MA5TER eieCTRICIAN ONeOFTHe NINE NE6i20&$ AMON6rNeWYOl2J'$ ZlOO 8LECTWCAU CONTRACT- 0*2$. Pd?eN IN WA$«IN(9'1C?N,RC.,$0N OF R$Ym?UO&Y R0ORCH^.THCM^. ©PEWMeNTIN(3r WITH BUCTRlCTy WH6N He AW&5YJ2&OLP. 0P9I6PA IN '24 WW ZlSOflBLP fOLLiei' FORP PWANCIAL WII261? PAUJ20C^5Wil5, JWaiAEPAWP REii^Tf TV ^TUf5 NBC. PHOro^PWr ff 1$ HOggy; H6 wa$ eiBCTEPn€ I20TAL PHC?rO«APHIC $0Cf6TY»6E&«rH2TAlN. A 60LP Mm IN irAUANINft^HCW ^-■chiefSpth^ R^MAN6WATO. RUlip WEIi g^HUANALANP/TtlZIZl'rDIZY LABSfR THAN f«A$ IWULAJ2. WITH peWLC-, He P09V& O/T mcti DOCTDK/ti^woe AMP we ANP iiMvrn euiu^}^ PKES$UI2& CAuSePHIMT060n?CN6tANPTD5E&^l^Wa0^ , He WA$ FtTEP ANP Ml? fO$\VOH CCWRR^ W/IT SCHO>tS, iMPiwp Fc^ wew!$R M0NUM6NT TO HIM /r $6^0We. ^ 44th Annual Kappa Alpha PsI Conclave Theme Is "Achievement Through Integration" Dec. 26-30 WASHINGTON, D. C. With pre-conclave registra tions coming in at a rapid rate, Indications this week were that the 44th annual Grand Chapter Conclave of the Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity in Washington, December 26-30, will be (jpe of the greatest in the history of the fraternity. The convention theme is ‘‘Achievement Through Integra tion” and Dr. Wi Henry Greene, polemarch, has issued a chal lenge to delegates from far and near to come fully prepared to formulate a year’s program along these lines. An attractive four-day pro gram has been outlined begin ning Sunday, December 26, with a half hour radio program, pre-registered at the Kappa Alpha Psi House, 1708 S. Street N. W.,^and a “Get Acquainted Receptions” at the House and the Tropical Room of Dunbar Hotel. Miner Teachers College, Georgia Avenue and Euclid Street, Northwest, will be head quarters for the business ses sions, committee meetings and workshops of the conclave. A public meeting at whicH a Cabinet member of the Eisen hower AddiiniBtration will speak has been arranged for Tuesday night, December 28, at Howard University’s Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel. In addition to the business sessions, public forum and other serious activities of the four- day program, a round of out standing entertainment has been programmed. An open dance is scheduled for Monday, Dec. 27, at the District National Guard Armory, with the aimual Kappa Alpha Psi banquet at Hotel Statler on Wednesday, Dec. 29, and the closed datice, also at Hotel Statler, on Thursday, December 30. Other social activities Include a reception by the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority -on Monday, December 27, and a reception by the Pan Hellenic Council on Tuesday, December 28, at the Lincoln Colonnade. Wives and sweethearts of the host chapters brothers have or ganized an auxiliary and through this organization ar- ranged special platis to enter- " tain visiting wives and friends of the delegates. This program includes a card party, fashion show, a tour of Embassies in Washington and sightseeing C. K. Brown, general' chair man of the conclave coordina ting committee,-said this week that indications are that one of the largest attentances at post war conclaves is anticipated. Howard T. Pearcall. chair man of the A and T College Music Department, Greensboro, N. Cv directs the college's Male Chorus which is now touring principal cities in the state. Mr. Pearsall orgauited the unique group in 1951, his first year at the college. YWCA Presents Program Here The YWCA at North Caro lina College lield a apa^I Thanksgiving service at 6 a.m. Thursday morning in the Music Assembly. Ann McCloud was the chairman of the Program Committee. Among the participants in the program were: The Rev. Preston Williamg, Joan Burke, Josephine Long and Mable Pos ton. The officers of the YWCA are; Kathline Singletary, presi- Third Annual Band Director's Clinic Set For A. And T. College Dec. 2nd GREENSBORO More than 100 public school music instructors from through out North Carolina are expected to attend the third annual Band Director’s QUnic to be held here at A and T College on Thursday, December 2. The event, aimed at improv ing band music instruction in the elementary and high schools of the state, is sponsored by the Band Technics Class in the col lege’s Music Department. Featured lecturer at the one- day meet is N. E. Nutt, dean Vandercook College of Music, Chicago. He will present a lecture - demonstration which stresses practical teaching de vices for improving the perfor mance of school instrumental organizations. The noted in structor has just recently con ducted similar sessions at the annual Midwest National Band Clinic at Chicago and the Na tional Band Conductors Confer ence-held at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, He will appear at the afternoon session bebinning at 1:30. The morning session will feature a concert by the famed U. S. Navy Band of Washington, D. C. under the direction of Commander Charles Brendler. The concert to be held in the college gymnasium beginning at 11:00 A. M., will be open to the student body and general pub lic. Walter F. Carlson, director of bands at A and T College, and his assistant WilUam J. Penn will be in charge of the pro gram for the clinic. N. C. Negro College Conference Calls For More Jobs For Negroes The North Carolina Negro College Conference voted here last week to create iqore job opportunities for Negroes. Mayes B6hrman of Greens boro, director of the Merit Em ployment Program of the Apier- ican Friends Service Committee, told the conference that Negroes at present hold only between “500 and 1,000 o fthe 40,023 dif ferent jobs listed in the govern ment’s emplojonent dictionary.” In a session at North Carolina College at Durham, the con ference also passed a resoln- tlon favoring Supreme Court’s decision outlawing segregation in the public schools. Copies of the resolu tion were ordered sent to the State’s Attorney General, the State Board of Edu- tion, and the State Sup- Intendent of Public Instruc tion. A special Vocational Oppor tunities Committee, headed by Dr. Hardy Liston, President of Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte and President-elect of the N. C. College Conference, will oontinue its job study pro ject. W. E. Bluford, professor of economics at Johnson C. Smith University, is the new chairman of the commitee. C. A. Chick of Fayetteville State Teachers Col lege, Fayetteville, and Dr. M. D. Williams of Shaw Universi ty, Raleigh, are the members of the committee. In giving a progress report. Dr. Williams said: “This is a cri tical area which suggests that Negro leadership should devise techniques which could be ap proached in good will and in good spirit for the mutual ad vantage of industry and the cit izens in localities served by in dustries.” Behrman, in the day’s key note addreess, said it was his personal experience that job op- portimities for Negroes are in creasing in the South. dent; Doris Ragland, vice-presi dent; Renee Moore, secretary; Celestine Clayton, assistant sec retary; and Gertrude Moore, Treasurer. Mrs. Rae E. Williams is ad viser to this organization. Bowie Named Secretary Of Family Life Assn. Dr. Carol C. Bowie, professor of psychology at North Carolina College, has been elected secre tary of the North Carolina Family Life Association. The North Carolina FLA is a statewide interracial organiza tion with headqaarters in Char lotte. George A. Douglas is presi dent of the FLA. Dr. Bowie served for three years as consulting psychologist in a child guidance clinic in the Institute for Juvenile Research in Chicago. She has also served in a diagnostic court in Chicago SATVBDAT^ MO. Mft. lf$4 TRK CAKOUNA TIMES PACS HERE’S HEALT'HI By L»wi» WHAT vrCETABLE.enONN AS AN ORNAMENT MTHE UNITEP VTATES KX>yE«B ACO, IS TOMV OOR *EC- OttO LAR6EST FCODCaoi*? WHAT VEGETABLE, A NATIVE Of TW SOUTH AMERICAN ANDES. WAS Ht- mOPUCEP IN EUROPE BY EARLy EXPLORERS? I IVHAf VEGETABLE RETAINS MOST OF rre vmuNiN c (OVER AFTER IT HAS BEEN CCOKEPr THE TD/MATO WHAT VEGETABLE IS RKN IN VITAMINS ANP MINERALS rer is very low w calorio? WHAT VECETASLE.ONCE KNOWN AS THE 'LOVE AM-E: IHP SI R WALTER RALEI6H PRESENT TO QUEEN ELIZABETH AS A TOKEN Of HIS DEVOTION ? m AME Zion Conference Comes To An End; Appointments Announced FUEL OIL - KEROSENE TELEPHONK 8-1217 BONDED DRIVERS METERED DELIVERY ' OIL DBUMS & STORAGE TANKS FOR SALB KENAN OIL COMPANY HILLSBORO BOAD DURHAM, N. C. mum iuj{M)Ki) winsKKi 2 PINT 4/5 QUART CARSTAIRS BlibS. DISTIUJM OOl. I , H Y. ■ BLENDED vVHISKEY, 86 PWOF. 7Z% GRAIN NCIITRAL SPUUTI 20% To 40% SAVINGS THREE PAYMENTS SERVE AS CASH 1/3 DOWN 1/3 30 DAY 1/3 60 DAYS OPEN DAH.Y 9 A. M. TO 10. P.'M. SATURDAY 8 P. M. McNILUN FURNITURE STORE STORE 5 MILES EAST OF DURHAM DIAL 2-1772 NEW HIGHWAY 70 A COMPLETE ElicTRIC AND TRANSPORTATION SERVICE DUKE POWER COMPANY DIAL 2151 Comer Mangum and Pamsh Sts. SOUTHERN PINES The Central North Carolina Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Chur ch which met here November 24-28, in its Sevneyt-Fifth An nual Session-Diamond Jubilee Session” came to a close today with appointments fof the en suing year and the ordaining of one woman and three men as elders in the church. The Conference released a statement to the effect that the Session of this year, which was the most successful in its his tory, was highlighted by dis cussions by ministers and dele gates covering practically every aspect of church life and ad dresses stressing a non-segrega- ted church. Some of the speakers appear ing on the program were the Rev. J. W. Hatch, the Rev. J. C Flowers, the Rev. A. G. Duns- ton, Jr., Dr. W. J. Tr*nt, Presi dent of Livingstone College, Mrs. Josephine Humbles Kyles, Bishop W. C. Brown, Mr. John S. Talley, Rev M. P. Marsh, and F. R. Brown and J. H. Satter- white of Livingstone College. Also speaking were Dr. Vic tor J. Tulane, Howard Univer sity chemistry instructor and national laymen leader, the Rev. Claude Spurgeon, general-audi^ tor who delivered the ordination sermon, and Bishop Jones. The Rt. Rev. Raymond Luther Jones, at the afternoon meeting which closed the session, read the names of the appointees among whom was the Rev. T. J. Long, of Durham who was re appointed to begin his 29th year as presiding elder of the Durham District. Also among the appointees was the Iter. S. P. Pwry who returns to Oi« St. Mark AMB Zion Church in Ourham to b«> gin hi« IWh year of aervic*. The appointments imMte na a* follows: - Durham district—St Mark, Durham, S. P. Perry; St Paul' Union, L. R. White; Mitchell Chapel, R. V. Horton; Mt. Olive Durham, J. Z. Siler; Kyle* Tem ple, Durham, George T. Thar- rington; Cameron Grove, Jones boro, J. E. Jones; Corinth-Cen- tannial, Siler City, L. R. Willi ams; Evans Circuit, R. S. Smith- erman; Chestnut-Chapel HiU Circuit, M. F. Ward; Gees Grove Circuit, H. W. Harrell; Holland' Circuit, W. D. Drake; New England-Mt. View, Ed ward McClain; Russell, N. D. McLiean; St. B^tthews, Efford Alston; Thompson-Glover, Ef- Jord Alston; O'Bryant, Dorothy Keith; White Oak-Byrd, C. T. Farrow; Belmont, Roxie Small; and BlackweU, Julious Alston. Fayetteville district—Evans Metropolitan, Fayetteville, C. R. Coleman; Beaver Creek, J. S. Maynor; New Bethel Staton, H. T. McClain; Mattocics Memorial Fayetteville, S. J. Walls; Trmi- ty, Dunn, W. S. Henderson; St. John, Fayetteville, David Saw yer; Mt. Zion Station, J. A. Ashley; Gardner's Chapel, E. H. Beebee; Locke Creek Station, J. R. Ingram; Mt. Hebrew Cir cuit, M. P. PiirceU; Wesley-Er- win, J. W. Everett; Oak Grove Circuit, L. H. King; Tar Heel Circuit, W. E. Turner; Hood’s Temple, Fayetteville, Houston McLaurin; Elizabeth Circuit, T. H. Murphy; Huske Grove, T. W. Murchison. Sanford district—Fair Pro mise, Sanford, D. W. I. MpTnnis; Bethel Station, G. F. DoWtly; Jonesboro Circuit, D. D. Glover, Trinity, Southern I^es, T. L. Parsons; Carthage Circuit, C. V. (Continued on Page Seven) and for two years was clinical psychologist with the Veterans Administration at Tuskegee, Alabama. Professor Bowie received her A.B. degree at Columbia Uni versity, the M.A. from Colum-' bia University, and the Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. 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