One M Gov. Hodges, 'Prominent Negro Leqders’ Foriw ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Golf Case May Bring Atta^ On JC In Durham Theater THE YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS—Pretty Dora Lee Mar tin, 17 year-old ireshman jrom Houston, Texas, was elected suJteetheart of the University of Iowa last week in an election participated in only by the male portion of the student body.’ The young co-ed, described by white wire services as “light skinned," feigned at the Uni versity’s “Queen of Queens” winter formal dance Saturday nightt one of the University’s top social functions. She was one of seven candidates entered in the contest by her dormitory mates at Surrler Hall, a wo man's dormitory of about 900 ^residents, 50 of whom are Ne groes. Her escort for the dance was Collins Hagler, sophomore fullback on the Iowa team. 'INtEGIiATE IN FIFIEEN YEAIiS' fliOFILE OF AN UNCLE TOM HALIFAX One of the long sought foe “prominent Ne'gro leaden” who apparently backs Gov. Hodges' plan for voluntary, segregatioi was discovered* here this weeli He is Rev. F. L. Bullock pastor of four churches and member of the Halifax'Count; Board of Education advisor; committee. Said Rev. Bullock after a re presentative of the Halifa: NAACP' reqtested' thi Board to end segregation in the county's schools by September 1956. "The two races in the schools would not be integrated with out preparation strengthened with prayer and much consi deration.*’ “f don’t think it (Integration) should be done hbrriedly. I don’t believe the Supreme Court meant for it to be done hurriedly. That is what I am telling the 3,000 people who make up the congregations o{ my churches.” i Six Race Golfers To Face Charge Of Trespassing An attack on-the segregated policy in Durhan^'s Carolina theater, one of th* city’s two largest movie houses, may re sult from a case in Greensboro involving the leasing of public lands to a private group to side step the Supreme Court’s ruling against segregation in public property. In Greensboro, attorneys for six Negroes who were arrested after playing a round of golf at the Gillespie Park cours^ said that the city could not maintain segregation in' its public lands by leasing them to segregated private groups. The course, forinerly owned and operated by the city, was leased to a "private club” for one dollar per year purportedly to prevent Negroes from play ing on the course. After the ac tion, the city announced that it was “out of the, golf Business.” But,' J. Kenneth Lee and Ma jor High, attorneys for the six who were served warrants for trespassing, said that the city I could not maintain segregation indirectly • by leasing the land to private groups. Although the Carolina thea ter is a business, -it is housed in the one-time city auditorium and the building ^s still owned by the city. It was leased to in dividuals sometime ago for the purpose of operating a theater. The city collects $10,000 per year for the lease which hasi quite a number of years to rvm yet. The management of the thea ter has maintained segregaticm since the start. Negroes enter by a side entrance and must sit^ in the upper portion of the bal cony. T^e six charged with tres passing in Greensboro and leheduled ttf -fye trlhl on t)ec. 20, are Samuel Murray, Joseph Sturdivant, Philip Cooke, Ell-i jah Herring, Dr. G6orge Simp kins and Leon Wolfe, all resi dents of the city. The case originally began as an effort by Greensboro Ne-. groes to use the golf facilities in that city. Before the city leased {he land, they were refused permission to play. Now, however. It could blos som Into a test cas« to deter mine if such methods as used by the city of Greensboro in (Continued On Page Eight) (Continufed on Page Eight) VOLUME 31—NUMBe4 DURHAM) N. C.r SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 19S5 PRICE 10 CENTS REV. F. L. BULLOCK He went on to say that if it is accomplished in the next 10 to 15 years, it will be time enough. •Notwithstanding Rev. Bul^ lock, Woodrow Harvey, chair-. 5 , f n M V MASONS'HMD RAPS HODGES INCONVBmON The ICasona of North Caro lina ended, their thM* ds]r meeting in Durham tUa wedi with a blast at Got. Luther Hodges for his 'attack on tiie NAACP. The organization imU ses sions in Durham on Mnaday, Tuesday and Wcdneadby. at the St. Joseph AMK church and the Hillside High -SchuoL U was the 85th annual meeting of tlM organization. I lose respect for a chief executive who will g« OK tite air over radio and tel—ilion and denounce a legitimate or ganization that is fighting for human }iistice in full view of the wt^ld,. teaching people the brotherhood of man and good citizenship, who can never see, or at least never speak of that white-robed hooded night rider shot through with subversive ness, undertaking to dethrone law and order and destroy our way of life.” These were the words of G. D. Garfaes, grandmaster of the Masons, who delivered the main address at a putdic meet ing held at the Hillside high school Tuesday nigh^ A resident of wUmington, Cames went on to defend the NAACP for its “constructive works” and pledged the con tinued support of the Masons to the organization. Rev. O. D. Came$, grand l the organigatitm't public meet-1 ges- for his statement against the i ment of Colored People. Shown master of North Carollna’t Md* ing in Durham Tueiday night at NAACP and pledged support of seated in the background ate sons, i* shotim ?iere addreming 1 Hillside high school auditorium. 1 his organization for the tfdtiim- principal officers of the organt- the audience which attended | Rev. Carnet attacked Gov. Hod- [ oI Association for the Advance-1 zation. Integrate South, AFL-CIO Urged NEW ^ singer 8Uppo'rt'>(rom this new — —rj— ? 'Delegates to the AFL-CIO corv^idated amr of organize -1^ I ^^ Asa D. Herrihg, Jr., was re cently prompted to the rank sf Captain in the United Stater Air Force. He it shown here with wife and their two sons, Alan, one, and Asa Da%%cy, HI, three. Captain Herring is presently assigned to the S06th Strategic Fighter Wing at Tin^ ker~Air Force Bate, Oklahoma City, where he has 'duties at flight commander, pilot instruc tor and test pilot. The young airman flew right wing guard for jCaptain Don Jackson in the history making United Statet- to-England jet flight,, longest on record. Captain Herring was educate’ ed in the ptiblic sehoolt of Asheville and at Tuskegee In stitute, where he received a bachelor’s degree in areo me chanics. He has alto ttudied at th/e Lewis School of Science and Technology and the Aeronauti cal University .of Chicago. His wife is the former Miss Honor Bomar, a graduate of Hampton Institute and former teacher in the Asheville public schools. The young jet pilot, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Herring of Ashe ville, is making a coreeTi of fly ing. NEW . Delegates to the AFL-CIO conventTofi here wire told by the nation's leading civil rights attorney last week that one of their biggest jobs is to organize the newly industrialized l^outh “on a completely integrated basis without any compromise in the slightest detail.” Thurgood Marshall, NAACP special counsel, asserted that a refusal to compromise on racial integration by Negroes, and or ganized labor in the South “can rally other good foites of the South to the end that justice will prevaiL” Southern Ne groes, he noted, haVe “refused to compromise on the question of racial segregation.” The NAACP spokesman de cried an “atmosphere of law lessness” prevailing. in sections of the South regarding compli ance with the Supreme Court school decisions and protection of Negroes’ constitutional rights, as well as “ia similar lack of protection for the rights of organized labor in many parts of the South.” “It should be noted that this vicious anti-Negro .program ex tends to white citizens who dare to speak out for justice for Ne groes,” Marshall said. “It is highly significant that in many areas of the deep South orga' nized labor is being bracketed in the same position as the Ne gro He declared that the merged labor movement’s duties in. the South will include not only "seeing to it that the plants in- vblved are...organized ort completely non-racial basis” but “that the communities sur rounding these plants are run in a democratic fashion which today means, according to the law of the land, the absence of racial segregaticii.” Maintaining that “the addi-. tldnal strength from this (la' bor) merger wUl most certain ly be used for the benefit of the country in general,” Mar shall praised “the recognition by organized labor of the need of extending labor’s fight from inside th^ plant to the commu nity in general.” “Those of us in the fight for justiqe for Negro Americans can now depend upon an even ;er support Jrom this new illdated amr of organize labor,^’ he added. Strong Civil Rights Resolution FoUovrfng Marshall’s address the convention passed a resolu tion urging ‘‘all of our affiliated state and local bodies to work with other liberal forces in their communities to facilitate a peaceful and effective transi tion to an linsegregated Ameri can educational system.” Fur- (Continued on Page Eight) Mbery ffofive In ieader'sMtr NEW YORK Reports so far received from Texas indicate that the murder of Herbert Johnson was un connected with his presidency of the Schulenberg, Texas, NAACP branch, Roy WiVElns, executive secretary of the Na tional Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People, said here Friday. According to V. S. Tate, of Dallas, Tex., NAACP counsel for the Sovthwest region, there appears as yet to be no-positive indication Johnson was slain because of his NAACP activity. 'The motive for murder, Tate said,. seemed to be robbery as the victim-was known to carry sixeable sums about his person. Duriiam NAACP Meeting Sunday L. B. Austin, publisher mt the Carolina Times, will deliver'the principal address at tfee 'Svst ham chapter WAACP' meeting to be tre»amiday at the Union - - Baptist Church on Roxboro St. The meeting begins al four o’clock. A trophy will be presented to the organization, church or business which has garnered the most members during the month, Atty F. B. McKissick, president of the Du'^hain chs’j- ter said. Louis Jones, labor un ion official, will make the pre sentation. Defeat Of Virginia Bias Schools Could NORFOLK, Va. | course, that is, whether it will Defeat of a proposal which go along with integrated public would have thls^tate dump tax schools or use state money to Plan To Keep End Byrd Reign money Into “private schools” in a- frantic attempt to evade the. Supreme Court’s ruling against segregated schools was predict-' ed here last week. A highly informed source re vealed that the prqposal, which is actually an amendment to the Constitution . empowering the state to “pay the way” of-stu dents to private schools rather than have them attend integrat ed ones,*has become an unpopu lar one among Old Dominion residents for a variety of rea sons, and has only a 50-50 chance of surviving the state wide referendum scheduled for January 9. \ Last week, the state legisla ture voted to submit to popular vote the plan which would eliminate from the Constitutloi) that portion which prohibits the state from 'I using public funds for private schools. The necessity for a constitutional amendment arose after a Cir cuit Court ruled that the state could not under its present con stitution use tax money for pri vate schools. This ruling came after the Gray Commission which formulated the idea, at the direction of 3ov. Thomas Stanley, had submitted the plan. Each school district'will have authority to detepnine its own send pupils to private schools, including transportation. A combination of the Negro- future. Norfolk, for instance, has gone on record as being ready to integrate by the Fall of 19^6. liberal white-Republican plus the general unpopularity of the proposal could seal its doom at the polls, according to the best informed sources last week. At any case, the adminis tration’s plan is in for very rough sledding, it is generally ^ believed. | Causes of the proposal’s un- | popularity were listed as fol io wing i i. The dissatisfaction among supporters o^ the Gray plan These reasons, plus the al ready known Negro opposition vote to the proposal are thought to be enough to muster a powerful coalition against it at the polls on January 9. If the state’s Re publican leaders decide to join a coalition of liberal white-Ne- gro voters' the plan is thought to have little chance of succeed ing. The impending referendum has attracted much attention on many fronts. It is b^ng watch ed by NAACP leaders for it mayssignal a new phase in the over the hIgh-handed manner | long sUoi^le against segrega i Sm* A^ii/kafrinn Tn nast in which it has gone about for mulation of it; 2. The uneasiness of the state's churchmen, especially Protestants, over the possibility that the plan would channel much of the money now going for public schools to parochial schools; and 3. The fact that integration is not longer a problem in many units, especially in the far wes tern counties where the Negro population is so sparse that it can be and has been in some in stances absorbed in integrated schools; and in the northern counties and' some large cities, where in^gration Is proceed ing apace or plans are being made to integrate in the near tion in' education. In the past, the fight had been waged large ly in the courts, where many significant victories have been won for integration. But, since the fate of Virginia’s plan, one of the first to be offered by southern state for sidestepping the Supreme Court, rests on the ballot, it means that the fight has been brought to the politi cal arena where, naturally, the victory will go to the most as tute political strategists. And although this may not be a true indicati(m of the political ma turity of Negroes in the state because of the poll tax require- mrat, it could scfve as an iitdl- cation of how future iWnwMies will develop. National political keeping a weather eye on flMt referendum, for defeat for plan could put the skids fla Ik* democratic machine and the eventual end of the dynasty and the entreaetaBKBt of the Republican party te state. It is to be rentembcred ttiat it is an administratton {daa (Continued on Page Ei|^t> t. Negro Cleric Heads Merged Ministers'Gr; SOUTHERN ^ Dr. J. R. Funderburg elected president of the County Minister’s AssociatlHh ' an organization composadl white and Negro mlntstwrm «i* the county. In additicm to Dr. bure another $kgro ^ was named to the ottice aClMMt* surer by the ^ T. L. Pmntm, paatar at (h* • ity A. M. X. Zioii a The onaniiiitiBa in June vrtiatk tte white miiyatar’B m«rted. It Is «an 50 ministers,