Stanford V Warren Public lihraiy fayetteiri Vote Case Heads For High Court JACKSON anoHerman Taylor of Raleishf ca«e will be do When Lee Calhoun was given the key to the cities of Durham and Gary, Indiana after winning the Olympic hurdles championship last fall, he be gan to think that his days as the most publicized student in the history of North Carolina College were nearing an end and that he would soon re turn to the relative seclusion of student life at the Durham institution where he was pursuing a de gree in Physical Education. But the quiet-spoken, lithe young athlete did not reckon with the stay ing power of athletic fame in these days of high pressure collegiate athletics. Thus, when word of his marriage to his collie sweetheart leaked aH the way to the ear of a New York television show producer, plans were instantly set in motion to beam the star’s wedding ceremony coast-to-coast via the electronic magic of the television camera. Lee and his bride-to-be, Miss Gwendolyn Ban nister of Pinehurst, accepted the offer and last Thursday were mairled before millions of view ers on the NBC-TV “Bride and Groom” Show. They received some $2,500 in gifts and a two week honeymoon in Paris. Picture at left shows the couple with Lee’s father, the Reverend Cary Calhotm, who officiated at the ceremo4iy. At right is a scene from the wed ding reception last Simday in Pinehurst at the home of the bride. Left to right are the new Mrs. Calhoun and Lee, the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Morrison. Certain that his televised wedding would put an ahd to his career as a sup plier of news headlineSt found out that the issue of his amateur standing, injected into the wedding plans by the AAU, is going to keep him alive as “hot” newspaper copy for some time to come. The AAU acted Tuesday to officially dis qualify him as an amateur. Lee had already in dicated he would api>eal such a decision, an act which makes certain that folks around here have not heard the last word yet on an Indiana yoimg- ster named Calhoim. ON SWIMMING ISSUE KKK Threatens Monroe Prominent Physician Receives Menacing Call From Klan A ctfse testing the coniti- tutlonality of the state literacy test for voting is ready to move into the State Supreme Court. Last week, a Superior Court Judge denied an appeal by* plaintiffs seeking to have the state requirement declared in valid, thus forcing the action into the state high court. Judge Malcom C. Paul ruled in Superior Court here last Fri day that Mrs. Louise Lassiter, plaintiff in the action, was not qualified as a voter of North Carolina. Mrs. Lassiter had refused to submit to a literacy test when she applied for registration be fore a Seaboard registrar earlier this year. She was refused and subsequently appealed the de cision to the election board, where she was also turned down. The case originated back in the Spring of 1056 when Mrs Lassiter and other Negroes were refused registration by Mrs. Helen Taylor, registrar of a Seaboard precinct. They were refused registra tion on the grounds that they had failed to pass the literarcy test. Attorneys James H. Walker of Weldon and Samuel Mitchell Taylor of Raleigh instituted action in federal court against the registrar where, in a preliminary memorandum, the court struck down the section of the State constitution which pro vides for the test. However, before th^ case reached hearing, a new law was passed in the state legislature providing for a series of appeals from a registrar’s refusal aU the way through the state judicial system. The federal court ruled that the plaintiffs would have to pur sue the remedy of the new law. Friday’s action by Judge Paul marked the third step in the re medial process provided for by the new law. The plaintiffs are contending that the literacy test is uncon stitutional since the federal court memorandum struck down the constitutional provisions for it Attorney Walker told the TIMES that the appeal to the State Supreme Court would probably be scheduled sometime in September. Mrs. Ellen Edwards, also of Seaboard, was a party to the first two steps of the appeal process. However, only Mrs, Lassister’s name was used in the Superior Court hearing. Mrs. Edwards’ case will be postponed for a fu ture court hearing. Negro Woman Is Slain By White Farmer WILLIAMSTON A coroner’s jury, after a few hours deliberation here Monday found L. B. Moore, white tenant farmer had committed a crime less than first degree murder in the fatal shooting of Mrs. Rellie Biggs and the discharging of two or three shots into the body of her husband, and held him for the Martin County grand jury, under a $15,000.00 bond. There have been several stor ies as to why the irate white man took the life of the mother of six children and continued his wrath upon her husband. Evi dence alleged to have been given at the trial indicated. that there had been trouble between the children of the two families. Sherifff Rawls is said to have told the jury that Moore called him (Please turn to page Eight) MONROE Following an attempt of Ne- gro citizens to use the one swimming pool owned and ope-i rated by the city here last week threats have been made against a local physician and other prominent Negro citizens by the! Ku Klux Klan. Following a mass meeting held on last Wednesday night by the local T>ranch of the Na- School Board Jim Crow System Attorneys who filed requests for 14 Negro parents to permit their children to be assigned to unsegregated schools declined to comment on the decision of the Durham School Board to make its regular assignments on the basis of race for the coming school year. Attorney C. O. Pearson, one of the lawyers representing the 14, told the TIMES that they had no comment to make at this time on the school board’s action. Some two weeks ago, parents of children in the Roxboro Street, and Club Boulevard sec tions petitioned the School Board to not to assign their chil- dred to segregated schools as they had been in the past. In its meeting Monday night the board adopted pupil assign ment regulations which call for no changes in the established pattern of segregated assign ments. _ The regulations explained that Durham children would be as signed just as they have always been, “except when petition is made according to the stipula tions included in the regula tions.” The regulations were prefaced with the explanation of their purposes, “to promote the order ly and efficient administration of the public schools ... effective instruction of . . . health, safety and general welfare of . . . pu pils.” tlonal Association for the Ad' vancement of Colored People, Dr. J. A. Perry was qalled over telephone, presumably by mem bers of the Ku Klux Klan and threatened. The physician told a repre~ sentative of the Carolina Times that the person making the call and threats stated that he was a member of the KKK and that members of the Klan were coming to get him. Dr. Perry stated he attached little significance to the threat and that it did not frighten him. In spite of the threats, Negro laulni. vdtb IJie mMtion ot fxre' sending firm and iiitend I bringing legal action to secure I use of the pool. Among the one or two Negro leaders opposing an attempt to use the pool is one Rev. C. C. Johnson, pastor of the Elizabeth Baptist Church of Monroe^ Rev Johnson preached what many have termed the greatest “Uncle Tom” sermon to his congrega tion last Sunday morning that has ever been heard in this seC' tion of the state. Rev. Johnson said, “’This is a white man’s world. The white man has got the guns and all you can do is shoot one shot and nin.” His sermon is authoritatively reported to have met with strong resentment on the part of the majority of Negroes of this section. J. L. HUMPBHEY Jefferson L Humphrey Elected To National YNCA Executive Council WmSTON-SALEM Jefferson L. Humphrey, 4 member of the faculty at Car ver Consolidated School, In this city, was elected vice-president of the YMCA National Young Adult Assembly which con vened July 29th through August 2nd at Blue Ridge. Mr. Humph- rey was alao elected National Pro-Prlmus of the Y-Phalanx Fraternity of the YMCA. A product of the public schools here, he received a B.S. degree from Winston-Sa lem Teachers College and a Masters degree from New York University. At the Patterson Avenue Branch YMCA in this dty, Mr. Humphrey is a mem ber of the Adult Program Com mitted Boy’s Work Committee, YM-YHCA Co-Ed CouncU, Pri mus (President) of Alpha Chap ter, Y-Phalanx Fraternity. On the state level, he is vlce-pre«i- dent of the North and South Carolina Laymen’s and Secre taries’ Conference and a mem ber of the E&ecutive Committee of the State Older Boys Confer ence of North and South Caro lina. Jefferson Is the husband of the former Bliss Vera Macon. They reside at 603 Morrison St. He will fly to Newark, N. J., the morning of September 13th to attend his first Executive Coun cil Meeting. Mr. Humphrey was the only Negro elected to the Executive Coimcil of the YMCA Naticmal Yoong Adult Aasemr- (Continued from page One) dic-Cdfi VOLUME 33 — NUMBER 32 PRICE; TEN CENTS 17,1957 DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, DR. EDMONDS TO BE NAMED! An attempt to sobstantlate unconfirmed reports that Dr. Helen O. Edmonds has reeelv- ed a high level government ap pointment were nnsnocessfnl this week. Professtor of history at North Carolina College, Dr. Edmonds recently returned to this leonn- try after a six month stay In Europe where she lectori nn- der the sponsorship of the State Department. This was her second speaking tour of Europe. Dr. Edmonds Is highly re garded in national political cirelee. She seconded the nomination of President Elsen hower In San Francisco In 1»6«. Though people in Raleigh have long since grown ac> customed to the presence on Hargett Street in the downtown business district of the Mechanics and Farmers Bank (the bank has been there since 1922) and though scores of them, on the pretext of doing business there Thursday morning, took the opportunity to wander through the high-ceilinged, airy banldng room and gaze at the modernistic interior when the bank opened for business in Its newly renovated quarters, hundreds more returned later that afternoon for the formal opening, heard brief addresses by bank officers, sipped punch and took a guide tour of the two and one half story building. Perhaps it was the spell of reassurance cast over them by the quiet yet dignified and commanding man ner in which President J. H. Wheeler (who is equally at home behind hb bank President’s desk, arguing a case in court, whipping through a Mozart composition for violin or swinging a tennis racket) presided over the ceremonies. Perhaps it was the aura of solemnity and seriousness in duced by the figures of board chairman Dr. Clyde Donnell and Raleigh board management chairman Dr. L. E. Mc Cauley. Or maybe it was the splendor of the newly reno vated, ultra modern building which surrounded them, it even could have been the idea of permanence and security (surely precious commodities by any Judgement these days) conjured up by the dim but Inescapable memory that the Mechanics and Farmers Bank was one of only two banks in the city which withstood the financial storms of the great depression. At any rate, they came, grown-ups and small fry alike, as is shown in first picture looking toward the main entrance from the inside of the lobby. Picture at left ihows principals in the formal opening rites, Dr. McCauley, Dr. Donnell and President Wheeler. Calhoun Gives Swimming Pool To Boys Gub Lee Calhoun’s televised wed ding brought a windfall to John Avery Boys Club in Durham. Nearly ready to enter its new club building on Branch and Proctor Street, the club’s gym- nasiimi equipment was fairly adequate to begin with. Now, thanks to the Olympic’s star’s generosity, the cliA will get an Esther Williams brimming pool. The swimming pool was orig inally a gift to Calhotm and his bride, Miss Gwendolyn Bannis ter, who were married last Thursday on the NBC-TV “Bride And Oroom” Show. Calhoun turned the pool over to his Coach, Leroy T. Walker who immediately passed It on to the Boys Club. Walker, who brought Calhoun along from a clumsy high achool hurdler to the best In tha Iwsl- ness, called Boys Club executive director Lee W, Smith JiM be fore the show went on and got his approval in accepting the gift Smith, who was plMMantfy at the qncjqMcted tom of food fortune, told the TDflS The ftr$t woman of her race group to t>e certijlcated by the California State Committioner of Corporations, at a Mutual Fund* Broker, Miu Thelma Lu cille Barnhart, wa* recently ap pointed by Wiley E. Daniels, District Manager of the Lot An- gelet Branch of Gill-Harknett and Company to terve a* an agent for the local branch. The plucky young woman before coming here two yeart ago, too* secretary to the President of North Carolina College, At Dur ham. She is an advanced tteno- type student of the Bryan Schools. She it a part-time tec retary in the late firm of Loren Miller and Edward Carter Mad dox. The latter, it her brother. The 33rd annual session ol the Interdonominational Ushers’ Association is scheduled to con vene in Durham August 22-25, it was announced here Wednes day by L. E. Austin, president of the organization. The Durham Ushers Union, of the association, is host to the he was delighted at the surprise gilt. He said be knew nothing of (Please turn to paga Ugbt) Durham Stage For State Ushers Meet convention wlUch will be iuld at St. Joseph’s AME Church on Fayetteville Street. Approxi mately 500 officers, delegates and visitors are expected during| the session. The convention will begit^ promptly at 10 o’clock Thurs day morning, August 22 with State Meeting Of Women Baptist Convention To End In Twin City WINSTON-SALEM The Woman’s Baptist Home and Foreign Missionary Con vention of North Carolina, Auxiliary to the Baptist State Convention, Inc., concluded its 73rd annual session Friday, Au gust 16th. The convention lias been in progress since Tuesday, August 13th, at New Bethel Baptist Chturch on North ’Trade Street. Dr. Jerry Drayton is pastor of the host church. More than 1,400 delegates are attending the convention. This year, the convention's theme la “Missions and World Peace.” Their objectives are Home Mis sion, Foreign Missions and Shaw University. Mrsi M. A. Home of Winston- Salem who is in her eighth eighth year as president, de livered her annual address on Wednesday, August 14th. Mrs. Home emphasized the three ob jectives of the convention, pleading with the vast audience to "do more in these particular fields.” Addressing the young people, she told them to "hava an idea or pattern of what they want their lives to be” and that (Please turn to paga Bght) the opening smion being taken up principally with registration of delegates and appointment of committees. The Thursday af ternoon session will be devoted to routine matters and a meet ing of the Board of Trustees of the association. Thursday evening a public program will be held at the church with many outstanding professional and business men and women of Durham extend ing words . of welcome and greetings. Among those appearing on the program will be J. S. SteW' art, member of the Durham City Council and secretary- treasurer of the Mutual Saving* and Loan Association; Rev. A. S. Croom, pastor of Union Bap tist Church, Rev. D. A. Johns ton, pastor of St. Joseph’s AME Church and president of the Durham Ministerial Alliance; W. J. Kennedy, Jr., president at N. C. Mutual Life InsurancA Company and Dr. C. 1. Boul- ware, secretary ot Durham Committee on Negro Affairs. Music will be fuRiitlMiif by (Pleaae turn to page Sgfat) A. J. HAMMONDS Widely Known Sports Figure Stricken Fatally WmSTON-SALEM Funeral services for Andrew J. Hammonds, known widely throughout this area as a sports promoter, were scheduled to b* held here Thursday, August 10 at the Howard Robinson Fune ral Home Chapel. Hammonds died at Kate Bit ting Reynolds Memorial hospi tal here last Sunday, August 11, at 6:45 p.m. His death came Just one we^ before th« all-star classic which (Pleaaa turn to page Bl|^)