Stanford L V/orren A Fa»ttevill ## f ' 6dl For Bombed Alabama Churches Forms ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ DR. ACCUSED OF ABORIION ON WHITE WOMAN OPENS $284,000 CHURCH The Rt. Rev. R. L. Jones of SaJUbury, pretiding prelate of the fourth Episcopal AME Zion ditt^t, it shown dedicating the tuw Greater MetropoUtan Wes ley AME Zion church at 1700 Jl. W. Capitol Street in Wash- ington, D. C. Formal services opening the new Imilding were h€ld Sunday. The buildini; was purchased . from an unidentified D. C. con gregation by the AME Zion church at a coit $284,000. The old Metropolitan church site, at 411 D street. Southwest, is being razed to make way for a housing project. An historic land mark, it was the first Negro Church estab lished in the District of Coluni' bia, was a mecca for the under ground railroad and served as the stage for many of Frederick Douglos’ denunciationt of the slavery system. The Rev. H. C. Lee i« pastor of Greater Metro politan. TO SET UP RETREAT Ushers Buy College Site KBANKLINTON The property - once- housing C^egf li^i^^clUd' ninational Ushers Asso ciation of North Carolina, it .. j announced this week by L. E. Austin of Durham, president of the association. Located on U.S. highway No. Om, with a frontage of one mile, the property was bought from the American Missionary Anociation, sum>orters of the Christtim-CoUeg? whicii has abw^4pn^ ^ purcnase included some g4 fcr^ t^q dpT^tories, and IlfirfK 9^ which Igrtngr^y f^ryed as tte home of the |(^Qi^’s Although the exact amount of ti»« purchase was not made public, it it thought tliat the ' figure ran into five digits. According to President Aus tin, the property will be used by the North Carolina Ushers aa a home for retired ministers and their wives or widows. It will be open to all denomina- Uona. A spokesman for the associ ation said after announcement of the purctiase, “many preach ers serve small charges in ur- ban ai»d rura} ‘cehters for years without ever earning ‘ enough money with which to purchase K hobie of their 6wh. The Ushers As^iittioh ^pes to sne to it y»a^ such' init^ers are able 19 t^'eir'lafer years ii) the tJlgi)ity^l^omin£ to their pro- ksilon," It WM also stated that the c 7anization intends to provide pi :nic grounds and accommo dations for Sunday Schools, churches, fratemltes, clubs and o'her organizations at the re- t cat. The as^iation is the largest au(.h organization cutting across (lonominational ties in the state, (continued on page 8) COUNTY OF THE YEAR Scott To Make PersonlAward ROkBORO Presentation of the “County of the Year" Award to Person County will climax a day-long celebration to be held here at the County Courthouse on Mon day, March 18. Person County was declared winner in the North Carolina Rural Progress Campaign for 1056, with special reference to Negroes (n February of this year. Thije cbiihty had won out in competition with 60-others in the State on the basis of its Negro population having con> tributed most to the overall de- SENATOB SCOTT velopment of the country. The final decision was an nounced in February by Dr. W. E. Reed, ctiairman of the State Committee and dean of the School of Agriculture at AftT College, Greensboro. The com- ties: Iredell, ITnlon, 0i^Uh Mear-Old iiiCKinsnes . , . For Mayof , , , REVERiENP RICKa EVANGELIST ENTERS LISTS FOR MAYOR Rev. Julius Hicks, 504 Rox- boro Street, was the first person to file for office of Mayor of Durham in the election ^ be held liere on May 12, it Was dis closed here this weelc. '^e in cumbent is Mayor E. 'J- 5vai>s who has not yet made any an nouncement as to liis intei^tiqn^ but it is Ijel^eved l^y tho®® close to the ppiiUcal sitjiation Dur-: ham that he wjll be q pandidate to succeed himself. Rev. Hicks is a World War II combat veteran, a radio evange list and experienced in the tex tile field. At present he is presi dent of the Carolina Evangelist Association and director of the State Singing Convention. He is also active in the AMVETS and other veteran organizations. According to Rev. Hiclts,.he (continued on page 8) 6ASTQNIA Qne of the ch^'s ted wpjl known eiiiMn*, 78 y^r-^d Or. W. Percy Carter, has h«en charged with perform ing an abortion of what has been descril>ed as a “Ijeautiful” white woman. The physician has been placed under $5,000 l>ond, and preliminary hearing was sche duled for Wednesday. The identity of the woman remained a police secret early this week, but Detective Ed Groves, who broke the'case, de- scribed her as a “beautiful, higlily inte^igent wo^^.”, He said t^e WQm^ ^wr^ed to a fp'reigii' naU^n^ l)^t U separa^^ from ‘ "^ef ^Usf^qd who ^s q^t flf ^e ‘cQWfllary. She is 9 beaut}9iai)/ ^cpqr4in| tq report*, Qrovos, who receive “tips" on th* al leged abortion, went to the wo man’s home sarly this week where she was, according to Oroyes, “very cooperative.” He said she gave him a statement. According to police, the wo- man said she underwent an ope ration in Dqctor Charter’s office about five p.m. on Feb. 26. Po lice report tliat she said the doc tor was assisted by A Negro nurse in the Opehiti6n. Reportedly ^wo ^ohtlw preg- (coAtinaed on pa^e' Edgecombe and Nash. W. Kerr Scott, Haw River, U. S. Senator from Nortii Caro lina, will deliver the principal address at the formal presenta tion program to begin at 3:30 P.M. The cash award cf 9500, given jointly by Dr. Clarence Poe, publisher of the Progres sive Fanner, Raleigh, and the Agricultural Association 6f A and T College, will ba presenled by William Poe, associate edi tor of the publication. It will t>e received by Dr. Warmoth T Gibbs, pre^dent of the AftT College, sponsor of the project, who, in turn, will present it to the winning county. The award will be accepted for the county by C. J. Ford, cou&ty agent. Other prominent persona scheduled to appear on the af ternoon program include; T. B. Woody, mayor of Roxboro; John Merritt, Person County Board of Commissioners; (Jor don B. Hunter, representing county businesses; R. E. Jones, State agent, in charge of the AlcT College Extension Service and R. W. Shoffner, Raleigh, assistant director. HKCdfi VOLUBrt 83— NUMBER 11 DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1957 PRICE; TEN CENTS k Representatives of the five labor unions at Ligget-Myers, official* of the Tobacco Workers International and company offi cials concluded negotiations for new contract at the Durham plant in conferences last week. Here is a scene taken from one of the talks, held at the firm's o//ices in Durham last Wedues- day through Friday. Present for the conferences were representatives from Tq- bacco Workers Union locals 176, 177, 194, 202 and 208. Also, Georo4 Robinson, (seated, ex treme left second row)second vice-president of the Tobacco Workers International, and S. E. Blaine, (seated second from left second rowj first-vice president of the Tobacco Workers Inter national, were on hand for the talks. Tentative agreement woe reached on a new contract for the Durham plant, pending op- proval bv various local unions. Eastern N. C Registrar To Face $5,000 Damage Hearing In Ntoy SUM 1^ iNMMlVe ages for refusing to register a Negro will protMbly- t>d hoard in May. The action, brought against Littleton registrar T, W. Ck>le by Ernest Ivey, was orifinally schedule^^r ^ miei|j) di vision ef the (e^er«) now in ses^en Howeyf?, lawyers tjr the plaintiff were notified iMt week by ^ f9|erDl ofiurt rterk that the case be«q transferred to tho Wilson division ol th* oaitem district of th« tedoral court. Th« Wilson term of the court opens in May. Attorney James R. Walker of Weldon, one of the lawyers for the plaintiff, explained to the TIMES this week tliat he feels the change was made because of the crowded calender of the Raleigh term. Judge Don Gilliam of the Eastern district of the Federal court will hear case. Ivey^^ |2 yMf 9^ ^rjner- prMCh^ yttle- ton, ^rM in the «otiqn that he ag«p4n)stered exami nation cont^i^g olMuro and diiQcult questions which he sulM^qumtly did not pass to registry CoU's satisfaction. He Is seeking $5,000 damages on the grounds that denial of registration by Cole was willful and imlawfCil, constituted an in tentional abuse of discretionary powers and was a wilful denial of his civil rights. The outcome of the case may well have bear^ oi^ the; tion of lit«;n^c^ t^ts ^b- spectiv^ yq^s, nc;w U^e {n anoth^ ^aM Igrof^gl^t in federal couH W a resid^t of nearby Northampton county. Officers of Winston-Salem InterdfnomlnatiooMl Min* t-tarial Alliance elected at ■ recent meeting at the PMt^rton Avtnuf BTv pictured liere. Left to right are Kcvennds tt, L. PattimoB, seeretaryi LeEoy Pavis, reporter) W. M. Adams, treasurer; S. W. Hylton, Jr., financial secretary; BiiiMp H. D. Wilson, vice-president; James A. Blaine, pred- dent; Edward Gholften, J. B. Bridges, aMisant Mcretarjr; and Junius Dudley, secretai^. Thejr were installed in formal sorvices at the YWCA last Monday, during wMch the presidential address was given by Rev. Blaine. micpofflto AtKCCSimkqf Greek letter organtaations in 10 nearby colleges have been Invitod to }ola the Nortlv lina College Pan Hellenic obser vance of Qreek Week, March 17-aa. An address by Clarence Mit chell, director of the Wasliing- ton Bureau of the National As sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, at 3 p.m. Sunday in Duke Auditorium starts the week’s program. Mitchell will l>e guest at a, tea sponsored by the Durham Business School at the Algon quin Club Hou|se en Fayette ville Street after l^is NCC tulk. A P9vie iq QUke Auditorium Sunday night^'WiU climax the day’s prograni. " Other events icheduled dur ing the week are an all-Greek sing at 1 p.m. on the campus Tuesday, another sing and a forum at 7:30 Wednesday night in the auditorium of the Com merce Building on the meaning of fraternities and sororitie.i on today’s campus. Mitchell, a former newap^j^r reporter, is a graduate ol Lin- coUi University (Pa.) ar\d the AtlanU School ql Soyciai Wvk. He ^o^nf^ the I^AACP’s Washin{5V>h 4*' 'I®*® serylng in at^n^/ative capa- citias in branches In Atlanta, Ga., and it. faul, MlnnesoU. m Amriversary Community Baptist Church of Durham will celebrate its 15th Anniversary on Sunday, March 17th with Special Services. The Anniversary theme is “Tribu taries Toward Church Growth.'' Guest speaker for the morn ing services will be Dr. J. Neal Hughley, Pastor of First Bap tist Church, Franklin ton. He is also Minister at North Carolina College and Professor of Econo mics. Other guests will be Prin cipals and Faculty members of county schools, L. S. Uilliard, Merrlck-Moore School; W. H. Cole, Jr., Pearsontown No. I; and J. W. Davidson, Pearson town No. II. At 3 P.M. the Lincoln Memo rial Baptist church with Rev. R. H. Johnson, acting pastor, will render special afternoon ser vices. Rev. E. T. Thmnpson, Com munity Baptist pastor, said that the public is invited to attend the, services. At the regular meeting of the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs last Thursday, J. S. Stewart, chairman of the organization and secretary of Mutual Savings and Loan Asso ciation, was overwhelmingly endorsed by the Committee as its candidate for City Council from the Third Ward. Stewart allowed his name to be offered by the Committee in response to an unprecedented demand by Durham citiiens from all walks of life. Stewart is well-known in business, civic and religious circles of Durhaoi and the state where he has served un selfishly for a long number of years. He promises, if elected, to do everything In his power to help make Durham a bigger and better dty. — Alabama Group Seeks SIIW 000 For Rebuilding Florida A. And M. News Chief Is Publications Meet Consultant MONTGOMERY, AU. Negro Ministers of Montgom ery, anxious to rebuild the churches and homes that were damaged from the bombings of last jMuary 10, are organizing a National Campaign to raise money. Under the sponsorship of dvic minded clergymen, the group known as the Committee to Study and Plan Aid to the Bombed Churches and Homes has set its goal at $100,003. Two of the churches that were completely wrecked were without benefit of insurance (continued on page g) Charl^ J. Smith, III, a publi cations expert and director of public relations at Florida AltM University, Tallahasse, Florida, has been named chief consultant for the Campus Echo Publlea- tions Conference which will be held at North Carolina College on April 5, This will be the Second An nual Publications Conference for the prize winning NCC newspaper, which was rated “All American'’ by the Associ ated Collegiate Press last year. This year the Eagle, NCC year book, will be co-sponsor. Some 300 faculty advisers and students from high schools In North Carolina, South Caro lina, and Virginia are expected to attend the meeting. A native of Augusta. Georgia, Smith received his undergradu ate training at Tennessee A&I University in Nashville and the master's degree in journalism at I the State University of lovm. SMITH He was director of public rela tions at Tennessee State before taking over his present position at Florida A&M six years ago. The youthful publications specialist founded the annual FAMU Interscholastic Press Worlcshop which is now in its seventh year. He is also adviser to the Florida AltM student pa per, the FAMUAN. At the NOC meeting. Smith will stress the value of audio visual techniques in Improving the quality of high school news- (coatinued on page S)