PAGE SIXTEEN \South Not Armed To Resist Integration: ’ Faulkner VCC Prof Attends A Workshop \ DURHAM Dr.™ .T. C, Finney, professor of education at North Carolina College, and director of the . anmer workshop for princi pals, attended a Southern Educa tion Foundation Workshop at Tus cegee, Alabama, March 28-31, Work sh o p directors from ! throughout the south evaluated j as t year’s (programs and com pleted plans for the IPSfi summer programs at the sessions. The NCC summer workshop will bo hold hero Jtyie 25-August Sponsors are the NCC summer school, the State Department of Instruction anc! The Souhern Edu cation Foundation, ' Eight Teams To Compete In The filey Belays MARSHALL, Texas -- (AND - Sight teams, representing Texas southern, Xavier and Southern iniversities. and Tuskegee Insti tute. Prairie View. Philander smith and Wiiey colleges, will ake part in the 15th annual Wiley telays here Aptil 21. The Wiley College Athletic De >artment listed 15 events for the neet, including a sprint medley, j wo milo, 880 and 440 relays. I 5 feature attraction will be i he Harry ,T. Long Memorial Mile lelay. The event was named for he bite former Wiley football oath. T'-xas Southern, aced by Brans ord Watson. 1952 NIAA sprint rhamipion, is expected to make the 1 reins' rough for the other corn ■eiing teams. Add a Den, Bedroom Or Bath to Your Home! Call Us For Any Job We build New Domes: and Repair and Modernize Old Ones Large or Small Residential or. Commercial Property m REALTY 00. 129 E, Hargett St., Raleigh PHONE 2-0956 MtmCMJIfIM-WWMffnWNHtntw ir>.w»n«UHi mmmmimu, .KwawKSiMEMMaim naan. PRODUCTS I |. PERSHING ROAD RALEIGH PHONE 4-2557 ■ OLIVE STREET KINSTON PHONE 2514 Saving I means <& ' a bank f ii »» us! \ ’^S/ Os course! it’s assy to malt# * deposit or • withdrawal. Your money is safe because it’s protected by sound management and insured by the F.D.I.C. Earns good interest, too, and it's available whenever you want it . . , every coni. 8E WISE ... SAVE IN A SANK! FIRST-CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY * ■■'Mm?- ■*» Ward Singers Hit \ $35,000 Wk. Mark \ NEW YORK Whether it’s on the church circuit in Dixie or in a Harlem rock and roll vaudeville house, Clara Ward and the Ward Gospel Singers still break boxof fice records, Closing out a successful week’s stand at the Apollo Theatre here as headliners of an all-religious show, the Ward group drew 22,000 peo ple thru the doors of this pop ular entertainment house. The wee k s boxoffice receipts Publications Confab At NCC DURHAM—High school students from throughout the State of North Carolina are being invited to a Publications Conference which will take place at North Carolina College at. Durham on April 20. The conference will be designed for faculty advisors and students working on newspapers and year books in the high school. The aim of the conference, acording to H. G. Dawon, director, will be to im prove the quality of high school publications in North Carolina and to bring together student and faculty members for the purpose of discussing common problems of newspaper and yearbook produc tion. The day-long meeting will consist of two groups—one de voted to newspapers and the other to yearbooks. In each group, lectures, demonstra tions, and panel discussions will be carried on throughout the day. A two-liour social in the women’s gymnasium at the college will climax activi ties of the day. According to Dawson, the ■con ference will afford instruction in the areas of design, writing, lay out, financing, and organizing both newspapers and yearbooks. were estimated to he $35,000. In the manner that has made them household words in the gos pel quartet field, the Philadelphia group drew thunderous applause at every show and each time hac'f to beg off stage. Their singing spreaded over into the audience and at each show j people were observed jumping up from their seats and shouting “praise the Lord,” or making some expression of happiness as the spirit moved them. Special emphasis will he placed ; on small budget newspapers and j yearbooks with specific instruc- \ tion bemg given on promoting and ; financing high school publications, i There will also be a series of j Panel discussions related to prob lems high school journalist face in publishing newspapers and yearbooks. A special course is planned for faculty advisors. Publica tion specialists from North Carolina College, Duke Uni versity, the University of North Carolina and from the ranks of professional journal ists are being invited to serve j as consultants and intruders for the meeting. Registration will take place from 8:30 until 10:30 Friday morn ing, April 20. The sessions will begin immediately afterwards. Shirley T. James, editor of the Campus Echo, Walter Davis, ad ministrative assistant, C. R. Stand bac k, yearbook representative, and Dawson are on the planning committee. Mrs. Himes Gets Grant For Study ; DURHAM—Mrs. Estelle Jones Himes, instructor in French at North Carolina College, has re ceived a study grant to spend 8 weeks in France at the summei seminar for teachers o£ Frenc! language and literaure. The grant comes from the U ted States Education Commission in France. Mrs. Himes was one of several United States teachers selected for this special seminar. Mrs. Himes, * grduate a* East High School, Columbu . Ohio, received the B.S. »«d MJi. degrees from Ohio Slat* University. She spent one year summer study at Ecole des 'Letters, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, In 1938, j • Mrs. Himes is the daughtei of Lloyd Jones, 1339 Monberry j St., Columbus. Ohio. She is married to Dr. Joseph S. I Himes, NCC professor of so ciology. In 1943 the NCC French teacher wrote an article on "The Vocabu lary Difficulty of Beginning Text- Books in French” for the ench Review in collaboration v Dr. James Tharp of Ohio Sta! Uni versity. She is a member of Alph Zeta Omega chapter of Alpha "Capps Alpha Sorority. Prior to joining NCC’s staff Mrs. Himes taught in the Coin nbus, Ohio, public schools during 1934- 47. She also taught at Last High School in Zanesville, Ohio, iring 1952-53, The award is effective for the period June 21-August 18, 1956. Mrs. Himes is scheduled to leave Ne.w York City on June 22 on the S. S. United States. Prices paid by North Carolina farmers for most feeds on January 15, 1950, remained on about the same level as a month earlier. More eggs, chickens, and turkeys are likely to produce on farms in 1958 than in 1955, and prices may j average a little lower. DRIVE SAFELY!!j PATTERSON CLUB HOLDS EASTER PARTY—-The Patter- ! son Social Club held its annual ' Easter party at the. clubhouse, E. Cabarrus Street Saturday night. The menu consisted of barbecue and chicken with all the acces sories. Included in the photo are Mrs. Ruby Mayo, president; Miss Marie Taylor, secretary; Mrs. Mary Jane I,anc, treasurer; Miss Bronze Star Medal To ROTC Staff Member BALTIMORE, Md.—The Bronze j Star Medal, the nation's sixth ; highest military honor, has been j awarded to Master Sergeant Hu bert Kenney of the Morgan State College military science depart ment for “meritorious service in ground operations against the en emy” in Korea in 1953. The medal was awarded to | Sergeant Kenney during a sjlr - Hpjjl it/j __ IP' * ’ _ ■ <":fj fillll ■■ ' •* .BBgm HONORS LATE EDUCATOR | —Misses Grace Dungee, junior, j of Greensboro, left, and Char- j lotto Brown, senior, of Jackson- j viile. Florida, open curtain un- i veiling portrait of the late Dr. 1 April UNCF Aircasts Fete Four Top Choirs NEW YORK, N, Y.-The April schedule for the series of weekly college choir programs presented in cooperation with the United Negro College Fund, over the A mercian Broadcasting Company’s radio network, was announced to day by W. J. Trent, Jr., executive director of the Fund. On Sunday, April J, the Fisk University choir will be heard in a program made up of selections appropriate to the anniversary of Easter Sunday. April 8, t.hc Morris Brown Col lege choir will offer a special program to mark the opening of the 1958 United Negro College Fund appeal. April 15, the choir of Clark Col lege, Atlanta, Georgia, will pre sent group of religious numbers. April 22, the choir of Lane Col lege, Jackson Tennessee, will be heard; and, on April 2S, the clo sing program will be offered by the choir of Xavier University, New Orleans, Louisiana. During part of April, the choir of Lane College will make a nine state tour for a series of public concerts in twenty cities. The states in which the choir will bo heard are Tennessee, Illinois, Mis souri, Kansas, Nebraska, Indiana, I Wisconsin, Michigan and Kentuc ky. I TWK CARDLIFIAn j Verla Mae McKoy, Miss Mamie McKoy, Miss Mary Wilcox. Miss Blonnie O’Neal, Mrs. Leathta | Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Taylor, Mr. and Mrs, Nathaniel Mayo, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lane, Jordcn Taylor, Jesse Taylor, Laurence, Levister, Maurice Haywood, Robert Louis and j Duke Peebles,—STAFF PHOTO BY CfIAS. R. JONES. ceremony held recently at the Maryland Military District by Colone.l Bruce R, King, of the Array Reserve Advls or y Group. Sergeant Kenney earned the coration while serving as a trst Sergeant of Headquarters ’onvpany, First Battalion, 17th In antry Regiment, in Korea from April 3 to August. 15, 1953. | David D. Jones, for 29 years president of Bennett College, j Greensboro, at Sunday cere j monies in Student Union Buitd * ing named in his memory. The United Negro College Fund choir programs originate from New York and are heard over the ABC radio network, Sunday mornings from 10:35 to 11:00. Cashier Kills Customer In j Birmingham BIRMINGHAM,~Aia. (ANP)— An argument over a 85 cents meal resulted in a Negro customer be ing charged with murder. Police said Winston Taylor, j 40, was shot by Alvls Lloyd j Kuhn, 58. at the cafeteria for Negroes where Kuhn worked, j Witnesses related that Taylor had taken a tray of food from the cafeteria counter but hadn’t paid for it. Kuhn was tyring to eject Taylor, who was described as be ing drunk, when the shooting oc curred. Milk production in the United j States totalled 121 1-2 .million I pounds in 1955—■ the highest on j record. | United States Won’t Allow Dixie To Resist Or Secede MEMPHIS, Term. (ANP)—Prize winning author William Faulkner said Monday that the south “is not armed to resist the United States” over the segregation issue, “be cause the United States is neither going to force the south nor allow the south either to resist or se cede." Faulkner, winner of both the Nobel and Pulitzer prizes, made his remarks in commenting on recent published reports that he had said that if be had to choose between the United j States and Mississippi “then ! I’ll choose Mississippi. I would fight for Mississippi against the United states even if it j meant going out into the streets and shooting Negroes.” ; My "Madam, let’s see your union card!” FOR A BETTER WELL CALL j HEATER WEI.E CO. RALEIGH, N. C. 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