m CROUND-BRCAKING it Found- fi« D«y—Aefion her* last Fri day at fh* LivingttoiM Colas* Foundar'*^ Day thows tha prin cipals braaking ground for tha Llvi^stona Building Program. Thay ara kft to right, Dr. S. E. Duncan, praaidamt of tha callaga; Bishop W. J. Waiit, chairman of tha Board of Trutf*as, Sr., Bish op of tfia 2ion'Church; and-Dr. Aaron Brown, Jr., Proiisct Di- ractor, Phaipt^tokas Fund, Naw Yoric City, who dallvarad Pound- ar** Day addras*. Dr. Duncan said tha carameinkas wara sym bolic of thraa buildings to ba constructad thlt^ yaar. Thay in- cluda Dining Hall-Studant Union, Auditoriwm-Music .Building, and naw Dormitory for girls. Lwingstone (Hven $180,000 During Celebration of Founder's Day; Ground Broken For 3 Buildings ‘program. lege; re^6ived a total of $180,949.- 33 at‘its annual Founder’s Day 2|{ebration here yn February 19. The Board of .^ishops led by Bishop W, J. Walls, senicf bishop of the church and chairman of the Bcai^ or Trustees,, reported $17B,- 320.08, arid studcntis, faculty and alunuUeave, another $2,620.25' as tiK . annS>»L Fflundfif^ jrally reached a ne\high in regular giv ing ,4or the col^ge. The three buildings which will be constructed thi^ year include a Dining Hall-Student Unibn, Music Building-Audftorium, and a new dormitory for you^ ladies. This, in a very real sense, was a day of fulfillment for the thousands of ^ in rii^fil^'ftinds for the c6Tle]ge and warned that “increased giv- friends and benefactors of the local college. It marlced a partial rojiliTflHnn _o£- thti HftOSt longed for days in Livingstone his tory. Dt' Aaron Brown, Jr., Project; jn the morning service held at DirMtor, The Phelps-Stokes Fund, New, Yorlt City, delivered the Founder’s Day address at the 2 P. M. meeting held in Trent Gym- nas^m on the campus. Following tha tarvica ground breaking ceremonies wara hald symballc of the thraa new build ings toon to be cansf.ructad on tha campus. Lad by Dr. S. E. Duncan, president of tha col lage; Bishop W. J. Wails, i^ior bishop of rha Zion Cljbrch; Yankitrs, N. Y,; and Dr. [$iron Brown, iioil was spadad . dffici- ally signaling tha starting of tha —■ Ui 10, student and faculty tributes were paid the memory and life of Dr. Joseph Charles Price, founder and firtt ,president of the college. Members of the senior class es corted Mrs, Josephine Price Sher rill, daughter' of the Founder and College Librarian, to the tomb of Dr. Price where a floral design was placed on his grave, t Dr. Brown in his address des cribed Livingstone as “A growing institution of higher education with a bright and glorious future.” tie offered thanks for the leader ship .of the A. M. E. Zion Church Hi Smart It im a ammAcawMT becaus* tf*$ tha sgsy, safe, modem way to pqy bills and. have a dependable record of each transactfpn. Open your Checking Accovnt at this convenim bank, ^any of your neighbors hove checking accounts/ why not you? / ' * Mechanics & Farmers Bank lieW.ParriAhSt. Durham, N. C. ing will l)e needed if the college Jls to keep pace and move stead ily ahead.” Mrs. Doreatha E. Williamson, president of the General Alumni Association, reported that alumni have given more than $^,00Q on a pledge of $50,000 and said the remainder would be paid to the college by Commencement this Spring. She presented Dr. Duncan a check for $2,500. Financial reports by episcopal areas; Bishop W. J. Walls, Yonk ers, N. York, $35,773.70; Raymond L. Jonas, Salisbury, $36,962.M; H. B. Shaw, Wilmin^on, $l,7y767.18; Stephen G. Spottswood, Washing ton, D. C., $20,928.40; W. A. Stew art, Washington, D. C., $21,366.50; D. C. Pope, Bristol, Tenn., $13,- 12S; Charles E. Tucker, LoUisVille, Ky., $10,012.50; Joseph D. Cau- then, Norfolk, Va., $515.75; Felix S. Anderson, Louisville, Ky., $13,- 095.50 and William M. Smith, Mo bile, Ala., $3,095.05; all repreient- ing the AME Zipii Church. Livingstone College Students gave $1,000, the faculty, $1,070.25, the Washington, D. C.' Alumni chapter, $500, and the General Alumni Association, $2,500.' Stu dents from Hood Theological Sem inary gave $50.00. Outstanding visitors included, in addition to the bishops of the church, the following trustees, E. M. Graham, Chicago;, Dr. A. L. Cromwell, Winston-Salem; Richard W. Sherrill, Salisbury, Dr. W. J. Trent, Sr., Salisbury; and Dr. Ru fus E. Clement, President of At lanta University, Atlanta, Ga. General Officers of the Zion Church in attendance were Dr. J. C. Hoggard, Mt. Vernon, N. Y., Secretary-Treasurer of the Board of Foreign Missions; ’Dr. A. P, 'Morris, Secretary-Treasurer of the Board of Home Missions, Brother hood Pensions and Relief, Char lotte; Dr. E. S. Hardge, Director of the Board of Evangelism, Win- aton-Salem; Mr. E. M. Graham, General Secretary-Auditor, Wash ington, D. C.; Dr. W. R. Lovell, EMitor of the Star of Zion, Char lotte; Dr. J. Van Catledge, Eklitor of the Church School Literature, Charlotte; Mr. D. W. Andrews, Secretary-Treasurer of Church Ex tension, Winston-Salem; and Alex ander Barnes, Public Relations Di rector, Washington, D. C. Judge Asserfs Sitting-in Is Mot Criminal Trespass COLUMBIA, Missouri -r Alert- ing that “a criminal trespawi in Missouri” must entail “the doing of some damage to pcopaifty,” Municipal Judge Carl Wtt««t*n has ruled that a peacefitj ^4n does not constitute cfiorfi^, tres pass. In so ruling, ha acqwHtait fwo University faculty mamfcena #nd thraa studant*, aH mantbav* - of CORE,|«rho wara arraafai Di- cambar 10 for liHlng-hi' ■ 1# Clark's' Lunchaonatta, a cantriji dovimtewn aatMg placa. ; The faculty members are John Schopp, assistant professor of astronomy and Edward ToMich, instructor of Sociology. Tlie- >tu- dents are Julia Skinner, Ca|rolyn Gnojewski a nd Malvin West, "itiey were defended by Charles OMbam of St. Louis, who is CORE’S na tional chairman. Acknowledging that “dam^e in a trespass case may consist of loss of business,” Judge Wheaton held: “There is no evidence • that cui tomers in the restaurant left -it because of the presence of tbe defendants. The complainant testi fied that, while the defendants were in his restaurants on tie date, people would not come In because they figured there w^s something going on. This at>peaps to be merely a conclusion of tl^e witness with jio evidence of possi ble customers to support U and is not valid proof of tbe mental processes of those people.” The Columbia CORE group is continuing its campaign to inte grate downtown eating places. Elizabeth City Requires Nat'l Teachers Exam EUZABETH CITY—Dr. Charles Lyons, Jr., Dean, Elizaibeth City State Teachers College, announced this week that all senior students enrolled in Teaching Majors witl now be jrequ^F^d^ tional Teachers Examination^ The examination will be given on April 15th at Elizabeth City High School. In- making the announcement, Dr. Lyons said; “At Elizabeth City we are doing everything possible to raise our standards’ and nr»> pare teachers who will be ac cepted for certification anywhere In the qatloh. ^Making the National Teachers Examination a require ment follows logically our joining with other institutions in the state in requiring all entering students to take the College Board En trance Examination. In io doing, we'are coope^rating with the State Board of Education in its study of teacher preparation in North Ca rolina, and simultaneously tight ening our own standards.” At Elizabeth City State Teach ers College, the administration of this program has been placed un der Dr. George H. Walker, Direct or of the Areq of Education. Greatest Truths Not. Always In Print -- Greene GREENSBORO—An audience at A. and T. College was told last week that iiome of the greatest truths of the world are not to be found in books and the archieves. The speaker was Dr. W. L, Greene, Raleigh, executive secre tary of the North Carolina Teach ers Association. He delivered the main address on last Tuesday,, at the opening of the A. and T. ob servance of annual Negro History Week. "Soma of tha graatad ttoriaa on ' the davalopmant of world civilization," tia contlnuad, "doubtloM, ramain fiiddaln and unaxcavatad In tha ruins «f Africa and South 'America." He said that the, informatit>n now available on^ the part the Ne- Rro has played in the development of the world and America is fur ther limited by, perhaps, delibe rate ommissions by world histo rians. WINNIE VANCE—'^ISS UNCP" WHey College Coed Crowned Miss UNCF" at Alumni Confab rr DAYTONA BEACH, Florida — The crowning of Wiley College co ed Winnie Vance as “Miss Nation al UNCF” highlighted the fifteenth annual conference of the National Alumni Council, held February 11 and 12 at Bethune-Copkman Col lege, Daytona Beach, Florida. Misi Vance, a junior was select ed as the representative of the stu dent body having the highest per capita giving ratio to the 1960 UNCF campaign. It marked the third consecutiye year that Wiley College has produced the national queen. The crowning took place in the Moore Gymnasium, built with money raised by the United Negro College Fund. Alumni volunteer workers from the North Carolina Teachers Asso- ciajtion, told a student group at the Fayetteville State Teachers College Wednesday to orientate (hemselves to their ever-changing environment by a study of the his tory of the Negro race and. to the rich heritage that young Ameri cans inherit from their elders. all parts of the country, UNCF students, and alumni executive secretaries attended the two day series of workshops and discussion meetihgs. New ideas and concepts ‘ in the techniques of educational fund raising were presented for review and evaluation, in prepara tion for the 1961 Fund appeal. The 200 delegates heard ban quet speaker Dr. R. O’Hara La nier, projects director for ' the P^ielps-Stokes Fund in New York, challenge the Fund Colleges and their students to* strive for in creased excellence in their aca demic preparation; and he remind ed the alumni of their responsi bility to help the colleges in the achievement of this goal by in creased support of the annual UN CF campaigns. ^ r Awards were made at the ban quet to the Chicago Inter-Alumni Council for showing tlie largest percentage increase of alumni support of any Council in the cbuntry; and Tuskegee Institute was honored for having the. larg est student delegation at the con ference. ■ rnt cAnottwA SAT,, PiB. 75. 1M1 *TMI TRUtM im Leading Clergy Endone Plan to Use Church to Help BreA Job Bar^ NEW YORK-The NAACP church departOMBt’a campaign to enlist religioiw groupa in tbe fight against job Uaa was endorsed bjr a DumbCT of pnMiliicnt ‘ch«reh leaders. According to me Kerr. E. J- Odom, NAACP church seereUry, the pro ject, entitled "BrotherlMod in Ac tion,” will involve “inter-racial and ihterfaith teams of churchmen in an offensive against current prac tices in the hiring and upgrading of Negro personnel.” Clergymen endorsing the cam paign include Dr. Gardner C. Tay lor, president of New York CIty’f Protestant Council. “The NAACP,” he said, "is giv ing dramatic, indespensable lead ership in actualizing the Christian doctrine of brotherhood. This ef fort merits our total support." Dr. Taylor was joined in his en dorsement of the project by Bishop George W. Baber, of the A. M. E. Church’s First Episcopal District. Bishop Baben declared:' ‘Church- men through out the country should rally to this NAACP effort to improve job opportunity ” Also commenting were Bishop Stephen Gill Spottswood, of the A. IL K. Zi«a roartfe rHwnfl DMriet ami wtm drnir- mm af tb« IfAACP tmrt af Dir* cetMV Dr. BesJ mtm M. Maf«, ti Mtnikmm aim ITAACP Bmv« ai OiracMn. Mao Kev- **m UTwff. ■Met- at itftor ot AnwHo aut Catbofie mmatM Comta at New York; aad BMop W. J. Walla, ai Ota Bptagaifal Dim- trict A. M. & Ziam Cbmdt md a membef ot til# NAACK Waati at Directon. YW Natkinal Lecturefi At KBfc City EUZABTTM city—Him Baaet- ta Gardner. ♦- W. C. A. riaU S«c- retary from the Atlaela, Oattgla, Regional Office, ^aat Sunday leeturia* seminars with atadealg « ty at Elizabeth Citjr SMc College. Her meetings with stndeat tai YM and YW. addntti*C Oif day School, and a Sunday night faculty of the coUe0t. KITTRELl COLLEGE A co-educational Junior College dktia- guished for Culture and Chnstian em phasis in Education Registration for Second Semester nnaoonced far Jannnry 30-31, 1961 OFFERING: l^vo years of Liberal Arts College Training; General High School Training for Junior and Senior years, cor responding' to the 11th and 12th Grades; Business Education, Secretarial Science and courses in Religion. Veterans opportunity for this area to study and acquire basic educational reqiiirements" for advanced study. For Information and Amriication Kanks ' write: The Resristrar mr , Dr. Philip R. Cousin, President KITTRELL COLLEGE. KITTRELL, N. C. Study History Of Negro, Teachers Secretary Urge$ FAYETTEVILLE — Dr. William Gieane, Executive SaoetMy of Allen Unhreiaity stndaiifli gadiar for an infonnal supper ai Dean Cmnbo’a apai^ ment. Left to ri^t ara Sitnm Banian Miaa Ondbo and Gloria Maaaey. liaia diah will be rhirtow with CamaHti cream sauce (ledpe below). “Camatiaa baa been tbe milk in my hooaa aa bag as I can lemember.** Miaa Cmafao aayai “In fact, it waa my fonmila aaflk «haa I waa a ba^.” lliia milk in tiha rad amd wlitta can iatiia wodd’a tmrontai. hr taa, netpe: \ ; Crettmed Chiekan witit'* . I CARNATION LUMP-F^ \ VCREAH SAUCEi& - ,HUkmakma4mntiait I I With Dr. Frank R Veal, President td AlkaVnivmntyr Dean Ombo djiuMtj^. second semester plans daring coffee break. “Most «i vm ban 1^ sdiool prefer Carnation to cream in onr coffee,” Miaa Cumbo points oat. ^It makes coffee taato HO dehciou8-and it’s nice to know Carnation cuta fat caloriaa inluJf 1** I - • ^ Dean of StudenU at Allen teU9 yihy,,^ . **Camation is ns^ BteisreaDij for coflfee and cooking-even wbippinglf 2 tablespoons fkNNL Vi teaspoon salt' 2 tablespoons butter 1% cups (latrge can) undiluted CARNATION EVAPORATED MILK During her buqr day at Allai Univeif Bity in Columbia, South Qandina, Miaa T. Lorraine Cun^ likes to rdaz ior a coffee break now and tiien. After sdiocd she comes home to her attractive aparti ment on the campus-and xelues bop" serving dinner to student guestal, “Cooking is my hobby-but I’m cannj, about calories. That’s ^idiy I code with Carnation. It makes everything taste sOi IciieBofcnam.'*-' >Today*a Catnatoili ewpotatcJaig* dal way feat wahn it took, ponra^ «vGo Ute rfaam-aafe H ^ ^ calotiea, and at % fee ooat it cMan. {£vai irtiai you it irifli am tqaal '•mount ot water, CanatiMi glvaa •noothtt cooking NMte itMB flnbMqr milk..atittkMooab flour, am and feetlar toiMtMr 1 In saucepan owar low haataatisana^L ! Gradual^ add undMad CwMflDa'to I butiar4odrnitatwra.StircaaalMi%1^ | tHthic>awadandiiaoBm.NrCieWMi | CMdiMorlMiayifWnjMil^nar ! Craam SaUca oaar aaUtan at 2 cups dioppatf aookad chicken ar turkay, cap choppad Ml»*»i%aipallcad