KISS CASE MOTHEI^ LEAVE ★★★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Spaulding, Peors^n For C-RAdvice Uirit Attorney C. O. Pearson and Asa T. Spaulding, both of Durham were among some nine North Ca rolinians appointed to the state ad visory commission on civil rights, It was revealed this week. The group held its first meeting Ifi Durham on Tuesday afternoon {ind set about to organize and pro- These committees will serve as ing and Todd, other members of adjuncts to the Civil Rights Com-j the North Carolina unit of the Com mission created by Congress in mission are J. McNeil Smith, 1957. Several others have already Greensboro attorney, chairman; been appointed and are at work. . Mrs. Margaret Vogt, Wilson house- In addition to Pearson, Spauld- St* SPAULDING, p«0* S MIMMr NIitft Appeal To Be Sought From Ruling Denying Release of 2 Youngsters (FTkEtlftUTM VOLUME 35—NUMBER 4 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2^ 1959 PRICE: 15 CENTS Raleigh Funeral Home Mgr. Dies HAPPY TO BE HERE — Smilti Robert F. Williams, Sr., left, presi dent of the Monroe N, C. branch of NAACP to the Association's Exec utive Secretary Roy Wilkinf, cen ter, and North Carolina State Con ference President Kelly M. Alex ander. Williams initiated campaign to free two pre-teen ag« young sters sentenced to reform school because one of them was kissed by a white girl piamate. The ease is still in North Carolina courts. Trio gathered at Association's an nual fellowshp dinner recently at Belmont Plaza hotel. New York. NEW YORK — Tli« National As sociation for the Advancement of Colored People will appeal the rul ing of a North Carolina judge who refused to free the two young boys involved in the Monroe “kiss ing” case, Robert L. Carter, the Association’s general counsel, an nounced here this week. Meanwhile the families of the youngsters, David (Fuzzy) Simpson, age 8, Hanover Thompson, age 10. were resettled in Charlotte, in 600 At DCNA Meet More than 600 persons filled Un-| ion Baptist Church's auditorium I last Sunday afternoon to hear the annual report of the Durham Com mittee on Negro Affairs. I Tiie assembly took part in a' brief vote which clccted three j members to the Committee’s board Promotions at N. C. Mutual Listed Firm's Progress in'58 Reported of directors. It also heard reports from the Six persons were promoted in I the high echclon of North Carol ina Mutual life insurance company five major subcommittees of the i n K»«nf uiifnmul»\/ Tr/ttn ' DCNA and a brief summary from ommittee. chairman J. 11. Wheeler of what to expect from the orga- lization In the coming year. The massed assembly then hoard former committee chairman J. S. nual stockholders meetin? earlier ihis month, it was revealed this week. Information made public this week also showed that the comp- Stewart say. “if you’re interest in « have topped the $60 the future of your chddrcn and accord mg to the re- k«ur«iter. leu#* meeting.^ * **^ '''*«^’'netir1ng ^resfdft^ W- X Keiine- PEARSON vide itself with an agenda. In addition to Pearson and Spaulding, one other Negro was appointed to the nine-man group, lie is Attorney Curtis Todd of Win ston-Salem. The committee is similar to ITiosfto be appointed In alt ttnr 49 states of the union and' the terri tories of Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the district of Columbia. this committee Wheeler’s brief peek at the or ganization’s future plans took the place of a full dress preview for the committee scheduled by exec utive secretary C. E. Boulware. Boulware requested that his state ment be witheld because of the length of foregoing proceedings. Reports from the subcommittees were m*de by L. ft Frasier, etvie- committee; F. B. McKissick and N. B. White, economic commitee; El- SM DCNA, page • dy, Jr., made the report in one of his last official acts as head of N. Ushers announce Plans To Finance $50,000 Home for Unwed Mothers Under the leadeship of A. O. Grady, its newly elected president, the Durham Ushers Union announ ced this week the institution of a program to raise through mem berships a total of $200 per month. The money Mr. Grady stated will go toward helping to make the monthly payments on (he Ushers Home at Franklinton. The property was purchased by the Interdcnommational Usher As sociation of North Carolina a little over two years ago at a total cost of $50,000 and will eventually be used for a home for aged minis ters, ushers and unwed mothers. In announcing his program for the year, Grady stated that he hopes other ushers unions through- to the state will fall in Ime witi his program wnich he feels will make it possible to pay for the property within a few years and get the home in operation. Prominent Belmont Woman Dies BKIiMONT — Funeral for Mrs. Pearl Davis Keid was held at Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, Belmont, Monday, January 19 at 1 p. m. with her pastor, Ucv. Thomas Boyd officiating. Mrs, keid died at a Charlotte llo.spital Friday at 7 a. m. follow ing a short illness, she was daugh ter of the late Joe and Amelia Da vis, well known citizens of the community. She was owner' and operator of a grocery store at her home in Rankin Height Section of Belmont. Her many activities in the church and community endeared her to the people and she was widely known throughout the State. As first secretary of Reid High School P. T. A. of the city, she was able to interest many, mem bers in joining and working with the school. Her church work in cluded teacher of Sunday School, Superintendent of Extension De partment, organizer and first pres ident of the Usher Board, member of the deaconess board, President of The Lydia Missionary Circle. She was a member of the county-wide Missionary Society and was presi dent of the Ushers Union of Wes tern, N. C, Surviving are a son and daugh ter, Mrs. Bernice Reid Reev^es, for mer teacher of Reid High School and McAlister Reid, mason, both of Belmont, three grandchildren, Barry Reeves, Business Adminis trator, in Chicago, Joseph, a stud ent at Howard University, Wash ington, D. C. and a granddaughter, Barbara, a student of Reid High School, Belmont, one sister, Mrs. Jane Grier, of Belmont and many other relatives and friends. MCNEILL Funeral Held For Owner of Durham Firm Funeral services for Prentice 11a- •old McNeill who died at Lincoln ■lospital at 7.15 p. m. Monday vere slated to be held at 3 p. m. Thursday at St. Mark A. M. E. Zior. Jhurch. The Rev. R. L. Speaks, wili officiate at final rites. Burial will follow in Beechwood Cemetery. A native ol Benneltsville, S. C., McNeill had lived in Durham for the past 35 years. He was proprietor of the Royal Cleaners on Pettigrew Street, a business that he organized in 1929. He had been living in semi-re tirement since an illness several years ago. Although known to be in uncertain health when he en tered the hospital at 2:30 p. m. Monday, McNeill was not thought to be fatally 111. His parents were th6 late Thom as Jefferson and Henrietta (New ton) McNeill. After attending the Bennettsville schools, McNeill lived 10 High Point before moving to Durham. His survivors include his wife, iMrs. Gladys Holloway McNeill of the home, 1504 Fayeteville Street; two sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Pearson, Gibson, S. C. and Mrs. Wilma Er win, Philadelphia; and four bro thers: Ozie, Philadelphia; Jeffrey, Newport News, Va,; James, Tampa, Fla.; and Rhodes, Durham. Sea MCNEILL, Pa^ 8 C. Mutual, largest Negro owned business in the world. Kennedy, A'ho remains as board chairman, A^as replaced by A. T. Spaulding as )rcsident. The promotions saw three per sons move up in the official staff of the company and two others raised from administrative to of ficial staff positions. Another was promoted to the admiinstrative staff. fi/; if.' B$aneU, ff., was prom to the position of Actuary and sistant Secretary and elected to the board of directors. He was form erly Associate Actuary and As sistant Secretary. W. J. Kennedy, III, was elected Controller. Ronald C. Foreman was nam^ Associate Controller. He had pre viously held the post of Assistant ontr^ller Moved up to the official staff were Mrs. Geneva L. Hawkins and A. E. Spears, Jr. Mrs. Hawkins, who had been assistant to the Cash ier, becomes Assistant Treasurer. Spears was named Assistant Con troller. He formerly held the title of Assistant to the Controller. A promotion from chief book keeper to Assistant to the Con- troler saw Mrs. Gertrude Taylor move up to the admiinstrative staff. “We have every reason to be proud of the achievements of our company as a substantial unit of the life insurance industry' in our nation,” Kennedy told the stock- iiolders in iiis farewell report. He had just completed detailing the financial status of the firm vhich showed it had netted a pre- nium income of $13 million and reached the 250 million mark in msurance in force and admitted 4ssets of .$60 million. “To the American Negro,” Ken- ledy said, “North Carolina Mutual s more than a life insurance com oany. It is a symbol of the ad vancement of Negroes despite ec- inomic, civic and political injus See PROMOTIONS, page ■ Liiwicnci' 'riidnipson l.iglU- ncr. proinincut Isalctf'li funeral hoiiic inana^'iT, difcl at Duke ht»s|)ital \\ cdiK'S'lay cvcuiiiy. |an. 21. He was stricken Monday morn ing at his home and taken to St. Agnes hospital in Raleigh on Tues day. On the same evening he was transferred to Duke hospital in Durham wnere he died. He was 40. Funeral services have been scficduled for Friday, Jauary 23, at ihe Davie zaei- rresoytenan Church. Thp Rev. Robert Shirley will deliver the eulopy. A native of Raleigh, Lightner was well known throughout the See LIGHTNER, Page 8 Sears Agrees To Hire After N. Y. Protest I Edmonds Quits Bennett For Post in Conn. Edmonds homes ••cared to tfeeai kjr Kcfly .\iexander, president of the NAACP n North Carotiaa. Feede, new ^umiture and ciothing wen also supplied by the NAACP to Mn. Svelyn Nicholsoa Thowpac* and ler five children and Mrs. Jeasie Simpson and her four ckfldren. In anowmcine the ■•laciHaii 'he families, Alexander tmU: hepe t* d« • • ly rehabilitation so ttwt tfc* state will ha¥« no excuM far nrt rstafi»- ing Hanover and Funy I* tiMfr tm- •nilies. We are getting jobs far fcctli of the mothers," The new hewiai are near an eiementary id>eel and St. Paul's Baptist Church. Following Superior Court Judge Walter E. Johnston's denial of the NAACP petition for a writ of ha- l)eas corpus at the conclusion of the hearing in Wadest>oro, on Jan. 12, the .\ssociation’s attorneys of record. Conrad Lynn and Frank Reeves, witheld comment pending study of the record. Later in New York, NAACP Gen eral Counsel Carter said that fur ther legal action would t>e taken to sccure their release of the boys. At the hearing, Robert William.s. president of the Monroe NAACP branch, testified that Hanover ami David had been denied their ctm- stitutonal rights in that they were See MONROE, page 8 N. H. Bennett, Jr Founders Day At 2 Schools Prom TIMES Dispatches Founders Day exercises have been scheduled at two colleges in North Carolina. Dr. F. D. Patterson is slated to deliver the key address at a Foun der’s Day program at Barber-Sco tia College on Sunday afternoon, Jan. 25 at three p. m. The school will be observing its 92nd birthday. On February 26 at ten o’clock, Kittrell College, the 73rd Found er’s Day celebration program will be held, featuring Dr. Rembert Stokes, president of Wilberforce University, as main speaker. The school’s • mid-year convocar tions being heW jointly at the celebration. NEW YORK — The Sears Roe buck Fordham Road and 149th Street department stores in the Bronx, have agreed to employ Ne gro sales persoinel following three weeks of picketing by the Bronx branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored | People, Herbert Hill, NAACP labor secretary, reorted Friday. The picket line was withdrawn after agreement was reached at the conclusion of a series of confer ences of NAACP loaders with the GREENSBORO — Beginning 1 February 1, The Reverend Dr. Ed-1 win R. Edmonds**presontly engaged * as Professor of Sociology at Ben- i nett College, will assume duties as . Minister of the Dixwell Avenue j Congregational Church, New Ha ven, Connecticut. While employed at Bennett Col- Pictured above and below are three of the six persons promoted during the annual stockholders meeting of the North Carolina Mu tual life insurance company.N. H. Bennett was elected Actuary and Assistant Secretary. W. J. Ken nedy, III, was appointed Controller R. C. Foreman was elevated to the post of Associate Controller. See page three for pictures of others promoted. store's personnel. executives and j lege. Dr. Edmonds served as Presi- with Commissioner Elmer Carterident of the Greensboro Branch of oTthe StalirC»KWl1SiTori Ag^instlthe NAACP and as Chairman of the NAACP State Conference of Branches Membership Committee. Under his leadership, the Greensboro Branch membership more than tripled in si*e. He was previously employed as Professor of Sociology and ChaplaiA at Dela ware State College. In addition, he has held positions as Program Di rector with the Greater Boston Sol diers and SaHbK tyr^antzattoirrB Resident Supervisor with the Na tional Youth Administration and as a teacher in the Adult Ekiuca- tion Program in San Antonio, Tex as. A graduate of Morehouse Col lege, Atlanta, Georgia, Dr. Ed monds received his S. T. B. from the Boston University School of Theology and the Doctorate of Philosophy in Social Ethics from Boston University. An author of several articles in sociology. Dr. Edmonds has been See EDMONDS, page 8 Discrimination. Ark. Schools Law in Test NEW YORK — A move to have Arkansas-^law which periytted, Governor Orval Faubus to close the Little Rock high schools, de clared unconstitutional and to re open them on an integrated basis was initiated this week in the fed eral courts by attorneys for the Negro student. Thurgood Marshall, director- counsel of the NAACP Legal De fense and Educational Fund and Wiley Branton of Pine Bluff, Ark., filed a motion accompanied by a supplemental complaint, asking the U. S. District Court of Arkan sas on Monday to take the action. WarrerhHalHax Group Barred From Courthouse WELDON — A meeting of the tri-county Progressive Civic Union has been scheduled for the First Baptist Church at Roanoke Rapids, according to Union spokesman at torney James R. Walker. The meeting will ope« Thursday at 7:30 p. m. The Progressive Civic Union is a civic organization comprising Ne- groee from th»-. three counties of Warren, Halifax and Northhanp- ton. Prior to Christmas, the group was denied use of the Northhamp ton County courthouse. Walker said. Representatives from the Union were told they must l>e taxpayers or citizens to use the courthouse. Walker stated. The XTiMon se^’^ To arouse Ne- gre citizens to the duties of assum ing fUU citizenship, the Wetdon attorney said. Formed recently, it has been active in urging Negroes to register and vote. Attends Meet GREENSBORO — President Wil- la B. Player of Bennett College at tended the sessions of the Associa- ition of American Colleges in Kan- |sas City, Mo., last week, and will > See ATTENDS, pe«e ■ Senate Move Helps Little W. J. Kennedy, III R. C. Foreman NEW YORK, — Because of their roles in putting through the so- called compromise cloture rule, Se nate Majority Leader Lyndon John- on of Texas and Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois “must be held accountable for the fate of civil rights legislation in the 86th Congress,” Roy Wilkins. I NAACP executive secretary, as serts in letters to Senators Paul Douglas, Hubert Humphrey, Cliff ord Case and Jacob Javits. The letters dispatched express on behalf of the Association ap preciation of the efforts put forth by these senators in “sponsorship of the bi-partisan resolution de signed to effect a meaningful change in the Senate filibuster rule.” The Johnson resolution, the NAACP leader points out, “will not alter, except in microscopic fa shion, the situation which obtain ed under the old rule,’ as indicated by Senator Richard B. Russell's ob servation that the new rule is just about as effective as the old one. Under the old Rule 23, it was necessary to secure the vote ef two thirds of all senators te step a filibuster. The new Johnson rule provides for cloture by a vele ef two-thirds of the senators present and voting. Furthermore, it af firms the concept of the Senate as a "continuing body" the rules of which carry over from one Con- See .SENATE, page 8 Elks $100,000 'Massive Assistance' To Pupils Drive Declared Success MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The Negro Elks’ “Massive Assistance” camp aign to raise $100,000 to finance scholarships will be successfully concluded on January 30. So stat ed general George W. Lee, Grand Commissioner of Education of the Improved Benevolent Protective Order of Elks of the World as he discussed the coming National Ci tizenship Banquet at Philadelphia’s Broadwood Hotel, where scholar ships will be awarded to outstand ing students. “Financing scholarships is an old story with the Negro Elks,” he said. “In the past quarter century our Department of Education has raised a million and a half dollars and given out more than eight hundred scholarships. This money has come from rich and poor in Negro Elkdom, and is a concrete evidence of the capacity of color ed people to help themselves.” “Right now,” he continued, “we have fcMty-six. students on our scholarship roll in American, Ca nadian and Mexican universities.” Far-flwng Expert Behind this annual effort Is a far-flung and influential 60-year- old Negro fraternal group with 1, 300 lodges and 1,000 temples. The general public hears too little a- bout but it is most effective in citizenship building. There is an Elks lodge almost every sizeable V. S. colored community. The dol lars for scholarships are raised throughout the year in a variety of ways from membership collec tions to mass meetings and turkey raffles. It all leads up to the great annual banquet where bright youngsters are haaded checks by Grand Exalted Ruler Dr. Robert H. Johnson enabling them to fet a higher education. The L R P. O. E. W. scbolardup program has been highly praini by such diverse personalities m President Dwight D. Eisenhowgr*. Vice Preeideat Richard M. Postmaster Geneni SnnuMHkMl Maryland Governor Theodor* Mkr Keldin, U. S. Repraentalhgt seph Martin. CarreQ les Diggs and Adaia C. Uordacai W. JohttMB. Howard Univenity: Or. See ILKt. p«t» •