Cke Cramp Ctmeg ^ThFTruth~JnbrI5:ed7|| FOR 28 YEARS THE OUTSTANDING WEEKLY OF THE CAROLINAS Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Durham, North Carolina, under Act of March 3, 1879. VOLUME 29 — NUMBER 24 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, JUNE 16th, 1951 PRICE: TEN CENTS UNC LAW BUILDING OPENS DOOR TO RACE Here is the age old law building at the University of North Carolina that opened its doors this week to four North Carolina College Law School Graduates who will attend Summer School classes at the University. Two of the men, J. Kenneth Lee of Greensboro and Harvey Beech of Dur " ham, have already been assigned rooms on tEeThird floor of Steele Dormitory. "The other two who will probably not live on the campus are James Lassiter of Rocky Mount and Floyd B. McKissick of Asheville. -t——1 Fayetteville Negroes May Seek Admission To White School If Petition Fails Fayetteville Trustees of Fayetteville City Schools were handed a petition Saturday by the Young Men’s Civic Co-Ordinating Committee, seeking either equalization of white and Negro schools in Fay etteville or entry of Negro stu dents into the white schools in September. The petition read in par: “ ... if the trustrees cannot or have not provided total equality for Negro public school students by the beginning of the 1951 1952 school term . . . the under signed will seek enrollment of Negro public school students in. the same schools which are pro vided for white public school students who are similarly situ ated.” The chairman of the trustee board, Neil A. Currie, said that some of the requests in the pe tition “have been met, and others are in the planning stage.” He contented that the trustees felt the Negro school E. E. Smith High and Fayetteville High (white) compared rather favor ably. The petition charged the fol lowing inequalities: 1. Fayette ville High offers a larger and more varied curriculm than does E. E. Smith. The petition point ed out the absence of a com merical department at E. E. Smith. The white school has one. 2. The white school has a far better program and equipment for its students in home econom ics than does E. E. Smith. 3. E. E. Smith High, in its in dustrial department, does not have the quality and quantity of equipment the white school has. 4. The white school has a sup erior science department to that of the Negro school. 5. Inadequate library facili ties are suffered at E. E. Smith. 6. The white school has a well equipped gymnasium and athlet ic field on its campus for the exclusive use of its students whereas there is no gymnasium nor athletic field at E. E. Smith High School for the exclusive use of its students.” 7. Fayetteville High School has paved entrances and ap proaches, a hard-surfaced park (Please turn to Page Eight) Lost Relative James Fuller of Adams Court is desirous of seeing his daughter, Miss Mary Fuller, who when last heard from was living in the East Durham sec tion of Durham. Her mother is Mrs. Lucille Montague. Anyone knowing the where abouts of Miss Mary Fuller, please ask her to contact the CAROLINA TIMES at 518 E. Pettigrew Street or Phone 5-0671. Committee On Negro Affairs To Meet At First Calvary Sunday The annual re-organization meeting of the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs will be held Sunday afternoon at 4 o’clock at the First Calvary Baptist Church on More head Avenue. This is a city-wide mass meeting, at which reports are made to the people concerning the activities and achieve ments of the Executive Committee during the past twelve months. All interested citizens are urged to be present. J. S. Stewart, chairman of the Committee, will pre side at this meeting. Additional persons will be elected to the executive committee and recommendations relative to future policies of the organization will be discussed. TECHNICIAN Mrs. Margaret K. Goodwin, who attended the 23rd Annual Convention, American Society of X-Ray Technicians held June 3-8, at the Benjamin Franklin Hotel Philadelphia, Pa., Mrs. Goodwin, a registered x ray technician, is in charge of the x-ray and laboratory service at Lincoln Hospital. She is a member of the American Society of X-Ray Technicians and has had several years experience in the field of Medical Technology, ogy. Following completion of train ing at Lincoln Hospital under the direction of Eugene Bradley in 1939, she was x-ray techni cian and laboratory technician at Lincoln Hospital and Com munity Hospital, Norfolk, Va., until June 1941 when the call of matrimony interrupted her professional career. Mrs. Goodwin returned to Lincoln Hospital seven years ago and has served in a dual capacity as instructor in the Lincoln Hos pital School of Medical Tech nology and as x-ray and labora tory technician. She did post graduate work at Mt. Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., during the year 1945. While attending the conven tion in Philadelphia, Mrs. Good win and her young daughter, Marsha, were the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Sloan. State NAACP To Lead Fight For Integration The Eighth annual convention of the North Carolina Confer ence of NAACP Branches was held June 7-8 in Spring Hope. President Kelly M. Alexander said, in his keynote address, that the NAACP is on the march to eliminate discrimination and seg regation in the field of educa tion. “The attack is now being made at the high school and ele mentary school levels.” Alex ander told his audience that the entire policy of “separate but equal” is a farce, and Negroes can only receive equal educa tional opportunities with the superior white facilities. This, of course, means that integra tion in education is the only solution to the problem of deny ing Negroes equal education.” An important feature of the convention were three work shops on Branch Administration, Membership and Fund Raising Techniques; and NAACP Action on the Local Level. Participating in these discussions were: Mrs. Bernice N. Napper, field secre tary, NAACP, New York; P. B. Price, Laurinburg; Mrs. L. B. Michael, Asheville; Mrs. Lassit er, Oxford; N. L. Gregg, Greens boro; W. R. Saxon, Asheville; Rev. T. H. Wooten, Lumberton and J. B. Harren Rocky Mount; T. V. Mangum, Statesville, Charles McLean, Winston-Sa lem, Mrs. L. L. Graham, Bur lington and Rev. L. W. Wertz, Hamlet. Attorney C. O. Pearson, chair man of the State Conference Legal Committee, presented the legal program and discussion on educational inequalities, and po lice brutality, etc., was entered into by Attorneys C. J. Gates, M. E. Johnson, John Wheeler of Durham; Herman Taylor and Roger D. O’Kelly of Raleigh; John W. Langford of High Point and E. W. Avant of Durham. The convention approved re commendations on immediate action to eliminate segregation at the elementary and secondary levels in education, specifically (Please turn to Page Eight) Shaw President Blasts Jim Crow School Svste Southern Presbyterians Abolish Segregated Unit I_ Segregaton in the deep South was dealt a severe blow here. Monday when the Southern Presbyterians, in their 91st Gen eral Assembly, voted dissolu tion and absorption of its lone. Negro Synod. The move means that in the. future business meetings white and Negro members of the church will sit together. Dissolution of the Negro Sy nod after a two hour debate on the question, during which ef forts were made to offer motions to carry the matter over until next years meeting and to turn the Synod over entirely to Ne groes independent of the white church. When Col. Francis P. Miller of Charlottesville, Va,. in his speech advocating the dissolu tion plan, referred to it as “a Christian communty thing, not a race thing,” he was loudly ap plauded. Negro members of the synod had already voted for dissolu tion, but had made no indication that they wished to pull out from the parent body and be come an independent organiza tion. After vote on this question by Synods of Alabama, Georgia and Louisana, action on the matter will be taken by a commission. The step was hailed by many as being in keeping with the breaking down of segregation in other fields all over the South. Texas School Admits Negro; “To Do Right” This article is reprinted in full from the June 18, 1951 issue of Time magazine with permission. Mrs. Annie Taylor has spent half of her 48 years as a teacher in the Floydada, Texas grade school for Negroes. This year, before she could qualify for a renewed contract, state law re quired that she go back to school herself for some courses in elementary education. And the most convenient place for “Miss Annie” to do her graduate work was Way land College, a white Baptist institution at Plainview, only 28 miles away. Wayland has received inquir ies from Negroes before, but not until Miss Annie sent a tran script of her record did the col lege find one who was academic ally qualified. Like other South ern colleges, Wayland might well have waited until the courts ordered an end to racial rectric tions. But one day before the spring term ended. Wayland’s president, Dr. J. W. (“Bill”) Marshall, called faculty and stu dents away from final exams, asked them to vote on Miss Annie’s application. No faculty members, and only nine out of 274 students, had any objection. The next night Dr. Marshall faced the board of trustees. “Our concern,” he explained, “is that we do right, and if we do right, God will see that we come out right.” Despite token resistance from some West Tex as trustees, the board decided that to “do right” was to open “the academic facilities of Way (Please turn to Page Eight) Prominent Washington Matron Attends Graduation Of Son Who Was Taught By Some Of Mother’s Teachers When Mrs. Audrey L. Woodson, (second from right, 4918 Fitch Place, N. E., Washington, D. C., was a young dashing co-ed at North Carolina College, Durham, two of her professors were Miss Pauline Newton (third from left) and Miss Ruth G. Rush (extreme right). Two years ago Mrs. Woodson sent her son Wilburn K. Wright (fourth from right) to NCC as a transfer student. Wilburn finished along with 254 other NCC students on June 4 with BS degree. Others shown in the above picture are left to right: Miss Roxie Holloway, the President’s staff, NCC, Miss Barbara Chambers, 32 West 118 Street, New York City, one of the graduates, Miss Newton, Wright, Mrs. Woodson, and Miss Rush. FATHER’S DAY SPEAKERS AT MOUNT VERNON Father’s Day guests at Mount Vernon Baptist Church here Sunday will be Dr. M. C. Allen, President of Virginia Theological Seminary and College, Lynchburg, Virginia, who will deliver the sermon at the morning worship hour; Dr. C. C. 2 Spaulding, president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, who will make his annual visit to the Sunday School at 9:45 as a teach er of the Tonkins Men’s Bible Class; and W. J. Kennedy, Jr., who will deliver an address at the 7:30 evening service. Music for the occasion will be furnished by the Mount Vernon Male Chorus under the direction of Mrs. E. H. Fogle. Four NCC Law School Grads Begin Classes At|UNC; Other Applicants Turned Down Chapel Hill — For the first time in its history the University of North Carolina opened its doors here Tuesday to Negroes when four former students of the North Carolina College Law School begun attending classes. Two of the Negroes, Ken neth Lee of Greensboro and and Harvey Beech of Durham will have rooms on the third floor of Steele Dormitory. It had not been determined last Tues day just what arrangements for rooms the other two, Floyd B. McKissick of Asheville and James Lassiter of Rocky Mount, will make. Although the University has admitted the four law students to classes there is strong evid dence that its officials do not in tend to let down the bars of segregation any further than the federal courts force them. Ex cept in the matter of one Negro who has been accepted for the medical school, the four law students, who were admitted on ly under court order, are the on •ly Negro applicants that have been accepted. In fact one young woman, Miss Gwendolyn Harrison, daughter of Dr. Joseph P. Har rison had been assigned to a even turned down after she had been accepted last Spring for the first Summer term. Miss Har rison had bee nassigned to a room in “C” Dormitory. She stated that she designated that she was a Negro on her ap plication. When the young woman ar rived Monday to begin classes she was told by Chancellor R. B. House that a mistaken had been made and that the Univer sity officials did not know that she was a Negro. (Please turn to Page Eight) SAYS NEGROES WANT BEST EDUCATION Raleigh Like a bolt out of a clear blue sky, Dr. William R. Strassner, president of Shaw University let it be known here Saturday that he differed with Governor Kerr Scott on the matter of segrega tion. The State’s Chief Executive said here last Friday at his press conference that he thought seg regated public schools would never be eliminated in the State. The North Carolina governor then went on to put his own in terpretation on what Negro leaders wanted in the matter of public schools by stating that most of them did not want non segregation. Said the Shaw University president who has, since taking over the reigns at the Raleigh educational institution, continu ed to gain in respect of Negroes all over the country, Negroes are interested primarily in the best educational opportunities, re gardless of whether they exist in a segregated or integrated school system. “They are certainly not get ting these opportunities under the present segregated system,” he said. “If the best educational apportunties require integration sf white and Negro schools, that is what Negroes want,” Dr. Strassner stated. The Shaw president said “the segregation picture in this coun try i s undergoing a rapid change.” He stated further, however, that “I do not believe there will ae an immediate change in North Carolina but, ultimately Negroes like all underprivileged peoples of the world, will achieve the goals they are striving for. This movement toward ultimate equality cannot permanently be stopped.” Dr. Strassner’s forthright statement was heralded by Ne groes all over the state as more nearly expressing the real feel ings of the race on the matter of segregation than statements to the contrary made on the subject by well-known state school heads and others on the State payroll. It is reported in several quar ters that Governor Scott’s state ment on what most Negro lead ers did not want in North Caor lina was the result of misin formation given by certain of his Negro advisors. N.C. Dentists To Meet In Wilson The Old North State Dental Society will meet in Wilson ruesday and Wednesday June 19 and 20. The President is Dr. W. L. T. Miller; the Vice-Presi ient, Dr. Dewey Hawkins; and ;he Secretary, Dr. Morris Watts. NOTICE Durham Business and Profes lional Chain meetings for the nonths of June, July and Vugust will be held each Third rhursday night in the month at eight p. m. beginning, Thursday !*ight, June 21st at the Algon juin Club House, 1400 Fayette ville Street. Everybody is urged to attend. SPECIAL THIS WEEK! In The CAROLINA TIMES READ WHAT EXPERTS SAY IN THE TESTI MONY OF THE SOUTH CAROLINA TRIAL ABOUT THE EFFECTS OF SEGREGATION ON YOUR CHILD. Begins On Page Two