W—PSl" Stanford L Warjren Public Lihrajry Fayetteville St LIVINGSTOIIE HEAD RESIGNS The Carolina Times Is The Oldest, Widest Read Negro Newspaper In The Two Carolinas. PRICE 10c PAY NO MORE VOLUME 33 — NUMBER 23 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 PRICE: TEN CESTS Teacher’s Slayer Tries To Hang Himself Miss Carolyn In^am, daufh- ter of Mrs. Bernice Ingram, 1213 FayettiivUle Street, Is shown here as she fets degree from PresldMit Will* B. Player at Bennett College commence ment exercises on May 21. Mlsa Ingram had previously reoeived the Dayld D, JonM leadenhip award. $10,000 Effort In NEW YORK Since January 1, a total ol $10,000 has been allocated by the NAACP to an educational campaign to register voters in the southern states. It was an nounced here recently by Roy Wilkins, executive secretary. The worls is being done in Georgia, Virginia and in a small section of Mississippi. A pro gram is scheduled to get under way in South Carolina in June and In North Carolina later in the year. The state organizations ol the NAACP are handling the pro gram on the local level. Virginia is adding>« man to its state stall by vote ol its executive commit tee and part of the expense wUl be met by a grant ol ?3,000 from the national headquarters. In the intensive registration period in Georgia in March and April just prior to the election there, local registration clinics were assisted in the amount ol $2,500. A staff man will be added to the South Carolina state organi zation, according to Rev. J. M. Hinton, state president, and a grant of $3,000 will he made by the national otiice, Mr. Wllkios said. The North Carolina program will be a careful one In Con gressional districts and will be imder the direction of Kelly M. Alexander of Charlotte, state NAACP president. “These are purely education al, non-partisan campaigns, Mr. Wilkins said, and will feature the giving of information and instructions to voters on how to register. No work will be done for any political party and the campaign will be in-the handi of NAACP members or in non partisan activity. “We believe that practical work must be done to get voters on the rolls as a matter of good citizenship and for this rea^n our state units are translating tbeir determination into action. “Our funds for this work are limited by the demands being made fbr other aspects of our (Please turn to page Sight) In Vote Soutk ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ N. C. College Graduates 365 Pumps Slugs Into Body of Teacher, Attempts Suicide WILSON A few hours after he had pumped two bullets from a .32 caliber rifle into the body of a pretty, young Wilson school teacher here early Saturday morning, a North Carolina Col lege graduate studient attempted to take his own life after he had been arrested and jailed on a charge of murder. Dead is Miss Jean Willett Bryant, 22, seventh grade tea cher of the Darden High School, who .was shot once in the head and once in the hip.' She had been employed at the school lor the past two years. The student, R^lph Gay, who being held ding bond pcn- prell4iinary hearing which, according to Chid of Police Albert Privett of Wilson, will probably be waived by his attorney. The Carolina Times learned that Miss Bryant was killed about two e^eloek Saturday- (Please turn to page Eight) $1500 Scholarship Given Ligon High Student RALEIGH Ernest Eklward Ratliff, Presi dent of the Ligon'High School Student Council and fourth ranking honor student in the class of 145, was granted a scho; larship of $1,550 to Colgate University in Hamilton, New York fpr the 1957-88 academic straight scholarship and four- hundred fifty dollars ($450) It' a work scholarship. This scho larship is renewable. Ratliff has had a disting^uished high school career winning many honors and prizes. In 1956 he won first prize in the World Peace Speaking Con- t6st;’^e~ also’' served -as sports editor of the Ligon Tatler,. President of the National Honor Society and member of the foot ball team for two years He is planning to major In English as a stej^ toward a career in Jour nalism. I Lillian Elizabeth Carnage, valedictorian of the graduating * class, won a $500 renewable | (Please turn to page Eight) Nearly 5,000 Hear Dr. H. Thurman, Noted Minister, In Finals Address Dr. Howard Thurcan warned the graduates to "defy the tra- James E. Shepard Statue Unveiled RALPH GAY The photoa above are those of Ralph Gay and Mto Jean Wil lett Bryant, principals in a Wil son murder and attempted sui cide last Saturday. Oaj, the MISS W. BRYANT slayer, has completed require ments for a Masters Degree at N. C. College. Miss Bryant, the victim, was a teacher in the Darden High School of Wilson. Baptist School In Wake Forest To Admit Negro Students In 1950 CHICAGO, ni. Racial bars at the Southeast ern Theological Seminary at Wake Forest, N. C., came tumb ling down, although belatedly, last week in Chicago by action of the schSOl’s trustees. This puts the Southeastern Seminary in line with the other Baptist ministerial schools that have al ready integrated. The change was effected by the decision of 25 of the Semi nary’s trustees in a meeting held to deal with the problem. The actlSii, talt«H br vote, provide* that the Wake Forest Institution open it* door* in the fall of 1998 to qualified Negro student*. utuadnunirr'2-lo-n Durham, its own property at the time ot the admission of Negro students. Five of the 30 trustee* of the seminary were not present at the meeting. A new chapter was written in tli9 develppm«it of^ C lege here Saturday when the bronze statue of the late Dr. James E. Shepard, the schools’ founder and first president, was unveiled. The statue which stands In the circle in front of the Administration building of the college was viewed last week and this week by thous ands of visitors and friends uf the school during the com mencement program. The at>ove photo was taken, following the unveiling. T^ose In the picture from left to rlgfil ariTJ. T. Tay^ lor, executive secretary of the James E. Shepard Foundation, sponsors; William Zorach, sculp- turer; Dr. G. D. Carnes, who succeeded Dr. Shepard as Grandmaster ot Masons of North Carolina, and Mrs. Carolyn Smith Green, granddaughter of Dr. Shepard, who did the un veiling. Dr. W. J. Trent Forced To Give Up Livingstone Post Due To III Health North Corolina College gradu ates here Tuesday that “the in tegrated order of things to come will not accept the old alibi of race" as any explanation for in dividuals to fail in their life's ambitions. “It is significant,” he said, “that the Southern Association of Secondary Schools and .Col leges has abolished the old dis tinctions of “Negro” schools. In the very near future all schools will be expected to meet the same standards.” “Competition to meet the standards of the new day will not accept race as an excuse tor failure,” he warned. Dr. Thurman, tabbed by “Life” in 1953 as one of the "top 12 preachers in the United States,” spoke at NCC Tuesday on “The Present Criais.” J^ree hundred and sixty five candl-. f«tnlli*s and ‘Visitors riearly filled the ...(tilDOO aeat-capacity Men’s Gymnasium to hear the famed cleric. Sunday’s baccalaureato preach er was the Reverind E, Deedom Alston, rector of the Churcti of Our Merciful Savior of Luuis- ville, Kentucicy. The Rev. Mr, Alston advised dition of ‘odd man out' anil flee the smothering embracc of con formity. He cited Jesus' two auestiOns- “Whom do men say thnt I am?” and “Whom do ye say that I am?” as questions whose an swers “will make your life.” The baccalaureate speaker is an alumnus of North Carolina College in the class of ‘35. Among the 369 recipients ot degrees was Solomon Shannon, professor of education at Touga- loo College in Mississippi, who was grant‘d NCC'p second doc tor of philosophy degree. Dr. Walter Brown, placement offi cer at the college, received the first Ph.D. at North Carolina College in 19S5. In his filial* speech on TuM* day, Dr. Thurman defined crlal* as a “condition...growling out ot tension between tv o(b^r to ttxpanii, it> develop." “All growth, he continued, “1* a re*olving of tensions between these two things." “To tfie Self, growing in maturity mean* de veloping techniques for negoti ating the expanding time inter val between wish and fulflll- nent. ' (Please turn to pagt Hgllt) LET THE PEOPLE SPEAK THIS WEEK’S SUBJECT: “Do You Think We Are Taking As Much Advantage Of The Opportunities Offer ed In The Business World, As Did Our Fathers And Grandfathers?” (a) “Do You Think This City I* Still Recognized As A Leader In The Negro Business World, Making Progress Comparable To Other Cities, Such As Gastonia and Atlanta, Georgia?” (b) “Do You Think We Might Be Living Off The Prestige Of The Older GeAeratlon?” SALISBURY The educational career of one of North Carolina's leading per sonages came to an end here Tu^day, when Bishop W. J. Walls, chairman of the Board of Trustees, Livingstone College, with tear filled eyes, announced the resignation of Dr. W. J. Trent, who has served as presi dent of the capstone of learning for the AME Zion Church, at its 75th commencement cere monies. Here Sunday Rev. S. P.| Perry, of Rich mond, Va., mer pastor St Mark Because the seminary at the present time 1* holding chapel service* in the Wake Forest Baptttt Church which U does not own, a provision In the form of a resolution *tipulates that B. B. Felder, pastor, Mr*. E. M. the school sliall be operating on Ford, Captain. wi preach Tueada; night, Jtme at Mt. S Baptist Chi just acros* Road from Merrick Moore School, Fl*h Dam Road. Rev. CONGRESSMAN ADAM POWai SUFFERS MIID HEART AHACK Bishop Walls told the throng that gathered at the close of the Diamond Jubilee celebration that President Trent, on advice of his physician and close asso ciates, had tendered his resigna tion as the head of the institu tion that he has served since 1925. 1’he prelate said that the Boar^ had accepted the man- . date-reluctantly aad bad npmed Prof. J. H. Brockett to ierve as acting president, until Dr. Trent’s succe**or is named. A committee was appointed to seek a person for the Job. Dr. Trent came to Living stone in 1925, the fourth presi dent of the college, and has made an anviable record. He came at a time when the school (Please turn to page Sight) NEW YORK The condition of Representa tive Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., was reported as favorable last Monday at New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center. The 48-year-old minister col lapsed while preaching at his church, Sunday, at 1:10 P.M., to 2,000 persons attending the ser vice. Leaving the church, Absynn- nian Baptist, the Rev. Mr. Po well was driven immediately to tiie hospital. "Exhaustion” and ‘possible heart attack” were given as the reason for the col- lapse ■' Further test* are being con ducted by the congressman’s doctor, and no final • statemen* of the cause of the colUpse will be made until they are com pleted. 'Twice before Representative Powell has had what was thought to be heart attacks, but examinations proved the heart WILLIAM J. STINSON, Manager of Fourteentli Street Shell Station: “Frankly speaking, we are not doing as well with what we have as the older generation did. -We are living on a bed of ease; opportunities are plentiful from all angles. Not only for the heir who inherits a fortune, whether largo or small, but for the newcomers to this town as well; rich or poor, opportunities are here. One of our faults is that most of us are not staying on the job as we should and some of our businesses are run haphazardly. Now you take cities like Atlanta, the segregation pat tern is more strictly enforced there, and in order for the Negro to enjoy the comforts of certain things, they have to build them. Of course, most any citizein here will point a finger of pride at the bus company and insurance company that’s operated here by our people; and they are something for us to be proud of. They are things that the older generation started, probably with very little capital, so every individual has a chance to con tribute something.” TOM PERRY, President of Local 248 Transport Work er, 832 Rich Square: “I do not think we are doing as well because the people are not cooperating as those older people did. Most individuals seem to be trying to live for themselves and to*do anything we must unite. We seem to think what the older generation did will last forever; but we, the younger generation will have to keep the ball rolling in order to keep up with such places as Gastonia and Atlanta.” • ilw CONG. ADAM POWELL was not involved Rep. Powell, a -.ard worker, tias taken part m a number of public exercises lately and had complahied of not feeling well, but attritnited hi* condition to exhaustion. AUTHOR C. fiANNER, Assistant Clerk ABC Store System, 1349 Undei^ood Avenue: “To tell the truth it really makes me 'atiuunied whenthiidr abotit this seriously. We are not doing what we should; not with what we have at our disposal. 1 think some of us might doing pretty well, but the most of us are sitting back and brag^ng about what has been accomplished 25 or 30 years ago. We do not expect to keep up with th»e other cities when we do not have a program to stimulate new ideals and then cooperate together in carrying them out. Most of the people who are already in business are not concerned abput the public for no more than what they (Please turn to page Eight)