Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 19, 1952, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAOB BIOHT TUB CABOLINA TIMBS 8ATVBDAT. JPDLT l*th, 1»®» North Carolina College Teachers In Europe -Iditor- (Continued from Page One) health, and was succeeded by Dr. J. S. N. Tross. He retained his position, however, as owner and publisher. During his life time Mr. Hou ston was influential in many civ ic improvements for his race, ' among them was the founding and the promotion of the “Go To Church, Go To Sunday i School" program of which he i was the chief founder. He was also president'of the Communi ty Crusade and a charter mem ber of the Grace A. M. E. Zion Church 'of which he was a trus tee at the time of his death. His wife, Mrs. Maria R. Hou ston died three years ago. Surviving are one son, A. N. Houston, a member of the Char lotte Police Force and a daugh ter, Mrs. Maggie Ross Miles of Portsmouth, Va. These three North Carolina College faculty women arrived in Naples, Italy, last week on the first leg of a journey that will keep them In Europe for the next month and a half. ^ Left to right the Durhamltes pictured above are Miss Pauline Newton, professor of English; Mlw Ruth G Bush, professor of educaUon and president of the Stele Federation of Woiften’s Cli»l)ii, and Mrs. Gertrude Taylor, wife of James T. Taylor, professor of psychology and director of the Jame* E. Shepard Memorial Foundation. Eisenhower campaign leaders are shown In the offices in the Conrad Hilton Hotel Wednesday morning taking a last minute check on Republican delegates In order to map final plans for the drive to nominate General Elsenhower to be the next President. Reading from left to right: Alexander Barnes, Prince Georges Connty, Maryland; Dr. C. A, Price, Topeka, Kansas; Dr. John F. Moreland, Bock Hill, South Carolina; P. M. Townsend, Topeka, Kansi^; ThurJnan L. Dodson, Washington. D. C.; J. W. Jones, Carlene, Kansas; Dr. C. D. Cole, Topeka, Kansas; P. G. Porter, Olethae, Kansas. KEGRO lEANRS PUSH GEN. IKE mmmtmm ■Eleclrical' The success of the Eisenhower , campaigners to make the Gen eral the standard-bearer of the Republican Party by inviting the Negro vote can be largely attributed to the work of P. G. Porter, Alathe, Kansas; P. A. Townsend, Topeka, Kansas and Thurman L. Dodson, Washing ton, D. C. These Republican leaders have been closely associated with Ei senhower forces since the be ginning of the campaign, but moved into high gear in Room 1160, Conrad Hilton Hotel here last week. The Republican stal warts got busy lining up doubt ful delegates who were wooed back into the Eisenhower column and many other race votes were substantially nailed dqwn for the five star General. They furnished information for all of the Negro delegates and alternates and kept direct contact with developments throughout the drive. Their abil ity to gain votes for General Eisenhower was phenomenal. There was never a question, they felt, that all Negro delegates might not join the trend to Ei senhower, The Eisenhower Headquarters in which these workers held forth was continuously swamp ed as to General Eisenhower’s stand on civil rights. They were able to satisfy most of those who sought this valuable Infor mation by telling them that the General knew no color or creed and that he had repeatedly main tained that America was too email for race hate, class bigotry segregation and discrimination. They pointed to the fact that General Eisenhower had sur rounded himself with men who tiad been in the forefront for Civil RighU. protection of the right to vote; strengthening and expansion of the civil rights section of the Department oi Justice, establisb- ment of a permanent federal commission on civil rights; s.tate- hood for Alaska and Hawaii; and home rule for the District of Columbia. (Contluned From Page One) taxes reduce participation in e- lectlons to a small fraction of the potential vote. lUE-CIO not ed that Georgia and North Car olina have no poll taxes but that the electorate in some areas is kept small by "artifical and sometimes violent methods.” “Particularly must this be true where' race-hating Con gressmen represeent constituen cies in which Negroes comprise the majority of voters and po tential voters,” -the lUE-CIO Civil Rights Committee declar ed. “No rational person can con tend that a Congressman elected fro ma district in which Negroes are a majority really represents the people of the district when he voles gainst federal prohi bition of poll taxes, .against an- tl-lynch legislation or against a fair employment practices stat ute.’’ “lUE-CIO guarantees to un derwrite the full cost of such a poll by a reecognlzed indepen- dentj opiriion-taking organiza tion of national repute, provid ing that Congressmen Hanking, Cox and Barden agree to abide by the majority sentiment ex pressed in these polls and in the next session of Congress vote according to the mandate given them on these civil rights is sues,” the proposal states. -Gas Ranges- (Continued from Page Five) with four top-burners in group- range ‘, ed, divided or staggered ar- rangemeents. There are models, too, with'' six top-burners for those who want extra cooking capacity. The “jet-fired” ranges are available with automatic time and temperature controls to per mit “absentee” cookery — the “set-it-and-forget-it” procedure that so many modern homemak ers demand. -Trent- (Continued from Page One) the colleges and universities of Cambridge. Dr. Trent will return to Salis bury, North Carolina at the end of August to prepare for the opening of Livingstone and his twenty-eighth year as president of the college. He is a member of the Salisbury Board of Edu cation; the executive committee of North Carolina Interricial Commission, and served as pres ident of the North Carolina As sociation of Negro Colleges in 1927 and 1941. Dr. Trent is the father of W. J. Trent, Jr., Executive Director of the United Negro College Fund, of which Livingstone is a member institution. Cannon- (Contluned From Page One) riet Tubman Branch of the Y. W. C. A.; Director of the Westmin ister Foundation, an organiza tion of Presbyterian students in State Schools; Chairman of the NCC Religious Activities Com mittee; Member of the Ch4ft- laln’s Association in Universi ties and Colleges; Past Modera tor of the Yadkin Presbytery (an organization of 33 Presby terian Churches in the State); Chairman of the_ Committee on National Missions in the Yad kin Presbytery; MemBer of the Executive Committee of the As sociation of University Presby terian Pastors of the Presbyter- tian Church in the United States; and Chaplain (on a part-time basis at Lincoln Hospital. President Alfonso Elder Is un derstood to have ~ written tltr Rev. Mr. Cannon in part in ac cepting the minister’s resigna tion at NCC: “You have con tributed greatly to the spiritual life of otir students and faculty and I appreciate very deeply the spirit of cooperation which you have exhibited on all oc casions.” (Continued from Page Five) tiny kitchens and big appetieies, range from $15.75 to $172.50. The new bill authorizes for the first time for World War H veterans and veterans with ser vice since the beginlng of the Korena conflict a minimum monthly rate for arrested tu berculosis and a statutory al lowance for the loss, or loss of Farm Croppers—^1952 -Negro- -Ushers- (Contluned From Page One) Conaeeration sermon, it was an- this week by president oi the Awociation, L. E. Austin. (Contluned From Page One) the resolutions committee of the Democratic National Conven tion calls for revision of Senate Rule to 22 to i>ermit imposition of cloture by msijor vote; en actment of an FEPC bill with en forcement powers; elimination of segregation from all federally controlled or aided facilities, services and institutions; enact ment of an anti-l]rnching bill; abolition of the poll tax and SAFETY NATIONAL tAFtTY COUNCIL MAHONALfARM SARTYWHK JULY20-26,1952 Randolph Urges Vigiknce On Gvil Rights Issue In the International head quarters of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in New York City, A. Philip Randolph, International President of the Brotherhood and the Co-Chair man of the National Council for a Permanent FEPC,. warns Ne groes that both the Democrats and Republicans will sidetrack civil rights issues unless Negroes jjvage a militant fight for full and complete civil rights now. He stated that, “just as the Re publican Convention adopted a colorless, meaningless and weak appeasement civil rights plank in the platform with a view to winning the favor of the pixie- crats, so will thee Democrats do the very same thing unless Ne groes struggle for a civil rights program with an FEPC with enforcement powers, a Civil Rights Commission, abolition of Rule 22 and Filibuster, and eli mination of the Poll Tax and Lynching.” Nothing short of this should be considered ac ceptable by any decent Negro in the United States today, whether Democrat or Republi can, concluded Mr. Randolph, Ph,D,- (Contluned From Page One) One person remarked, “Is Dr. Alphonso Elder a mere stooge of UNC and N. C. College Its auxiliary or annex for Negroes thjt he and the college have got to accept every hellish and fiendish plan of that gang of race haters at the University of North Carolina?” Just what attitude the Nation al Association for the Advance ment of Colored People will as sume with the establishment of the PhD degree at N. C. College could not be learned here Wed nesday. C. O. Pearson, Durham attorney for the NAACP stated “No action if any will be taken until the work has actually be gun. The administration at UNC is not working in the pub lic interest as far as Negro citi zens are concerned.’’ Bishop W. J. Walls, senior bishop, A. M. E. Zion Church, Is shown at the pulpit of the Cjm- tennlal Church. Mount Vernon, at the closing session of the New York Conference, jMt af r e Conference went on record to send him to India, as a representetlve of the Connection at an m- ternatlonal meet, November, 1952. Bishop Walls has made an enviable record as a churchman due to the fact that he heads one of the committees of the World Council of Churchi^ fa expect^ to play an important part. Shown with him are the Reverend C. C. Williams, C. D. McWno^, T. C. McDougal, host pastor, who completed the edifice In time to enter the Conference, Bishop Wal^ mr. B. Farley Fisher, General Secretary. Bevereend J. C. Brown, recently appointed to pastor lo Boston, J. H. Tucker and J. H. Douglas, Conference Treasurer. the District’s health facilities. Dr. Cobb hailed the District Medical Society’s decision and said that his society hopes other barriers in the District against equal medical care for Negroes will soon fall. Howard Presides At Republican Nat'l Convention Chicago —Perry W. Howard Mississippi National Conunittee- Trrair^inl veterats polltleame- publican leader, made history here Saturday, when he pre sided over the meeting of the Republician National Commit tee, in its first meeting after the choosing of^the 1952 standard bearer. Mr. Howard, fey virture of the fact that he is the senior mem ber of the service, took over as chairman, the first man of color to have this honor until a new chairman'is elected. It was his duty to preside ov er the sessions in which the newly elected members were in troduced and received by the body. It was also his duty to preside over the "choosing oi the man who will be charged with the job of electing Gett- Eisenhower. The nominee use, of a creative organ. Up to now these benefits have been availabe under exisiting law to certain World War I veterans only. ' COLLEGE VIEW DRIVE IN Two Shows Nightly*'v 8 to 10 P. M. Highway No. 55, Doww Alston Avenue Week Beginning July 20th SUNDAY • MONDAY mCHWAYSOl tues. • WED. I WAS A COMMUNIST FOR THE FBI THUR. • FRI. PEOPLE AGAINST O’HARA SPENCER TRACY , JOHN HODIAK • SATURDAY • DODGE cmr ERROL FLYNN expressed his thanks and b^st wishes to Mr. Howard and as sured iiim that he was grateful to greet him as the acting chair man of the party. Mr. Howard handled the meet-‘ ings like a veteran. Party mem bers who tried to recall found it impossible to find where a Negro had ever presided over this august body. It was his duty to call upon the members and all Republicans to unite and go forward to lect a Republican presideent and a Republican Congress comes November. This position gives Mr. Howard a unique responsibility in the forthcoming campaign, Mr. Howard appointed the committee to wait on the nom inee to ascertain his wishes as to the officers of the new na tional committee. As a result, Arthur Summerfield, Michigan was elected chairman for the next four years and received the gavel from Mr. Howard at the end of the session. can be placed on the visiting staffs. When Dr. Cobb became pres ident of the Medico-Chirurgical Society in 1945, the organization began a concerted attack on dis crimination against Negroes in DRESS yP FRANKFURTERS / 'wa: -Medical- stuff Irmkt wWi a fatty drMtlng and not* Aa toco^laa lh«y *•«••• up« •firlch«il yaaat-ralic4 broad crumbs males anough drafting to stuff a pound of franks — or • to 10 larga onai. lak* tha draai*d-up franks about 10 mhiutas hi « hat avan and sorva hnmadtataly with a hat mustard or tomato sauco. (Contluned From Page One) riers Is a particularly signifi cant victory for-JSfigto_ja£ntL bers of the medical profession in Washington because private hos pitals in the city require that doctors be members of the Dis trict Medical' Society before they STUFFED JTIANKFURTBRS 1 lb. frankfurten 4 cup margarine or butter >4 cup minced onion 2 tablespoons minced celery 2 teaspoons chopped parslL'y Ml teaspoon drira'basU (optional) 3"c5IpJ~sofr'entIcHe3~ yetu-raised bread crumbs. Salt and Pepper. S~iit franks down the middlo but c’o not cut all the way through. Arrange in greased baking dish. Melt margarine or butter in • fry ing pan. Add onion, celery, parslej^ and basil and cook until onion ana celery are tender. Stir in bread crumbs until all margarine or but* (cr is soaked up. Season to taste with salt and pepper. If desired, moisten with a little hot water. ^Ht**f™n^l'Ad^a littu'wate " to baking dish to keep franlot from burning. Bake at 400* F. (mod;r- ately hot oven) 10 minutes. Seive v/ith hot mustard or tomato .sauce. Makes 4 lervings.'^' YES — IT’S A FACT — PURITT STORES VOLUME SALES MAKE IT POSSIBLE TO SAVE TOUR MONET. SHOP TOUR FATETTEVILLE STREET PURITT STORE. FRESH HOME KILLED FORK SMALL FRESH HAMS S5c FRESH BACK BONES lb. 55c SMALL FRESH SHOULDER fic FRESH SIDE lb. 43c FROSTT MORN FRANKS He SLICEP BACON Ib. 39c lO-POUND BUCEXT CHnTERLINGS $l.« FURITT IN a LB. STICKS OlEO !lc nnrnNEEnHEE lo lb: bag FROSTY MORN " 25 LB. STAND PURE URD E!5 FLOUR Be 9 OZ. BOX PIE CRUX MIX No HONEY IN 16 OZ. HANDY SERVER 4?c FRESH FISH DAILY ores OVIE OWNED
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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July 19, 1952, edition 1
8
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