DURHAM NORTH CAROLINA 0 a yo3 m wa m m m CO ^3. ^ Z' -' '84- DU Q m 83 m a Q O Arcs inscribed on the above map of the city | of Durham show the location and asea served by the existingr fi^e stations in city. Proponents for the location of a fire station in Haiti section at I afford the city maximum coverage with a mini- the intersection of Pekoe and Fayetteville Struts I mum of overlapping, point out that the map indicates this site would ) ■age by both Houiea oi Con* greu by a two-thirds vote and ratification by thr«e-fOufths of the states before becoming law. Meanwhile a number of civil rights organizations have joined the NAACP in protesting again st the proposed amendment. -Girl- (Continued from Page One) The parents had her jailed on March 17, wiiere she has re mained until now while her pa rents and welfare officials con tinue to talk about the situation. -Federation- (Continued from Page One) Harriet Tubman Branch of the YWCA. Attending w ore Mesdames Aggrey, Hardy Liston, Char lotte; Norman Darden and Anna B. Johnson, Wil.son; L. B. Cib- son and S. T. Enloe, Shelby; Emmaline Hawkins, Concord; Maggie Jones, 'and Sally Orr, Asheville; Esther Barnes, Greensboro; Alice P. Collins, Smithfield; Edna B. Taylor and Annie P. Foster, Pinehurst; Fan nie T. Newsome. Rich Square; E. L. Spellman, Elizabeth City; Cora ' Hawkins, Warrenton; George W. Logan, E. R. Merrick, Sybil 'Taylor and Miss Connie Young, Durham; and Dr. Char lotte H. Brown, Sedalia. Pictured above b the new Kroger Store which will be opened in Durham on April 5. Located in the newly con structed Forest Hills shopping center, the mammoth store will contain floor space of 18,000 square feet, making it one I of the largest super markets in the State. Among its other features will be air conditioning ai^d modem furnishings throughout. -Alphas- (Continued from I'age One) of NCC. “New Careers and Vo cations" was the subject of the panel, and Hobart Jerrett 'of Branett Colleg ■; Dr. W. H. Ro binson of NCC; Dr. Alfonso El der of NCC, anJ W, H. WlUlwns of Jackscr, Mii'sissippl, were speakerF. following ttie first sessions, delegates were taken on a tour of the North Carolina Mutual Home Office at 3:30, following which they were guests of the company at a dinner in the In surance Compaiiv’s cafeteria. A public meet was held at 7:S0 at Mt. Vernon Baptist Church and will feature Frank L. Stanley, General President of Alpha Phi Alpha, as main speaker. The puolic was invited to attend this meeting. Preceding the Formal dance at the Armory, the members of Tau Gamma Delta Sorority sponsored a Social Hour for all delegates and their wives at the Algonquin Club House. The dance was from 10:30 until 2. Saturday’s activities include two panels, reports from re gional and nat::nal officers, elections, a banquet, and a close!) “All Greek” dance. ^ The first panel will be heard at 9:30, |with undergraduates from Morehouse College, Shaw University, Florida AfcM Uni versity, and North Carolina Col lege taking part. "New Challen ges in Social and Cultural Life’’ will be the panel theme. Following the discussions, re gional and national officers will give reports of the year’s activi ties, and this will be followed by the election of officers. The convention photo will be taken on the steps of the Edu cation Building at North Caro lina CoUege at 1:10. At 2:30, the final panel, titled “New Challenges in Politics and Pub lic Administration,” will take place. Jacob R. Henderson of Atlanta, Ga.; T. F. Cathcart, HiUsboro; and J. T. Taylor of NCC will serve on the panel, which will be moderated by A. H. Anderson, principal of the Kimberly Park School of Win- RUY NOW! S Ford Ton Pickup Clean %eith m m 695 S3 M Victoria TIC 1295 b» r. M. s,lnc. rOBDOMAnC A Utde **Ci r%. Sanitary And Liberty Markets 413 N. MANGUM ST. ^ 349 W. MAIN ST. LIVE BETTER FOB LESS TALL PET MILK, Cail THICK FAT BACK, Ib TURNIP GREENS, lb Firm Ripe BANANAS, lb. . . STALK CELERY, Each Large GRAPEFRUIT, 2 for':.. RIB SIDE MEAT,, lb FRESH PORK BRAINS, lb. . . SRIALL PIG EARS, lb XEAN GROUND BEEF, lb,. .. TENDER BEEF ROASTS, lb. . LEAN BEEF STEW, lb Local Country EGGS, doz., 39c PURE LARD-4 Ib 49c Red Label LUZIANNE lb. 79c SWIFT'S mi 31b. a 12|c 10c 15t 29c ston-Salem. Attorney Harry Groves of Fayetteville will be the banquet speaker at the affair which takes place in the North Caro lina College dining hall at 6 p.m. The banquet is open to all dele gates and ^thftir wives and guests. The VAll Greek” da.ic.:: will take place in the Women’s Gym on the campus from 9-12:00. This will mark the close of the convention. (Continued from-Page One) ^nly wrote the story in the Star which accused the Bishops, but also stated that he had docu mentary evide:ice to substan tiate his charges. - Bishop. H. T. Medford^, who presides over the North Caro lina conference, in which Rev. Bell’s church is located, de manded that the editor bring charges against t^e writer of the article. The charges were drawn and sent to Rev. R. V. Faulkner who is believed to be preparing ac tion for a trial and eventual ex pulsion of the young pastor. Rev. Bell said that he would welcome a trial and declared that he does not plan to recant if and when a trial is held. -Exercises- (Continued from Page One) Mary E. Terry with S. W. Payne at the organ. A special selection will be given by the Alumni Choral Ensemble initiated by Vivian Windley of the Class of ‘41. Greetings will be given by President J. Ward Seabrook for the College, by Charles Allen for the student body, and for the Alumni by W. E. Smith, Class of '39, President of Alumni Asso ciation and Principal of Mag nolia School in Dublin County. Mrs. Romaine Clark Brown, Class of 1947, of the Richmond, Virginia City Schools, will pre sent a portrait for the Alumni^ group. Ceremonies in honor of for mer Presidents, R. Harris and E. E. Smith, will be held at the E. E. Smith Monument on the campus and will be led by BYank C. Weaver, Principal of Roberson School in Edgecombe Covmty. Alumni Ends Drive Perhaps towering above all else will be the culmination of the long-range effort on the part of the Alumni Association to present to the College the sum of $5,000 to boost the current scholarship effort. To meet this objective projects are moving forwand -in many communities in the state. In the afternoon alumni and frfends will see the Broncos in action in the CIAA conference baseball game against the Shaw University “Beaj'” outfit of Ra leigh, North Carolina.' The alumni dance will go forward in -the Lilly Gymnasium in the evening. -Change- (Continued from Page One) their senators urging them to vote against the proposed amendment which requires pas- Stop And Shop Super Market Fresh DRESSED FRYERS lb. 33c CURED PORK PICNIC lb. 33c VEAL STEAK lb. 39c Fresh Country SAIJ^SAGE .. -lb. 25c ALL MEAT FRANKS lb. 33c RIB STEW BEEF „ .lb. 15c PIG FEET lb. 10c SUGAR 5 lbs. 47c Stop And Shop Super Market 544 EoMt PeUigi^w Stt}eet Phone S-5351 1 = Defense Of Segregation-By S. C. Editor Is Attacked By Roy Wilkins NEW YORK Replying to “The Southern. CasQ Against Desegregation,” an article published recently in Harper’* magazine^-flAACP Ex ecutive Secretary Roy Wilkins declared in a latter that the_ article’s “sophisticated defense of racial intolerance is no more rational than Senator Eastland’s crude denunciations.” “The Southern Case” was written by Thomas R. Waring, a South Carolinian Portions of Wilkins’ letter were published in the March Issue of Harper's. War{ng, Wilkins said, “brush es aside everything extept race as a cause of the Negro's alleged backwardness.” The “shades and alleys” in in which the southern Negro ivas to live, “the outlying hollows and gulleys and railroad cuts that formed .his ‘residential areas’ were to inspire the ‘home improvement’ deplored as mis sing By Mr. Waring,” the NAACP official commented. “The overcrowded, under equipped one-room school, the racial pay scale-and job ceilings, the demeaning etiquette of the segregation system, the exclu sion from the ballot box—all tkese had nothing to do with development. That vast num bers Of Negroes failed this ob stacle course means (according to the ‘Southern Gentlemen’ of the Waring school of thought) that the race is racially inade quate.” * “The remedy they propose, Wilkins noted, ‘ is ' to continue the same system, to have ‘medd'f lers’ keep out and let time (2055, one South Carolinian has said) and the friendly, thought ful considerate Southern whites take care of the whole thing.” The NAACP executive secre tary asserted that “the past year has been one of great disillu sionment to many white South erners. ‘Their’ Negroes, whom they said did not want desegre gation, have not stepped for ward to ask the continuance of segregation.” Responding to Waring’s as sertion that the South’s racial situation calls for discussion, Wilkins said "the opposition doesn't want to discuss a solu tion of desegregation problems; it wants only to secure agFee- ment to a continuance of the status quo laced with such Im provements as the whites, in their lieneficienee, and in their own good time,. jf;ay choose to make.” “The Negro contends that this is no basis for discussion, mo- derate or otherwise. To expect him to think, talk and act as though the Supreme Court had never spoken is pure fantasy, unworthy of debate.” The following births were re ported to the Durham City and County Health Department dur ing ' the week of Marcii 1!> through March i24. Robert and Frances Thorpe, boy. Jesse and Mary Eubanks, girl. Theodore and Lottie Odom, girl. Chesebrough and Ruby- teen Williams, boy. Louis and Gloria Dixon, girl. Charlie and Josephine Barrett, boy. Clyde and Otha Mae Bailey, boy. John and Mary Poole, girl. Ben jamin and Annie Page, boy. Clarence and Cleora Burch, boy. James and Dorothy Hester, boy. Mr. and Mrs. Matthew of Statesville announce the en gagement of their daughter, Miss Bonnie Lee Reid (above) of Durham to Finlev Atwater of Pittsburgh, Pa. He is the ton of Mrs. Martha Atwater. The wed ding will take place June 1, at First Calvary Baptist Church in Durham.' Door» Open 12:01 —Dance 1 A> M. VntU ★ ★ ★ Three Star Attraction BIG EASTER MIDNIGHT DANCE ★ NAPPY BROWN •'DON’T BE AmRY" THE PENGUINS "EARTH ANGEL" ...Plus... Idy Lucas and his Orchestra “Diane” ★ ★ ★ “Heavenly FMher’* Durham Armory-:-Sun..^ April 1 Admission; Advance—$1.50 At Door (Inol. Tax) fS.M Blaster News BRIGHT AND CAY HATS 198 098 ® And "i EXCITING STYLES . . . NEW AND LOVELY IN EVERY DETAIL HAVE JUST ARRIVED . . . COME IN AND SEE THEM NOW. And MANY STYLES AND FABRICS TO SUIT YOUR OUTFIT. LADKS DRESSES SMART LINES SPRINGTIME FABRICS AND 3 98 COLORS . REGULAR . HALF SIZES UNITED DEPARTMENT STORES,