eDDAI? DF FI F 4 1 T Q f FFMI FV JL JL/ .JL,*# ...il*# \.J JL k$ «J • JL i.i 11 j ..Ij A Ik k it k ★ k k it k kr k kt k k ★ k k W ★ k it k i WALLACE BOOED Chip' ‘ • 1 prTTr Padat tatt AM I jL Hli vAKU LI J\ 1/V i\ I I i — , —-— ————.———— SINGI F 16 Pages j NORTH CAROLINA'S LEADING WEEKLY \ COPY 10c| VOU ME XXVIII RALEIGH. NORTH CAROLINA WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, SEPEMBER I. 1948 NUMBER 9 ! .11 ADDED TO SHAW FACULTY ★ ★ ★ ★ "k ★ ★ ★ k ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★★★*! Ira Lewis, Courier Head, Passes HEART SEIZURE IS FATAL TO PITTSBURGH NEWSPAPER HEAD PITTSBURGH 1; ,s F 1. A . !.•• y i r old piesidont of the Pitts burgh Couuoi . one cl America's. Jaigtsi, Negro nev.-spa i it'i' :.. died Sniurdsji of 3 I'tiiil atilt, k in a s i.it at .He Ho'.'l Commodoiv n Sow \ ork ( it y. Mr Lev..... who had held the t pest of preside' t ■■ -.d general e«*cr of file Pittsburgh Cou Publiahmg C 4. puny for the pa.-u "ight yours was also president YEARS OF AGE TEXARKANA. Ark. (ANP) Funeral services were held hire alst wck for Mrs. Harriet Vaughan, an ex-slave who died at ht age of IXS. Only a week before her death she foretold her passing by say ing that one of her four dead children appeared to her in her sleep and sa.d. “I'm coming back next week to lake you with me." She is survived by two j daughters, Airs- Mary McCray, 77, and Airs. Delia Edwards. 79. Busy Little Bees Are'nt They? REDS BEGAN RIGHTS FIGHT, SAYS S. C. GOV. WASHINGTON (ANP) Branding civil rights legislation as Red, inspired. Gov. J, Strom Tburmsnd of Soutn Carolina, Dixiecret nominee for President, denounced the FEPC, federal anti-poll tax. federal anti-Lynch and anti-segregation laws in a radio interview here* iasi week. Interviewed on ,» transcription by Charles Palmer, the can didate hold listeners of FEPC as follows; 'ln my opinion, the FEPC, the db-ealled fair employment practices act, is a most vicious un-American proposal to break down slate lines and turn America into a socialist, fascist or communistic state. The clamor for federal anti-segregation laws, he said, "Jldmes ffldm agitators and socially maladjusted persons who do not care or do not understand the individual circumstances of com tnuniiei where the races must work and live together, "If -such laws were passed there would be no Harlem in New York, no Chinatown in San Francisco, no souihside in Chicago nor communities of the sfcAri in other cities." * Although agreeing that lynching was "the waist form of murder," and that payment of pcllt axes j® vote was bad Gov. Thurmond said that it was the job of the states to take care of these problems at the federal government." He said, "Under the guise of anti-lynching, the Reds, pinks end sarfcvsmvfss am making use of the horror which the Ameri •| can pmpin have for lynching to change our form of government." MISSIES HIT 3RD PARTY LEADER m STATE TOUR By JOE SHEPHARD A tned. bewildered and egfi spattered former Vice- President : of. the Un'tcd States . tood on a street in a North Carolina town this week and asked "Is this Arm nc*a? The man whom he asked push ed him away and raid, ' Get your nands off me". The town was Burlington, and the former Vice-President was Hen: , Wallace, the Progressive Partyv candidate for President of the Unitea States whose cam paign trio through Nortn Caro lina nas N-en mnrked by a in ception imparralicled in Amen • ■ hict - r V The tour begun. Sunday even 1 inf* in Dirham, where an already ! gaunt and haggard Wallace was 'met at the til port by a crowd of more than 500 persons who : appeared anything other than i\psti!' i Reception Pleasant lociuded in the crowd were a j bus and more than a dozen car j loads of Wallace supporters who ; had come into Durham to at : tend the Progressive Party's con vention which was being held at I the Durham City Armory, j Following a brief session of • posing durntr which he was able, for one of the few times in North : Carolina, to summon the weli know Wallace grin, the Third Party candidate left the airport for the State Progressive Party 'Continued on page 8, Jts* Section) * ».*■*•' • ; - ■ i^^Sl ' \ ■.'.■\> - : T: • ■•>*. '•'■ •' •;,■£ . : ;•. * m v ff| V;. JllillF ... .. - 's&MSfcf&'x m&sr j^«i. ?gKj|S?r : &st *:f Jitff ISfeSSsSMBS: -if Jill Jig * *" • 'll *-^;. : .f » w •jjtSi l i -'** y r '’' ; ' , '**KBBB^^St£' r •£> ■■■•■ >'^: . aß|r ,^ v , - -V. ; • :-,.■ A M *4: :'■!- 4& I i "M w ' •■•.•;(■ '".' ■• - -" , ■ • V ’’'■ il : • &xx ■ ; . % v gaßfc iLJf ... ■ .’:. ;'•■ .;. A y %W< , ' .' • :,,,-/• :4r«,' ? >!^ The Rrv, J W. Junes, pastor • cl the Fayetteville Street Bap list Church, above, was united in marri.qe to Mrs Alga Flor ence of White Plains, N. Y , at the home of Grover Jones, son of the Rev. Jcrtes, at 37 Man hattan Avenue in Greenburgh Sunday et 7:00 pun. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Louis W. Hughes, ■pastor of the Union. Baptist Dr. Charles A. Wesley To Be Among Speakers At Urban League Meeting Edgsr Lav, Managing Editor, Tampa Daily Times, and Chas. Wesley, president, College of Edu cation and Industrial Arts Wii berforce Ohio, will speak at the first public meeting of the Na tional Urban League’s Annual Conference which begins in Rich mond, September ti. Richmond's Mayor Horace H Eld wards will greet the Urban I League gathering, as will the * Honorable Oliver W. Hill, who made national news recently as' the first Negro eleetd to the Rich mond City Council. Others on : the evening’s program are Presi dent J, M. Ellison. Virginia Un | .on University, and Eugene Kin ! okle Jones, general secretary, Na lionai Urban League. Meet in South The national interracial social | work orgr-niration is meeting in , a city of the "Old South" for the | first time in a number of years "It is more than a coincidence," Lester B. Granger, Executive 1 • Secretary observed, "that during ! 1 the conference, the sound and l ; fury of an extremely bitter pc. ! liticai campaign will be resound- j j ing over the national scene, with . the- quest ton of civil rights n chief sub).:-:-’ of acrimonious debate,” "It is fust as impossible," Un | Urban League head continued, i “for the National Urban League ' jto .attack the socio-esonomi? ' I problems of thd WetSiai pbpuula-; LContlnuwi on page 6, Ist Section) ’ Church at White Plains, and the couple left immediately for Columbus. Ohio, where the Rev. Jones is a delegate to the Lett Carey and Foreign Mis sion Convention from his church. They v ill spend four days in Columbus and leave for Ra leigh where they will be at home to iriends and well-wish ers by September 4. CATHOLIC YOUTH EMBARKING UPON RIGHTS CRUSADE j Notre Dame, Ind. Upwards of 3,000,000 Catholic students in thee United States were pledged to work for great social justice for American Negroes in resolu | lions adopted at the closing ses sions yesterday (Aug. 29j of the I thirteenth national conference of the Catholic Students Mission I Crusade. Held ; * the University of Notre Dame, th * four-day conference was attended by 3,000 student del > egate rep'-ssenthuj Crusade units | in thousands of American com mun;tie.«. Several hundred Negro 1 delegates host prominent parts in ' the conference which also was l the tare st missionary meeting 'every hold ini he United State.-. J Introduced by Robert Smith | Shea, Executive Secretary of Xavwi University. New Orleans, La., rhi resolutions on the Negro held that “prejudice and unjust ' practices against Negroes arc baaed fundamentally upon ignor ance of th. hiriorv of this group ;of Amc ricans and a rack of re (Contiaaed on page 3, Ist Section) DR. DANIEL LISTS ADDITIONS TO i SCHOOL FACULTT ( 1 j RALEIGH A partial lint of! - ' addition? to The faculty of Shrew i ' University for the 1948-49 school i | term was made public recently by ■. : Pnu.ident R. P. Da rut-1. I New members will meet with the l : entiic staff at the annual faculty : cqu.'*r Tices to be held for two; i day- beginning Monday, Septembei 13 fit 11 o'clock. Other staff additions will be an-j rui.mccri prior to the conference | which each ver- precedes the fresh- j t.-i lontation period, scheduled j year to begin September Id New staff members include: Miss Casearea E. Dawson. A. 8., j Shaw University, A. ML Columbia : . sity. Instructor in Educa i on; William A, DeCosla, B. S., j W iberforce University, M S. Haw- j • ar University. Instructor in Chem- . istry: Miss Ann \V. Ferebee, B. S.. j : A. M . New York University, In- i 'hue:.,; i n psychology and Reli-1 riot Education; David N. Hender son. A R. Morgan State College, i A M. Columbia University, In structor in English and Personnel j Counsellor; Thomas E. Kee, A. Bj Shaw University. A M. Columbia t University, Instructor in Romance j U'oi,turned on page S. Ist Section) j HOTEL 'MISTAKE' DRAWS REBUKE : FROM DIPLOMAT [ , ; i j WASHINGTON < ANPj The | | Liberian legation and the Liberian , minister, C. D. B. King, adminis- ! to ed a stingirig rebuke to a local ; hotel which sought to decline ser- j I vice to their guests recently. 1 he Fairfax hotel, a new and rea- i ■onably swank hostelry located in ; the fashionable section of the ‘ ; Northwest, st'nt ornate invitations : ito all oj the foreign embassies and S| diplomats to patronize their dining I room which they described as one! lof the finest in the capital. The Li-j |be dan legation have three dis tin- j I i koished visitors from their home -11 land in the United States, Counsel- j ! ,or R- S. Bright, speaker of the house of representatives, B. G. Free j man and Postmaster General Nk*t-i : jbe Brownell, decided to honor ) ; them with a luncheon at the Fa ir * s ’ fax. i |'Continued on page 8, Ist Section) . AVC ASK S SPECIAL CONGRESS SESSION AFTER ELECTION ’• „ j WASHINGTON (ANPT • To, “ I show that Americans are really’ on l "j the lev-til when they scream about. £ -mother nation’s deficiencies, the | American Veterans committee has . recommended another special ses -1 '•'’•on '•* congress immediately aftei . the national elections in Novem ; her to pass an effective civil rights " program t Joseph A. floretv Jr„ acting j f : chaimnn of A VC, urged his entire . : membership to demand adolhei ! Q j specical session to pass an inflation' t j control bill,, the Taft-Ellcnder > B ; Wagner housing bill as ’.veil as a ..j civil rights program a j In reference to the recent special i . | session of congress, Clare ty said. I ,i i < Continued on page 8, Ist Section) i |f|SSr llpil- •» fc# ' Ly HBWL? jfc* *; fsHHI HR aaaHik_ 7fi»7: .. S |B|wsS3g- ' ."f w t? 4 Jt-.fc 'SI & * %->> <& Jill - JlillPf : 'Ufr.^S. m , -. ■ ■ f.'»* - • m * I . tk-l \ ♦ t Ivw V f ly• t■' v '* -# v R||i < ’ Jjaffif ~ a&L .<• , f is . Y s Ht?&* ■' , t\< -Jf ) .' known as Truman's C.vil Rigiu: i cuy ami county has been asked to : -el a-.ue If) minutes so that the : < ivj) rie.hth program may to pr< - . sen ted to the congregation. < A. & M. Presu Uncle Toms h CINCINNATI W dibit i H I Gray, President of Florida A. and M. College. Tallahassee, exhorted Negroes to ••aggressive and poti- • live apitation*’ in outer to achieve - their full right" under the Amer ican Constitution and criticised < some Negro educators rind business ' people who he charged are “con-;; trolled by the white community ’ ' Dr. Gray was addressing the Civil < Liberties meeting of the 49'.h an- s tiual convention ot the Improved i Benevolent Protective Order of ' Don't Wait For Blending . . . NEGRO RACE NOT DUE ! TO DIE SAYS SAVANT BOSTON 'ANP) The American Negro will ml disappear and be swallowed op by whiles. William M. Kepbari. sociolegist at the University of Pennsylvania, said in a report published in ihe American Sociological Review this week. Kephari, opposes the theories of certain scienii-N who say "that in due course there will be no Negro probkm because there will be no Negroes." The contend, he reports, that Negroes "will gradually be come lighter and lighter by virtue of the infusion AI lAt !•: t;. I7S \!• PORTER -- Shu it liiv.l Par' . ! ■ i'.,i .* lv shewn U'. . at the E.tl. ah. .;* >:* \ h\ Mis , A:a\ > P. ■ iv e Tarty candidate tin- ■-\ . i amt f{i< iini'j.id r t ear old Tu,..n sii ‘ bt r who joined an-.', u.. :. :K .1 every meeting of th ).■. grfS'ivf i’:ift« in < ids, !:, : -i , Ilia it is ti i mils "ji . > a: o stand, for the th nits av,!. t ulcred people -iioui , :,. e-t,tl. 7TU Tcor.? Lilli iLDisI A’ s»Lnw isL i-v.... ■ CINCINNATI Fi 1 <■ re-', ksdi'ori of ,'i 7y .7 isti : uoy a piop'i. ai to 1 1 . - ■-- • R. .ilTi tO C'.spi i. I, -A '■ The Grand l.odut* v u-e ue.o i and pulled awe- .from giganGt dent Hits * i Speech Apnr; 'from calling' "urdeit.ei cd leadership" that could be p; o aided by the pre/.et sr-ional grow among Negroes. Dr. Gray mwitfc that all legal technique., for taiK.ii cipation be utiii/ d. and that No groes themselvct show a greaD read.ness to uvaii thur.-elves c iContinued on pap. Sivtios.