jaift rOHCE OtfiCEfl — Lt. SSriWin L. DukM, CrYMiUboro, (Traduate of A. and Colleg* in engineering nMriihemttticf, vnm last week Commiuioned ai an officer in the U. S. Ail Force under the A. and T. ROTC pro^am. His bars are being pinned an by Mm. Diikee, his charming wife. Owfch's Place in Freedom Fight Pressed bi AMEZ Youtii Speal(er ^USBtJRY—The opening day’s foliion of the General Convention on "Christian Education, A. M. E. ^ion Church, in the new halt-mil- libh dolldr AuditrtfiiitA-Music Build ing,- Iiivifi®stone Colleee, was fea tured with two resounding mes- pales from Bishops W. A. Hilliard aifd W. J. Walls, on the theme “The Church’s Responsibility for Freedom”, Sunday. Bishop Hilliard delivered the morning messai^e and took for s subject, “The View Behind the Seen”. He bemoaned the fact that the world is seen as a disturbed, distracted, perplexed and sorely shaken place, where many of the once cherished valus now lie in the debris of castrophe and humao hAte. i^rte MW gi»^ ytiuiWim. ties if man 'would cast his eye beyond that which he sees and en visions a world inhabited by peo ple of goodwill, united under a government, whose leader would b*' motivat^ by Ood, to seek new solutions and practice them, in re -telalioni^ ^ ^ Bishop W, J. Walls, to thfl key note speech, followed the same trend Simdav Wight and told th' mare than 2,COO deltliates, fr6n throuphout ArtrCiIca and fron foreign countrieA. that Jesus Chris was that pd^J’er bey6nd (he vlsfbl> that came to earth to establish the very essence of freedom He pictured Christ as being tliv, exponent of that lasting peac>- and the church as the doorway by which He planned to establish that unity. “Jesus is our peacf and dfi"lared that it would noi come out of a superior race, but an elect race. God is looking to Pivft the world to one race, the elect-race. Jesus Christ came to build out of many races, one great race flo'ik and goodwill” said Bishop Walls. The speaker was conscious of the part the Negro church had played to make freedom work. He said that the AME Zion Church was the first race church tna' decided that its communicants would have a place to worship God according to the dictates of theh own conscience and without humil iation. He admonished the chil dren to loek around and see what QaA had ^w)uiM,^thro tile AME iion Church and told them that it did not appear what It would be if we looked beyond the power of man, to the unseen reality, that power we call God. Wiilter Mined to ai ECTC ELIZABETH CITY — Dr. Oeorge H. WaHter, Pfofes.sor of; Education and Director of thcj Area ot Edacatioti at Elizabeth City State Teaohcrs College, has betti tf(yt)ioin'(ed Acting Dean ef- ferttve 1. | Walk«?f, A Native of Portsmouth, i VirgiWa, holds the Bachelor of! Arts. Vifgtttia Unton University, I Rfehmcnd, the Master of Arts,' Cfoftmftia Univerafty, NCw York Ctty, ana received the doctorate | frftm New York University in' itm. I Before coming to Elizabeth City State Teachers College, ’ tiea'n Walker served as Dean of the Graduate School, Texas Col ' lege, Tyler, Texas and as Head Of the Department of Education at Southern University, Baton Remge, La. While in Louisiana, he served ts State Chaimuiri! of the Com- I mittee on Teacher Bkiucatlon And Pl'df^ssiorial Standards, and Advisor to the Louisiana Com- mlMion on Higher Education. Slttce coming to North Car- oiixm. Walker 'has served _pn the Governor’s Conimittee on Edu- option Beyond the Hit^ School, and represented State Teachers College at the N. C. College Conference. At EUzabeth City State Teachers College he re organized and revitalized the Student Teaching Program. Dean Walker is married to the former Lillian A. Daniels of Winston. They live in Elizabeth City with their daughters Fran- ceene, age 9, and Suzanne 14 months. Dean Walker succeeds Dr. Charles Lyons, Jr. who resigned to became Executive Secretary of the North Carolina Teachers Association. EUROPE BOUND — A happy family trio including CME (Ohrlajtlen Mej^Jiodist Epis copal) Bishop B. Julian Smith his wife, Hermlon, seated and dnughler, Mrs. Carol S. An- Iheny, left, are shown tcan- .ning itxavel brochures prior* lb leaving Chicago for Bel fast, Ireland and Paris, FraiMie, where the Bishop al- tenctbd two internaiional Chrir^n conferences thU summer. Rev. Sfnith presides over CME District 1, with churches in Arkansas and Tennessee. (ANPhoto) USHERS MEETING L. E. Austin, pTesident of the North Carolina Interdenomina tional Ushers Association, was the principal speaker for the monthly meeting of the Dur ham unit of the organization on Sunday afternoon, Aug. 12i The meeting opened at 3:15 at the Markham Chapel Baptist Church, located on the old Chapel Hill road. The Durham Ushers union Meqee VA Head Moved WASHING Ion. D C — Dr Howard W Kenney, director of the Veterans Administration Hospital in Tuskegee, Ala., has been appointed director of the VA Hospital at East Orange, N. J., the VA announced. Dr. Kenney replaces Dr. Her bert M. Plneberg, who will be come director of the VA Hos pital in BuitfalOv N. T.. July 31, oft the retlfttftent' ot the pre sent head of that hoapita'l. Ho ward E. Puller. Dr. Kenney was bom at Tuskegee Inetltute, Ala., in Ifll?. He received his M. D. de-' (tree from Meharry Medical CoUege, Nashville, Term. He ^as a captain in the U. S. Armyi Medical Corps, and practiced In ternal medicine in Tuskegee and in Tuskegee In 1948-49 and after Army service and private practice he returned to the VAH at Tuskegee as assistant director of professional services, advancing to the post of hos pital director in 1959. was observing “Banner Day.” Day.” B urvOR KAACP Flies Suit Consoiidating issues in Ail)any, Ga. Struggie BOURBON DE LUXE nCKNMOII K LUXE OISTIUIM COHTMY, UHirSVIUI, K£NTUCXy. 16 NOOF-MtTMRSlK iftllll NEW YORK — An NAACP Legal Defense Fund motion to consolidate the three federal court actions growing out of the Albany, Oa. protest movement was filed today in Albany by C. B. King before the Federal District Court for the Middle District of Georgia. Mrs. Constance Baker Motley, chief counsel for the Negro de fendants, said that today’s con solidation motion was brought because the same issues were present in all the cases. District Judge J. Robert El liot of Alt>any Is now hearing a motion brought by city of ficials to enjoin the Negro citizens from demonstrating against segregation. No hearings have been held on two pending Legal Defehsirrund suits to de segregate Albany public facili ties and to stop Albany of ficials from interfering with peaceful picketing. Judge Elliot on July 10 en joined Rev. Martin Luther King and other affiliated integration groups participa^ng ^ the Al bany- Movement from demon strating against city official*. His injunction was upsejt by Appeals Court Judge Elbert P. Tuttle on July 24 on the basis that Judge Elliot lacked juris- diotion. The pending omnibus public facility suit ask.s for desegregat ion of Albany libraries, audi toriums, parks, playgrounds and other recreational facilities and buses, bus terminals, taxicabs, theaters and other places of public amusement. Since the Albany arrests of more than 700 Negro citizens began last December, the Fund has spent approximately .$10,- COO in lepal costs it was esti mated by Director ■ Counsel Jack Greenberg this week. Mr. Greenberg said that the real legal work is just beginning, as most of the convictdons and the de.segrogation suit will probably have to be appealed to higher courts. NAACP Lesal Dofen.se JFund attorne.vs in the Ali>any cases are C. B, King, of Albany, ,Ga-; Donald L. Hollowoll of At- Unta, Ga.; and Jack Greenberg and Constance Baker Motley of New York City. Belafontp Opens At New Hotel In N. Y, Tn October KEW YORK — Harry Bela- his first supper club appearance in New York City since November. Iff.SS will be the initial attraction at the new Americana Hotel of New York, Seventh Avenue and ?,nd St, for three weeks commnncing Tuesday, October 9th. The intemaitionally famed Song star, considered tSe world’s leading concert attract ion, will appear twice nightly in the Americana Hotel’s new supper club, the Royal Box. He will hold the floor for close to one hour for each and will be accompanied by his own core of musicians in addition to the re gular Hotel Orchestra. Belafonte will offer an all new reijertoire of sonifs froin all over *he world. b''ariitg the stanvji; of his in'lividuality of performance and material con tent, He will, of coiir.se. feature some of (he numbers that h.ive b^om^ identified with him over the years. Charlotte's bethel A.M.E. Planning Special Program MORGANTON — The members of Bethel A. M E. Church locat ed on Brevard Street Charlotte North Carolina, with pastor Rev. P, 0. Crawford, arc in the pro cess of cclebrntint; their annual Woman’s Day August 19, The guest speaker for the 11.00 a. m. service is the Rev. Lucy M James. Rev, Mrs. James is a gradu ate of Winston-Salem Teachers College where she obtained a B, S. decree and of New York Uni- vorsity where she reeicveil her Masters Decree. She is employed as a teacher in Cedar Grove Elementary | School, Orange Countv. and is| an ordained Evangelist of the' Western North Carolina Confer ence of the A, M. E. Church. j Factory Laix)rers' June Income Reported Higli WASHINGTON, D, C, —Spend ahlo earninps of tho factorv wnrk- • »r In .Tune. aUhoiicrh virtually nn 1 eh»need from the nrevious month, wero at a record hiPh for the Imo"'’’ U. S. T,abor Depart ment’s Rureau of Labor Slati.stics renorted. After F''dernl ineome and so da! seenrity ti>xes had been de j iiiieted from his pnv the factory, worker with 3 Hnnendents re '•oiveri an averace of $05,91 a: weoV In June, and the worke> | n'Uhnut dependents received S7PS4. Althoueh earninp* usually i Po tin in June because of the sea sonal rise in hours of work, the increase in enminffs was one of the smallest for June In the post war period: tne only decrease in weekly earnlnss between May and | Jime occurred in 1918. Purelias nig power of the factory worker’s| naveheck was about the same as In May. Over the year, spendable earn- inss irtcreased 4 oercent, or a little more than $3. This result ed from a longer work week (in eluding more overtime) and high er’ hourly earnings. Purchasing power, because of a moderate in crease in consumer prices (1.3 percent'), was up somewhat less than earnings about 3 percent from a year aco. . ' r in l£ C' M K O I w A I « it | SATURDAY, AUOUST 18, 1H2 DURHAM, N. C.—PAOi State's Leaf Crop Expected Largii RALEimi — RitsoH on con-i di*ion and probabl,v .yield re-^ ports as rtf Aygii.st 1, tfie North I Cnrolina flue-cured tobacco crop ( is foreca.-t at H«1,47.'i,()0n| pounds, or lust over one-half of, one percent above the July estimate. aecordln(j to the NDrlh | Carolina Crop Reporting Serv-1 ice, Mosti'ty adequiite supplies of moisture durioK July s^imn- latcd plant growth in the Mid dle and Old B'^lts. and thi' pro- speetlve yield of Tytie 11 wns increasncl hv 2.") pounds per acri'. Over-all production pro spcds in the Eastern and Bord er Belts are unchanged from those forecast a month curlier. The flue-cured forecast of pro duction of 861 million pounds is 29 million pounds above the 1951 production of R32 million po\mds and is 14 million' pounds above the 10-ye,ar average. Destructive rains in a number of coasfftl counties the lattT days of June and additional rain fall early in July reduced the over-all earlier prosperts in the | Eastern Belt, An appraisa of this damage was reflected in the Jiriy forecast. Sli((ht further damage during July appears to have been offset by gains in otner areas or couotries with in Itie Uelt, Yield and nroduotion fbrad ca«ss for No)*t(h Carolina, bjt tobacco types, are as fell»*v»: E Type II (Middle and Belts': Production for this are4 is estimntnd 329.479,#0^ nounds from iflt.onn acres fotj a reeord high yield of 1, 7lf. nmmds as rnmpared with 0,^ ’Ofit nrnductiotr of 303,940,006. noimds from 182,000 aerM andt ''iHd of 1 ,fi7n pounds, the pr«4 vions record yield for this Tvne 1 (K'',s*ern or ’^’•jtrht Belt 1; Production in thA- F.a'!*f'rn B«lt Is forecast at 418,'> (>00,000 and is unehnn«gd from* 'I month earlier. Yield i» mated at 1.77S nounds 100'. •'"iinds b^low that of latt juri Destructive raln^ in ae¥«r»ti counties durln» late June "arilv Julv reduced early fWCMj ■jnects that anoeared to aph proarh a ton pf'r acrp Tvpo 13 (Rorrtpf Belt): A r»l! r>nrH vleld of 1 flso potmda fr«i^ oon t»rrpn for a sro]u(^ton of 113,100 000 pounds is eatl J tnntf'd for this area and is>uli ■ nhnnrpH from iRSt mOOth. ^UCf j 100,400,000 nounds prodfio^i r lost venr hv fl 700,000 poundf 0 | 0 3 percent The orevloua r# r cord yield for this tyne wai r 1,!)20 pounds produced In 1M(M IS TO m? YOU! Union insurance And Realty 814 Fayetteville St. Tele. 682-1133 Who Is Your Choice AS P R E SI DENT Of N. C. College In a few montlifi from now Dr. AlfonHO Elder, President of, N. O, Collesre at Durham will be elijcible for retirement. Because the strateg;ic position of North Carolina Colles^e in the*'ffeld of education, the selection of a person to succeed Dr. Elder is of national, state and local importance. During the next six wedcf The Carolina Times will conduct a straw vote of its readers #il the next president fojp N. C. Collesrc' V ; r Nominate and Vote For Your Clioice \fi Filling In the Coupon Below Witli the Name of Yoir Selection. FOR THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF N. C. COLLEGE I SUGGEST THE FOLLOWING PERSON You do not have to si>;n your Own name Virxte istewl* Uustama HjiiMted PtMideat & lalaat wM|» —rlwiMag — ilrs. lUith H«n«wajr Jonca, netmUj f, ftuM wltb a atttiig ij'MttI at