I PAST/ OF TH6 SUPREME COURT PREP SCOTT ^ , WHEN $COrr WAS TAKEN F0CW ' OAVe TgBRirogy IMTDA PBBB- STATE A ^KONP Tiwe, HE IN$nTUlB> A 50IT F0I2. HIS R2eePo«.we sopsBMe cotier DKIOeP THAT WHEN We (BMSTITUnON VIHS ADOPreP,NECriaoeWBaENYK«WJ6PA5 S CITIZEN'S.. PI«/W'SSeP/ PLE^yyi;FgC6(Ji$0N' $UPR6Ai«- £Ot«r uwap state- jiMceo LAWS RsGotaiNer SBimrioN OF I2ACE$ IN jm^PlXTATION Capitol Close-Up -(Oontinued from Page Two) Government (Congressman....... Dawson, chairing the House Conjmittee on Government Operations, please take note), over 47,000 police man hours, and )l22,522 in police salaries. $357,248 was collected, accor ding to the official survey just completed by a committee of three, including a District of Columbia Police Inspector. Citizen Earmark Checks A barrage of checks ear marked “good after integra- I eauM of integratlMi. ThB five Winiton childriD are' all mem bers of All Souls’ Sunday School. Sterling Brown's Jasif Clots Howard Unlvnraity’* Dr. Sterling Brawn—EngUah pro feasor and Po«t of the People— has lust “graduated” a second class in Jazz, part of the Ne^ Classes Program in adult edu cation. Fred Bamaey. national ly known authority op Jazz, who has authored several books on its origin and evolu tion, met with the class ot twotty in an allrday session at the Brown home in Brookland, last week, telling about his trip through the South, where he has been studying folk mu sic on a Guggenhein grant, in terviewing and wore-recording the voices of old singers, which may be IdM, otherwise, to other generations, as a valuable part of the history of American mu sic and culture- Dr. Brown'^s course in folk music, which includes study of frontier ballads, blues, and th» beginnings of ragtime, is en livened by personally-collected data and records—many un available elsewhere. Many folk-music devotees who not enrolled in the course, en joyed the final session. Many of the members are personnel from local book and record shops, and young couples who waht to understand what they already enjoy. Integration here is in reverse! Mississippians Learn the Hard Way Recently some white stu dents from Mlsaisaippl, vaca tioning in the Capital, became involved In a street brawl with some Negro you^ whom they encountered on we street in a part of town not customarily visited by sightseers. As told in the daily press, one of the visitors “nished” the approach ing Negroes, demanding that they get out of the way. The impetuous visitors ended up in the hospital. A Missippi solon on Capitol Hill demanded that “protection” be provided for youth visiting the Capital After ^"re^H»l?ec had been made by physicians, the visitors ted that they were the ai sors. What the visitors needed, it seems, was the “protection’' of the lesson of respect for others that they failed to learn "back home.” Poul Comely to Leave Freed man’s Freedmen’s Hospital Medical Director Paul Comely, who is also Professor of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Howard Medical School, has re signed his Freedmen’s post and hopes to serve full-time as pro fessor at the Medical School. Dr. Comely, who is a native of Detroit, did undergraduate and graduate work at Wayne Uni versity and the University of Miciiigan and holds a medical doctorate—from the University of Michigan. He - interned at Lincoln Hospital in Durham, N. C., and is well-known in public health circles through out the country. SATPBDAT, JPNK 25. IHS THK CAKHJitA TIMES Plans Listed For Principals- Supervisors Conference At NCC Preliminary plans for the Sixth Annual state-wide Prin- cipals-Supervisors Conference to be held at the North Caro lina College here Wednesday through Friday, August 10-12, have tieen announced by Dr. J. H. Taylor, Director of the NCC lummer School. Dr. Karl H. Bern*, Assistant Swretary f(jr Fidd Operations of the National Mucation As sociation, and Dr. J. Rupert Picott, Executive Secretary of the Virginia 'teachers Associ ation, wiU be the principal speakers for the conference. More than 150 Negro princi pals and supervisors are ex pected to attend the sessions. Cooperating with Dr. Taylor in the planning for the confer ence are the following princi pals and supervisors: H. D. Cooper, Principal, Robert L- Vann High School, Ahoskie; Ikliss U. R- Fowler, Jeanes Su pervisor, Johnston County Schools, Smithfield; Oliver N Freeman, Jr., Morgan Elemen tary School, Charlotte; H. K, Griggs, Principal, Booker T Washington High School, Reidsville; Miss Ethel Mae Lewis, Jeanes Supervisor, Cra ven County Schools, New Bern; B. Stewart, Principal, Ad kins High S!hooI, Kinston; E. Waddell, Kingville High School, Albemarle; J. Earl Whitley, Supervisor, Guilford County Negro Schools, Greens boro; Mn. A. O. Williams, Jeanes Supervisor, Vance County Negro Schools, Hen derson; and Mrs. Nina A- Wil son, Supervisor, Fairmont Col ored Schools, Lumt)erton. Returns To N. C. College As Instructor Dr. Maude J. Yancey, out standing North Carolina Col lege alumna in health educa tion and professor of health education at Southern Univer- ' states. sity, BttteA Kod(s, L*., rrtiim •d to N.C.C. ttals montli in the const's Health EdHc»- tkm Workshop. A native ot Wilsofi, Dk. Yma- cey received bcr B-8. defrw from Knoxville CoUece. The young health educator baa the distinction of holding two aao- ters degrees from North Caro lina College. She waa awnled an M. S. in 1»40 and in 1»4« she earned a Master of Sdence PubUc Health Edueation. She received her doctorate de gree at the University o4 Michi gan. In addition to teaching at Barber Scotia, Knoxville, and North Carolina Colleges, and Southern Uo.iversfty, Dr. Yan cey has done special research in Marine Life at the Marine Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass. She has worked one year as health consultant in the State Department of Public In struction in Raleigh. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, L. B. Yancey of 913 East Green Street, Wilson. Dr. Yancey is among several distinguished health educators participating in the six-weeks project which has students en rolled from several southern tlon” and a rising number ot outright refusals to contribute fiurther to the segregated clubs met collecting police during the drive just ended. It is estimated that 195S coUectlona are $120, 000 short of the expeeted goal of $350,000. Quite by coincidence. Com missioner Chairman Samuel Spencer, who had just held get-nowhere conference with the Police Boys Clubs manage ment, has now called another conference with Club president Fred A. Smith, “to learn if any plan has been developed!” We think that the Clubs have KENTUCKY STRAIGHT years oM $9,80 4/f Q». mmmmummduoi already had more than ample time to come up with tangible evidence of their intent to de segregate. Your money is also involved as long as the District derives part of its support from Federal funds. Under the circumstances we believe that the educational value of a civil stdi would be important—to your Capital, to the orientation of the Com missioners, and to the thinking of the developing boys and erf the management of the Police Boys Clubs. This column will give its best support should suit be filed. Carmel Marr Speaks of Leader ship Carmel Carrington Marr, the young Brooklyn lawyer who is Near East Area Adviser to UN Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, addressed Gamet-Pat> terson Junior High School graduates at their Commence ment, last week. Mrs. Marr majored In political science and was a Phi Beta Kappa at Hun ter College, New York, before joining the U. S. Mission to the United Nations, after five years of private practice. Said Mrs. Marr to the graduates: “As young Americans living in the capital of a cotmtry which occupies a position of^ leadership in the world, today, you have a unique position.... You live in an age of great con cern for the welfare of others. Never before in the history of mankind has the mental and physical well-iieing of little people in far-off places been such an important factor in the lives of our citizens...do not permit your leadership ability, your contribution by the way of new outlooks, or your zeal to be thwarted by persons who fear loss of position because of your entrance on the horizon— or who underestimate you...” Grandson of Virginia Educator Is Cum Laude Grad in Conn. Marcellus B. Winston, of Washington, grandson of the late Edward Howe, superinten dent of Suffolk, Va., secondary schools, was graduated cum laude, last week, from Hotch kiss preparatory School at Lakeville, Conn. He is Hotch- Idas’ first Negro student- Young Wltiston, wfao is 18, was graduated from Banneker Junior High School, here, four years ago, and entered Totch- iciss the following B’all. At Ban neker he was active in dra matics and was known as a "regular boy.” At the Connecti cut school he was a three-letter man, playing- football, starring at track, and captain of the viarsity basketball team, while winni^ the school's poetry pelae, an award for excellence in English, and a scholarship to Harvard University, which he will enter this Fall. His mother, the former Eva L. Howe, and his father, Mar- cellus A. Winston, a postal em ployee at the Capital, modesOy ascribe his interest In learning to the influence of his lato grandfather, who was active in education at Manassas Institute and at Blackstone, Va. His si*' ter, Judith, is a 10S5 graduate ot Dunbar Higb School. 'Rte Winstoa family, Unitarians, are all members of All Souls Uni tarian Churchy whose minister,, the Rev. A. Powell Davies, re cently* received an award from Inspiration House and the Honorary Ph.D. degree from Howard University, in recogni tion of his devotion to the Every Department Stars In A&P's SUIWMER SHOW OF SAVINGS NAPKINS^ 2!^‘29c LEMON PIES'^. 39c SPECIAL! A&P FANCY Fruit Cocktail No. 21/2 30^z. Can SPKIAL! POPULAR BRANDS Gum Clwwing Box of 20 Pkgs. SPECIAL! ANN PACE Salad Dressing Quart' lor Crushed Pineapple 2(m>z. Wekh Frozen Priced Juice Grape 39 2 SAVINGS ON A&P's EXCLUSIVES SAIL DETERGENT 49c GT. Pkg. White House Evap. MILK 3 c^i^35c OUR OWN TEA Mb. Pkg. 49c SHORTENING DEXO 73c - • - Sultana Short Grain RICE 3 -43c DAILY DOG FOOD 3 il25£ These prices effective thnmgh Saturday, JUNE 25th »AP l^arkets 1 HOUR MARTINIZINC (Incorporated) FOB THB BBST IN DBT CLBANING AND SERVICE. 490 WEST MAIN STBBET FIVE POINTS FUEL OIL - KEROSENE TBUIPBONl BONDED 8-1217 ■■ DRIVERS METERED DELIVERY * OIL DBUMS * 8TOBAGE TANKS FOB lALB KENAN OIL COMPANY mz.L8BOBO BOAD 0CBHAM, N. O. KNOW KNOW When you bank here, you'deal with fellow townsmen, who are sincerely interested in this community and in you. Close and friendly relationships with customers is a pleasant feature of this home-town bank. Mechanics And Farmers Bank DURHAM AND RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA Gordon^s Gin IMa aMIML»wnMmUBraMttM • MMmMV Wir.im.IMA