Final Meeting Of fhe Elementary School Principals Workshop Held Final meetingi of the Ele mentary School Principals Worluh4>, now in ■ession at Vir ginia State College, will be held next week. The workahop la be ing conducted by Department of BlemSntary Education at Vir- 'ginia State College, with Mias Wilhelmin^'E. Hamlin, Head of the Department, and BIrs. Mir iam G. Lane aa ataff. Twuitjr Virginia school prin- eipals and teaehers are taklvc part tai the prAjeet. for the past five weeks the group haa been engaged in discovering and listing problems Insident to the adminiatratlon of an elementary school. Stndlea have made toward the solu tion of these problems. The workahop ia held in co operation with the Southern Educational Foundation which provides ten $100.00 scholar ships for as many participants. Mrs. Clara H. Peterson, Prin cipal of the Charles H. Houston School of Alexandria, served aa consultant during early sessions of the workshop. Dr. A. G. Rich ardson, Associate Supervisor of Elementary and Secondary Edu cation, State Board of Education, spoke to the group on “Basic Assumptions Underlying a Train ing Program for Principals.” Workahop participants in clude; Miss Geneva F. Arch er, Douglas Park School, Blacktsone; William D. Coaby, Quioccasin School, Glen Allen; Michael S. Coston, Principal, River School, Edenton, N. C.; Mra. Alton T. Evans, Principal, R. R. Moton School, Emporia; Isaac D. Faulkner, Principal, Eamont School, Charlottesville; Mrs. Ruth D. Ford, Principal, Norman School, Culi>eper; Miss Mary Jane Hubbard, Webster Davis School, Richmond; Rev. Junius H. Moody, Principal, Chlckahominy School, Lightfoot; R. P. Moultrie, Supwvising Principal, Drew and Kemper Schools, Arlington. Mrs. Nellie L. Perry, Union Hurst School, Hot Springs; Lloyd Sykes, Principal, Drew- reysvllle School, Capron; Mrs. Marie W. Sykes, Pope’s Mill, Capron; Mrs. Helen C. Thomas, Supervisor of Cadet Teachers, Elementary Education Depart ment, Virginia State College; Joseph Ij. Travis, Principal, James A. Greene School, Law- rencevlUe; Alvin H- Walker, Principal, Greenville County Training School, Boydton; Mrs. Fannie E. Watson, Principal, Gainesboro School, Roanoke; Rev. Ernest Wheeler, Principal, Madison Training School, Madi son; Miss Ethel L. Wiley, Super visor of Elementary Schools, Gladstone; and Rev. F. D. Yates,' Principal, Mt. Airy School, Qre- tna. SPECIAL: GrsTe Monnments 245 pounds) IS5.09. Markers and footetones also reduced. AWNINGS * TRUCK COV ERS MADE TO ITT. YOST'S SHOP — 30«8 Boxboro Boad. Open >tU 9 P. M. — Call 9-4562 or 4-4543. Forum On School Bias Held By Assembly Group PETERSBURG, VA. The Negro is, and rightly should be, concerned over the stress being place on the “in tention’* issue in school segrega tion cases now before the Supreme Court. That was the concensus of a fonun held Monday night at Vir ginia State College’s second sum mer assembly on the question, “Is Segregation In the Schools Doomed?’' The, forum was arranged by Dean J. H. Johnston. G. G. Sin gleton, Director of the School of Commerce, was moderator, and Dr. W. E. Williams and Dr. J. H. Brewer discussed opposing phases of the subject. Further argument which has been called for by the Supreme Court for its fall session on'the question of what was the intoi- tion of the states which ratified the Fourteenth Amendment was a chief point of discussion. As to whether the states in 1870 intended and foresaw the abolition of segregation in the schools, forum participants rals- WAIjKS F0> palsied VlCmiS. On« of tb* thousand* of postmen throughout the country who have volunteered toe the “MailmeD’s March of H«rcjr.’* to help raise funds tor the United Cerebral Pal^ in its nation-wide drive for $7,800,000. Here, mailman Lonnie J. BfcConnell starts over his route to collect funds on his own time In Los Angeles. With him are two palajr victioiit Terry Mitzell, left, and Sandra Ana Holms^ right ed and discussed numerous ques tions. Forum leaders, who had seen briefs prepared by Negro law yers in the previous hearings on school segregation, praised them as monuments to the brilliance, sincerity, and consecration to puipose of some of the best legal minds in the country. A BARGAIN SALE Want to: 1. BUILD A HOME? 2. BUY SMALL STORE? -r. ^ Investment In Walltown 14f07-*1411 Knox St. and 924 Fourth St. This valuable property 100x140 ft. must be sold now. One small store now being rented, a spacious comer lot with shrubbery and shade trees and 924 Fourth Street adjoining can be repaired for renting. Has running wa ter, etc. Near school, churches and bus stops. $2,975. 1117 ROXBORO STREET Five room home in good neighborhood with bath and new hot water heater. Recently painted inside and out. Newly underpinned with new screens, large front and back porches. Near churches, schools, and three bus lines. Fay $3,200 and take up payments of $35.00 per month. Now being rented f6r $48700 per month. Good investment. For Information Call: EUREKA REALTY CO. "YOUR FASTEST SELLING REAL ESTATE PUBLICIST” Call Today . . . Must Sell PHONE: 9-5682 or 5-0071 L. L. Strauss Gets Atomic Energy Position HAMPTON, VA. Lewis L. Strauss, New York financier and life member of the Hampton Institute board of trustees, was selected on June 24 by President Elsenhower as the new chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. He will succeed Gordon Dean who retired on June 30. Adviser toTWel’resldent’rMi^ Strauss was nominated to a hew ifve-yMT'ttnn on th« Atomic Energy Commission and then President Eisenhow er designated him aa chairman after the Senate confirmed the nomination. Strauss, a rear admiral In the Naval Reserve, was a mem ber of the A. E. C. from 1846 until 1950 and on March 9 of this year was appointed as a non-salarled special assistant to the President to serve as a liaison official between the White House and the A. E. C. He will continue to serve as the President’s personal ad viser on atomic energy mat ters. Wilkerson Clams Up Before Sen. McCarthy In D.C. WASHINGTON Professtjf Doxey A. Wilker son, well-known Negro left winger, refused to open up be fore Senator Joseph McCar thy’s investigating committee on the grounds of possible seU- incrimination. Wilkerson, a former writer and newspaper editor, only remarked: "I have never been interested in com batting Communism.” McCarthy, in turn, seemed bent on using Wilkerson as an example of why he said the FBI has been unable to root communists out of the Govern ment. He dug into Wllkerson’s early affiliations with the gov- ernmetn as far back as 1935 SATtJRDAY. JULY 11. 1663 THl GAltOUNA *10118 when he was a teacher at How ard University, which is ad- minlsterad mostly by the Fed eral Secnrity Agency. Mc Carthy claimed tiuit the FBI in 1942 got up a 59 page d«»- aler on Wilkerson and gave it to the PSA but tliat It refused to fire him. Wilkerson, himaelf, testified ttiat he was «aoployed by the President’s Advisory Commis sion on Education in. ’38 and '39 and with the OPA in ’42-_ ’43. Hia book on Negro educa tion was designed to expow the “horrible discrimination against Negroes in public schools in this country,” so that it was all right with him if the State Department “burns” it. Davis Completes Course In Japan School ETA JIMA, JAPAN—PFC. John A. Davis, Jr., whose wife, Barbara, lives at 620 Nuway Street, Salisbury, recently completed a course in chemi cal warfare at the Eta Jima Specialist School in Japan. Private First Class Davis, whose parents live at 821 N. Highland Avenue, Winston-Sa lem, is a graduate of Hillside High School at Durham, and received his masters degree from the University of Illinois where he is a, member of Alpha Phi Alpha. He was a school teacher in civilian life. Miss Alaveta Hutson, chair man of the Dance department of the North Carolina College at Durham, will appear In the college’s Duke Auditorium on Wednesday night, July 15, at 8:15 p. m. The concert, a spe cial presentation of the NCC Summer School, will be open to the general public without charge. Mias Hutson formcriy danced professiMally with the Katherine Dunham Dance group. She has been enthuri- astically received in several recent recitals in Eastern dance circles. The Army’s latest methods of deteise a^inst chemical, bac teriological and radiological warefare were taught during the concentrated two-week course at Eta Jima. 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