Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 1, 1962, edition 1 / Page 8
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' State's Principals, Supervisors Hear Education Experts at Fayetteville School to thB cinsini; K^neral «ns sion. Shi' Rave an awakening jolt to school people 'Rathcrefl, charg- InR them to come forth from a state of complacency and rcdcdi catc themselves to the most im portant job of today, that of teach ing boys and girls. She assured tho educators that t>)ey could and must brin? the youn? Negroes to ward proficiency and better per i'urmance. The Fayetteville public schools and State Teachers College were co-hosts for this two day confcr once. Edward M. Holley of San lord is chairman of the Division ijf Administrators and Supervis ors, NCTA. FAYETTEVILLE — North Caro lina principals, supervisors and other interested educators gather ed in Fayetteville on November 13-14, to attend the third annual statewide professional conference (ft the Division of Administrators and Supervisors of the NCTA, The theme of the Conference, "To ward Proficiency in Pupil Per formance”, was developed through addresses at two general sessions, three affiliate meetings, and seven interest discussion groups. Among the national educators who spoke at the conference were Dr. Utborah P. Wolfe, United States Otfice of Education, heailn and Welfare, Washington, I). C.; and Dr. Paul K. Daniel, supcrvibor of Laboratory School of Temple University, Philadelpnia, Pa. State Department of Public In struction personnel '«ho partici pated on the convention program were Dr. Joseph M. Johntiton, su pervisor 01 curriculum develop ment, first general session spi-un. er; Dr. Allen U. Chone, cunsuitaiit in education of the gilted; Charles E. Si>encer, supervisor of sciiuul I NFW YOUK—The U. S. Supreme health and piiysical education; Court agreed this week to hear Dr. Frank Weaver, State Super i^n NAACP Legal Defense Fund viaor of Elementary Education. | yppral involving segregation of ur. Wiiiard S. iswiers, assisunl park and playjround facilities in superintendent of Fayetteville Cuy Mcmpiiis, Tonn. Schools, served as panelist. Many; The Court refused to near an other colleges, university and pub j appeal by the City of Jacksonville, lie sthool euucator^i uiioutJiiout'j,.;. Involving segregated golf the stale, appeared on the pro ! toursc.s. The Court of Appeals for gram. Mayor Kobert H. uuilei i u,,. j.-ifu, circuit had ruled in fa Uiought greetings to the convcii of Legal Defense Fund attor tion from the citizens of Fayette j „yys last summer on the Jackson viile. . viiiri case ordering two golf cour- Seven discussion groups ex-1 which had been leased to pri ploied the following topics; Pro i vati- individuals, to desegregate viding for the gifted and the slow their facilities. Itarujis; reiiieuiai tcauiiig prue j ihn Memphis park suit was filed tices; recent development in plan- i„ i960. Federal District Judge M. aing, conducting and evaluaungjs, Boyd denied an injunction tc field trips; athletics and physical] the Negro plaintiffs on June 20, fitness, an integral part of Iheiisyj, Judge Boyd ruled at thal toUl school proiiram; now tlie su I time thal the Memphis Park Com lAppeal tor Faster ! Desegregation In I Memphis In Court THE CAROLINA TIMES 6-B—DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, IM MASONS' SUPREME COUNCIU CouiMil, 'Sard dagtM, ScOHlih Msmbtrs of tht Unlttd Suprvmi Ril»vf FriMiasenry, Princ* Hall pervisory responsibility of t h e principal can become maxiinuinly effective, unified instruction in grades 1-12; the ungraded school AX the first "general s..sslui) which was held in t he J. W. Sea inis.sion was desegregating its facilities gradually and requiret' the Commission to submit a de segregation plan in six months. On June 12, 1962, the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit up- U' brook Auditorium, State Teachers held Judge Boyd’s decision. De- College, Dr. Joseph M, Joiinsioii j frnse Fund attorney Derrick Bch outlined very clearly the role ui j stated that the appeal to the Su the administrator and the teacher;, i,uurt will involve "the in bringing about betler pupil per issue of .whether the all deliberate 'ormance on every level of educa ion through out thJ State. On Wednesday, November 14, Dr. D P. Wolfe Rave a most dynamic speech at E. E. Smith Senior High •peed doctrine applies to public .’acillties as well as schools. No date has been set for oral arRument in the Memphis park case. © NAACP Reaffirms tntention to Press Struggle Despite AFL-CIO NEW YORK — Following at tacks by George Meany, presi dent of the AFL-CIO, the Nation ^1 Association for the Advance ment of Colored People this week reaffirmed It intention to press its campaign to eliminate racial bias in the labor move ment A resolution adopted by the NAACP Board of Directors at its regular monthly meeting here, Nov. 12, reiterated the Association's policy of seeking "to prevent racial discrimina tion by any public body or or ganization including labor unions.’ { In response to a renewed at tack by Meany on the very day the Board resolution was pass ed, NAACP Executive Secretary Roy Wilkins pointedly asserted that “a Negro worker needs the patience of Job, the hide of an elephant plus a crowbar to get into Meany’s own union the plumbers.’ Wilkins added that “The NAACP has no intention of re laxing its campaign until the urtificial barriers to payroll parity are achieved. "Our staff members,’ he said in referehce to Labor Secretary Hefbert Hill and General Coun sel Robert 1>. Carter, “are follow ing the directives of our nation al convention and have, the full support of our member ship’. These . remarks were in re- ajponsu, iQ Ihe suUK^stion by AFL-CJO Presid«i^t George Meany that Herbert Hill be drop ped from the NAACP’s staff f»r hii teQacious drive of pointing out trjide>union bias Jn aliswer to Meaiijr’i as^rtion that the AFL-CIO will no long er givis financial ^d to the As sociatioR Wilkins atid they are “withdrawing. something that dbei not exists.’ tie said the AFL-CIO Is not ji'^contributor to the NAACP. .. f'NAACP fund come pri marily hot enftirely from dftr I memiberi, not from contriblit- Ing oganizstions Welcome as that support would be. AfMlittion.. Southarn Jurditdic- tion, thowin as they mel in 76lh session at Jackson, Miss., last month. Above art the active members of the council and bo- low lha 56 members of the class elevated to the 33rd de- grea. Shown in the canter of the active members is Dr. John G. Lewis, Jr., Baton Rouge La., sovereign grand commanitcr. Shown with the class are the advisers. Dr. Amofs T. Hall, Tul- sr, Okla., lieutenant grand com mander and John W. Delaney, Covington, Ky., active membw oF the council. Knighted In the class were three college presi dents one city council mamber of Galveston, Texas, a mambsr of the school board of Nashville, Tenn., a father and son combi nation, in army major and chap lain from Bamberg, Germany, t!*.? top Negro in the AAarch of Dimes program, three life insur ance company presidents, a vice- president of Frontiers Intarna- tienal, and many others of equally high rmk. The next session is to b» held in New i Orl'^ans.—(AMPhoto) "We'll Fight Discrimination Wherever We Find It" -■ Wilkins TTINGLY STRAIGHT BOVRM WmSKET (MiM cmdOHeUow aOTTLlD av MATTINGLY t MOORE DISTILLING CO. LAWHtNCtBUM*. IMOIAIv* YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio — The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People “expects to contimie fighting against discrimination wherever we find it,” the Association’s ex ecutive secretary, Roy Wilkins, declared here in an address be fore the Freedom Fund dinner of the Youngstown chapter of the Negro American Labor Council. This, he explained, “is the primary job of the NAACP . . “In carrying out this de termination,” the NAACP lead er said, “we do not visualize a split with organized labor, but rather a contimiance with per haps better understanding and deeper respect of our coopera tion of the past. “Certainly we stand ready to meet and to discuss all items of program and procedure and to attempt to arrive at a reasonable and honorable agreement on future efforts.’’ Not only have "enlightened acgments jot labor” aided the oause of civil rights and the NAACP, WiUUns asserted, but “thi NAACP and Negro citi sens, iii turn, have many times aided -the ;atise of labor. “Here in Ohio, for example, it was the NAACP which car ried on a dynamic campaign against the 'right to work’ bill and helped defeat it," he said. “This was no catch as catch can operation on our part. From the national office we sent out the very man so many labor people are now damning as a devil with horns to campaign up ami down the state, rallying posed amendment. It was not NAACP opposition to the pro easy. Many Negro citizens do not have the same view of organrized labor that the NAACP has. They criticized our activity. But we and labor won.For what we did then we have in our files a letter of thanks from George Meany, president of the AFL- CIO,” Wilkins continued. PDSMERS BERGAMOT WATER REPELLENT CONDITIONfR ‘-•'•jir, wunw khiskr • as pnw • lunMcif t moohe tismiiiK co.umKcuvio. tiD. MILUOI^S of Satisfied HEADS DEWAR’S White Label SCOTCH WHISKY BLENDED AT 16.1 PROOP SCHFNLEY IMPORT CO., NEW YORK, N.V. WAixiNiommmus IS TO m? YOU! Union Insurance And Realty Co. 814 Faj'etteville St. Tele. 682-1133 Chapel Hill Girl Among 6 ^o-ed: Getting Frosh Honors at Bennett GItEENSBORO — If you yield to the temptation not to achieve four highest po tential you are cheating your self,’ declared Dr. James S Thomas of Nashville, Tennr , in his address during the initial honors convocation for freslf- men at Bermett College Friday. Six students, representing as many states, were recognized be cause of their standiirg on en trance examinations, their high school average, their standing on Bennett Collegt tests, their present academic standing and adjustment to reesidence liv ing. Selection was made by the admissions committee with fin al approval by the academic standards committee ^ They are Misses Edith Autry, of Chapel Hill, a psyehologj major; Patricia Greene, of Ball more, Md., an English majo] Mp,'rian Kelly, of South Noi walk, Confn., an elementary ed cation major; Carolyn Livisaj of Princeton, W Va,, a math matics major; Gretta Middletoi of Charleston, S C., a mathi matics major and Amife 'Sult of Portsmouth, Va., Engllsl major The students were presentei fo President Willa B. Player Miss Evalina Williams, of Op Locka, Florida, vice president Alpha Kappa Mu, national hoi or society and following th awards. President Player ir troduced Dr Thomas, represeo ing the Board of Education the Methodist Church. Dxam&tic! tlils youtliful pairing of fox onl fm« tured wool. The bold, beautiful fox collar a porfM complement to handsomely texturad all wool **Ll Riba." Softly flared, the back a sunburst of fullnMl* In taupe, wild rice, or bluo. 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The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 1, 1962, edition 1
8
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