1
Fouileeii States
9mim(k
APMCA AND U.S. —S«nat«r
John P. Kennedy, (Dcm.-Meii.),
Chairman of the African Affairs
-Subcommittee of the Senate For
eipn l^eiationt Committee, It pc-
tur*d above in his Senate ORIee
with Ado Thanni/ Sertior Infor
mation Officer ffr the Weatern
Nigeria Geviirnment, Thartnl Is
visitirig the Untte4 Statea un
der. an iCA pregMm to etudy
)Hibn adi^lAifti'ation lintf'infor*
matioh service*.
Renovations of $200,000 Hade
To Fayetteville State Gymnasium
FAYETTEVILLE — Ready, for new modern shower room, # fiheck
complete use when the fall se*s-1 room and a snack ■ bar l?oth fully
ion opens on September 14 is Uie equipped.
Lilly Gymnasium which was erect-1 And on tne side of equiit'ment
ed in 1938 and which has recent-1 stands visual education facUitiei,
ly undergone a complete enlarge
ment and renovation at a total cost
of ^00,000.
The reworking of the building
itself ran to $183,000 and included
expansion of the building, class
rooms and oSices for the Physical
Edcation personnel, rodms with
push-up bunk beds for visiting
coaches and visiting athletic
teams, a completely reworked and
enlarged front, a full-equipped box
office, a new furnace and a new
new athletic equipment, ample
new lockers and a new basketball
scoreboard, items that stahd at
$18,000.
The Lilly Gymnasium, is one of
seventeen buildings on the ' Fay
etteville State Teactiers College
campus.
O—^
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1
YORK—A »ttrvey by the
American Jewish CongtfM of ihe
civil rights l«w« eitMted in the
past year by various st#t«s in this
country presents striking evidsnce
that the Americm peq|rt« arc de
termined to vripe out racial and
religious discrimination from
American life.
The study, conducted by Mm
American Jewish Cqngress and
titled Summary of IMS and 1956
State Anti-Discrimination Laws,
discloses that twenty-four laws
dealing with racial and religious
discrimination wera Nssed by 14
states during 199S.
“Both in number and centent,”
the study notes, “the civil rights
laws anactflfi by Die states tbis
year exceeded the product of any
year in tke past decade.”
The Congress study summar
izes the principal Isgisiative ad
vances ol 1919' ak fonows^
1) California #nd Ohio adopted
eiiforceaUe fair employment lawf.
Phis brought to 16 the nUmt>er of
states having such legislation.
(2) The first stdte i^laws against
dilNViitiinatiM in' ttie general
housing market' ,w^re adored
Mar«t0fDre, atl state laws on hous
ing were confined to accommoda
tions reiving some form 6f gov
ernmental assistanet. this year,
Colorado) Coffnactlciit, . Massachu
setts and Oregon adopted board
fair housing legislation, thereby
following the path recently mark
ed by New Yori City and Pitts
burgh.
(S') Maine became the 24th state
to enact ^n enforceable law pro-
tiibiting discriminatioii in places
of public accomrnc^ation. A nutn
ber of other states improved the
effectiveness of iheir Jaw in this
area.
The Congress ^survey also
veals that the work of '4he 1969
state legislatures'* briit|s to an im
pressire total the'number of state
anti-discriminaflon .laws in effect
today.”
Sixteen states, it no^s, now have
fair employment laws enforceable
by an adn)inistrative a|^ncy us
ing the method of conciliation,
backejl by t|ie power to issue ad
ministratiVe ordei^s enforceable in
die courts.
Four states ^ve laws broadly
prohibiting discrimination in edu
cation, i^nforced by alministratlve
agencies, whi)e a number of oth
ers have more limited legislation
in that area.
Twenty-five states have prohib
ited disorimination in a substant
ial portion of the general hous-
ihg market. Three others have
piuklblted discrimination in vlr^
tually all public and ^publicly as
sisted housing, aMd. a number of
stat«s have mot'e limited statute!'
in this area.
O—
Potts Sees
StlrmeGame
Genial Gene Potts, leading Char
lotte disc Jqckey, .waft a special
guest at the post-gam^ dance
given by 9afa Tempte vf Dui-h(mi
at! the Square Cluljf; hst ^friday
night, Potis has a jiopular daily
program over Station WpIV. The
affair which wf|S ,.,well-Vttended,
followed the a,t purham
Athlkic Park wtublt saV the. Dur
ham tei|m losing to Itameses teni
pie of (%artotte.
Among those w}tq attended
irffair w^re:. W- P> Holmes, John
A. Weather, Chester Johnev>n,
Jesse W. Youn^, Jr.;iL. N. Smith,
Gene Potts, Herman iliomas, Allen
DuRant, John Morrison, J. C. Fox,
Willie L. Fox, all of Charlotte;
Walker Tutt of Newark, N. J. Miss
Otelia Clements, Mrs. Clasie D.
Brown, Mrs. Ruby Smith, Mrs.
Marion Moss, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.
Frazier, Miss Jean Cobb, Miss
Miss Alice L. Cobb, Mrs. Grade
McFadden, G. W. McFadden, James
Fulton, Miss Daisey Gardner, Wil
liam H. Cote, Jr.; J. D. Williams,
Odell Leak, Chappell P. Feldw,
Miss Bessie Jones, Mrs. Minnie
Petty, Mrs. Ethel Carraway, Miss
Bessie Peaks, all of Diirham; Miss
Melissa Perry, Edwin Caldwell
and Alfred Foushe*, all of Chapel
Hill and many others.
/ o
TO TEACH At
SAT,
THE CAROLIN/. 7sM£3
AUOUST 15, 1»5* 'T'Hf TBUTH UMBRtCl.Eir
'a;hi >
nUMCtfALS CLOSE SESSION
AT NCC — Pictured hers are
soms ef the members of the
Principelt Workshop held at
North Carolina College during
the Summer School session
which closed last week, as they
take time out from a busy round
of sessions to ^ pose with the
workshop leaders and NCC «f-
flclsls.
Prom left to right, first row,
are: William Hill, Armstrong
High School, Fayetteville; Mrs.
Georgia Morgan, Librarian, Pas
quotank Training School, Pas
quotank; Mrs. Kathreen Scruggs,
Chatham- County, Georgia; Dr.
J. C. Finney, Director ef the
Principal's Workshop; Mrs. An
nie Murphy, Craven Corner
School, Craven Corner; Mrs. Na
omi Morgan Lyon Park Ele
mentary Sch^l, Durham; Boxie
McBee, proctorville High School,
Procter'Mlle.
S«cond row: C. T. Daniels, Ra
leigh Roid Elementary School,
Linden; F. R. Jones, Clear Run
High School, Garland; W. E.
Smith, Douglass High Sehottl,
Warsaw; Dr. J. H; Taylor, NCC
Summer School Director; The-
baud Jeffers, Assistant Director
of Principal Workshop; O. A.
Ferguson, State J>epertfnent of
Public Instruction, Raleigh.
Third row: E. H. Ware, Branch ;
Elementary School, Albertson; !
T. E. Boykin, Pleasent Grove
High School, Seaboard; E. A. j
Anderson, Principal, Burton- |
vitle Elementary School, Candor;!
J. R. Barnes, Nutbush Element- |
ary School, Manson; Dr. William ;
H. Brown, NCC Graduate Dean;
E. T. Artis, Stony Creek Ele
mentary School, Hoidsvllle; A.
H. Andarson, Assistant Director
of the Principal's Workshop;
and R. L. Webster, Edmund Em
bury ConsoKdated School, Tryon.
Livingstone Summer Scliool Graduates Told To Learn
To "Tolerate Intolerance"; 12 Receive Slieeps1(ins
SALISBURY — “College trained
individuals should have acquired
the emotional maturity,” Dr.
James T. Taylor told the graduates
and their well-wishers at the Ninth
Annual Summer School Convoca
tion at Livingstone College here
Friday, “that will enable them to
be tolerant even of intolerance.”
Speaking before a capacity crowd
at the Hood Theological Seminary
Chapel on the campus at Living
stone, the Nortji Carolina College
educator briefly reviewed the
roots of unrest and distrust in our
nation, especially in the Southern
Region, and urged the candidates
to utilize their training to bring
understanding and tolerance to
regional problems.
Outlining the resources and
skills of trained persons he ad
monished the graduates that they
should “by their actions, attitudes,
and by their individual collective
behavior, exemplify a willingness
to hear both sides of all issues
and to suspend judgment until all
the facts are in.
“A great deal of the confusion
and misunderstanding," he con
tinued, “in the world and in our
region stem from an unyielding
and adamant attitude of mind on
the (Nirt of individuals and na
tions who find themselves on op
posite sides of controversial is
sues.”
“College trained individuals," he
Striking Hard Ths Season;
I Negro Popuiace Said Suscepi)le
I “Widespread polio viru.'i of a
virulent type is strikin;,' with a
1 high ratio of paraly/ed polio pa
I lients. This discrimination bv
polio against unvaccinated people
is seemingly inflicting the highe.st
ration of paralysis on Negro com-
I munities,” Charles H. Bynum.
Chief of Intergroup Relations for
The National Foundation, sta ‘d:
before the Women's Auxiliary to
the National Medical A.ssociation
meeting in national convention at
*he Sheration Cadillac Hotel. Dc '
, troit, Michigan. Tuesday.
I He continued; "The American
I people financed with March of
Dimes funds the development of
I safe and effective vaci.’ine. Yei
‘ more than half the populaUon re
, mains unprotected against paralyt
ic polio,” Bynum said.
' ‘'The heavy financial costs of aid
‘ to polio patients stricken in re
I cent years, and continuing to re-
! quire assistance, have exhausted;
the treasuries of hundreds of .Va- arthritis. Bynum said,
tional Foundation (formerly "{'jr Attending the Naciooal Medical
Infantile Paralysis”) chapters -^s.ociation and v,omen's Auxil-
across the nation.” | ‘he N .M.A,. Bynum is be-
"There is increasing evidence ginning a crosj country tour to
tliat polio may be following a new speak at national conventions of
pattern. Unfcrtunately polio i.s Sorori.y, The Shria-
jrippling Negroes way out of pro'i ''*■* Daughters of Isis. He will
portion to their ration to the total coafer with state and local
population. This is largely the re- Nati. nal Foundation officials and
suit of the extent of lack ot pro-j 'Olunleers. and visit poiio epMem-
tection provided by polio vaccina- suspect areas in Texas, Ok-
tion. Every community leader must *^homu. Arkansas. Nebraska. Ari-
help in the effort to increase the i zona, lown. Florida and lAabaaa.
use of polio vaccine by everyone,!
especially pre - school children.
teenagCTS and young adults,” By
num reported.
“This summer many thousands!
of March of Dimes volunteers are! Swift, Durham physic-
givijig up their vacations to raise ian. will read a paper on “An
funds to provide aid for victims i Approach to Infertility'’ at the
C'hjrin ii. Bynim
-O-
Swift in Mich.
ship between free public schools
for all the children” and the
preservation of our democratic
processes. Thus the j of poHo. The New March of Dimes | National .Medical Associatioo’s -
must continue to provide assist ■ conven-ion in Detroit on Wednes-
ance for nearly 50,000 persons! daj'.
paralyzed by polio before 1959; Swift is vice-chairman of the
and also begin the support for! Olistetrics and Gynecology section
crippling caused by birth defects of the NMA.
trained persons,” he said, “must
align themselves with those who
are dedicated to the preservation
of public schools for all children.”
Emphasizing the need for a
wholesome atmosphere for demo
cratic processes to survive, he re
minded his listeners that they were
“obligated to help create an at :
mosphere for acceptance of the j
U. S. Supreme Court’s decision”
striking down segregation in the
public schools. |
Dr. Marlow F. Shute, chairman'
of the natural sci.ence division at
cautioned, "should be acutely | college, conferred the degrees
aware of the significant relation-
Religious Sect Stressing "Black
Supr^y" Worries AutiioritieSj
NEW YORK—A disciplined Neg- Americanism. Last week. Time re
po religious sect is embarked on' ports, before 5,500 Negroes pack-
a calculated campaign of anti-white
ha'red to establish a doctrine of
black supremacy. Time says in a
special report (Aug. 10 issue) based
on a national survey of racist ac
tivities.
ed into Manhattan’s St. Nicholas
Arena, he proclaimed that- ’'every
white man knows his time is up.*’
He continued: “I am here to
teach you how to be free . . free
from the white man’s yoke. We
Known as “the Moslems, the | unity of all darker peoples
INDIANAPOLIS — More state
and municipal fair housing legis
lation to counteract federal gov
ernment laxity, was called for
this week by an NAACP official.
Speaking before the Indiana
State Conference of NAACP
branches. Jack E. Wood, NAACP
special assistant for housing, said
such legislation must be planned
and executed without racial bias.
Wood charged the federal gov
ernment with financing urban re
newal housing programs in the
ftrtflw, Nar^N University. '* j South that foster racial segrega-
H« wiU tntelalis* In tl|* arfaltion.
•f lnt4mftlM«al gduwrnlt These affect thousands of Nefpo
ment. I families and, “are ingeniously b«-
'7 -V
HARVARD UNIV.
Athna, Ga.^ — Dr. Samuel f.
WesHMd, deen of ttt# school ft
Business Administration at Atlafi-
ta UfilwersMy, on sahbatlcal leaye
for MS9-60, hgs #«c«ptpd atpoliyt-
ment as Guest Proloaaor of Biifl.
fiess Admlnlsttatlon, in the Grapl-
date School of B»sina«s Admln^j
cult boasts some 70,000 Negro
members organized in 29 U. S.
cities. Their leaders is a • frail-
looking fanatic who styles him
self as the Messenger of Allah and
is known to his;' followers as Eli
jah Muhammad. (He was bom
Elijah Poole, son of a Baptist
minister, in Saftdersville, Ga. in
1897.)
One momentous day, he tells
the faithful, he met one Fard Mu
hammad, who revealed himself to
be “Allah on earth” and picked
Elijah as the “messenger” for his
black-supremacy doctrine. Elijah
took up the spiritual surname of
Muhammad and founded his first
temple in Detroit in 1931.
"Mosteri of the U. S."
Calmly feeding the rankling
frustration of the least-educated,
lowest-paid Negroes jammed into
big - city slums, Muhammad
preaches virulent racism and anti-
on the earth. Then we will be mas
ters of the United States, and we
are going to troat the white mao
the way he should be treated.” For
the next two hours, amid shouts
and applause, he poured out his
scorn upon all “white devils,”
“satisfied black men,” the “poi
son” Bible, Christianity’s “slave-
master floctrine,” and yVmerica's
“white for white” justice.
Such cold black hatred, plus
Muhammad’s elite corps of dark-
sujted, shaven-polled young “honor
guards," has lifted his Moslems
well beyond the run-of-the-street
crackpot Negro nationalist groups.
Indeed, says Time, the Moslems
are of rising concern to respect
able Negro civic leaders, to the
National Association for the Ad
vancement of Colored People, to
the police departments in half a
dozen cities, and to the FBI.
on the candidates in the absence’
of Dr. S. E. Duncan, president of-
the college who was attending aj
Board of Bishops Meeting in •
Springfield, Massachusetts.
Twelve students graduating in
cluded :_^Ayery C. Stonetj^ East
Spencer; Thelma L. Burris, Kings
Mountain; Audrey S. Davis, Pat
rick, S. C.; Daniel Lee Partee,
Landis; 'Vernal E. Coleman, Salis
bury; James E. Sheck, E^st Spen
cer; Cladia C. Rinehardt, Newton;
James S. Doode, Forest City; Her
bert L. Steward, Suffolk, Va.; Nol-
lie Davis, Jr., East Spencer; Sam
uel Burris, Kings Mountainj and
Hattie W. Biddle, Morven.
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Federal Government Charged With
Permitting Bias in Urban Renewals
ing planned and carried out to cre
ate new segregated ghettos.
“Negro and white families who
formerly lived together in these
communities, are being uprooted
and deposited separately in ghettos
of new federally assisted hous
ing,” Wood asserted.
“The federal government also
insures the investments of private
developers who build these segre
gated housing projects.”
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