Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 4, 1958, edition 1 / Page 2
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' Die iDdustrial Center Bond tiecfion Hk CAROLINA TIMES wishM to extend cM|tat4teti(Mit to 4kc fNipffilk on Vtegfe Mtairs iM- tlHt IglMidit j^b ft .J fn iNhilMWht the Iwnd •■Ki* tor Ule If»- dtilHlft'CeiMr. Jlfth»Hgh INc vd» vm li^ all over Durham, from a percentage stand point •N«g»e v«ten Mved the day. An an- afy*'ilWlWtlWNlttn «MftMnTo'l!)fe1w4r«i- cA In 'ihe hft-^effro fwwjwcts tiat m 'Mint -^ifhaNs Nagiws tax lOgli^WWi fn Iteffe I'Heftr 'Wffft, rtftivfc^ Hi ^ hoitii etedttdn Hiftts nsgn liirtfcHi tft tUnfmh i/fm alwtfys ^wtp- py to fill ««i HlpLJi*t(ffiity to coopertfle '^ifh any ^Ihirt wiwm TJrdgresh, * f»t*t YHfe r(xd>it^Wbt!dimfKtet‘ sh«m. T^dt'tfhUe sinat A •opgtiMe^ 23 yews ago 1«s the CoiirtBHMt voted again^ ■pMgrcss. Many ttvic fmprovetnchts ffi tlK! rfCy cn4 dtWiity dlt TDorhaln can bo attributed tc the ijMite) ^itfife'CoTTin;tteo to come fhrough in a fJOfNkllA fWiis. progressive vdtc in the ImiMlWilll'Center bond wjis arftdthtfr in « iMt which dates bflCk since the XHmmittec fn r»S5. !W*r *#Mt ’Ste tJenter has iDeen asstfted, fclt^ us IfA IMMt 4di;Mhe*r to mskc it « great cess for «U Mie«itMem of Duviiam.'We CMt^ ftiis H Ih Ikdfh racdb Wl% tile! x>buri^ to Ipoint ^e way aM disMKflvgfe- lIHose ^o t^ould make it appWr that IMietti-' beri m btltk rade^ cannot w(M4c and together without friction. In time the Ceur ter can tnean much in the growth and d«- vekJprttertt oY thirham sledig kSl 1i««. WHrti {ft«Dvth tiffd -ctmt, thos« cftt«hs W)fo vdlSiA a^0im lifte bttttd it- Mte flind '«ti^ iBftnte to r«t^ tlMft *l!hene is 'to Itatit ittwtft (jftizefts di iJtflh rtwes togetlier to tttttke America ^Mttg and •rtfie ■from the bditmm cm: ift eertttn: if tWs fwrttfdii is «H»#r % tfn duMdfe 1»fe ^ Wt tike tifrtfe to d^eftwMrtfe '*irW!h p«l St itik tfounftty to iitSfhh, flor Wftl hi>t6 iMttUbs 'Wife time orit to deail in •e*plostdt!S. Whether we Ifke “ft dr Jfot, AtMCWctfhs (H aftl colors, races and ?l*ee5s We th thfs Sfnd 'fc'in Hitik or swi»n tog^’he't. It is to Hte best iWtere^ of all to Wdt'k Mil to- gefthft- with Qrte corrtmon ftnit is to preserve dutr way of life as laid ddwh by the fa^efs df tliis coantry. Hk Itew Negro ftan Wfcch flle rtew fire statirin opened hete on October 1, employing 10 Negro firemen, it merited ♦he- reaiiiiaticn of a goal sought by thte newspaper or more than 15 years. It was IMK tlttii "Ihree years ago that we pub- lishdA lin a&6un't ^Ith pictures of Negro ffremWi in Hichm«lnd, Virgfnia and Winston- ^lem as jMJMtive proof that such was nothing new tn the South. Even as .late as five ye*s ago the acquiring of Negro fire men for Durham seemed a far off goal which some Said wotrtd never be reached. The actewl •pCMing of the new Fire Sta#on wfth Neg^oliremte Sfftiplyshow what can be done when a community or group works togertheff with * common aim in view. NdW tllat *hl8 Ttiilestone in interracial gotMMR iMs l>eeh p&ssed, we are satii^ied that the new ^reme>i will conduct thfem- sclves as upright citizens and repTesenta- tives of their Mce. The ten men clitisen )or Ihe nnvr stttton have be^ w«31 screen^, «nd this h saftrsfted that in due time they Will lii&kc firemen ot Vhich trtl df fiiur- ham will be prtoud. While they are fn train ing we urge them to apply themselves to -the task of learning fire-fighting so thart when the opportunity does come they will 'be teafly. The Durham Cpmmfttee on Ntgro Affaits is to be eoftrmended fot the pftft it played in securing Negro firemen for Durham, ^'rom the beginning the Committee hAS 'never ceased to keef) ever before the (Mroper au thorities the toritefttkJn that Negroes shottld not ortty be gi?%n fhe dppoiftffitty to sefve the city as KiTeiwen btit t'h^ hcWilted ifhe jobs, as a ’rtiarter of befterihg our economic welfare. tJnder the previous leadship of j. S. Stewart and more recently under that of J. H. Wheeler the CtmtiWWtBfe rtn Negro Affairs ftfits demonstrated IfhAl it ■fs irfWrfested in Making Durhanv a betiet place in which to bv^ and in giving tp Mople >t a^ races eqiial opp^tnnities 'fts 6it|p6Tl9jk^V‘ ^ Hie Rdt Of Tyrtmts And 6i§lls PWtih!*t at>peal to all Amerk»iU to coinpfy wi^^. Supreme CoiArt^ *n Ulte^^on wiill protmbty not bfe t)y that sfegWierit of southetn- ers wkoge tnemhers are Sb steeped in .prej- atMii h«iw tMtr MftiMs MM tjie of «6K- iwiqttWJt^es^ to the tttfflofi, the pi'eSidSlA watned. Ded on by ^ch bigots as Arkansas Govemor Orval Faubus and Virginia Gov- em0r J. I*li6ey Almond, afnti-integration- ists WM M notiung in their defian% of the SMplHflMfe l^ftis, in^ead of lead ing iK their respective states to court in the iMfll, we hfcVe InAM. 'Ml ’Ma Mtry spetacle cl( tif/o goVer- noin leading the people in de^ance 'Md Mgots never adMt that they are lbivi|g. Only men of nobiKty tfifd fi^0i lire big enough to confess llheSr sins. So great is confession ttikit God HiA- "SSfr Tefl(Ai6S 'afltl StihftB 4h* confesser on*his feettnms^Qs^im go m ^ace and sin no more. Only forgiveness is great er tham ccMifessidn. When man ihekiiges in tiliftr or beflSi he becoriieS « gfcd. tT«jre fsh’t eftoiigh hdbilify ‘fR H^lMs ‘htJi’ Alirtond to confess tfibt they are wi-bfig Whfen t'fiey deliberately defy the Suiveme Court of The Uftitea States. Instead of being little gods they are Kftfe ^teiftons Mth sadistic minds. Pfesidewt Eisenho’wet’s wiJrt#ng to the type «¥ ^lAez«et th«t and J^hrfond fndvns feel ilhAt tifgUtt ihm ilhi Sttpftme Cooft, bigger tlf*n |*5##te«t aVld ti4gger than the tMt^ StdHos. MKli iMtle men bece»iie dltfnk w’to'rth tpthMMc, the^ only dfte laWggciage l^y ar>*tePiH>fciWd atfd that is the Milage of ff Hi Cai Wasii SMkai Hi fnmk Mm 'Wtan ift Jfegto Stfhools in the South like? Jame* WrtAw'tn, the distinguished Negro writer, went South to find out. He visited with the 0f a high school boy who had jtist en teral ili Mdli^ated sciiool. wptu$m in the 0«tot>er issue of Hamper's jUlcaKiM, BMPMh telBs an intcrvtew with the boy, %)^ra be WKeiitffies chAy n “G." and wilih his mother, wAtom he calls “Mrs. R.” asmm Utttn T« The Editor Dftttr Sir: I ha'frc just rfeUil with interest the article In your isstfe of today, headline4^ “Pope Ex- presses Enmity to Bars Be cause of Race”. I did not find that the port^ns of the jJops's speech, which you quoted, contained any SUeh expressioh. The nearest approach thereto was that “The Church has al ways energetleally opposed gcnoclde attempts and prac- ttces arising from what has been called the ‘color bar'. This statement might welJ be disputed by the dfficlal coun* tcnance and blessing granted to the Catholic Spaniards }n their greedy quest for gold in the West Indies. In my re^itt book, . and Catholicism, I establish, from history, tiie fact that these -Catholic Spaniards worked the native population Of those Islands to death, liter acy, as Slaves tft what had been their orwn gold mines, for the enrichment of their Catho lic sovereigns, arid the embel lishment of ihe Catholic Ca thedrals and churches in Spain, and that therea’fter ihey instituted Negro slavery in America by bringing Africans over to repftite these natives. A CathpHe historian, Baudler,^, m his Cathoiic Church Wi L«hi- lst»nft,'by way of making jx- cuse for the immoral practice of providing joint housin;^ fu- cilities iot the male and to- male slaves \vho wcjre employ-" ed in tho man-killing sugar.* cane fields of Louisiana, and many of which slavo# were owned and worked by cha ^ Catholic Church on its planttr'' tions, said, on page 203, ‘‘This tyne of^work on the plantatldh made is impossible to ecgtb- gato the slaves according to y sex, BUT THE V/EAHV WORK THEY »II3 WAS THfe BEST CORRfccTIVE OF SEX ABUSES”! Such a control of sex abuses, if it had Worked, would have constituted an example of genocide, and here we find that this official Catholic his torian approvingly, and Jok ingly, refers to tho practice, •rtie first ciiaptor of Exodus tells of a similar attempt at genocide, when Pharaoh thought to control the 'multi plication of the Jews in his realm, by increasing the bur dens of the Jews, but verse 12 ,, says, "The more they afflicted ' them the more they multipliad and grew.” R. R. MILLER DURHAM “He Was Mled With Thte ttoly Ghosl” ByjREVEREND HAROLD IWM-AND Pastor, MdAtit Gttfe&d Bafitut dhuirch “Aad be filled with the Holy 6ho«t...” Acts 9:1'}. We must be emptied in order to be filled. This is a kindy>f law of physics as Well as things spiritual. Saul Was fill-, efi—filled with fear, resfcrtl* ment, h&tred, pride and preju dice. fte was a Bolling caul- dren of unholy and destruc tive feelings. Now as He meets Jesus in holy surreftder he is emptied of the unholy things of that wild, restless past. He 18 porged, cleansed and re deemed. He is emptied of the 4rt^hteiiins power of the XJ^J- 'ftbLt S¥>miT THAT htfd brought him on his destrue- ^ve rtiission. He Was emptied in that spiritual .^pcration called Regener^iOo^^fV?' Born Anew Of 1‘he Spirit tjS God. Etftptf^ to be liiledf'flanew. £n#tied to_ lie': witli what? Emptied to “Be' filled wkh 4he Holy Ghost...” In the new birth we are emptied of sin to be filled with the Holy Spirit. What relief and peace we enjoy when we are emptied of sin and filled with the blessings of the Holy glc Spirit. He is emptied* of hatred to? be filled with love. Emptied of. the nagging restleSsnete Of goilt to be filled with calinness aiij^ peace. Eihp'tied of cbhilict ;tci be filled with inrifer pedce. Emptied of fear to be filled with a coul’ageoos arid trium phant faith. Yes, he was emiijtted df'the ravaging fruits of fin and evil to be filled wiM the Iblessed fruits of tlUe Hdllr Spim. rlst eiiiptles t^^ lidbl of !ies8 fiilS ft ,w^ HiXLTH AND iWiSdtlOTS^. To'fee ffifed with (Ke ijiirft Is to have tlie pdM/ers 67 sickness taken away Snd lie 4{iven. the powers df health, 't^ftur ‘Soul is sln-felck. Theft let'him tempty yoiilr soul of tha't sfckness .and hlHit with health. Satd was a siM yoahg iniln. Who but a sIo^"yBu1h couTft feid hhnself to siith a tfcherqe'(^:death and desilructton^ Hiu4 now Chri^ Jesbs Itekls a%d cieaitites his sou}. Tile soul being emptied of its Sickness 'IS lined With ' joybas health-gfving powers pf the Holy Spirit. His soul is I emptied of its spiritual and moral sickness to "be filled tWth the Holy ghost..." He Is filled with the power of life at its best; A spirit-fill- ed Life. The old life did not satisfy. It left Mm joyless, con fused and restless. Human be ings are ever restless when they are filled with fear and resentment. But now the new life giving power of God’s ^scfe-it give's him the matchless ^ peace that passeth human un- derstffiidiftg. A j>eac^ that ke^g^^hioij slhiid,. the jiiany trialrf, ordi^s that miin mu^t suddr In this life. Are yOu restless, Joyless and unequal to the teVMfi'e* demands that life makes upon you? Then may 1 suggest a remedy: Give yb'ur ^fe to Jesus and let him ^nvpj yOii of evil and fill you life-givint; power pf the spirit. It worked for the ydurfg mat! Saul. It will do wotfdfe'rs In your life tOo. The true secret of life at its best—life as God would have us li\^ It-is to be emptied of SIN AND BE PILLED WITH THE HOLY GHOST. By ROBERT SPIVACK Watch on the M the told him he hadn't been UmMHK Miyttilbg in the Negro school, and Mw MMIUir ‘aaMM Mn to exiMn. 4ba MMMer eom«> in,” he saM, “and #0u tbifietMng to read and she tdas Mt. IM MvM iMie other dtudefrt in bimrge...” Vfen flat tMgfne how much Yeadfng gets iBJOBCp SMMlUv Vt burhdih, Tt. C. •r ftblMfor*, Mb. 4>r A JtBMMl, Pre^ldMft Hb#aOawr,Caiiibii]> ■BMwrluniiiKt 4M c. p«m>aw u. •■Aim. Nbfjl CiPdU* lOMtM «naler %ll«| done,” Mrs. R. interposed.) “At the end of the period,” G. continued, “!She tWffWS tMick and tells you something to read for the next day ” Baldwhi t;6ntiitue8;,“So, hai’Wig dbthing'else to do, G. began artiristnf Ms cMilmatet and hts mother began to be afraftl. G. is just about at the age when boys beHh 'dIVWMhg out of school.] I*erhaps they get a 'fnl6 ItbMbtes Aa also; drops out; the boy gAs woi'k Kdf a *time yr *ets| into trouble for, a long t'ime. t Wdstotd IHfit forty-' five girls had left schob^ for the maternity ward: the year b^ore. A week or ten days 4)«iore i arrived in the city eighteen bojrg from (J.’s'lor- raer high school Jiiih beefh V^ht^ed 'to '(]he cftainj gang. j “Tite Alhci^l tff ®,’s fcntMt high sehort was about ^Veiftgr^iw Whan tie 'i»tt yifwMy re-i Afed and his Idea of HiMlk>Niie wn t» have two boy* beat estdh other—‘under hi* supertAiea*-^ vlth teat!her 'b^lts. This onoe hafpenc# with G.,' With lio othiM' resnlts than that hia iwrenis gavei the Principal a tongue-laihing. K hantanad with two boy« of G.’f icqualntfMce witlh retuH that, alter achoo4, one boy beat the ather fp badiy that he had to be sent to tiie iiMjpital. T^ teachers have thonaelves arrived at a d«ad en^ f>r in a •egregeted school system they cannot rise any higher, «n4 the ihwt^tka itns TiMttrk ‘vH Hht. Itoth at«Mtents and te^ehsn todh tb lArtMlte. “ft t Voy can wash a blad*aer*, * 1fc«#*er IWaftMrtftOltty, J’Ujwwcta JUas.” -y ' v'-'P Little R»ck And Radio '^aire You get some idea of the im pact Gov. Faubus of Arkihsas is having on world affairs, partidularly in the Middle East, in the following quota tion t’hat comes from a friend ot rtdne in the U.S. Foreign Service: “When I first^^came out to the Middle East,” ^ he writes, “the Arabs were all steamed up dbont Imael. She was the ‘eneihy.’ She had to bfe de- i/froyed...NDw three year?-and some months later I find that America is the ‘enemy’. Noth ing we pan do or say seems to ftspel this widely-held ndtion tlhat the TJ.S.A. represents everything dark afld sinister in world affairs. “Yoti may ask the e^se and jWU Will bp sarpcwed, at the ■Ifnfcwer. Contrary to A^^hat you fttay think we are hated not because of John Fostet^ but becattse of Oifval Fatttms "and those other apostles of lily-whitertesS who stand WItfl h*n,..” The letCeV eofitinti^s in ‘a ^eMoniA Vein krtd ttntt part of ft i hih omitting. Whart rtiy friend wrhes from the ^^ei^n Medfterrartean ddlncides with whsft the State hears almost ddily fhjtti tJ.5. dlptDfiiatk MatiOfied in North Africa and In the Artflb states. h,l .t Arab propagandists ^re pick ing up each incident involving race isSues and exploiting them rnercllessly in creating anti-American fee'Iing. As One might expect, It’S the U.A.R’s premier Waoser, possibly goad ed by hig Soviet allira, who leads fn playing up racial strife fn this country. Those who monitor Middle East broadcasts report that the concentration on race issues began when Faubus last year ordered out the National Guard to prevent integration at Central High School. When President Eisenhower sent federal .troops to keep the school open, the an4i-Ameri- can broadcasts subsided some what, But now tihat Central lUgh ■ and many Virginia schools are closed down be cause local atithorities are de fying the Supreme Court, the Arab commentators have re turned to the subject with're newed iury. WHat Th«y 9agr M&M Vs The race issue has been effl- phaa^Eed on altnost every state-owned bfoaidcastir^ sta tion in the Middle East^ Broadcasts have been made in Swdhiili to ‘Bast and 'Central Africa, as weHas i» Sudanese and in Arabic. IKrhA. V-dk HMkM If fijom tyi#leri,S3WiidW*;. caji^ The commentator was Dr. Ahmed Assayyid Hamid, chief editor of/SAWT AS-SUDAN— “The wave oi racial persecu tion these days has reached a high level and has begun to take a dangerous ,turn in Britain and the United States.. It is an attempt to distract the attention of English workers from the real source of their misery, for example, the capi talist regime, by using colored people as a scapegoat. So much as far as Britain is con cerned. , J “Regarding America...racial discrimination there has reached the extent which has made whites masters of the blacks...There is no doubt that racial persecution in a country such as America, which alleges to be' the leader of the free world, is an astonishing mat ter, and HMkes the people feel that the ijefense c& freedom shottld be [jracticed at home iirst. "Condemning Jimmie Wilson to death for stealing one dollar from a white wohian, because he Is a Negro, is another ex ample of the farce of demo- cra^^in the free world, and cT^rly indicates ttiat to A- rrie^ioa there is white justice a^d black jus'tidfe...'* F»d*H ‘eonunents it is lAOMCE&N SDA'S MISLED World events now taking place are clear-cut signs of times that bdth the church and the .world a're ' on the very threshold of momentous events which will usher in the Lord’s final work—the preaching of the Gospel with -power to all the world. (Matt. Z4:14—Rev. 14:6) Day by day we see ‘increasing numberis among memlwrs of the Seventh-day Adventist church awakening to the Bible Triith that the next major lirophetlc Bible event relating to the SeVe'nth-day Adventist church— is her cleansing Or puHfidaticfn (Malachi 3: 1-4) when'the LoJ‘d Himself will intervene to Sepa rate the tares from the wheat (Ezekiel chapter 9) in this reli gious body—this separation taking place just prior to the Lord’s setting up His Kingdom here on earth (E>aniel 2:44) as a pldce Of ‘peace and ref-uge for all heart people in OTe entire world. A great controversy (Wicah 6:2) is hdw going On Within the Seventh-dby Adventist dhurch —between the Da vidian SDA’s and the Laodicean SbA’s. The DaVldian gfotip believes that God is very shortly to set up His Kingdom herr-on earth beginning at Jerusalem and give Bible proof to back up their as sertion. (Jer. 51:20-31—51: 2-13 32:37—Hosea 3:45—Isaiah 2:1-4 ai: 1-6—M»cha 4:1-6—Ezefcipl 36: 16-38—Daniel 2:44) On the other hand the Laodi cean believers (Rev. 3: 14-19) claim they have all the Light they need and dismiss and dis count an earthly pre-mlllcnial Khigdom of Gdd. More people, than ever before^ outside of the SeVenth-day Ad ventist denomination are now becoming aware of this growing controversy taking place within thi^ church, and some are obser ving and closely watching its progress. The method the Lord will use in the soon coming Judgement In this church (1 Peter 4:17) to separate the wheat from the tares is made crystal clear in the ninth chapter of Ezekiel. Only those in the Seventh-day Adven tist church who are sighing and crying against the abominations are sealed as the first fruits of the Lord’s harvest. How wonder ful to be seaieti ;n His Kingdom rather than tp be dealt with by the destroying angels in this rapidly approaching antitypical Passover beginning at the House of God. As the sealing is now already underway—the next ma jor prophetic Bible event direct ly concerning this church is the separation in the Temple. Speak ing of this same event in Reve lation 7: 1-4 John'declares that there were 144,000 Israelites sealed and he also saw after wards an Innumerable multitude (Rev. 7:9) of sealed ones coming out of great tribulation from all nations into God’s Kingdom at Jerusalem-.' (See also Isaiah 66i. 19-20.) Urgent and timely admonition to all Seventh-day Adventists still in the Laodicean condition of dreaming themselvgs to be rich and increased in Truth and in need of nothing is that they awaken (Rom. 13:11) and “ffEA» Ve THE ROD—THE LORD’S VOICE TO THE CHURCM” (MiCah 6:9) and be ready, without delay, for the Lord’s soon-coming visitation to His sanctuary. We, as Adventists, are quite well versed on conditions in the world, but let us not neglect to fully understand that God is about to deal with conditions in the Seventh-day Adventist church FIRST, where at present great Light (and with it respon sibility) Has been freely and iHXintifully provided by the LORD through “THSi SHEP HERD’S ROD”, _ J. P. KELLEY ASHEVILLE Bat ye, brethren, be not weary in well doing.-r-XThea- aalonlans 3, 13.),' I l^y are so many of os tliaae days addicted to pills to make I us sleep, to give us needed ; energy, to allay our nervous ness and tension? Let us try I stopping at least once a day, in the headlong rush, to help someone in need, unselfishly to , lighten another's load—and in • I well doiiig, find peace. apparent that even if Wilson does not die In the electric, chair, Ihe damage to our pres tige has already been done. And American diplomats will be a long thne retrieving it. In another broadcast (Sept.l, IW8) Cirtro tl8dk> ssfid:^ “Maltreatment of Negroes in the United States is not con fined to depriving Negrp childran of the right tp attend pttblic schools; "ft eiterids to every wsrtk of life. *ln iact, even (ftitifches in the U.S. ate hot immune to the disease of racial dlseriminatfon...” 1t’« an (fld, direaty and hiac- curate story and yet there is enough substance provided by Faubus and his allies to pro vide heavy ammunition fot those who aim to picture America as rich, self-satisfied and indifferent to human needs. It’s a distorted picture, of courscj "nje U.S. Sopremfe Court has' forthrightly stood for equal rights and Cairo Radio says nothing about It. But grousing about unfafr commentary won’t get us any where. The only thing they’ll understand in the Middle Eaat., is Faubus’ clear and definite defeat through integration of Little Rock high sotiools.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 4, 1958, edition 1
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