Chatham Rd. - _ •■' ■ • _ Winston-SaL.m, M, C. , 7/20/Comp. LBJ Appoints First Negro Woman U. S. Judge J pM P^ m AWARDED GRANT—Dr. Mary M. Town**, associate professor of biology at North Carolina Colleg*, who hat been conduct ing research since 1953 on gly cerinated stalks of vorticella in hopes of understanding the causes of muscular dystrophy. NCC Instructor Seeks Key to Muscular Distrophy Disease By GEORGE E. HARDIN For every scientist who wins public acclaim for a new .dis covery, there are scores of Others working in fields just as important, but without spec tacular results, and therefore known only to their colleagues. In this latter class is Dr. Mary-McLean Townes, associ ate professor of biology at N. C. College, who has been con ' ducting research since 1953 In a project which may lead to greater understanding of one of man's most puzzling diseases muscular dystrophy. Her work involves the study of vor tieella. "decidedly microscopic" animals which can contract and relax much as muscles do until affected by dystrophy which causes them to progressively waste away. Speaking highly spe cialized project in the spotless office fronting the small labor atory in which her research is conducted. Dr. Towries indicat- ] ed that her is a part time activity, spliced between teaching ard family responsi- See DR. TOWNES 2A Intimidation of Negroes Rises In Mississippi MAYERSVILLE, Miss—Mrs. Unita Blackwell, a Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party leader said, "There has been an increase in intimidation of Negroes in Isequena County." The intimidation has increased as Negroes register to vote and as they register their children in formerly all-white schools. "There is a pattern of evictions used as intimidation," Mrs. Blackwell said. "The problem is that there are 1,808 Negroes eligible to vote and only 640 whites are eligible. Negroes have the potential to control the county. In 1964, there were no Negroes regis tered to vote. Today, after a federal suit was filed by the Justice Department against the Isequena registrar, Mary T. Vandevender, there are over 500 Negroes registered. Now the registrar accepts all -who oome In the door of the court house, whether or not they can read or write." Mrs. Blackwell said the peo ple can't stand to be intimidat ed much longer. "Twenty five people ran out of their homes and into the streets on Dec. 23rd after a car-load of white men threw fire bombs onto the sidewalks." The Negroes had shot guns under their arms. When the sheriff was called, he stated there was nothing he could do to apprehend the bombers since no one got the license number of the car. The Neeroes said If they caught the bombers, the sheriff would find them in the road. was recently awarded a grant to continue her work by the NCC Faculty Research Com mittee, An NCC faculty mem ber since 1950, she earned her doctorate at the University of Michigan in 1962. Julian Bond To Be Guest On NBC Meet The Press Jan. 30 Julian Bond, the 26-year-old Negro Representative - elect who was barred from sitting in the Georgia House of Repre sentatives because of his criti cism of the United States posi tion int. the war in Vietnam will be the guest on "Meet the Press" Sunday, Jan. 30. Bond, one of the founders of SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) and now its communications direc tor, has appealed the Georgia Legislature's action to Federal court. The program will be color fast live from Washington, D. C. on the NBC Television Net week 1-1:30 p.m. EST, and will be broadcast on the NBC Ra dio Network 6:30-7 p.m. EST. He will be interviewed by Robert Novak of the New York Herald Tribune Syndicate; Carl Rowan, former director of the U»S. Information Agency and now a columnist for the Chi cago Daily News; NBC News Correspondent Herbert Kaplow ALEXANDER Alexander to Be Honored By Colleagues CHARLOTTE Kelly M. Alexander, president of the North Carolina State Confer ence, NAACP, •will be honored by friends and NAACP co workers at a "Testimonial Ban quet" to be held in Charlotte, at the Queen Charlotte Hotel on Saturday, February 5, at 7:30 p.m. Clarence Mitchell, di rector of the NAACP's Wash ington, D. C. Bureau will be the principle banquet speaker. The banquet will commemo rate Alexander's service of: 15 years as an NAACP National Board Member; 20 years as president of the North Carolina See ALEXANDER 2A Expect Mrs. Motley to Continue "Stormy" Role In New Post NEW YORK President Johnson's appointment of Mrs. Constance Baker Motley Tues day to the federal judgeship for the southern New York dis trict was the first time a Ne gro woman has been named to a federal judge position. Mrs. Motley is the second ranking attorney in the legal defense fund of the NAACP— the agency which handles most of the national civil rights cases and is the president of the Borough of Manhattan. Named to this $35,000 post in 1964, she was also the first woman to hold this position. Mrs. Motley, 44, is married to Joel W. Motley, a real estate man and they have one son, Joel, Jr. Having done graduate work at Columbia University Law School, she is northern born and southern educated. When asked by her father why she had decided to be come a lawyer, she replied. "Law is difficult, and I want to do something that's diffi cult." Most of Mrs. Motley's adult years have been spent in the thick of the legal storm and her selection by President Johnson to be a federal district court judge is not likely to cause any calm. She represented James H. Meredith when he became the first known Negro to enroll at the University of Mississippi. She led a battery of five law yers to get Harvey Gantt ad mitted to Clemson College in 1962. She was the NAACP's le gal tactician in the struggle over Alabama school desegre and Lawrence E. Spivak. pro ducer and permanent member of "Meet the Press." Moderator of the program will be NBC News Correspondent Robert Goralski. Katzenbach to Address Queen City Confab CHARLOTTE North Caro lina NAACP President, Kelly M. Alexander announced this i week that the Annual NAACP Leadership Conference to be held in the Queen Charlotte Hotel, Charlotte, beginning Friday evening, February -4, will end Sunday, February 8 with an address by the Attor ney General of the-United States, Nichols Deß Katzen bach. This will be Katzenbach's first appearance in the state, sponsored by a Civil Rights or ganization. The leadership Conference will have as its major program focus, "Governmental Assisted Program#." Alexander stated that oup community leadership is in need of a better under 'standing of the provisions and implementation of governmen tal assisted programs on the community level. Representatives from various government departments who yill participate are William M. Seabrim,' Assistant to the Sec retary. Department of Agricul ture; Theodore M. Berry, Di rector, Community Action Pro gram. Office of Economic Op portunity; B. T. McGraw, As sistant to the Administrator for Intergroup Relations, Hous ing and Home Finance Agency and John Hope, n. Area Direc tor, Office of Equal Education- See KATZENBACH 2A ■'■ v ' MRS. MOTLEY gation, and she was instru mental in getting Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes into the University of Georgia in 1961. Mrs. Motley has sometimes found the machinery of the law moving too slowly. "You always feel that you wish they'd hurry up and rule . but when you finally win, then everything is wonderful." COURT REFUSES 4,000 WATTS RIOT CASES WASHINGTON The U. S. Supreme Court declined Mon day to accept for consideration a protest that about 4.000 de fendants arrested during the 1965 Watts riots in Los Ange las are not getting adequate le gal help. Improved Telephone Service For Durham To Begin In Feb. Durham telephone subscrib ers beginning next month will experience further improve ment in service ,as General Telephone Company of the Southeast completes a $2-mil lion project designed to sub stantially upgrade local facili ties. ' The company presently is putting the finishing touches to a months-long effort involv ing the installation of tons of intricate central office equip ment on Hollof.vay Street and miles on related wiring. Line crews completely reworked outside distribution and feed er routes between the main of fice and satellite (neighborhood switching) stations. Customers will directly bene fit from having the latest faci lities at their disposal, while See TELEPHONE 2A BL * : IIV J Wm H M 1111 ■■ LAWYERS GATHER—Th* Jack Tar Hotal was th* meeting plac* h*r* Saturday, January 22, of Hi* Exacutlv* Commltt** of th* National Bar Association. Committee is Named to Recommend President for N. C. C. | Bascom Baynes, chairman of , the North Carolina College i board of trustees, Friday nam ed a five-member committee to recommend a successor to Dr. Samuel P. Massie as president of the college. Massie, who submitted his resignation to the board of Che Carolina Cinws (psahSni'uwtm'E&'f VOLUME 43 No. 5 DUHRAM, N. C. SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1966 PRICE: 15c Organic Union and "Great Society" AMEZ Meet Topics Close Three Day Session at Salisbury, Md. i SALISBURY, Maryland I The 1966 winter meeting of the | Board of Bishops, and the an- I nual meeting of the Ministers j and Laymen's Association, A. | M E. Zion Church, closed here | Friday after a three day ses- I sion at St. James A. M. F.. Zion I Church, on two notes — Organic Union and President Johnson's "Great Society." Bishop H. C, Bunton, C. M. IE. Church;' Bishop John Wes ' ley Lord, Methodist Church, and Governor J. Millard Tawes lighted the torch of unity at | the Wednesday night session. Bishop Bunton told an over flow audience that the leaders iof the three Methodist bodies j had held the funeral of its' founders too long. He had the | following to say, "We must not j look to the past so long to be- I come insensitive to the pres ent. Don't let the dead hand of the past choke the life out out of you." the prelate said. He chided the bishops about j holding on to "little stuff" that; ! does not appeal to the consti tuency He warned them to not get in the way of the unifica tion of the three because of rami 1 self»sh motive or person al desire. "I want a Methodist ' Church built on a non-racial basis that will practice the principles of the Christian re ligion in all its ramifications." Bishop Lord warned that churches soon discover that ecumenicity stands for renewal and reform as well as for re union. Governor Tawes, him self a Methodist, departed from his prepared speech to add his testimony, true Methodist style, when he declared for a heart warming unity that would make all men brothers. Bishop Felix S. Anderson, Louisville, Ky., was elected President of the Board and will serve for the next ensuing six months. Bishop William M. Smith, Mobile, Ala., was elect ed Secretary for the same pe riod. Bishop H.B. Shaw, Wil mington, was re-elected treas urer. Bishop Anderson suc ceeds Bishop Joseph D. Cau then, Norfolk, Va. Hoat for Hi* occasion was th* Gaorg* White Bar Attoclaflon and C. C. Spauldlngt Jr., a member of the Exocutlvo Com mitt**. W. G. P*arson, 11. I» trustees Wednesday to become ! effectve June 30, has been granted a leave of absence with full salary beginning Feb. 1. Appointed to the selection Committee •were NCC trustees Clyde Shreve of Greensboro, chairman; Mrs .Eloise C. Beech 1 j M METHODIST LEADERS—Shown in this picture are three Meth odist leaders who took part in the meeting of the Board of Bishops, A.M.E. Zion Church, which met recently in Salis bury, Md. L-r, Bishop John W. NCC Professor To Teach At Ind. University Next Semester Dr. Ernest M. Manassg, chairman of the Department of German, Latin, and Philo»ophy at North Carolina College, will be a visiting professor at Indi ana University, Bloomington, during the second semester. A member of the NCC facul ty since 1939—a tenure equaled by - ondy one other professor— Dr. l&inasse was a student of the German philosopher Karl Jaspers at the University of Heidelberg where he earned his doctor of philosophy de gree. Dr. Manasse will lecture on Jaspers and Martin Heideg ger, and will hold a seminar on Plato who has been the sub ject of his major works. He is See PROFESSOR 2A proaldont of th* G*org* Whit* j Bar Association. Officers of Hi* NBA ar* R. O. Ortlque, • Pr*sld*nt; Judge Billy Jon**, I first Vic*-pr*sid*nt and Mrs. | of Klnston; Mrs. R. S. Fergu son of Taylorsville; Clarence C. Watkins of Reidsville; and Robert Brown of High Point. The committee's recommen dation will be presented to the board of trustees for final ap proval. Lord, MeHiodist Church, who ] welcomed the A.M.E. Zion con- j j fab; Governor J. Millard Tawes, j who was also on hand and Bishop Felix S. Anderson who 1 j presided over the sessions. The ! three endorsed the union of f- - * DR. MANASSE Loon* P. Thurmon, Socrotary. Th« above photo It compocod • of mombori of th« NBA Exocu i five Commlttoo and Hi* host*. CHICAGO Dr. Martin Lu ther King Jr., president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, set to move this •■veek into his slum apartment to direct his campaign against racial discrimination in the North. the three predominantly-Negro bodies, with an eye toward to tal unification of all Methodist bodies. The target date for the three bodies is 1972 and the tentative date for complete unification is 1980. OFF TO INDIANA —Dr. Ernest M. Manasse, chairman of the Department of German, Latin, and Philosophy at North Caro lina College, will serve as a visiting professor at Indiana University for the secon3 se mester. A member of the NCC faculty for 27 years, he will lecture on Karl Jaspers, who was his teacher at the Univer sity of Heidelberg, Germany; Heidegger, and Plato. Negro Pulpmill Workers Shot To Death In Ala. CAMDEN', Alabama A 32- year old Negro pulpmill work er was shot to death last Sun day by a white farmer in the presence of his wife and three other relatives. David Colston, a lifetime resident of Camden, was slain by a single gunshot above the right ear, fired at point blank range from a 32 caliber revol ver. The admitted slayer was J. T, Reaves, a 47-year old white cattle farmer, who minutes earlier, had driven his car into the rear of Colston's auto. The slaying took place about 2 p.m. in front of the Antioch Baptist Church where a funeral had just ended and a civil rights meeting was about to begin. Mrs. Colston a local school teacher at Camden Academy, gave this account of her hus band's slaying. "We were going to a funeral, my husband and I, two sisters, and a brother-in-law. My hus band and I were in the front seat. We were about to park on the right side of Antioch Baptist Church. We felt a bump behind us, and I looked back and there was a man who bumped us." "So naturally," Mrs. Colston added, "My husband got out and went back to see what was wrong. The man in the other car, the Reaves fellow said, 'you had better be interested in the front of my car and not be looking at the .back of See SHOT 2A