)
for the Individual Negro, Span
ish-speaking American or oth
er minority group members can
breed frustration and despair.’
The Vice President denied
that the riots showed that the
civil rights cause has been los
ing ground since the passage
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
and added that the United States
continues “to make meaningful
progress on all fronts—voting
participation, jobs, housing and
the like.'
PIC
FOREIGN STUDENTS ENTERTAINED - The February host
ess of the Intercultural Committee of the Raleigh Chapter
of Links, Inc. entertained several Foreign students at the
home of the Co-Chairman, Link Julia Delany, with Link
Thelma Clark and Link Willie Kay assisting. The home was
beautifully decorated with a Valentine motif. Each guest
introduced themselves and told something of their native
homeland. Foreign guest attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Stelios Danielopoulos, of Greece; Mr. Gaston Verreault,
Province of Quebec, Canada; Mr. and Mrs. Subhas Chandra
Chapel Hill News
CHAPEL HILL - The long
waited for low rent better
housing project is really
showing signs of getting un
derway.
Mr. and Mrs. Ollice Thom
as have just returned from a
very fine vacation. Mr. Mel
vin Farrington from Conn.,
spent the weekend in Chapel
Hill with family and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Edwards
of Sunset Dr., left early Tues
day morning to spend a few
days in Miani, Fla. Birth
day celebrations: Mrs. Lizzie
Brown. Very outstanding a
chievements from the chil
drens scholarship fund in Mu
sic, of Chapel Hill, were re
ceived by Master Ivey Joe
of Guy B. Fhillip.s School,
Master Joey McCauley oi
Frank P. Graham School and
Little Misses Sandra Johnson
of' Carrboro Elementary
School. Each received a six
ty dollar scholarship.
Centered around Lincoln’s
CLINTON NEWS
CLINTON - The regular
Eastern Regional Beautician’s
meeting, was held last Sunday
at the Sycamore Baptist Church.
The members of the Clinton
Chapter attending were: Mes
dames B. Armstrong, P. Mal
lett; C. Howard, L. Harper,
A. Beckett, a. Merritt, T. Boy
kin and F. Faison.
DEATH
Mrs. Rosa Willis Cogdell died
at her home in Fayetteville,
Feb. sth. Funeral services
was conducted from the Falling
and Run Baptist Church in Fay
etteville, Feb. 10th, with her
pastor, Rev. O. L. Bennett, of
ficiating. She was the moth
er of Rev. H. R. Cogdell, pas
tor of the Lesbon Street Bap
tist Church in Clinton. Surviv
ors are husband, Mr. T. U.
Cogdell, six sons, James,
Theodore, H. R., Edgar, An
drew and Ambrose, two daugh
ters, Mrs. Helen C. Evans and
Miss Mabel C. Smith, all of
Fayetteville, five sisters, 37
grandchildren, and six great
grandchildren. Those attend
ing the funeral from Clinton
were: Saddle Shaw, Francise
Jackson, Arthur Mathis, San
kie Herring, Elsie Ledbeltter,
Ida Blackwell, Ina Corbett, Wil
lie Beling, Mattie Powell, Lu
cille Boykins, Clayton Holmes,
Percy Boykins, Francise Fai
son, Cicero Fleming, John Kil
let, Reather Killet, Mary Fran
cise Everts, Rev. O. L. Ben
nett, Anne Hall, Comie Ben
nett, James Decond, Mattie Fin
nel, Pocahartas Moultie, Rella
Jacobs, Ona Easons, Fula Cun
ningham, Manie Faison, Mr. and
Mrs. Jessie Vann, Alice Mc-
Collop, Rev. James Evrets, Inez
Robinson, Helen McKoy, A. J.
Merrit, Rev. Willie Beamon,
Rev. Baxton Rich, and Gulie
Underwood. *
Club News
THE NATIONAL COUNCIL
OF NEGRO WOMEN
The Raleigh Council of t h e
National Council of Negro Wo
men held its regular monthly
meeting at the East Raleigh
Branch of the YWCA Sunday
afternoon, with Miss Jeanette
E. Hicks presiding. After a
brief devotional period, the
president called for the agen
da. Mrs. George Exum, chair
man of W. L C. S. - Wo
men In Community Service, -
gave a progress report on the
work of her committee. She
reported that a representative
from headquarters had held
two workshops here with
members of the committee,
and that she felt the coun
cil should proceed with the
operation of recruiting and
screening office, The func
tion of the W. I. C. S. would
be, to recruit and screen
more promising future. If
and 21,• who have dropped out
of school and who might pro
fit from an opportunity to
birthday and national Boy
Scouts Day, the Sunday morn
ing services were great. The
guest speaker was, Rev. Long.
His text was taken from St.
Mark 11:20 verse, “In The
morning they passed by and
saw the fig tree dried up
from the roots.” -
The youth choir gave the invi
tation song, “Come to Jesus,”
then sang, "I Know the Lord
Have Laid His Hands on Me.”
The beginners sang, "More,
More About Jesus.” Mr. Lew
is Taylor was at the organ
and Mrs. Norma Snipes at the
piano.
Flowers were given by M \s.
Louise Durham. Visitors were
introduced by Mrs. Ida It.
McCauley. Our motto is,
"Visitors are strangers but
once.” Immediately after
church, the mornig service
quarterly conference was
held, with Elder D. Williams
presiding. Pastor, Rev. T.
P. Duhart. Reports were
made, carried out in style
and order. At -5 p. in., the
senior choir, observed a very
fine tea, which was very suc
cessful
St. Paul’s Stewardess Board
number one and two, met in
joint sessions. It was a fine
meeting. The fellow ship was
great. No. 2 board acted as
hostess, service a fine re
past.
Those attending were, Mrs.
H. C. Duhart, Mrs. Susie
Webb, Mrs. Preston Weaver,
Mrs. Agnes Rankin, Mrs. Ruth
Booth, Mrs. Bertha Gilespie,
Mrs. Maude Oldham, Mrs.
Mary Miner, Mi s. Julia M.
Gurthree, Mrs. Golden W.
Tuck, Miss Wanda G, Weaver,
the pastor, Rev. T. P. Dur
hart, and Mrs. Susie H. Wea
ver.
leave home and prepare for a
more promising future. If
accepted, these girls will be
trained in one of the Job
Corps Residential Centers. As
soon as we get the go ahead
signal from headquarters, we
plan to open office in the
East Raleigh Branch YWCA.
Members present were:
Mesdames Sara Brower, Mil
dred L. Chavis, George Ex
um, A. B. Johnson, Mary Sapp,
Roy Smith, Richard E. Wim
berly, Sr., Misses Jeanette
Hicks, Vivian Irving, Dorothy
S. Lane, Ernestine Law s,
James Lee, Maye E. Ligon,
Beatrice Martin, and Almeta
Dunn.
500 Nib’s To
Participate In
Symposium
WASHINGTON, D. C. - Some
500 local physicians are ex
pected to attend at day-long
symposium on “The Fragile
Fetus” next Wednesday at the
Sheraton Park hotel. The pro
gram is being presented by the
Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology of Howard Univer
sity’s College of Medicines as
a part of the University’s year
long observance of its 100th
anniversary. Lederle Labora
tories, a division of the Ameri
can Cyanamid Company, will
co-sponsor the program. .
Dr. Clark will join the morn
ing and afternoon speakers in a
panel discussion of the sym
posium topic following Dr.
Chisholm’s presentation. Dr.
Ernest L. Hopkins, assistant
professor of physiology and of
obstetrics and gynecology at
Howard, will preside at the
afternoon program.
The day’s activities will end
with a reception for partici
pants and their wives in the
hotel’s Hospitality room.
According to Dr. Clark, the
subject of Wednesday’s sym
posium is one of the most sig
nificant in obstetrics and gy
necology today.
Mohapatra, Clttack, Orissa, India; Mr and Mrs. Walter
Lebenait, Vienna, Austria; M Michael Blair, Drummond
vde. Canada; Mr. and Mrs. Kersey \ntia, Kapodiu
m<J| ' B’-i:'*':".'. India; v . Pi odydi Kumar Butt, Cal
:; : M Nir!,; >1 K, .-Minn; India .nd Mi and Mrs.
Do Bern s, outh Africa. Other r.uest. were Mr. and Mrs
Jan,. . 1.,-.-, Durham; Mr. Sam Bt adley, Raleigh; Mr-. P. i:‘
Robin soi i dci.:h; Mrs M irie Funder 'burg, v\ .shin ton. I) C •
”‘7, T : ; Middiei-m, Infer ml u Com ;:<tee Chairman
aiui ■ '" t: •• me ! lag", Publicity < • airman.
Medical : oarch with lasers
at V> ter -ns Administration
hospitals has presented evi
dence that use of the laser may
be good technique for treating
some types of liver tumors
since bloodless removal of
parts of the liver are possible
with this method.
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Four Tops
Score Big
LONDON - Motowu’s Four
Tops scored heavily In their
first uati')i--vH jur of Great
Britain with a wildly success
ful gig at the Royal Albert
Hall here. Thousands of teen
agers called them back again
and again to sign one more
chorus of “Reach Out I’ll Be
There ” Levi Stubbs, Obie Ben
son, Abdul Fakir and Lawrence
Payton played the Olympia Mu
sic Hall in Paris Feb. 7th,
then continued on to Germany,
T l'.y, France and Spain,