Cal, Mac Make Olympic Bids Today, Saturday Coliseum Is Site For Game Trials Warsaw Lassie Is Essay Winner Daisy Lee Smith, 17, a 1956 graduate of the Douglass High school of Warsaw, N. C., has been named winner of the First Campas Echo Essay Contest and will enter North Carolina Col lege in September on a full tuition scholarship. The contest, which opened in April, was sponsored by the Campus Echo, award winning student newspaper at North Carolina College. It was a follow-up to a pub lications conference sponsored by the Echo on April 20. Some 250 students and teachers from high schools throughout the state attended the meeting which dealt with newspapers and year- Echo VOLUME 3 NUMBER 2 FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1956 PRICE: 20 CENTS Principals - Supervisors Meet Set For August 15 And 17 Integration In 25 Years: Dr. Browne DAISY LEE SMITH cipation in the essay contest was restricted to students from those schools represented at the con ference. Daisy wrote on the subject “Youth and the Right to Know,” and her entry was selected from the total number submitted by a panel of three judges — all English professors at NCC. The scholarship is worth $130.50, the total cost of tuition for one year at NCC. Daisy has already notified the Echo that she will accept the scholarship and that she will en ter NCC as a freshman in Sep tember. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Smith, Route 1, Box 120, Warsaw, and one of eight children. A mem ber of the First Baptist Church of Warsaw, the young writer plans to major in commercial education in college. Her parents are farmers. “Twenty-five years from now all of this ‘tulmult and shouting’ about desegregation and inte gration will be in the same category with witch biuning in Salem.” This is an opinion expressed by Dr. Rose Butler Browne, chairman of the NCC education department, in an address at the opening session of the Ameri can Teachers Association’s Reg ion III meeting at Winston-Sa- lem Teachers College Sunday, June 17. Dr. Browne told the educators from North and South Carolina and Virginia, “People of good will will be ashamed of their cowardice in these times of stress. Demagogues will deny their uterances. The little child ren will go to school together, work and play together, settle differences in the way of child hood, and no one will remem ber these foolish fears.” Calling desegregation a major crisis in education today. Dr. Browne said men and women of five yt^ars buli must begin now] to seek intelligent solutions to the problem. “Through shared conjoin decisions we can build our own destiny. The ideas that will lead to decency and fulfil ment for all must be nursed like tiny children into strength until they become powerfiil fac tors in American education and in world democracy,” she con tinued. On other “crucial issues” in education, the NCC educator said. 1) teachers should b^ rated on the basis of merit in systems where such ratings are fair; 2) care should be taken to see that special classes are not in fact racially segregated classes but are designed to meet special gifts or handicaps not based on race; 3) teacher should be able to make membership or non membership in reputable organi zations a matter of personal choice, “without coercion either way”; 4) individual states rather than the federal govern ment should be primarily re sponsible for public education but they must not make laws which conflict with the federal constitution. Other speakers at the meeting included Dr. Elmer T. Hawkins, national president of ATA, and Dr. Elwood E. Chisolm, who works in educational research in New York. Dr. H. Council Tren- (Continued on Page 8) The seventeenth annual Prin cipals - Supervisors Conference will be held at North Carolina College August 15-17. The con fab, which approximately two hundred principals and supervisors are expected to at tend, is under the general lead ership of Dr. J. H. Taylor, direc tor of the Summer School. Dr. Spencer E. Durante, Prin cipal of Carver High School, Mt Olive, is chairman of the plan ning committee. The theme of the two-day conference is “Educational Lead ership and Improvement of In struction.” Outstanding con sultants for the conference are Dr. Alonzo Davis, Dean of the School of Education, Tuskegee Institute, and Dr. Craig Wilson, associate professor of education, Alabama Polj^echnic Institute. The Principals - Supervisors Conference, a regular feature of the NCC Summer School, is under the joint sponsorship of the North Carolina Teachers Association and the North Caro lina College Summer School. DuBois Hi Grad Gets Voice Grant Janie'Massenburg, a graduate of DuBois High* School in Wake Forest, will enter NCC in Sep tember on the first Nell Hunter Voice Scholarship. The scholarship, in the amount of $75.00, has been set up to be awarded armually in honor of Mrs. Nell Hunter, NCC music librarian and one of Durham’s leading music personalities. The award will be made on a competitive basis annually to “a deserving student entering the college as a voice major.” Dr. Robert John, chairman of the music department, said re cently the contest will be held each spring in conjimction with the NCMTA State Music Fes tival. Newspaper Help Offered By Echo For the third consecutive year, NCC’s Simimer School newspaper, the Summer Echo, is sponsoring its volimteer’s workshop in journalism for in service teachers and students. The workshop, imder the direction of H. G. Dawson, Eng lish instructor and NCC news paper adviser, meets in the Summer Echo office on the ground floor of the James E. Shepard Memorial Library. Dawson is assisted by the Smnmer Echo staff, which con sists of Annie Hughes, Lawrence Hampton, and Andress Taylor, all members of the Campns Echo newspaper staff, and other part time typists and reporters. Teachers and students come to the office on a voluntary basis for advice and materials which they might use in advising ele mentary and high school news papers and yearbooks dinring the regular school year. According to Dawson, pamph lets, charts, and other materials and information are available to interested students, many of whom are already taking advan- (Continued on Page 8) The eyes and ears of Durham — and indeed, of the entire country — are focussed on Lo3 Angeles, California today. That is where the best athletes in the country are competing with each other for the honor of representing the United States of America in the 1956 Olympic Games to be held in Australia iri November. Winners of any of the first three places in each event o£ track and field today and to morrow will make up the U. S. team that will compete with similar teams from all over the world “down under” in the fall. Apart from a general interest in the outcome of today’s con tests, NCC sports lovers are especially interested in the per formances of hurdler Lee Cal houn and high jumper Charles McCullough. They’re the two standard bearers from North Carolina College — the first this institution has ever sent. Surrounding schools — Duke and UNC — are represented by Dave Sime, sensational 100 and 200 meter star, and distance runner Jim Beatty respective ly- However, hopes of repre sentation from this area may rest with Calhoim, the gangling gazelle who has already estab lished himself as the country’s leader in his department by annexing every championship in sight. He is champ in the 120 (or 110 meter) yard hiiti AA15, and the NAIA. (See sports page.) Sime is a question mark be cause of a groin injury; and both Beatty and McCullough face a host of opponents who have already topped their best performance this year. Calhoim himself will be up against the stiffest competition of his career, particularly in Jack Davis, who broke the world record in a 110 meter HH trial heat last week; Duke’s Joe Shankle, now coming into his own; and Harrison “Old Bones” Dillard. Displaying the form above that has catapulted them to the top ranks among-American athletes, NCC’s two track and field stars — Lee Calhoun and Charles McCullough are in Los Angeles today for the Olympic Trials. If they place in either of the first three spots in their respective events, they will be selected to represent the United States in the global games slated for Australia in November. Ed. Will Ride Out Crisis: Dr. Elder “As long as there is hope that the yoimg of our generation will have a future, education must go on.” That was the word given to some 1,030 summer school stu dents attending North Carolina College this term by President Alfonso Elder. “Teaching in these times,” Dr. Elder continued, “presents a challenge to people of integrity, intelligence, courage and devo tion.” Speaking at the stuniner term’s only general assembly in Duke Auditorium, Dr. Elder continued: “Education has been challenged before and it has survived. “Teachers in the past have been challenged and they met their challenge.” The NCC educator cited the possibilities that teachers and students in these time are like ly to be involved in “crisis situa tions” that- made “academic learning seem unimportant.” Such possibilities among stu- (Continued on Page 8)