In Recprd» Disclosure Case Georgia Ruling Against NAACP Cliall^iiged In Supreme Court WASIIINfl rO.V f). C.—Cf*htcndi»if; lliat a ruHii;' i>f an Atlanta rtiurt hc»l»lhi{,' the N'AACf' in corfunipt and !nii)n>int,' a flite '*1.1 at'hitfary. iiilreasdnalilf a;nl inilawful.' lavv- ycfi for tt»c Asjiocirtthni havo asked tlie L'niti'd Stales Sit- lii-onic (jtnrt t«i rcvcrs’f the refusal if llic Sn|ir-njc Cuttri i>f (ic(irj>ia to review itx dctiinl cif a iK'tition for a writ of ci-r- ' tlqrarl to the Qtnrelt Cttiirt of T H E C A II O L 1 ff A TIMES ', SAT., AWlIt 4, IW 'TM* T«UTH UflMIOtJO* 1 I.. DUBOIS IN CHINA Sftn* •bovt ii from th« blrtlidiy MHy (parlHng th* 91st anhlvtfMry it. pr. W. B. B. OuBols, the rtil>' Mnf AtMot-lkch hIttorUn and ^Midlogitt, In ^ikliig. capkl of tK« N«^let‘ Ktpublic of China. Among thoto attend lig th« af fair wertr Vtet-Prtmi|r Chin Yl sitting t» tht loft of DuttiU and Kuo MO-fo, Prtsidcnt ^f tltii^ CHi> tiele Aeadcmy of f> thi txtrkmo left. A. J. Tiiylor ' Taylor Retires After 31 Yearv As Scout Officer ‘ Andrew J. Taylor retlrcij March a| after having served 30 years a.s (|isistant national director of '-ln- terracial service of ^ the . Boy Sjouts of America. ,.|A resident of Greensboro, N, C;, ■^ylor has been an active leader in boy's work‘since 19l9'Whcn he became a student at Knoxville Col- l^Ro, Knoxville, Tenn. On-Juno I KnoKvlllOiC«lle«f win c^f tr upon Taylof' tho hon#r«ry ijIfKireo of Doctor of Human* Lot- tUM. ; ' ■ I Taylor was born at Townsville, W. C. He is a graduate of the Hon- a^rson Institute, Henderson, N.C.-, and Knoxville Collegc.^A* ^ ***•*’■ mer stutlent at IlamptOh Instlliiile, Hampton, Va., he attended the, first training coursc. Iaf rffifiri Scout leaders in 1^8. While principal of tho JohMton’ County High ScHbol at SWiltMlold, N. C., he became one o^ tho 'fjrtt, ^gro Scoutmactert lit e^tMrn' North Carolina. Taylor ^etaittk' a . JrEt’FEtlSCfN ClTY, Mp; — Lln- |jp|ti. University has ihpseti tWo ojewspapors ’ a6 an cfltclroiiics- brbqdcQstinji corporation as the wlnhcrs bf ifs' .Cfiratofs Awarta |df. Sigtrificant Contfibu- In Cleveland ' ’ CLEVIIlAND, Ohio—Dr. Walter M. Brown, placement officer, and br. Ray Thompson, counselor- trainer at North Carolina College, attknded tho ennual meeting of tho Ameri«n fersonnel and Guid- aneO Association in Cleveland, Ohio, March 23-25. ' Dr. Thompson has bsen appoint ed'to the mfcmbership on the Con- ffttution and Credentials Commit tee of tho Aisoctaiion. professional leader in Scouting in 1929 and in 1937 graduated from the 52nd National Triining School far .professional leaders In Scout- lng> conducted at the Schiff Scout Reservation at Mendham, N. J. In his work promoting the Dby ScQUt program among Negroes, Taylor specialized in directing Scout leaders’ training courses for local Doy Scout councils and in Negfo eollo'ies and universities from 1929 to 1944. He has been di rectly responsible for tho recruit ing of thousands of key business and professional community lead ers far Scouting. Major national church, school and civic groups have bMonre partners with Scout- Ins 111 serving thousands of bOys during his his long term in office. ~'Jlimdre3s~or the nation^s lead jyiig Negro citizens.obtained from Taylor their first knowledge of the Boy Scouts of America and the contribution the Scouting program can mate to boys.. G&W SEVEN STAR 50 PINT $^95 "nrra KWN ST/>» BltN0£0 WHIIKtY, 10 f«OOI, V)i% STBAIOHT WHISKEY ( YEARS OR MORE OLD. CRAIN NtUTHXl SfilRITS. GOOOERHAM & WORTS LID. - rto«iA. ILL lions to Better Human Relations.' Tho University has anhourided also Hie names of two journalists 'to receive Citations of Merit for Outstanding Performance in the Field of Journalism. The Toledo (Ohio) Blade and the New York Tirties wert^ the two newspapers chosen. Joseph Baker, president of Baker Associates, a Philadelphia public relations firm, and Thomas W. 'Voung, publisher of the Journal and Guide of Nor folk, are the two journalists. The Radio Corporation of Amer ica-National Broadcasting Company (KCA-NBC) was also chosen a winner. The .awards will bo presented at the 11th annual Headliner Ban quet on the Lincoln University campus Wednesday, April 8. The winners are selected each year by the Department of Journ alism faculty and reviewed for ap proval by the Lincoln University Board of Curators. Dr. Armistead S. Pride is head of the Depart ment of Journalism. ^ Tho human relations awards were established in 1952 to honor those media and agencies whose published materials servo to pro mote understanding among the faiths, cthnic and cultural groups of this and other countries. The Citation of Msrit was initiat- In 1950 to provide recognition to journalists principally in the Neg ro publications field. Awards for significant contri butions to better human relations vcre designated to the Toledo Blade for “its non-labelling of individuals in the, news by race ARTHUR QCHS SALlBfR- GER, assistant treasurer, of Tm Now York TlmOs, wlllVroekve the Liftc(^ln Univfrsity AVKird-^' Significant ContrJlMtiori^ fo'^t- ter Human Relations fdr" .^1;]lijlfc Tim^s at the Hoadlinor April 8 at Lincoln univmi^. , ■jnd f'jr its non-discriminatory hir ing policies; “and to the New York rimes for “its elimination of news racial identification some years ago, its special eight page supplement followin,'; the May 16, lO.")! U. S. Supreme Court decision RCA-NBC also won an award in (he lumian relations category for "KCA’s wholesome employment pr.ictices and for NBC’i selections of themes and personnel for ‘This is Your Life’ and its operatic, va riety find iuformaticnal programs.” i liaker and Young, were cited for •‘outstantling performance in the ifeld of journalism. ■' ‘ — 0 ^■ NCC's Summer Science Program Gets $15,000 The National Sciencc Founda tion announced today the award of a grant of $15,400 to N. C. College at Di:rham for tho operation of a Summer Training l’ro;iram for 30 talented high scliool students who a;;e interested in science as a pro fession. The grant will provide for the transportation, room and ijoard at (he college, and otiier foes for each of the students selected to participate in the pnigram. Tlie program will b/> under the direction of Dr. James S. Lee, Clialrman of the Department of Biology at NCC. The objectives of the progrem will be to stimulate the scientific interest and enthusiasm of. the students and to give thom broad training in the fundamental con cepts of biology, chemistry and mathematics. Further information concerning the program may be obtained by writing to Dr. J. S. Lee, Chairman, Biology Department, North Car olina College, Durham, Director H»ft-progr«»r. _ - ■ ^——O —— Almost 75 per cent of all hogs marketed in North Carolina aro prcducod In th« Coastal Plain. MICHAEL BRADSHAW, edlt^' of the Toledo (Ohio) Btado since 1946, who will represent hit newspaper «nd receive lt« 'Award, for Significant Contributions if Better Human Relations irt fhi, Lincoln University Hotdllncr Banquet, April 8. Mf. BrOdshaw. will address the banquef tud^i cnce THOMAJ i'OUNft, W**«- dent. Guide Publishing. Com pany/ and butinsss manager, Norfolk Journal fend dtilii#,. witl serve os master of ctreMenkH lyt Iho HeadlinerBonquof/April 8, at Lincoln UltivorUly qind receive a Citation if.Mtrit for Outstanding Performance in the Field of Journalism. Gets Grant SFIDALIA—Joe it. btafr, |iead of the Chtfmistry Departmoilt, at ,tal- mcr Memorial Institute, woi ed ah award from the Science Kducation, Atlanta Univetgily, physics at Fisk University /or eight weeks under direction of Profes sor Samuel P. Massie, Director of 1®?- Summw Jnatitutat, s^ sion begins ^une' 15, to Aus^t 7. , Stnrr is a former crad^attf',of Jtihnson C. Smith' University, iOtkr- lotte, North Carolina. Appeals. ilia NAACP pMittoit tu the U. S. Supreme CoitH was 'filed bn fc^reii 2U, one dity befo^ the time cfonted bs Jtutlte' Hugo UlQck fur fllihg expired. The cate oirlcinitetl on Novehi- ber 21, 1006, «heti, uiUnnountid, agelitf Of the Qewgla fttale Rev enue depBrtmeitt deaceiided upim tbt NAACt* l:eBioiial artd hniitch office* In Atlanta with a demand foir “Immedille prodM*tidn of all Hooks, records and other data bear- ihfi. on taxpayer’s income, 'disburst!- menlt and expeoies prepor^d or tuied by said corpofation (NAACP) in the Conduct of Its biuiness dur ing the taxable years 1M7 through 1066.’* , ' Such.xecords os Mrs. Ruby Rui:- t«y, the Association’f southeastern rjpgional ^retarf^ ^ her posaegsitn ^»(bre ’ Aiade'' available (or inspection by, t{ie .revenue agents. ■ | i V ' «Whe^ J^hn C..f(falhatin, then tjresideht of the Atlnnto, NAACP br««neh requested «pportUnUy for himself and cotinsiel to cohfer with vhe judge before' complying with ihe order, he and other branch 'jfficers werle confronted with an order' to show cause why they dipiiUl nol be cited for contempt. Motiotis filed by Ihe. NAACP tp iitmiss tho cowt% ruling were )Verrnuledr ' • I • On December 14,. 1D50, Cqlhoun ind the NAAC^ were found in coim tmpt. Tl»e brantii president was .irdered committc^ to ‘Hhe com- indn jair* whe* he was held for about three 'hours and a fine of .¥25,000 was imposed. u|k>n the NAACP. , Upon release, C^alhoun a.ccom- panied revenue agents to the branoti office whM'e the hooks and records were inspected, Al though released,., the contempt qitatipn aaginst him reinained pending. Appeals through the state courts proved unavailing. IVhereilpftn, the NAACP, claiming that the judgment and senWnce of the low er court were “excessive, cruel and unusual,” filed a petition in the U. S. Supreme Court for writ of certiorari to the Supreme' Court of Georg^. Signihg the Association's peti tion w'ere'NMCP allornejre Tlobeff L.. Carter of New York, general consel;. Frank D. I^ves, Washing ton; A. T. Walden and b. L. Iloilo well, both of Atlanta; E. E. Moore, Ir.; Romae L. Turner; and S'. S. Robinson. Lo- Shorter Week Will Help Race NEW YORK—The adoption of a shorter worl^;,we#l( no tii- Ulctibft ini i,839,- iiod new j6i»ii fi»r >y^er^! in \merica and wouft ^irdVide‘''"the be.st tangible evidence of working brotherhooti” for millions of un employed colored.t workers, the ISO.OOO-metnber United Electrical, Radio, & Machine Workers of America (UE) said this week. At the winter meeting of the union’s General Executive Board, Albert J. t'iUgerald, UE President, said: ] “This union prides itself on its unrelenting struggle tor full equality among the worlcing men ind women in the electrical in dustry. Our program for the short er work week with no reduction In |My will provide an estimated 1,300,000 new jobs In America i( ulopted. It would priiVlde 85-hour 1 week jobs at 4i9 hours pay for he mllliona of fully unemployed, >art-tlmi| workers and yt>ung work- 'fs entering the labor market for he first lime, “It would also mean that the Cegro workers of America would •v* able to get their rightful share! if the Job ma^jtet at a time of ris- j ng unemployment amid rising! roducllon aitd soarihg cbrporatei iirofitsi” t'lUgtfrald said. “Opr ecohoinists ettjmate that' the a^option of a 35-bour week] with 40-houi^ pay woiild mean ap- proxinlately 1,^0,ODb jobs for Negro wwiers,” he stated. For the past year, the United Electrical, Radio . and Machine Workers of Anwrica (UK) , which jrJJSitirilsins ,fbr.^^(joa^f^ .In il sTates ai)d 'V>s T>een campaigning for, I shorter work week to nieet tkc oriais of un- yemploymeni ) Deiinlte Date to Free African States Urged NEW’ \’()K1\ -CiiUdiial jMiw- ors in Afric.T must now lifilarc a date wlifii iiKlcpciidfnci' will lie Kr:tiUcl tu llu- pcopk-s un der their control, Charles Dnii- iKir .Slicrniaii. witrhl itiesideiit >f tlie Votmi^ Men’s Cliristian Associations and si'cretary of tlie tfeasiiry of l.ilioria, .said here recently in an inlerview at t.heOverseas I’ress C iirli. “The great harm of colonial ism,” Sherman charged, “lies in Its waste in human resources since inen are not permitted to coatri- but to their fullest capacity.” He cautioned, however, that “the rights of minorities of all races should be safegarded and protect ed by constitutional means.” Check Senseless Flow of Blood Setting an independence date, he said, would check “tho sense less flow of blood.” It would also make the prepara tion and transition smoother, al lowing peoples of the countries involved to “bend their efforts to ward reconstruction and develop ment u;ithout rancor ami hatred,” Sherman added. WORLD YMCA's PItEStDENT ^Charles Dunbar Slicrnian, left, president of tho World Alliance of Young Mon's Ciristian Asso ciations and secretary of ttw treasury of Liberia, Uughs with Herbert P. Lansdale, Jr., general secretary of ttie Notional Coun cil of YMCA's of the* United States, prior to Mr. Shemijfi'* yrecent press conlerofici at Iho Overseas Pres* Club in Now York City. Durin| the cowfor- cnce Mr. Sherman died ow col onial powers in Airtca to- de clare a dote of indopemtencO for peoples under their conlret. Can't Run From It-Miami Merfic NEW YpnK—Dr. John Brown is: j a Neijro eye' surgeon. He i; on the' I staff of a top flisht hospital, drives ' a new C.t»tillac and owns a 22- foot cabin cruiser. lie couhl, if he desired, prac- 1 tice almost imywhere in tlie touii- I lr> . j Instead, i.e has chosen to live i and work in Miami. His decision j means that: He can—ami does—operate on I the.eyes of white men, but he I can’t sit nc.\t lo them in tiie mov ies. I He can golf on Miami's munici pal coursc, but he can’4 use the clubhousc and resiaurjni. He can rent, a room in a b»3 Miami Beach hotel and swim in the pool, but he can’t use a white’ ririnkln;' foimtnin in tho Cade County Courthauso. Why, then, doej he clMxre to re main? Ln an article in the current ».s- .sue of Look Magazine, Dr. Brow* answers simply: ■•\Ve are not satisfied. Sefre"*- tion is here. But you can^ ni* from it. A man should work for progress where he is, not run." Get the genuine article Get the honest taste off a LUCKY STRIKE PHOTOGRAPHER RICHARD SAUN9IRS takes pictures, fpr almoet every tnnjor magazine in the U. S. He’s a Lucky, fan of more than 15 years’ standing. With Luckies, Dick enjoys tho unforgettable taste of line totmcco. “Luckifls t«Bt« best,” he says. “That’s the best reason I know for smoking ’em!’* 9 r. o. Prudutt

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view