FOU UON VOTERS IN DIXIE BY ’60 Had Backed Segregqtloi The above ccene* were taken during the annual con/crctioc 0/ the toeetem North Carolina unit of the AUK church, held hut week in Raleigh. Minietert from eeveral districte within the con ference were onigned new posts. In top photo, Bi«hop Frank M. Reid, far left, back to camera, pretiding Bishop of the second epiacopal diatrict, condKctt or dination ritw for new deacons. Kittrell College alttmni Presi dent Mrs. Vorheese Jamison of Baltimore is shown in center. Top right. Bishop Reid and Dr. O^ge Singleton of Philadel phia, poufe for impromptu con ference during session. Dr. Sin gleton substituted for the Bi«hop for Sunday’s address. Vernon D. Cowan of AehetHlle, pretident of the Laymen’s league of the church, and league secretary Mrs. MyrtleJCnox Long of Wil- son, go over plan* before a ses sion. In center, the Rev. George Fisher, toidely known civil rights champion atm pastor of an episp^pal church at Raleigh, says goodie to long friend Bishop Reid idstring conference. Picture at bottom right shows officers of Womtn’s Missionary Society. Study Racial Peace In Eastern N. C By J. B. Hjuren BOCKY MOUNT Tht St. JamM Baptlit Church her* was the acene November 18th ot the Mcond ol the “Inter racial iMtttaifat” held thia year by Negro aad white Baptiat wo- men’i organliatlona oi the state tm the Intereat of better interra cial haraoony, ChristUnlty and eooperatka. The tint sueh meetliig waa held in Charlotte on Augnat aoth, but offtrtala stated that the eest Carolina meeting was much more widely attended. At the November ‘ MMre were more then two €h(€ap ^ FSSiSBSSgi DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, NOV. 23,1*57 PRICE: M dEMTS Convention, Mrs. M. A. Home, president and Mrs. SUen S. Alston, Executive secretary; and the Woman’s Mis-> (continued on page 8) Durham AHE Church Receives New Minister The Bev. Melvin Chester Swann, tor the past live years, pastor of Bethel AME Church of Oreensboro will be the new pas-' tor of St. Joseph AME Church of Durham. The appointment of Bev. Swann to his new poet eame at the close of the annual session of the Western Nortti Carolina Conference held In Raleigh last week. The new pastor of St Joseph will succeed Bev. D. A. Johnston, who has been at tha local chutcih for the past nine years. Rev. Johnsten will go to Qreensboce aw pastor of Bethsi AME Chunk. ' Rev. Swann came to the Wes tern North Carolina Cotorence from ^ItfnUie vdiere he initiat ed the constsoction of the flOO, 000 Hemmlngway Temple. Ete ia a graduate of Claric University and Oammon Theological Semi nary in Atlanta, Georgia. He al' so took advanced study at Union Tbeological Seminary In New York and A&T College graduate aehooL In addition to his work m pastor Rev. Swann is in charge of radio and tooadcast educatlmt of the AME Church and will represent the church at the general assembly of the National (continued on page 8) AMEZ May Purge Charlotte Gergyman WINSTON-SALEM The poBslbility that discipli nary action may be taken against an AME Zion minister of Char lotte whose stand on race rela tions has been declared in con flict with the church's was indi cated at the annual meeting of a unit of the church’s state organi zation here last week. The western North Carolina Conference of the AME Zion church passed a resolution dis avowing support of Dr. J.S.N. Tross's publicly admitted state ments on race relations and hint- ed of possible action against the Zion cleric. Tross’s position on race rela tions have been repeatedly aired In a newspaper he publishes in Charlotte. "We declare that the position of Dr. J. S. Nathaniel Tross (on race relations) is not now...and never will be the position of the AME Zion connection. We will not harbour segregationists in our Church...” the resolution stated. It was passed by the confer-i ence and signed by the confer ence chairman, Salisbury district presiding elder C. E. Norment, and five other members of the (continued on page 8) T’hit scene showing AME Zion in Winston-Salem. Pictured here! ference. Left to right, they arei Hunter, Charlotte district; Bis- clergymen was taken during the| are the church’s seiUor Bishop the Reverends L. C. Clark, North hop Walls; Reverends C. E. Nor- church’s recently concluded wes-iW. J. Walls, fourth from left,\CharU>tte district; I. L. Houston,] ment, Salisbury, district and J. tern North Carolina conferencel and presiding elders of the con-| Winston-Salem district; G. W | D. Gladden, Lincolnton district Herbert L. Wright, national youth secretary for the NAACP, will be heard in an address at North Carolina College next Tuesday, Nov. 26, at 10:80 a.m. in B. N. Duke auditorium. Wright’s appearance is spon sored by the college NAACP chaptsr. The program is open to the public. Mitchell Sees Negro Legbbtors From Dixie As NAACP Sets Strategy To Use New Law In Expanding Race Vote ATLANTA Southern leaders of the Na tional Association tor the Ad vancement of Colored People and cooperating organizations ‘last week set a goal of 3,000,000 Negro voters in 11 southern states by 1060. The goal was an nounced Sunday by Roy Wil kins, the Association’s executive secretary, at the close of a two- day planning conference attend ed by 8S representatives from Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Flmrida, Louisiana, M1ss1ss1m»1, North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina and Virginia. The southwlde conference was called by the NAACT to develop a program to enlarge registra tion and voting by Negro citi zens under provisions of the 1957 ClvU Righto Act, the first A. T. Spaulding Appointed To Government's Emergency Cabinet Antiouncement of ttie appoint ment Am T. Siwuldlng to tho President’s emergency cabinet was made this week from Dur ham following Spaulding’s re turn from Washington where he spent four days in briefing for his new Job. rormal title for Spaulding’s new Job la that of Natkmal D*- ienae Bxecutlva Beaarvlst. The yrogram was establidiad under the National Defenae Produetioa Act in 195S to provide key go- vsrmaent agendas and depart^ OMBta with trained paiaaanet in tka ease at an tmrgmry. Each department of the e: cutlve branch haa been assigned reserve personnel who will swing Into action if an emergen cy developa. Spauldini^ was named to the State Department’s national defense executive re- Since the establishment of tlM mobilization program, some 1100 reaervists have been appointed. Tha fiill complement is 1,200. All reservists have beao cleared for security. Aeoor4|ng to Gordon Gray, dii rector of tbe oftlee ai Defense (oaatinaad ea pa^e 8) such law passed by Congress in 82 years. A statement issued by the conference calls for coopera tion of local and state NAACP unite with chturches, organized labor, civic, professional and fra temal soci^es in a southwlde drive to expand vastly the num ber 6f registered Negro voters in this region. “We seek as our first goal,” the statement asserts, "the regi^ tration of as high a proportion of Negro voters as of whites. The immediate goal is to bring Negro registration up to 60 per cent of Ito potential or about 3,000, 000 voters by 1960. With the in centive of the 1957 Civil Rights law, we are confident that this goal can be reached.” This goal would more than double the pre sent Negro registration of about 1,250,000 in these states. Clarence Mitchell, director of the Washington bureau who told the conference that opponento of the newly enacted civil righte law were afraid that “Integra- tioa at the polls” wouM work fundamental changes in the po litical complexion of the South, predicted the early election ol Negro legialators from the South as a result of the anticipated ex panded Negro voting under the new dvU.rights act. Tbe new law, signed by Presi dent Eisenhower on Sept. 0, es tablishes a Commission of Civil Rights to investigate sworn com- plalnto that dtizens have been denied the right to vote because of their race, religion or national origin; to ^dy and collect in- formatlea concerning 1^1 de-i v^tvmente ctmstituting a denial of equal protection at the laws; and to appraise laws and policies of the federal government con cerning equal protection of the laws. Kelly M. Alexander of Char lotte, N. C., a member of the na tional Board of Directors, was nanuM chairman of a committee on implementation >of the con ference objectives. Named to serve with him were W. Lester Banks of Richmond, Vs.; Mrs. L. C. Bates, Liftie Rock, Ark.; C. R. Darden, Meridian, Miss.; A. T. Walden, Atlante; W. C. Patton, Birmingham; and B(rs. Ruby Hurley, Atlanta. The committee! will meet within 80 days to plan action for a full scale campaign. Seek Removal of Restrictions In response to a question rais ed at a press conference follow- (continued on page 8) Church Marking (4th Year With Program Series Celebration of the 64th anni versary of Covenant Preaby- terian Church in Durham will continue Sunday with two speci al Mrvlces at tte church, it was at tb* church last Sunday. It eoi tinu^ with a Family Hour wor ship program Wednesday night. An anniversary dinner Monday night at seven at the church will bring the celebration to a close. Sunday has been designated anniversary Sunday, and two special programs, one at eleven and anotheFat^sTx will be held. Eev. J. W. Smith, pastor of the church, will speak during the eleven a.m. service, while Dr. John R. Dungree, pastor of the United Presbyterian Church of Henderson, will deliver the main address during the evening ser vice. L. E. Austin, publisher of the Carolina Times, will be the main speaker for the concluding pro gram in the anniversary series Monday night. Mrs. Almeda Spears is chair man of the anniversary celebra tion committee. She is assisted In directing the observance by Richard T. Pippin and Howard Fitts. £ J. W. Davidson, principal of section provides the school with Pearsontown school, points to scale model thawing newly con structed wing for school as Mrs. lola Mason, president of school committee, looks on. The wing was formally dedicated in ceremonies at the school last Sunday afternoon. Completed at'was occupied on Oct. 16. a cost near $150,000, the new! nine more classroom*, a cafe- teria-auditorium and aujriliarv rooms. The school also gained an additional 300 pupils when the new former wooden frame Pearson town school on Fayetteville road was abandoned. The new section Here And There DR. DUNGEE State PTA Congress To Gather In Raleigh Friday For Confab RALEIGH LlgoQ high school here will provide the setting for the 18th yearly convention of the North Carolina Congress of Colored Parento and Teachers Friday and Saturday. “Imperatives for Growth iq home, school, _ community,” theme of this years conference, will be treated by three wor- shops during the conference and a major address by the or^nlza- tion’s president. Three workshops are sche duled for Friday afternoon, and Mrs. Mary C. HoUoday of Stai ville, will deliver the presiden tial address on Friday evening. Committee meetings, exhlbito, demonstrations, showing of films and a Youth forum are also fea tures of the conference. A dinner meeting Friday at 6:80 at which specisl awards and recognitions will be made and a reception for delegates fol lowing the President’s address will highlight the less formal aspects of the conference. The event of widest public In terest will come Friday night when Mrs. Holliday is scheduled (continued on page 8) THE RACES: A bit of history was recorded in Durham on Wednesday when Negro and white practical nurses held a joint workflhop at the Methodist Retirement Home In Statesville wbere white heat was generated at the arrefiti Urt ^ . -4irq Nagso meil wito thpir white girl fri^ lUagi dtiwn early thfii week. Hie girls, Judith and Martha Lambeth, 17 and 19 years old, and their mother were escorted out of the town by poHcp. One of the two NegroeSi Alfred Smith, 22, will face trial on chnrpes of driving without operator’s license and having an improper muffler ... At Asheville, students from some 14 city and Buncombe County schools appealed to President Eisenhower this week to call or sponsor a national youth conference as a counter measure to acts of violence attending integration of public schools .... Dr. Edwin Edmnnds, Negro leader of Greensboro, charged the City Council with acting in a venge ful manner in deciding to sell the city’s public pools rather than run the risk of desegregating them in the future .... North Carolina Baptists took time out from Asking colleges to stop that dancing to hear a report from its committM on social service and civic righteousness which said there are indications a “sizeable minority of Baptists are ready to move forward toward the Christian solution of race problems.” EDUCATION: Three Tar Heel educators who have contributed over 100 years service to the state's public schools were honored at the Resource-Use Conference at North Carolina College last week. At top are Mrs. Lawrence Woodson of Raleigh, State Elementary School Supervisor, and William Collins, prin cipal of Johnston County Training School at Smithfield. Inset is Mrs. Clara S. Jamerson, of the W. B. Wicker School faculty in San ford. They received plaques and citations .... St. Augustine’s, Livingstone and John son C. Smith all announc^ this week receipt of allocations from the United Negro College Fund. St. Augus tine’s received $11,135.76; Livingstone, $12,530.76; and Smith, $14,193.51 .... The fundamental cause for shortage of scientists and science teachers is that unequipped science and math teachers make their subjects out to be so hard, difficult and unusual that they scue prospective elementary school pupils away from them, so said Dr. Samuel P. Massie, director of Fisk University’s workshop for science and math teachers .... Dr. Rose Butler Browne, professor of Education at North Carolina College, told a Barber-Scotia college stu dent audience last week that the world will not accept them unless they are prepared to be good . .'. and good for some thing ... Newly elected officers of the North Carolina Negro College Clonference are Dr. L. S. Cozart, Barber-Scotia prexy; Dean Foster Payne of Shaw; Dr. George Davis of Elizabeth City; Dr. A. F. Jackson of A. and T. College and W. E. Blue- ford of Johnson C- Smith. Cozart is the new president .... Samuel C. McGhee, Hampton Institute instructor, recently returned from Kakata, Liberia where she spent two years an the ICA staff . . . Gilbert Riley, Durham, senior, has been elected “Mr. Chidley Hall for 1957." Chidley Hall is North Carolina College’s men’s residence hall. RELIGION; ’The Credit Union of Durham’s West Dur ham Baptist Church will hold Open House Friday at seven and sponsor a worship hour Sunday evening at seven-thirty in observance of National Credit Union month .... The monthly meeting of the Durham Interdenominational Ushers Union will meet Sunday afternoon at Mount Gilead Baptist Church