Sjnggjir. ,_ e stationed with Troop S D. He will ride with a vet • eran officer in Winston-Salem until the beginning of the pa trol’s next recruit school in Chapel Hill. Johnson's mother said her son was “very enthusiastic” about his patrol career and wanted to “go as far as he can” in the ranks of the law f SWEEPSTAKES NUMBERS 5 15 1620 8333 \ | WORTH $25.. WORTH sls WORTH $lO j %■ An£2*j® J?!23s TwrJSf* t y^S»!?i T: ®' i lctcet>!: aa> *>d August I®. 19WI, with proper number* present same « to The CAHOLINSAN office and amounts hated a toove from the SwccoEctakas Feature. R mm wfmm mw ■m m m urn mrm m ■mrmrmnurm mm wrwnm mrm mmm mvm m m m m mS Three liners Api§§ This leek W . That later® st iis Sweep states W-mmtimes to grow and the read ers are winning the money. For the past two weeks there haw been constant winners. Mrs. Gladys Mayo of Zebu lm had ticket number 2090 that »he picked up at G. S. Tudfur Furniture Company, She received $25.0(5 for it. Mrs. Mary Kill;, $lB E* Lenoir, went Citizens, who live near the intersection of Martin and Pet tigrew Sts., have become a larmed at the number of acci dents that have occurred there recently. It is reported that there were three mishaps there in two days, with two occurring within hours of each other. Pettigrew has become a main artery for traffic that comes, perhaps from New Bern Ave., and proceeds through Rock Quarry Rd. to new building sites in the southwest section of the city and into the county. Al though there have been no fa talities, it is expected that there will lie, unless the city adminis trators do something about the peril that exists there. Marshall Confirmation Assured WASHINGTON - A majority of the Senate Judiciary Com mittee said Tuesday that Thur good Marshall is “uniquely qualified” and “perfectly pre pared” to become a Supreme Court Justice. Four committee members, however, called the solicitor general ‘‘a constitutional icono clast” and asked the Senate to reject his nomination as the first Negro on the high court. The conflicting views were contained in the committee’s report on the nomination, which was approved 11-5 two weeks ago. The report was to be filed in the Senate today. Marshall’s confirmation was assured. He has been confirmed previously as solicitor general and as a judge of the 2nd U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “It will be a most historic occasion when the Senate con firms Thurgood Marshall as as sociate justice of the Supreme Court,” the majority said. “History will be made out of much because we wffll be rec ■ newsmen here Aug. 22, after leaving the Federal House of Detention, free on $15,000 bail.* SNCC had quickly raised the bail following a tempestuous hearing after which a federal judge reduced the amount of bail from $25,000. Brown is charged with violating federal law by taking a rifle across state lines while wider indictment. He was formally indicted for that charge by a federal grand jury Aug. 22. (UPI PHOTO). ■ t into Hellg-Levtoe and got num ber 1002 and it was goad for $lB. This was Iter second time winning to the CASOLMAN Sweepstakes. Mr. Pilgrim T. Jones, 52$ W. Lenoir St., tad some busi ness with Brown's Property Management & Investment Co, When be was through he re membered that the firm was one Elsewhere in the state there were three weekend traffic deaths among Negroes. On Fri day, at 10:10 p. m., Willis Mar shall, 24, Rt. 1, Box 64, Rocky Mount, is said to have been traveling at a high rate of speed when the vehicle left the road and si. _ck a tree. He died as the result of the mishap. About twohours earlier Wiley Crumton, 60, 1016 W. sth St., Charlotte, lost his life when it is alleged that he ran into the path of a car. On Sunday morning, at 5:30 Lewis Barnell James, 18, Fd. 1, Halifax was killed when he was hit by a hit and run driver, on N. C. 561, about 6 miles north of Scotland Neck. ommending the confirmation of the first member of the U. S. Supreme Court who is a Negro who is uniquely qualified and one might say perfectly pre pared to become a Supreme Court justice.” The minority view was writ ten by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D- N. C. and supported by Chairman James C. Eastland, D-Miss., and Sens. John L. McClellan. D-Ark., and Strom Thurmond, R-S. C., Sen. George A. Smathers. D-Fla.. did not H. Rap Brown Freed NEW YORK CITY - Admir ers and followers of H. Rap Brown were able to raise $15,000 for release from a New York jail Tuesday, but their trouble of raising money to get him out of jail might have not an doe. According to informa tion coming out at New Or leans, La.., there is a possibi lity that % federal judge, down of the participants In Sweep states. He asked for his ticket and was given 1704, which was good for $20.00. There to no reason that you eannat win. All you have to do is do business with one of the firms listed on the Sweepstakes page and ask for your ticket. It will he gladly given to you. C*t»» JWWftMI®. 9. ») AT JACKSON, MICH. City Hall Windows Smashed Protest Police Action JACKSON, Mich. - Angry Ne groes smashed the windows in the Jackson, Mich., city hall and a bottling plant Tuesday night in a protest over police action. Violence subsided in New Haven, Conn., after three straight nights of turmoil. The Jackson incident erupted after 150 Negroes attended a city commission meeting to prot est police activity in a case that touched off several nights of violence. The Negroes told the commission that police had over-reacted and used too much force too soon in breaking up a fight between two Negroes at a dance Saturday night. The police action was fol lowed by several nights of fire- : bombings and other disorders. 3 Mayor Mary Bennett told the! group their complaints would be investigated. But several Negroes threw rocks through the windows after they left the city hall meeting. New Haven enjoyed relative calm Tuesday night and author ities said an 8 p. m. curfew apparently was effective in pre venting trouble. “There’s considerably less action tonight,” a police spokesman said. “They’re throwing bottles, but we’re not too concerned about it.” Police reported that 20 ar rests Tuesday swelled the total to 393. At Detroit, a private guard, Waverly Solomon, 32, was charged in the shooting of a Negro during the Detroit riot last month. Solomon, also a Negro was guarding a grocery at the time. sign either report. Ervin prefaces his opposi tion with the comment that “I know that in doing so I lay myself open to the easy, but false, charge tliat I am a ra cist. I have no prejudice in my mind or heart against any man because of his race. I love men of all races. After all they are my fellow travelers to the tomb.” Ervin said, “I have been driven ... to the abiding con- there, has set bond of $25,000 to assure his return there, where the allege crime is said to have been committed. There was general disorder in the courtroom as the judge attempted to have a heaving, oa whether he should lower the bond or not and it was not until U. S. District Judge Thomas <»** SAP BHOW3W, P. t) Low Budget Okayed By Council In a new move to provide supervised recreation during school months and to work more closely with the Raleigh Public School system, the City Coun cil has included an SB,OOO bud get item for paid recreation leadership In the five Junior High Schools of Raleigh this year. These leaders and pro grams are to be under the sup ervision of the Raleigh Recrea tion Department. Plans inclxide pre-school, af ter school and Saturday intra mural s in the schools. Spe cific activities will be announc ed for each season during the school year. Programs will start to September and oon t»«* SSCRSAXMOf, 9. 8) 1 111 ■ ' North Carolina *» Leading Weekly VOL- 26, NO. 39 P. 0. Workers To Stage D. C. Demonstration #### rS-rj-rysy &&&■& MORE SCHOOL BARRIERSFALL Lim@h And Franklin Get Orders LOUIS BURG - Judge Alger non Butler, Federal District Court, left no doubt in the mind of the Franklin County School Board, In a decision handed down Saturday, that it could no long er dodge, evade, or escape the desegregation issue, as it ap plied to the school system to that county. On Monday night the county board and principals of the county schools are said to have sat down and assigned 282 Ne gro children, in compliance with Judge Butler’s order, making the total 328 Negroes in so call all-white schools The jurist told the board it had to assign at least 10 per cent of the county’s Negro pupils to predominantly white schools before the 1967-68 term began. He went further in his edict and told the board that it had until October 15 to submit a schedule for conversion to a completely desegregated school system. Judge Butler told the board that their use of freedom -of choice was nothing but circum - vension of the law and there fore was no freedom -of-choice He heard testimony of this sys tem, that the board had been operating under for sometime and rendered his decision on the evidence he heard about a month ago. He was told at the hearing that Negro children, who had chosen white schools, had returned to Negro schools, (S*e SCHOOL, P. 2) Advocates Os Black Power On Downgrade COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Ec hoes from the embattled meet iag held here by the National Student Association, the with drawal of Harry Golden from SNCC for its expressed desire to give up non-violence, Rap Brown's in-and-out of jafl epi sodes, along with the arrest of George Washington Ware, aide to Stokely Carmichael, present a gloomy picture for Black Power advocates. Pandemonium almost pre vailed here Sunday when a mili tant resolution, endorsing black power was approved. Approxi mately 50 Negro delegates threaten to walk out. The re solution encountered debate when a motion was made to delete the controversial phrase. “Black power is the unifica tion of all black peoples in America for their liberation by any means necessary.” Supporters of the amended deletion were able to get it dropped by a vote of 182 to (See SLACK fOfftt r. 2) j mammj j CORRECTION! Paul Roland Pope Jr. was er roneously reported as being charged witn attempting to burn a house at 612 Nazareth St, in last week's CAROLINIAN, The report was incorrect and we apologize to Mr. Pope. The person actually charged with toe crime was Paul Retold Pem Sr., bat the charge was later dropped. According to testimony to City Court Friday, Pope Sr. faOowd his wife to the home of his brother, Joseph Pup*, the Kasareto Street ad dress. Pope Sr. then yelled for his wife to come out of the taiiMt, warning ter he was go- RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 AND MORE TO COME - Sfexsed, N. C.: Several families were forced to leave their homes near here late Monday after flash flooding occurred when the Deep Creek River overflowed. Heavy rains in the area kept residents from their homes again today Aug. 22 and weathermen were predicting more rain. (UPI PHOTOX Bias, Veto Said To Be Cause WASHINGTON, D. C, -A ma jor White House demonstration on discrimination in Federal agencies and the possible threat of a veto on a proposed inadequate pay raise wUI be staged Friday, August 25, 1967 at 11:30 a. m., by The Nation al Alliance of Postal and Fed eral Employees, with represen tation from other 120 major pos tal and federal installations. The alliance is requesting the President to give his approval of a 12.5 pay increase, which is above his recommended 4.5 Tar Heel To Head M&rtkiam GREENSBORO - The 30th An ual Convention of the National Funeral Directors and Morti cians, Inc. elected Perry J, Brown - owner of Brown’s Fun eral Home, Greensboro, it.s Na tional President at the conclud ing session held at the Sherman (SEE TARHEEL, P 2) ing to throw lire bombs at the house. One bomb landed in the yard and started a fire. Paul Pope Jr. threw a rug cm the fire to put it out but failed and set. the rug on fire. Since nothing was actually burned. Judge Pretlow Win borne dropped the charge of felonious burning. Pope Sr. was convicted, how ever, of carrying a concealed weapon, a straight raaor, and judgment was reserved. He was ordered held to jail pending judgment of the court. ■ {«®@ cam® wmx, j*-. ») guide line. They also request ed the President to use the full weight of his office to demand all agencies to eliminate; all traces of discrimination and to make all federal agencies the image of democracy. The demonstrations that will end at the Senate Office Build ing will be joined by rank and file members from across the country. The following telegram was sent: President Lyndon B. Johnson White House Washington, D. C. THE EXECUTIVE BOARD OF THE NATIONAL ALLIANCE OF POSTAL AND FEDERAL EM PLOYEES, IN SESSION AT THE SHERATON PARK HOTEL, AUGUST 21, 1967, WASHING TON, D. C., VOTED UNANI Benefactor Rejoices Over Beach Growth SWANSBORO - It was grati fying to Mrs. Gertrude Hurst on August 12, as she stood In the Gertrude Hurst Building, built by members of the North Carolina Teachers, in 1955, as a tribute to her for the part she played in making Hammocks Beach a reality, and smiled with glee as she told what a conso lation it was to have had a part in such worthy undertaking. Mrs. Hurst and her late hus band, John, were employees to the home ct Dr. end Mrs. Wil i 1 1 1 1 _ 1 in#* 11 ImSSei SBHSL’BIJStST PRICE IS CENTS? MOUSLY THAT A CRISIS EX ISTS TODAY IN AMERICA BE CAUSE OF THE FAILURE OF THE HEADS OF THE POST OF FICE DEPARTMEN T, TO £ GSA, VA, HEW AND OTHER AGENCIES TO FULLY IMPLE MENT THE EQUAL EMPLOY MENT OPPORT UNITY' PRO GRAM. YOU ARE URGENT LY REQUESTED TO TAKE STRONG ACTION NOW TO SEE THAT THIS PROGRAM IS NO LONGER STYMIED BY AGEN CY HEADS AND THEIR SUB ORDINATES. NEGROES, LATIN AMERI CANS AND OTHER MINORITY GROUP AMERICANS CAN ON LY UNDERSTAND CONCRETE RESULTS. Ashby G. Smith, President National Alliance of Postal and Federal Employees. liam Sharpe, in New York City, for a number of years, and it was the generosity and respect for the couple that prompted the Sharpes to offer the Hursts more than 4,000 acres of land, they owned in Onslow County. When the offer was made Mrs. Hurst Is said to have replied, “We will never be able to de velop this property why not give it to the members of the North Carolina Teachers Asso ciation, mamMurtm, **. s)