Red Carpet Out For Echo Conference Delegates ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Self Defense Plea In ^TriaV Forecast Murder Charged In Mock Court Ivan “Blossom” McCaskill, 24 year old freshman law student from Miami, Fla., is expected to enter a plea of self defense in the March 14 “slaying” of a fellow law student, Lloyd Yancey, 22, of Philadelphia. No date has been set for thei trial which will be heard in the Moot Court Room of the law building before one of Durham’s practicing attorneys who will act as judge. The student body and the general public are in vited to attend. Yancey’s “death” climaxed an argiunqnt which began over a cigarette. According to bystand ers, McCaskill asked Yancey for a cigarette. Yancey uttered sev eral insulting remarks, to which McCaskill replied with several insulting remarks of his own. Yancey became enraged, appar ently, and advanced several steps toward McCaskill with ’ hands in pocket. McCaskill then flipped out his knife and inflict ed the “fatal woimd.” Sammie Chess, Jr., District Solicitor, says he plans to seek the death penalty for McCaskill. Chess is a senior law student from High Point. He will be as sisted with the prosecution by Theosious Clayton, Roxboro sen ior, and James Faison, Seaboard freshman. McCaskill will be represented by Nathaniel Belcher, chief de fense coxmsel, Plymouth senior. Assisting defense attorneys are Nathaniei Dedmon, Beauford, ^d Moses Burt, Hillsboro, both jimiors. The “murder” and “trial” are a part of the Student Bar Asso ciation’s annual moot covirt pro gram, promoted by the Moot Court Committee imder the chairmanship of Nathaniel Bel cher. S. Govt. Names Election Leaders Jqrome Dudley, Speaker of the House in Student Congress, told the ECHO last week that the fol lowing persons have been ^ect- ed by fellow congressmen as members of the 1958 election committee: Robert Stephens, chairman; Edith Sutton; Doris Edwards; Delores Brinkley; Clarence Ellis; and William Nel son. Robert Stephens, when con tacted by the ECHO, stated that the objective for the committee this year is “To get the studenta to realize the impwrtance of vot ing. A student without a vote is a student without power.” Stephens further stated that the elections for SGA president and vice president and Camposl Echo editor will be held on A- pril 25. Registration for elec tions will be held April 23-24. Requirement for registration wiU be presentation of student identification cards. Candidates and campaign managers will meet in the Stu dent Government office Friday, April 11, at 4 p. m. for the piu*- pose of ironing out possible flaws in the coming ele;ction. “The election committeJ would like to see 1000 or more students take part in this elec tion by first registering and then exercising their right at the polls by voting,” the group told the ECHO last week. Prior to press time, only onei student had openly announced; his condidacy for any of the e-* lective positions. Qjinpus Echo VOL. XVI—NO. VII DURHAM, N. C., MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1958 PRICE: 20 CENTS Campus Echo staff leaders are shovpn above as they put finishing touches on the program for the Third Annual Campus Echo Publications Conference which will be held on April ll. Plan ners, who will also play principal roles in the program include Editor Sigredda Richardson and staffer Joyce Newkirk, seated; and Theodore Gilliam, literary editor, Elnora Joyner, fea ture editor; Beatha Williams, exchange editor, and Perry Leazer, managing editor. Literary Editor Seeks Campus Echo Editor Position Theodore Gilliam, Durhan^ junior, has announced his candi dacy for Editor of the Campus Echo, 1958-59. One of the out standing students of the English and dramatic arts departments, Theodore has been an active member of the Echo staff since 1956. This year he is acting in thd capacity of literary editor and, in working in this capacity, has had unlimited experience in the work which the college, news paper entails. Gilliam’s surprise announce ment gives him first-place pri ority in the forthcoming race for editorship of the Campus Echo, for he is the first person to an nounce his candidacy. When he announced his can didacy, Gilliam released the fol lowing statement: “I am seeking the office of editor of the Campus Echo be cause two years of experience with the newspaper have given me sufficient knowledge of its operation to feel qualified to serve in the capacity of editor. If I win the editorship in thd spring electioijs, I would not cease to try to continue the mer itorious jobs done by previous editors and to make the Echo the most outstanding newspaper of its kind. “A college newspaper, I think, should represent the voice and conscience of the college com munity, particularly the stu dents. As editor I would strive! persistently to have the Echd represent the best that North Carolina College students and faculty have to offer. No news outside of sensationalism would be too controversial to print a9 long as it would be written witb good intentions. It is the respon sibility of the editor to judge the quality and content of his paper. These aspects of the job I would diligently carry out. An efficiently run newspaper, one to which the college com- mimity would look with pride. and the best newspaper of its kind are the objectives that would always bei before me.” Noted Editor On Echo Program L. E. Austin, distinguished Durham, N. C., newspaper pub lisher, will deliver the principal address diuring the honor awards! ceremonies at the Third Annual Campus Echo Publications Con ference at North Carolina Col lege on April 11. The conference begins at 8 o’clock in the Commerce Build ing at NCC. Widely known and in great demand as a speaker, Austin’s editorials have been quoted and reprinted in newspapers throughout the country. Hi^ newspaper, the Carolina Times, widely heralded for its vigorous! editorial policy, is sponsoring the award for excellence in edi torial writing at the Echo con fab.. Awards will go to outstanding (Please tvim to page 10) 300 Scholastics Expected April 11 High school publicists from three states — the Carolinas and Virginia — will descend upon the campus next Friday, April 11, for the Third Annual Camp us Echo Publications Confer ence. This year’s meeting will fea ture separate sessions for news- papeirs and yearbooks, with Charles R .Stanback, American Yearbook representative, i n charge of the yearbook clinic. The Commerce Building will host the meeting. High school faculty advise|rs and students, in cooperation with Campus Echo personnel, will direct the newspaper sess ions in a series of instruction an4 discussion groups. Being sponsored jointly by the) Echo, prize winning NCC news paper, the Eagle, yearbook, and the American Yearbook Comp any of Owatonna, Minnesota, the conference will also provide the setting for the first meeting of Southeastern Scholastic Publi cations Association. Organized last year during the publications meeting, SSPA is an interscholastic organization of newspapers and yearbooks. One of the high points of the conference next Friday will be the honor awards prograip which will see foiirteen prizes awarded to newspaper and year book staffs for outstanding pub lications accomplishments dur ing the school year. R. O. Mensah, press attache^ in the embassy of Ghana, and L. E. Austin, Carolina Times pub lisher have been listefi as main speakers. A college publicist, Charles J. Smith, III, public re lations officer of Florida A & M University of Tallahassee, Fla., is also expected to take part. And Clathan Ross, editor of the Carolina Times, Durham, will lead one of the discussion groups. The program calls for regis tration beginning at 8 and end ing at 9 o’clock Friday morning, April 11. A general assembly featuring the Mensah address will follow at 10, after which the interest groups will go into (Please turn to page 10) Press Attache Will Keynote Publications Conference R. O. Mensah, press attache in the Embassy of the new state of Ghana, will be keynote speak er for the Third Annual Campos ECHO Publications Conference here on April 11. The African publicist, who re ceived his undergraduate and graduate degrees in the United States, will discuss the challenge of journalism as a career, espec ially in terras of representing governments in foreign coun tries. The Echo confab is expected to attract about 300 newspaper and yearbook faculty advisersi and student staff members from throughout the Southeast. Thel majority of delegates will comS from the Carolinas and Virginia. Also meeting in conjunction with the publications group iS Southeastern Scholastic Publi cations Association, an organiza tion of scholastic publicists with headquarters at NCC. Mrs. Ruth Tillman, assistant adviser of the Panther, Person Coimty High School in Roxboro, is president of SSPA. Mr. Mensah heads a list of experts in journalism and pub lic relations who will take part in the day-long training insti tute at NCC. The purpose of the| R. O. MENSAH meeting, according to Sigredda Richardson, editor of the spon soring Echo, is “to help highi school faculty members and stu dent staffers solve their publi cations problems. We have on program a number of experts who will deal with specifics irt the area of high school publica tions.” After receiving his early training in Africa, Mr. Mensah enrolled in Florida A & M Uni versity, Tallahassee, Fla., from which institution he was grad uated With Great Distinction in 1952. He won his master’s de gree in history at Coliunbia Uni versity the following year. While at FAMU, Mr. Mensah was assoi;iate editor of the FAMCEAN, student newspaper and was elected to Who’s Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities. He held several positions in the civil service in Africa prior to taking up his public rela tions post in the Ghana Embassy in 1956. I