BOGALUSA, LA. POLICE BEAT, JAIL NEGROES Che Cinws \ VOLUME 12 No. 40 DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1965 PRICE: 15c U.S. COURT ORDERS SWIFT ARK. SCHOOL INTEGRATION (| |M£ J! WHEN MORGAN STATE COL LEGE, Baltimore, celebrated iti Homecoming October 30, the theme was the "Gay Nineties." Here are Miss Debra Johnson, 2nd from left, Columbia, S. C., 98th SESSION BAPT. CONVENE AT SHAW Laymen's League In Sixteenth Annual Meeting RALEIGH The 98th An nual Session of the General Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, Inc. and the 16th Annual Session of the Laymen's League Convention will hold their Annual meeting at Shaw University, Raleigh, November 8-11. The theme of the joint ses sion is "Thanking God For Shaw University." The highlights of the Lay men's Convention will be dis cussion by Rudolph Jones, President of Fayetteville State College, "What the Laymen must do to Ease Shaw's Finan cial Crisis"; Charles Ray, N. C. College, Durham, "Advan tages of Attending a Church lege." The Annual Sermon will be delivered by the Reverend J. B. Humphrey, pastor of First Baptist Church, Charlotte. Frank Marshall of Asheville is president of the Laymen's Con vention. The General Baptist State Convention will be called to order by the president, R. M. Pitts, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, Winston-Salem. Following the call to order, the convention will hear re ports from the Executive Sec retary, O. L. Sherrill, the His torian, the Statistician, the De partment of Interracial Coope ration, the Central Orphanage, Editor of the Baptist Informer and others. The highlights of the conven tion will be a discussion of the theme, the Annual Sermon by H .S. Diggs, pastor of Pro vidence Baptist Church, Rock ingham and a symposium by the School of Religion of Shaw University. Special messages will be given by Carlyle Mar ney, pastor of Myers Park Bap tist Church, Charlotte, and J. C. Hairston, pastor of the Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church, Pittsburgh, Pa. Shaw University's Chorale Society will sing on Wednes day night, November 10, fol lowed by a sermon from the President, J. E. Cheek. The General Baptist State Convention of North Carolina is composed of seventeen hun dred with a member ship of more than three hun dred thousand Baptists. | "Miss A. and T."; and at rljht, Miss Adele Protcor, Brandy wine, Md., "Miss Morgan." They are shown at Morgan's Homecoming game with 2nd I Token Integration, Biased Reporting Behind Tex. Turmoil HUNTSVILLE, Texas— Mass arrests, fines and jail sentences are being imposed upon SCLC led demonstrators in this small, Northeast Texas town which has attempted to defy school integration,, with only token placement of Negro pu pils in previously all-white schools. Since demonstrations began on Oct. 18 when Negro parents began picketing the all-Negro Sam Houston High School be cause of its segregated enroll ment, nearly 50 persons chil dren and adults have been jail ed and given stiff fines and sentences. Seven a-lults were arrested the first day of the protest and charged with un lawful assembly. They were held under SI,OOO bond each. The following day a total of 31 additional arrests were made made in the Walker County Courthouse when stu- Former Durhamite Honored By Gasfonia Jr. Women's Club GASTONIA The highlight of the dinner meeting of the Junior Wpman's Club Thurs day evening at Masonic Temple was the presentation of the An nual Service Award to Thebaud Jeffers. Thebaud Jeffers City Coun cilman of Ward Four, principal of Highland High School, is the first of the race to be so honored by a group of young women devoted and committed to service. Jeffers has served as prin cipal of Highland since 1940. Prior to coming to Gastonla, he taugh English and French and was advisor and founder of the "Relgh High Sentinel" of Belmont. He also served aa principal of Reid High School. He is a graduate of Hillside High School, Durham; Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte and the University of Southern California, where he earned the M.A. degree in French and English. He completed Admini stration and Supervision at Corney University of Ithaca, New York. He has served four summers as teacher in the Principals' Workshop at North Carolina Lt. David Burton, Columbia, S. C.; and Michael Herndon (Ca det Col.) Lexington Park, Md., right. Morgan beat the Aggies 3U. dents and parents showed up in court td'protest the arrests. All were fined SIOO and sen tenced to three days in jail on charges of contempt of court. Six others also were arrested at Sam Houston High School on charges of unlawful assembly and placed in jail in solitary confinement. They were later given the maximum sentence of six months in jail. The protest demonstrations in Huntsville have been led in the spirit of nonviolence un der the guidance of SCLC Filed Secretary Booker T. Bon ner and Assistant Field Direc tor Richard Boone. Meanwhile plans are for demonstrations to continue and mass meetings are being held regularly at Goliath Bap tist Church with upwards of 200 parents in attendance. College at Durham and taught courses at Gaston Memorial Hospital in Gastonia four ses sions in the field of "Human Relations and Current Events." Jeffers has served on the eval uation committee for high schools for the State Depart ment of Education for five high schools during the past several years. He is secretary of the may or's committee on human rela tions, secretary of the Board of trustees of Gaston County Negro Hospital and a member of the Board of the Anti-Pover ty Program of Gaston County. Jeffers is an organizer and president of the N. C. Teach ers' Association Credit Union. As eldrt- in Third Street Presbyterinn Church, he was elected Moderator of the Ca tawba Presbytery. As state directpr of Educa tion for the Elks, he has inter ested the various lodges in scholarships for worthy stu dents. He is also a 32nd degree Prince Hall Mason, and a Shriner. In 1057 he was named "Man of the Year" by the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Epsilon Upi- See JEFFERS 2A Strikes Blow at "Freedom of Choice" Plan ST. LOUIS A Federal Cir cuit Court of Appeals here this week struck a blow at "Free dom of choice' 'as a means of desegregating public schools. The three-judge court, act ing on an appeal by NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, said a desegregation plan submitted by the El Do rado, Ark., school board did not go far enough or fast enough towards integrated edu cation. The Legal Irenes Fund ap pealed a lower decision accepting a plan thatXjyoj/ld have given pupils the choice of which of the systems 10 white and eight Negro schools they wished to attend. While agreeing with Fund attorneys that freedom of choice places the burden of desegregating education on Ne gro pupils and their parents rather than school officials, the court said such a plan was acceptable on an experimental basis. The court ruled that the school board must offer free dom of choice to the 11th and 12th grades for the 1965 66 school year as well as to the first and second grades as out lined in the original plan. It further ordered desegre gation of at least four addition al grades for the following year, with all grades desegre gated by the 1967-68 school year. The original plan was not to be fully implemented until the 1968 69 school year. Students who do not exer cise their free choice should "be assigned to the school nearest their homes or on the basis of nonracial attendance zones" in accordance with guidelines laid down by the Department of Health, Educa tion and Welfare, the court said. The court also agreed with a Legal Defense Fund argu ment that the school board should offer the choice of schools to pupils in every grade each year once the plan is fully operational. Ministers r Labor, DCNABack School Employees Better Working Conditions GROUP MEETS WITH CITY COUNCIL MON. Led by representatives of labor, the Durham Ministerial Alliance, the Committee on Negro Affairs and officials of the Durham City School Em ployees Local Union 481, con sisting of approximately 300 Negro workers in the City School system, the City Coun cil of Durham was presented a petition here Monday night re questing its aid in securing better working conditions and an increase in wages for all city school employees. Attending the meeting were approximately 100 person who jammed into the limited Coun cil chamber, occupying all seats and standing around the the walls. Highlighting the Monday night's session were the remarks of Rev. J v A. Brown, pastor of the Ebeneier Baptist Church. Brown charg ed that the Durham City Board of Education maintained a policy that denied Negro chil dren equal educational oppor tunities. Rev. Brorwn's remarks drew See SCHOOL 2A CORE Director Haley Reports Law Officers "Just Ran Wild" v * MRS. SPAULDING Mother of NCM President Dies In Columbus Co. CLARKTON Funeral serv ices for Mrs. Annie Bell Low ery Spaulding, 100, were held Wednesday afternoon at 1 p.m. at the Rehoboth A.M.E. Zion Church near Whiteville. Mrs. Spaulding died last Sat urday night at the home of her daughter, Miss Hattie Jane Spaulding of Clarkton. Her survivors include five children, Asa T. Spaulding, president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Com pany, Mrs. Lula S. Jackson and D. Fuller Spaulding of Dur ham, Armstead McClain Spaul ding of Whiteville and Miss Cecil Spaulding of Riverdale, N. Y. Other survivors are two brothers, a sister, 19 grandchil dren and three great-great grandchildren. Interment was in the Mit chell Cemetery. Local School to Observe Amer. Education Wk. Hillside High School stu dents and faculty will observe American Education Week be ginning Monday, November 8, and extending through Friday, November 21. The Annual observance will start on Monday with a daily theme for each school day. Open House for parents and friends will be observed dur ing the initial day's opening, and the theme for Monday is "To Strengthen Moral and Spiritual Values, To cultivate the Intellect." The theme for Tuesday, No vember 9 is "To Enhance Per sonal Fulfillment." A special assembly is being olanned for Wednesday, No vember 10, and the theme for that day is "To Improve Earn- See ED. WEEK 2A ■ 1 m I ■ AT NC C HOMiCOMING— Among actlvltlaa during North Carolina Collogo'i homacomlng f«T actlvltlai Saturday In Dur ham, was a gam* batwaan NCC and Shaw Unlvaralty. During halfthna, two "quaan*" wara BOGALI'SA, La.—Police in Bogalusa, La., had already ar rested 75 persons on Wednes day, October 20th; that night they charged into the Negro section of town after a pro test meeting and beat, clubbed, and kicked any Negro who hap pened to be in the area, ar resting 20 additional persons. This was the charge leveled by CORE southern director Rich ard Haley at Bogalusa and Washington Parish (county) law officers following what he called "a night of terror in typical Bogalusa style." "They just ran wild," said Haley, who reported that po lice dogs were let off their leashes, that officers pulled Negroes from cars that were simply passing through the neighborhood, that in several cases officers beat Negroes in «'de places of business, and that one officer fired Shots at a fleeing Negro youth. Haley's charges are especial ly serious in view of a federal court order issued in July, and still in effect, ordering police and sheriff's deputies to pro tect Negroes and civil rights workers, to allow them full ex ercise of their rights and to refrain from using any form of brutality. "There is no doubt in our mind that the officers violated the court order," Ha ley stated and added, "our See BOGALUSA 2A 600 Classroom Teachers of NEA In Convention Here The Southeast Regional Con ference of the Department of Classroom Teachers of The Na- I tional Education Association has been convening at Dur ham's Jack Tar Hotel during I the present week as some 600 ' odd classroom teachers, prin cipals, and other school offi cials are in attendance at the workshops, buzz sessions, dis cussions, and banquets center ed around the theme "Oppor -1 tunity for Responsibility." The conference opened with registration on Wednesday eve -1 ning, and settled down to the official school affairs of resolu tions committee meetings, ad visory council meetings, in-ser vice training workshops, and the like on Thursday rooming, November 4. The first General Session for the delegates and other visit ing dignitaries was held on Thursday night at o'clock when Mrs. Elizabeth Koontz, presi dent- of the NEA Department of Classroom Teachers address ed the delegation. Fri. morn ing's sessions included an ad dress by Miss Margaret Stev enson, executive secretary of the NEA Department of Class room Teachers, workshops cen tered around topics of "condi tions of work," "Citizenship," and "Tenure." crownad, Linda Wllion "Mitt Homacomlng;" and Margarat MeCullough, "Mln Alumni." From laft In tha photo ara: Dr. Samual P. Mania, NCC pratktant; Robart Farguton, NCC co-«aptain; Ml«t Wilton; r» jf^Kftl^^Bß I^' 7^/ jp AND AWAY WE CO This j spectator »t North Carolina College's Oct. 30 homecoming | parade was so excited by the thumping beat of the NCC marching band that he went into an old vaudeville routine, j MRS. KOONTZ The final feature on the af ternoon program for Friday •*as a panel discussion of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Friday night's session was focused on "Human Rights and the Million Dollar Fund." Final sessions for the con ference are scheduled for Sat urday, November 6 beginning with a 9 a m business session which will include some amendments to the NEA By laws, and DCT Resolutions. A 2 p.m. panel ddiscussion will be centered around "Changing See NEA page 2A Bobby Atmond, NCC coop tain; Mitt McCullough; and Chariot Stray horn, national protidant of tha NCC Alumni Auoclation. NCC won tha tilt, 3512. The homecoming parada, consisting, of some 70 units, in cluded eight marching bands, and was followed by an NCC- Shaw game which NCC won, 35-12. Microbiology Institute For NCC Approved The National Science Foun dation has awarded a grant of $29,370 to North Carolina Col lege to support a five-week summer institute in microbiol ogy for college teachers for 1966, President Samuel P. Mas sie announced this week. To be directed by Dr. Nell Hirschberg, professor of biol ogy at NCC, tie institute will he the second consecutive one of its kind supported at the college by the foundation. Last summer's program at NCC was the only one in the nation spe cifically designated for college teachers of microbiology. Provisions of the grant in clude stipends, dependency al lowances, and travel allowanc es for 24 participants. VIETNAM Asks for 17 Year Olds to Be Withdrawn WASHINGTON, D. C. —lm mediate withdrawal from com bat in Vietnam of all American soldiers less than eighteen years old was again called for by Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (Dem-Michigan). "Not send ing American soldiers into combat until they are eighteen years old was the policy dur ing the Korean War and I think the same policy should also apply to Vietnam," de clared Conyers who was de corated for combat service in Korea as an Army officer. "Quite simply I feel that seven teen is just too young for someone to fight in war, though I admire and respect the courage of the American youths who volunteer at such an early age. Not only should soldiers less than eighteen no longer be ordered into combat, but all those less than eigh teen should be immediately withdrawn from combat. Since the best Defense Department guess-estimate is that present ly there are no more than 1200 seventeen year olds in Viet nam, I feel confident this can be done without endangering thte safety of the individual military ui^ts." Conyers originally becamt aware of this issue in early September when cohstituents complained to him that they had been misled by Marina See CONYERS 2A