Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 4, 1967, edition 1 / Page 2
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rm RJSUSKm. Bi Cm SHTCT-iIMY. atAivCH 4. i*s7 2 EDIfCLLAL (CHkactl teem 1$ Si riariit Wbat ® pm«i dot* or £ses not do. wfesi lie atvfii or does sot *£F faitcdlf rsmitera. Bs is odlndseu rigid or vrosg seu»ieins fa> Ms rteis irllh i&i rexaii it** rasa s&rgotaent Ss gwr-swfel Tix. taee s?is»e*] is a te*ir©& of gres£ wtetetteem. Ttee tg'hiie tsfca ssspsts fel* sles art to* groasaS of race, and oscUy aaaagb. tfe* Negru las Earned his Iss msa Sroea the while raaa. Tc» Negroes* every «sM &3J Nsgtms ere rt*fet ii'tsasseetSv’s of wimt the? «fc bev-aue* they ate Kcgraes. Ard hr the ass»e reaso&iaa every white man is wraes*. What «?s»ss sad ihe mb!* «ay are eJEScaaeoes an*! foreign matters. Usee is &t &« stearin* wheel ai the Twentieth Oeafury world. E&ee *s£i&*s»s has brought the white tests »e4 his eteflisxffion to the brinks of m'fte&os&e, m 3 yet tfes Jtegro follows BitadJr ob, sM wherever the white na laa3s «w way fee sure he will have Negro yeess*fc.»iy. Whether Its Heaven or Kelt if the white mss larafa esr world atsd Its eftHim ttea. be wl-5 sal! have his race problem, far 3tegtn«?s wta be arslnn* on the ffewt teste or gtojfi. Great- Martin Lether King gave MARSHALL fOwstteasatS SWsa j>a#e 3j PhllK-daMili; Pa. The eulogy was delivered by Rw. Percy High. Tie Rev. L. H. Wade, VAtte Pistes, N. Y», and tbe immediate former pastor of First Baptist, were te charge of the services. He was paster of First Baptist, was In charge of the services. He was assisted by Revs, T. E. Brooks a&d Dr. A.S. Eider, presktent-anserftas of North Canobu Co3ege ? who read tbe eontatances, including a tele gram fm sa Lj'aAsa B*i ne s Jofensoa. The Rev. Mr. Shepard, €7, died i® the University of Peansylvaaia Hospital .sev eral days after a team erf neu ro-surgeons removed a brain, tumor in a two-boor tog op eration. The deceased sacoambed 'be fore completion of one of his chore** s most progressive pro jects— a huge- hcmsfog deveJop mete and. church center adja cent to the 42nd arid IKdltot St. cteareh, borderlt-g Hamferd Aim., cm Urn South. iesnfc Known N ATSQTSALLY is bah church and political cir cles the Rev. Mr. Shepard was bora to. Oxford, N.C., Where the body will be interred, the son of Robert and Patti* OiliiiUß Shopard, ok July 10, IMS. He survived by his wife., the Sorater XmcGZc Owens, two mas, Marshall Lorenzo, Jr., assistant pastor of. MU Olivet; Samuel, a brother, tester and two grandeWldpea. The Rev, Mr. Shepard first gsineti national prominence tn while serving Ms first year as a member of the Penn sylvania State Legislature, as t the first colored clergy-man to offer the invocation at & Deroo craric Ntelonal Ccmvention, The event caused national headlines when the late Sea, (■Catto Ed) Ellison D. Smith of South Carolina,, walked out of the coovesticsi in protest, Possessed of a great, sense of humor both «n tiie platform of orjftary and 1c his puljte, the Rev. Mr. Shepard again off ered the invocation at the De mocratic Can’'eatto in ]f>4B Bomteating President Harr; S. Truman, and brougtrt gales of buigteer when he quipped; ‘IS Cctton Ed walks out te here again today, I'm goiugw'iU; him TUThe South Carolina sene ter had beets dead several years. FRATEAMTY sSSwteMßia tens sow sty ed is she hsMs and mores of the state until he joined Bill Sesawns, later Dr. Sessoms, of Rocisy- Mount., is raising a tobacco crop. He saac re turned teKowart! Ussiveraify anti taught Ms Havortte subject and te the time of his death was head of the Physics Depart- For wumms mmmmiNQ mjmnm m wszMjm<ms. m MBBBsm wamsm i« wsmmsm M&myi i m mmpmsi mfjeammx. ! m mm tACNkiiON Bm mmumsm IM 1 IWJ m. 3.1 maSi 81 i C. :. f mmn ; I tSmik \ 9 S tfßW* i imsm mff 4S SMMM teHfK ijjf "4 WLWMSiW. mamcß \ m I m n., mmmesv m prArrise of leading the Wr»ro to bieast the tiew of n'lut. and ?lA* GnruJh' bad wita the white man a wsya. Witte hit taaci?- i*yr o. non Helenes. Soor Dr. King *ai preaching son -violence or the one hand and iaeftiy commanding it on thr other He oor>- dewnad riofcin* on the one hand end gave riciins subtle enctem.gfrfn«to cxi the other ay ttvrea «v ; ng tbe white rtme ure teih riot ing if certete things were not done and done “510 W." Tfeoae things hs?e not been dote arid sk not feeing done "NOW T We need a Kegro lesdex- or leaders who are too big to Imitate the white ua«n‘s dacotsbie *rices. Mttrk you. dear reader, Nietzsche and itetier came oat of Germany, and what pow ers they were and are’ Karl Marx, whoso Ctenamdsm u tferea.ten.lcg the wore*!, with only the United Stases to chai'ong-; its ad vaace. wm a German? Might over right; race over right: communism over democ racy, and aP German Ideologies. Race and right, godly-racc versus right., damnable and dangerous’ meat. It was in iSll that he joined wMb the late Dr. Ernest Just, now Stosteep Love :uad Dr. Os car Cooper, in seeking to build ius orgaairatitan ifeai would pro mote bet ie i under steading among students of college CAirjixe-.es, in scholarship, man hood, perserverance .and ijplifs. They succeected in .fwswtteg t>*e Omega Psi Phi Fraterafty and Ms principles are the guide lines for 23,000 members throagJ*ate the world, MURPHY (CtMWfcmw* e«m 1$ many in the summer erf that year. The son of the founder erf the AFRO. John H. Morphy Sr. and Mrs. Martha Howard Murphy, Dr. Mt-rphy left bis OO&Ci post Ist 1918 to join the AFRO and succeeded tils father as president of: the newspaper Chain at Ms death in 1922 Bober his direction, the AFRO became the largest co lored-owned new spaper in the ration. He held membei shipsiE nr.ffi erous civic, educational, fra terml, and publishers’ organ inaticMis. He is credited w ith being the chief architect of the expan sion program ai Morgan State College and the Fine Arts Building and auditorium near the -entrance to the campus bears his name. The Carl Murydiy Scholarship Fund which enables African Stu dents to study at Morgan was created it! 19f-3 in his honor. Dr, Murphy revived the Bal timore Chapter of the JiAACP in 193E and Imd been a i&aa)- ber erfthe orjte®2®*tioa , S nation al board of directors since I&SL la 195? the NAACP awarded him the coveted 3piiigarnM-l.il for distinguished leadership. He was also a member of the Pnetedeafs Post «Dffice Ad visory Board and a Presidential Elector for the State of Mary lan" in 195 C; S3rd degree Mason, Com maiider, Order erf the Star of Africa, Monrovia, Liberia, Dr, Murphy received the Outstand ing Scottish Rite Mason Man of the Year Award in 1954. Be was also recipient of the Omega Psj Fraternity Aclilwe iTsvnt Awards in 1939 and 1054. Honors also included the Social Action Achievement A ward et Phi Beta Sigma Fra ternity, National Urban League American Teamwork Award; Also honorary degrees from Central State College. Wilber foree, Ohio and Lincoln Uni versity, Ltac'jla, Pa. Survivors include hie wife, Mi - s, Lillian Parrot Murphy; six daughters; Mesdarnes A. Paul Moss, S. Edward Smith] Leelanc! K. Jonas, Jr., Buffa lo, K. Y,; Robert W, Matthews. 3rd, Clarence Henderson, and Marvin Davis, Two brothers, Lu Armtet and John H. Murphy, Jr.; 19 grand children and two groat grand children. Requiem mass will be held 10 a.m., Wednesday, March Ist at Si. James Protestant Epis copal Church, Lafayette and Arlington Aves., BaHteicre. Md. LEGAL IctatlinM! bw &»m 41 testify if he considers such tes timony necessary for the "ad ministration of justice.” Bailey said his bill would “take the ministers out of the testifying business as to any .information furnished him in which a person is seeking sp.ir iiuai nouns PL*’ *lt would enable people with marital problems to go to a clergyman and discuss their problems without the minister warning them that what they say could foe used In court, he ®aid. IBaiiey, a Methodist, said he had diaaiseeiJ the hill only with bin own minister in ?/inston- Saiern and not with ant’ group or cognteßMtem. The H.C. Council of Churches lis seetoig Isgialattots that wosdci permit a clergymat! to refuse to reveal cstefide-atSial information. The Hue. Baptist State Ccm vmiizvd passed a rsAteutioe sup portteg eomintml cwUon" at it* November meet mum {terjtea'A&rjfcy ibwu tess-.i hem} raoteUy sroploymaat pr»ctiase M Tbs firm'* prsAidste is C. A. union, who i& ftometsiZ director BBd tmawwor clhte'DereJir.raSc Party In teertb Ccrblto, The ‘Jmtkm Department pre vlously bad used the equal em pkijTaent sectißß of the Civil Rights Act to fcr lag salts agahste two labor organteaitoos, bat ■one had bosn filed against an employer. Dillon Supply Co., with its main office in Raleigh, tasfoer terar.eii oftloes in Kortb Carolina and ooe in South Carteina,. The firm .sells tedostria! tegdpmeat and supplies. The govarnment alleged that M sofestaatiallF all of the Xegro employees are in menial and low paying ;ob categories" and that ’-'all supervisory and clerical positions are held by white per sons.” The complaint charged furth er that "the deiendam fciicw s a policy and practice of dis crimination la employment a gsinst xtegroes on acc ourrf erf their race” la violation of the Civil Rights Act. KING (OwaSß’Ji-sj tr*>m @s«c S> teia with your militant record.” "At this hour of political crisis the Harlem community can and will appreciate your comteig- to the forefront,” the teierram ended. SWEEPSTAKES (CassttoathS ttvm s*se l> week. She stopped at Davidson’s Coffee Break, 122 E. Hargett St., and wher. she made her purchase she asked, fox her Sweepstakes ticket. Upon find tag she had the right one, she presented v. to the CAfiOLUTLAK office. She was promptly gteen $lO 00 Mr. IMibert Adams, 603 S. West Street, picked qp his laun dry at Oak City Laundry, 436 3. Salisbury Street, and picked up ticket *436, This ticket enabled him t pick up $15,00 at the CAROLECLAN. 2671 was not picked up and therefore, $25.00 went begging. Perhaps if you had visited one at the ' ■ CUC*. COi# •*H "rO«I ■■*!'{ H'OtJSfWKP t«AQf *MHr ■ WH«« I.lfNKjr WOtUrCT .tK •’ *«S '\y "■fOl* rO««««l' i You’ll go better re freshed with ice'-cohf Coca-Cola. Coke has the taste s«©© newer get tired of. Always refreshing,Thafs why things go better with Cake after Coke after Coke. l*ssg® bciier, * &&& Coke w *•"“ ** -"» ~ cocoon rnnn stores, listed the 3WEEP 3TAXES page, you would have picked if up and have bees? §25 richer, Mr, said, *q teej alrsgtg and will t?.~y some groceries with the prize aitaiey. s>ur.*t miss in* suwey this by n<F gf>ittng a ticket. C-o to one, or all of i’oe stores, week, aad ask for a ticker. If vou get 4065, you v® vii, $50.00. 5532 will give you $15.06, and 3173 is good fee $10.>3. Tbe tickets sue pink and dated Ft&rairy 25. GOVERNOK (Ccßttow-f fnw pa*e !} preserrring the scinto The delegatier. came, Moore listened .to r.cthtag mss rftecid eo. The delcgaiic* reported that the governor was ctjor teces, attetelve and even plea sant, hte did not give any fadt llng as to the impress, ks@ trade oo hi re . K. H. Midiwr, sp-Jkesmaafor tbe d?leg3tk-e, told the C.ARO linis-a ihsz the delegation would be taking; Its case to tbe legtstatere Tl»r*Say, fc she hope ft would lead a coopera the ear. AtfendSag the meeting were Dean D. G. Sampson, who heads school, .Attorney William G. Pearson:- Attorney H. M. Mi tten Jr., who te president erf the SOC Ahmmi Association; Moses Burt of Derbstm, wfe© is g«oeral camsel for the K-ortfe Carolina Fwk-I; Dr. J, H„ Brew er, WCC professor and npv seataUve of the Durham Csm miftee on Kegro afiaiss; aca Attorney William Marsh, an alumni assoc lattices representa tive active in the George White Bar Association in Durham. WAKE trt>ra P*4:e f> beginning of the 1367-6$ scbocl yea.:'.. This means that the new Mtllbrock High, with a 660- capacity enroSlmete, wfß open Mly iteegTatel. The West Ca ry which has operated as all-Jfegro, will become a ninth grade school an 6 will have an earoHmeat of 337. Fred Smith, superintendent of the county sCbocfts, is still ai a joss to determine bow many Negro students will be attend ing schools where white stu dents are in the majority and by the same token be dees not know bow m?.jiy white students will be artending schools where Kegroes will be in the majori f«Bnr Ti§ tmwi To TODD iLKTRIC CO. ty*»o/ Csteciric ~. l 4pptismc*s 27 MAIN ST. WIMm, X. C. t> i!v decs fc&cw there are about 25,006 students ai iecdtKg 'he? cosirfj schools sad tiipr atvXii 9,000 of tie® use Segrces. Ai ti*e prese«v titn "fcesre are ucly abcut Z&S Ka- bet toed to to atteaajjig predominantly vh«te schor.Lv. Federal education cfileiils have told the school board that dual schools for Jtegre sa6 white stu-ieuts must: be e!im!- nated ir. '-be c-utKst> sehoot sys tem sci tbe start of the !38®-70 school ;ern::. The move fey the sdtoed board to Mis totegrate all new scbeols also will affect a new high school in Garner sched-iled to opca next fall. “te&tnever vse bufid * new sc&»L h’s the policy cat tee hoars ‘a Integrate,” Smith said. Measfews of the CatfSdwois Advisory Council were at tise meettag and offered ac dtejec tioss to the deserregatto plan, ASKS fCcßtfass** Ttma fi&je ti petos that coocern the masses erf Negroes io tee State. Tbe current Injustices, <lis crimiaatkMs and failure cf the Megroes of Forte GwrcUaa to aeqpjilre eoeal a<aa compete clti zesiship is tare to tte? afipareat l ethargy, apathy and aneccteem of tee SEcreat Negro leaders sc Kortb Carafelaa. The- time is "ikvw” for scar leaders as fire following to come togfetfeer and plan a strategy which will point the- way aad give guidance for a united at tack upon all of the reaction ary forces in North Carolina that .are designed to feeep Ne groes ta the category- of second class citizens: The President and Executive Secretary of the Baptist State Coa'iveatieas, the Bishops and Presicliitg Elders of the Methodist Orurci-i, and other leaders of the State re ligious denominations; tbe Edi tors of the Negro Newspapers, the President and Executive Secretary erf the North Caro lina Negro Teachers Associa tion, the Preside at cf the State RffiNlTWi n»ONE 365-5671 MAIN sratHET HXSBM.L N. C. NAACP, t be President of tbe Negro Be; Association, the Ne gro Voters League, U»e Presi des. of tea Negro Bwstois Lateue, the Presidents cf tbe various Wonea’s Orga&iza'i jus and the Presidents of tS» State Crfranizaiiofis. The writer will mate ape? - sonal cojrtributloa of one fcsai crerf (1&0.00) dollars to assist in covering tbe cost of such a sg ootlfeed a bore, COLLEAGUE (CtitUsßßi trenv pmgv 1> the manner sr. whitte they etfh st cvjg the tremendous political pressures cieai- c fey tbe highly «a«’? -nal furor which has defied vhe real issues in the mterff of many Americans.*’ Altfeougb Mr. Conyers ex presred bis agreement at a mores mg press conference with the Ce&ur it»ee*s repert regard, tag tee se.ittag of Mr. Powell, he stated that he bad filed an addith-ssal statenseat in the re port potnitag up his disagree ment witti the Committee's oth er recommendations. “I Sre- Itav-e that our exclusive respan sSbilitj was to determine whether of not ids constituents would be denied their coast!- tta banal rights were he not seat ®d,” said Conyers. “I do net fee* teas the Committee should toriher confuse the issue by comcintag- two grave twessku tfcssal quest ions. Mr. Powell’s coodoef while a Member of Con gress is a totally different and separate issue from ;is right to l« sc-a’.ed. The exasduct «f '* Member is beyond the pur ** ! -rf £ committee sjsecificaliy set up to deterti:ta€' whether or not he should be seated.” In feis additiuoal sfatemeat, Cocgressman Conyers pointed out teat Mr. Pow ell to Ms at torney- should nave boss grant ■ed the right to cross examine the v itnesses against him: teat at no time did be feel that Mr. Leave the I Leave tne I FROSTBITE i&L on the line... * I '3 M I hHHv|'.., " ■ I W '. ' I J ;. I ' I T'J _ * * I .. : I • ■* • I ■* < I ■ ]g|* I lii* *i i<i^apS3BCßßßj j,Wmk. j B f | // f ■ *v .v * P "** t •■■ - , I il lT^ hr I " ; ir ~• ' • ■- ■ ■ -M *>owell baa oeea disrespectful iu hi- act iocs toward tbe Com mittee or the Congress; and that tbe j>Hi3ti-.e measures rec -o&me>ide<! by tbe C«amittefe were unprecedented ta the his tory of the Congress. "A re view of all eases of alleged misconduct Iv-r.sgnt before the House and Seriate Indicates that punishment has uerer exceeded censure," declared Caayers. ‘T. ere is no precedent for the removal r 4 accumulated sente r- Itv combined with a monetary assessment as has been propon ed ir the Powell case.” Hites Held (Cos;lanes; fr«wn *>*«* 1) beer: m the plirabtag business. Mrs. Raines is said to hate been active in the prosecution of the business. Sfe® cSta.l in Ne*-> York and seer body was brought here for terial. She is said to have been active fe the program of East r.--,loigr: Branch :rf the WO, located at 111 £, Davie St.reet. She lived, wffis tor lsi3.s~ band, at 10 St .-all Avenue. Ra leigh, NEGROES i ConUavrt lr*ni j»igc 1J Jacliston Killing, which Go\. Paul Jefeasoo labelled a “Helaaus and senseless Jcteson assigned state investigators to the case until it is solved. OSficials of Natchez, wlaere Natiomd G-aardsmen tod to keep racial peace- for several weeks lasrf year, vowed that every ek H. A. Goodson Construction Co. “Wc Construct New Howes, Remode! a-nd Repair” ftvtrbsrbaa Ireu AvsslaMe CAIX US TODAY! Sam* 2—tfcsteiffc. jr. C. Vre&ttmmi: m-*m mr tOS-ttki fort would be mw b ■4V ,4i ' he'»l tbe persons responsible so, the “‘Dastardly Crime" tn*i shattered six months of traa <juility Evers, whose br>?ther, M»Td gar, was killed by a sutyer, at ills home, in Jackson, in !963, after attending a Civil Rights meetlcg, led about 2,000 NegroSs to tbe Armstrong Plant Tuesday night. But guards had closed the gates of the chain link fence. The demonstrators thea went to the place where Jackson died. “This is sr,e spot. I will al ways remember that a Negro gave his life here because fee was truing to provide a better life so: his tie and children, the Negro can no longer be bru talized or killed,” Evers said. About r >-dcren policemen guarded the Negioes tearing the march that mostly was in Negro districts, but vent through sev eral blocks cf white residences. Tto:e were no white specta tors and no incidents. fc Meridas a sheriff, Lis chief deputy to the toad of case -if the naiicsi's most niiitaf Ka NJnx Klsr: groups faced federal non sgsir-a c . cfea r ge s ivedwakf In tbe 1954 slayings of three young Civil Rights workers. XtEBCHAUriSE FOS &SJJE Na tional ::--p cctie dTectcij. M.9C# post cfb.ce . ,i*.:ngs. Mail trams faster wiSfe »p cade. Order ywara now. $1 Zb past paav tnom S En’erpri***. Ra&esgh., Box M, smz ciajeixey her for sasx—la Hilicrrest. tow ?. plat l. number t. xertion A, 1M sq. feet. Arton*y Brace h G jr.te: 831 Lawyer Bldg. ■Md.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 4, 1967, edition 1
2
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