AFRICA STIRS IN REVOLT Gaston Credit Union Leads State SOUTHPORT ELECTS Ist NEGRO CONSTARIf Ros< oi* Dims Wins 01 fice As Democrat SOUTHT’ORI Tins DC' nil tu'.vn fc-be has it I ei'Ted a C s;;ri i foivta hlt- -1 ,«>! Nc>v»-im.t r. vhi’e ami . »!• oied fi-it nds ul Kiiv.m' Dai;-:, rail ed " the nui-t jjopulai man in town,” nrj-fd him to run foi otin stable nt Kie Township of Smith vilJe. which ini.lii,.it tin 1.400 m habitants ,Soutlii.a'.rt ;i- v ■ ■!S a;, other tenuory > a Demo oral Tht- i.itr/.fns tiid in’ want tin 'll! But till V lift ■!■ 1 .1 s ■ : II :i I • V hill til liblit :ti: in. .I',. ‘lt I Ist save hlill a : I*l,b ti: i: ! l it Was iht* man. ami ha gave a rood tight i)a vi- •• , t-i.it- a t mi he ea ’• a i... ;.t ! • (..• i tilt! 1.. I.' this ,!- it slit.; I 'll I .1. I NeglOgr VOKd til lai r Whitt- -axj tiny .•ti.jt,! tia.'f C.U iit ,1 t t:r fit' 11... ■ . ..it other Dav i tit■ ; i;> .i ■ t.■ ■. histoiit town a, w i.c bud fi s«- 1 : 'at t .i ; ■ N il of.!.- a«.i • :■ grocery stoic u! I . l -'ri; by titic i ! ■ i < r- If )'.'! • And tic Organization to .• 1 SpUlh) lit 1, !.)■: ! 1 y to be calm 1 .. . • . irtg town due to the proposed atu ninmt'on depot • m-h t e • . t J.i« 111 plans' to ••ret ! ;•••„; !.;• i’houi : 1 fill been made to keej the ; nt Uavis' -it. ti**:. ...'.* m . a. « ttoi t was .••.am ' : : ,< ■ 0} the ha- |:< til: i tt< Ist .lust It";.:, i i t t election .. ,i 1,1-Id i‘ < i .; , : ' ago Davis, who iii’H. (.ft All »vemse sa> ),. e;ijo> t ; v,oik. Mt pttimJlv w i stable badge and ranie: a and blackjack He M-port ' ■ . operation ti n " : 1 ci;■ ret s at tivi* ifi t.‘ t -;<• c !".(*,,■ Ml'n. Bt i lit.i 1 i.iv:s ", cii" ; ■ h»ld. Mat >- Ls o G. wi. ■ , . e lite! e(j p 'hi: -Chul'J. The ic’v. con: t.i:1 1 • t i.'jh'i;:.,r lit the ti iisl.ee i. tim'd o' St, .1,1 AMEZ church a h < has held for the tv. . ;Vp yewry. He tt: other church role’s ... '! ar fi a ciiiss leader and ,■ )■: c-fein- ■* eotiinuini! > ulfans. H- .- a A" on •-i fifteen years" stnnriin - HfV Os loliitOl o • f’.'et V "1 )■: The let’CCl Lcrc-v : foil ml;:":, ,-r. Ntfvoinbw 22, •*' > per ~ -it -ct tor quota.". in Nor;}. f"a -.da .> 8 365 slri.'ve- oast vote- Pali Output of Ooinnie :"C!• .v ; U fit'" Of-1 it al.sA'e a Vet;, c I'll in t tease ir, supply p: .. t y ■ ! , ; Bccom|tsnieU os ntodet ttcly in. . pt )«"K 5 ,’." ’"’’ Jv * v j?- 11" ''pSmiSa YOI’NUKKT HIDOHIST- Pan-1 'it * MHf dit Nehru, Prim* Mini-ter of Luisa i »/J fr| and Buniifv Prirm Minitlrr *U. Nil, !>«>(■ Willi 10-year old l.tma MBWB|&yMMHW| Rinpoche of Thiki* the yf>anue' . ■' ] M 1 1 ~ ” “ * i XŹŻ !t> s| l-l ttvisi: tOf \ tO! A i* \»; it« 11* \ 11- •\s is <; i: t f k f » !T I l< IT.Ms I AJA s IOS \ K N I ION S - I ht* abt)Vt ' 5 t’lalions ! t jii I'M iiLiin t’s for tht* 1 in*4 i n!.? m'.Jn.sfrv w ill so ji» ivise ii Ivt \Uwpi*l rcjit(*is lo f t * iH f'tl l*i 1 in- (N t . Ci tii« y,> Crvdit i. niOii uji.H-i iiti-ii m Nui tu Caro • i.aa by b- K.\ai:.M»r 1 : • • juil. Lliion tit Cmlf,. County With ... ..iis.it .• s-b" T*u- J T:u.* A v’.•»*; si« ;> I. U.n >-:i was ;w..-ai)/t.} i;j HHV:, and with the ■ A-ijdiri-..* of iis itUh yt-ar. out? out jol every if.'i Nef.rtM-s in G.is.f.m i 1 i.itipt '. a•• in;,. c- i th:.-. suc icessfti: euypro ) e ot'gijtii.’.atipn I which mt- r;.1.",t ti the lei , i of ItV >.i the A: gill In it only 10 (jtih ;ionia. to. < al.su i!n otmiio-.ti the :tMi*nt,t T pt saving and insti in'.oti A,is; e: t.iiilished crtidii sfai'.U ---.... for Negro.;, in 18. .•ommunlty ,i ‘"at !h->il soil-id m ! r.ave been . dt.-tie ti.rut.pi, anj other medium. ‘ The • "rcanizaf kiii has encouraged ! anti tnerß" provision* for every 1 *.. 1 n tin c.p ! i :■ ■■ save re it'iari.v :e o- of its income, and in vciori: the organization has been j «."i fimtnci.il orsistunc; in building : i-harcncs, at :U!!d;rp homes, in re ppfr '.p of hutiies ".r li ibsii:c, faim-, iimiricifp", schooi folis, hos ’• :->:h*• hi! •, doe! •; mi:. > e;i, jn : . ! ntori am s. juniishiitc money for sen in.- up new htamed fanvlies p-.o i, tone j." fe: P'tting dl ; ' or -■!■■ The E.vo-isior Crcdi? Union also ■ m ".ii< - Ci>.r» t: Savings Clubs j mriii,.". the- first week in Dercm : " ; • '•)>-i iii checks ■' r: mailed lo rtf. inhere p. the comnum ifv i■■ i -arnipp thrift ihrom.h the a: stme Sovirn'b Club Plan. Tin ililphiu, Mess II Kemlrix, left, public relations counselor for 'liie Coca - Cola Company, who ts directing the convention par ticipations will be in charge of Hie Cleveland operation. He Hill be assisted by S: i I.ipseointi, Jackson ( .Miss.) Coca -Cola Bot tling Company,and Manus Neu stadter, The Louisiana Coca-Cola Hottl’iig Company. New Or leans, second and third trout left respectively. William 1 Na * lacully and student: of the Hew land High School M Gastonia is one of the great agencies hi teach me .Pul promoting' tin tit through t.'.i ■ . noi l pupils in Btis co.inlv. lie Kail's Mutual Exchange, lm operates a thrifty m tr* ry sltiir whirl, is a stibs: diary of the Excels; Credit Uni,;-; i!i. Bn..id 1 oi Directors of the Halls Mutual Exchange is as lollow: K C Gin “ ~Ae- (.«. N. Brooks Find \V (.Taw Business League Names 10 As Regional Vice-prexies >t WASHINGTON D C The Natmiiai Negro Business League this week announced the appoint ment <.’l ten regional v*ce presi dents who arc charged with the promotion of the body's nation wide accelerated program. Tic.- appointments were publie !.'■ <: by VV. Burdette Hockaduy, NNBL executive sec. ••tan. on be halt of Cincinnati businessman Horace Sudduth. who is president • n the ft- yeai old rusc;.■ - - organ ization i' or the region embracing North Carolina. South Carolina. Georgia and Georgia and Florida. George Cox, Hr insurance executive, Dur ham, N C , was named vice-pre.-i --dent Mr Cox it also first vice pi esident for the NNBL ! tie vice presided! tur region 2 r Hiit'us G. Byars, public relations director for the District Theaters c;th headquarters in Washington, D. t riiis region includes Vir ginia and the District of Colum bia . Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New 'tork. Rhode Island. Connecticut, Maine Massachusetts. Vermont. N'tvv Hampshire form region 3 which is -headed by Vice-president J. S. Bonn, Philadelphia minister I and NNBL chaplain. Di Samuella ToHy, Baton Rouge I is vice - president for region 4 which includes the states of Ala- 1 bama. Louisiana and Missis ippj ! C A. Rawls. Brownsville, Trim, funera! director and insurance' Fear Full-Scale Revolt Is in The Makin gln Africa ! Hi JULIUS J. ADAMS NKW YORK < Global! - James IR- I -uv.son, Giobai s UN Mrn-s --; pondent. who returned from Africa j recently, pessimistically expressed ; ; l'-at that a full scale revolt against • I >he French in the North African j !Colonies is imminent unless quick! I and positive action is taken by | tlic United Nations. Trouble which had been brew- I hig across North Africa for many j months, broke out in tmeonti us- 1 j able fury two weeks ago with the ; | ambush slaying of Forbid Hachert popular labor leader and staunch! , Tunisian Nationalist. Condition- j j were worsened last week with the | j slaying of two Morroeana as the j French moved swif'ly to check the ! terrorism before the situation is j blown into another world hot spot iSirmiai to that m Korea. Lawson, who had met Hached ! |on two occasions, in the United j j States, once in New York and a- j (gain in Washington where the Tu- i ! Hsian ■•• .15 guest at a dinner g)Ven I jin his honor by U. S labor 'offl ciaD from CIO and AF of L., and I | other groups, said: t bors, extreme right, publie re lations counselor for Memphis tTeim.f Coca - Cola Bottling Company, will go to Philadel phia fur the meeting of Omega I’si Phi fraternity. Alpha Kap pa Alpha, Alpha l*hi Alpha, Del ta Sigma Theta. Kappa Alpha I’si Sigma Gamma Rho and Zeta flll Beta will meet in Cleveland, Nabors is one of two Negro PR men serving the Memphis Bot tler fie'i) Charles Hull. Clement Bar ber. Vv E. Hicks, Wilbur Bore-on, ' Elsie Walker Edward' Timms The Hoard ,: Dtreciots .;■( Excelsior C> edit Union T. Jeters. 'Nathaniel Hastier. H C. G Ingles. Nolan Brooks, Charles Hall. N. L. Sinitii, Mrs N M Lytle N ,1 Adams, and Rev S :VS Hardia The Christ mas Savings Club director is . Charles Hal!. By CJ. K. Cheek 1 executive, was assigned to region ': a covering Tennessee, Ar kansas and Kentucky Indiana, Michigan and Ohio will be direr ted by Groiy.e Berry, Cu • | Limbus. Ohio real ••state man, ; while the seventh region is head ed by Di J K Hurt of St Louis. ■i Mo 1-ie latter region is comprised jOl Missout i, Kansas. Wyoming, Nebraska Colorado North and : South Dakota. Tim appointment far Tex a-. Qk i iahwna Arizona, Utah and New Mexico, went to the youthful exe ijcutive of the Houston Negro ’J ba,*nbrs ■'t : uiuiiHiCr Roscoe I Cavitt The tar Wt-slern states of 1 *-ahlei ri'a, Oregon, Washington, j Idaho .Wvada fall m the region • o ended by George Beavers, Dos : 1 Angeles insurance executive Kit Baldwin. Chicago ice cream manufacturer heads the 10th re- Kioh which is formed by the states of Illinois Minnesota. lowa ana Wisconsin. BFC j Because of high yields, Canada j produced an unexpectedly large ihu* - cured tobacco crop in 1953 With total production figured at j 12? > million pounds, the country ; has a surplus of about 60 million j pounds for export. Milk production tins fall has de clined less than seasonally Mild j i "-other helped keep output *'■’ H.iw. vet farmers have bad to ,*• "d mo • concentrates than usual bi-oaus-- wf tii.. .short roughage it was during a luncßeon in New York that I began U> know tin real Hached, the fighting labor leader who was i battling for the freedom of Tu • nisia, klorrocco and Algeria, and all of Africa but be. lie red this freedom could be achieved only by first organ izing the workers/’ Hached. who was violently anti communist, w.'is. leader of over than 150,000 Tunisian workers arid ;v as regarded as one of the most powerful men in North Afric.'t |Mr Lawson said lie discovered ! this beck in October when he vis ! • t‘-d Hached in Tunis “1 had arrived in Tunisia fromj Rome on October 13, ' Mr Lawson : said in recalling the visit, “when: 1 learned that Hached was at the' | Capital addressing a meeting, pres- j ; -sing h*s demand for the indepen- j j deriee of his country. Through a! I mutual friend. I reached Dim and i ja conference was set tor the fol- j j lowing day. It was on, that day j ihal I narrowly escaped death i ! when a drug store I had entered i | was blasted to bits by a bonus j ’ Minutes aftar I had left” I THE CAROLINIAN WEEK. ENDING SATURDAY DECEMBER 2c, l'mV2 1000 EXPECTED • ! TO ATTEND SIGMA MEET By ,1. BENJAMIN HORTON. JR LOUISVILLE. Kv . ~ When Phi j ! Beta Sigma Fraternrity’s 38th art- ; niversary Conclave, meeting in ! Richmond. Va„ Dec 27th - 30th, is | I eulle dto order by its national; i president, Dr. Felix .1 Brown ol 1 Richmond, fully one thousand del- j ' egates and visiting brothers are j ' expected to attend, according to C. I il. Townes, Sr,, General Chairman ut the Conclave. Following the theme of die con- i clave. Full Democracy Nothing j Less," the fraternity is having as! : its principal speaker Dr. C. V ; ' Troup, president of Fort Valley j j State College, Fort Valley, Ga j Distinguished scholar and writer. | Dr, Troup is also editor of the I Crescent, the fraternity's celebrat-; ; ed magazine He has contributed: ; numerous articles and poe ms ; J which have appeared >n many ma gazines and anthologies. Having; ! received his undergraduate degree j 1 from Morris Brown College, Dr j Troup later took his master’s and; ! doctorate’s from Atlanta Uriiwr sily and from Ohio State, respec- j lively. Representing some 190 chapters, Sigma men will come from evijry rtchon of the United State.- and from West Africa and other sec-i lions of the world. headquarters for the conclave * have been provided for at the new i George Washington Carver Hcu ■ Schott:. 1110 West LeigC Sheet and , a* Slaughter’s Hotel. BFC - ISRAEL! PLIGHT IS DISCUSSED IN CRISIS MAG BA 1,7 IMQRF Md —Neither v .solution nor even an attitude- to-; , ward the Arab problem in Israel it ems to have crystallized. Dr, j Irene Diggs, Morgan State Col lege professor, writes jn the car-• ; rent issue of Crisis Magazine, Dr. Diggs, who is a member of I Die Morgan sociology department, i ! s P<*nt some time jn Israel last! year. j She writes that there ‘s a tre-1 ; rnendous difference in the stand- - aid of living between Jew and Arab in Israel An attempt is be •nit made, however, to make Arab: fuli legal citizens without dnairim- , inatioti. she writes Send Four News To Us In explaining the incident. Mi ; Lawson said, “1 had a headache! from my air trip and had asked' to be shown to a drug store. Bud- j ! Civilly, i was rushed Ullough a | ! side door and onto the street J had 1 reached a point only a tew yards; I from trnhe place when a terrific; i blast was heard and the building i was suddenly in splinters and de i bris. Lawson said Hached was a sym bol of the struggle of the workers of North Africa to gam their ; rights and of the Colonies to a ! i-kievt? independence ,He sees in Hached’s death the possibility of j | native unrest that could blow the j ltd off the powder keg that bus | j been on the verge of exploding | ; for some time Mr. i-awson feel.s ; that the trouble in North Africa i | could have serious consequences j !on the welfare of the United ; i States in Kie cold war against j i Communism. This battleground i i role in the fight against, Hitler's j Germany, could provide a mo l j strategic base in any attempt on ; the part of the Russians to over- ! run Europe. KEMEcM.Bfc.-KlN<.* I’KAHL DARBOK > — l . S. Naval Pier in New York on Sunday, itocem!i&iv ( Se&man Harry Houck, ono of the few survivors of the I'ss I tah when the* hatflcship wan «uok iisj K - the harbor of Peart Hath or I! years ago, recounts his ajh: for four youngsters who were visiting Ih® !•; yMilitstry Sea Transport, fetation, ( N : ewspre*s» Photo,) * * US Delegation 1 o General Assembly Represented On Issue By Mrs. E. Sampson STATEMENT BN Till HONOR ABLE MRS. EDITH SAM 1 ’SON. UNITED STATES ALTERNATE REPRESENTATIVE. IN PI ENTRY SESSION ON THE ITEM PRO POSED BY FRANCE. USE OF THE CITA TION DIED FOR iHE UNITED NATIONS" IN RESPKCI TO PERSONS WHO !N CERTAIN CIRCUMSTAOES ARE Kit .ED 1 THE SERVICE OF THU UNITED NATIONS. Mr. President; i! is with revorenct that I spTak now. on behalf of the United States, supporting the resolution presented to* t*his Assembly by the Delegation of France. It is indeed : , 'Ap IBGESHHBBSrait /\W' Wm ■ / t&sSsM'' 'smw ■ *v- • - -. ',' rJ > s' “V' A? ■«. ' MHP *aw|»3|fe£ r *' %•*- .tjspSߧ« ||^^^|j^Wßp^M^^^^iai^^B|KjWp^TS^Mr^' : ’.:-.-:-<;^^i | ■ • : - ._ ' ’ NSASC OfTHT.RS: Cooking i over tin* t ons! Hut ion that wifi , chart their course, are the a«*w iv elected «fli('frs »f tin North Carolina Association of student Councils electee) at the Decent- ; Iter, 4-5 Convention held in Dur ham. N. V. at the Hillside K?h j School, ieu to right are: Acidic j Poston, V ire President, Green 1 Bethel High S; Jiottl, fUdlthg Spring's, K. C.; Thomas Trues- ; fitting that t« Unite, t, thief «!„- have died for the United Notion-, • nould he proposed by the great Fnuch Repo blit. whose tradition o! libl ;! . and human js soivu: ,o enowned throughout the world. The resolution now bi !■ :’• u ---ellti eonftu a in.irk of liMh-.i' ii[ Unis i who have lot then hvt 111 the cause of the United Me and in tin- cause oi po:K in thinking us till:-; pro-jH- dl, olir n aid- and hearts turn to Korea. It ’■v.i'- there that the United Na tions met the challenge of aggres sion .in thi fir. t collective action .in history by an international or ganization | dale. Treasurer, Second VI «rd j High School, Charlotte; Joseph ! Cogff, President, lillfeidr H>gh School, Dur hair.. N. <'.; Dora Simpson. Secretary. Wm. Penn High School. High Point, N. C.i ■ and Ronald Schooler. Partiamen tanan, Hillside High School, | Durham. h. t.’„ Mrs. «i. l. ! Thompson, sponsor of Hiils<<