Ui>. Ipj. h:. 7UO Obatbum Rd. 7/?o/Co. White Rock, St. Joseph's Senior Choirs In Joint Program ★ ★ ★★ ★★ ★ ★* ★ ★ _ ★ ★★ ★" * SEE COLUMN 5 Negro Interest Ignored At Sout COURTESY, Lot Ang«U« Timw W»thln 9 ton Pott S.rvlct \J GILBERTSVILLE, Ky. No where has the absence of the Negro from the mainstream of Ameiican life been more vividly I apparent than in the confer- | ence of 17 governors at a state ] park near here Sept. 17-21. The governor's constituents | include more than half the na tion's Negro population. (The I 1960 census showed that of al- | most 19 million Negroes, more ' than 11 million lived in these I 17 states.) Except for several musicians, j who played Stephen Foster mel- \ odies to entertain the gover nors during a lake ride on the North Carolina NAACP Branch To Meet In Raleigh October 13-16 Many Notables Slated For Annual Session RALEIGH—The 23rd Annual Convention of the North Car olina State Conference of Branches, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will meet in Raleigh October 13,-16. Gloster B. Current, Director Branch and Field Operations will deliver the Keynote Ad dress Friday evening, October 14, 8 o'clock in the Raleigh United Church, the Rev. S. Col lins Kilburn is the Pastor. Bish. op Stephen Gill Spottswood, NAACP Board of Directors Chairman will address a Din ner Meeting of the Ministers Meeting on Thursday evening, October 13, at 6 p.m. All ses sions of the Ministers Meeting will be held in the First Bap tist Church, the Rev. C. W. Ward is Pastor. The Rev. J. T. McMillian, Pastor, St. James A.M.E. Church and militant Chairman of the Winston-Salem Branch Educa tion Committee, will be the Keynote Speaker for the Min isters Meeting. YOUTH AND COLLEGE CHAPTERS The Youth and College Chap ter officers will convene 4:00 P.M. Friday for an executive session with Regional Youth NAACP Director, Sherrill Mar cus and J. W. Hill, Advisor, Youth Work, North Carolina State Conference of Branches of Durham. The convention on Saturday will feature Attorney Kenneth Holbert, Director of Compli ance, Equal Employment Op- See NAACP page 7A NCC to Host Resource-Use Annual Meet The twentieth annual meet ing of the North Carolina Re source-Use Education Confer ence will convene at North Carolina College at Durham on Thursday, November 10, begin ning at 9 a.m. in the college's B. N. Duke Auditorium. The announcement was made recently by Dr. Theodore R. Speigner, director of the NCC Division of Resource-Use Edu cation and state chairman of the North Carolina Resource- Use Education, who indicated that 500 invitations have been mailed to superintendents, su pervisors, principals, teachers and former workshop partici pants throughout the state. The general theme for the conference is, "Harnessing Hu man and Natural Resources Un der Wise and Energetic Leader ship for the Great Society." Ofield Dukes, assistant to the Vice President of the United States, will deliver the keynote address at 2 p.m. in B. N. Duke Auditorium. A native of Mich igan and a graduate of Wayne State University, he has dis tinguished himself in journal ism and education. Mrs. Ruth Lawrence Wood son, state supervisor of ele mentary education, State De partment of Public Instruction, Raleigh, will deliver the prin cipal address at a 11 a.m ses sion which will be attended by See SPEAKER page 7A Belle of Louisville, no Negroes •,vere included among the more than 300 persons who com prised the governors' parties— aides, state officials, friends, state troopers, National Guards men. The absence of any "black power" was in strange con trast to the mood of some of the governors. At press con ferences they lashed out at "anarchy in the streets" and talked of how demonstrations and the cry of "Black Power" were hurting the cause of Ne groes. None of the conference Clue Carotop ©jwb VOLUME 43 - No. 39 DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1966 PRICE: 15c LBJ Asks Bishops To Help Drown Sounds Of Violence il ft JtHot' J iL \J m? I jjHBFi ™ SURRENDER —(San Francisco) —Nagro, who cama out waving whrta cloth to poiica aftar thay firad on group in building at West Coast NAACP Intervenes In Riot SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. West Coast Regional Director Leonard Carter says that he and other civil rights leaders are doing everything possible to quell the rioting in the Hun ter Point and Fillmore dis tricts of San Francisco, Carter himself has taped mes sages which are being broadcast every hour on local Negro sta tions calling for a halt to the violence and the destruction of property. Rioting broke out Sept. 27 when a policeman shot and killed a Negro who reportedly was trying to steal a car. Gov. Edmund G. Brown has called out approximately 2,000 Na tional Guardsmen to help the local police. The NAACP spokesman says employment and poverty are the main contributing factors to the outbursts. He has pledged the support of his or ganization to any meaningful program which can be worked out to benefit the people in the riot-torn areas. 562 ATTEND WITNESSES' CONVENTION HERE "Never anything like it be fore!" "Highly educational!" These were some of the ex pressions of joy and gratitude heard from the hundreds of delegates who attended the cir cuit convention of Jehovah'* Witnesses here last week. speakers even mentioned the nation's racial crises until Un dersecretary of Commerce Le- Roy Collins told a banquet ses sion that the problems of "ghettos . . . violence and law lessness" will not disappear with the passage of time and that governors should work to ward their solution. There was little reaction from his all-white audience. Earlier Collins, a former head of the Community Relations Service, which was created by the 1964 Civil Rights Act to negotiate racial problems be tween Negroes and govern right, said that thay surrandar ad and that ftiara wara wound ad Nogroaa inaido tha building and noadad halp. Na»ro than Funeral lor Former Durham Teacher at St. Joseph's Thurs. The funeral of Mrs. Emma Wfdrris Butler was held at St. Joseph's A. M. E. Church here Thusrday, October 6, at 4:00 p.m. The Rev. Philip R. Cousin, pastor, delivered the eulogy. Mrs. Butler, the daughter of the late Joseph and Sallie A. Morris, succumbed October 2 in New York where she had been living for the past sev eral years. Her death followed a lengthy illness. For a long number of years, Mrs. Butler was a teacher in the Durham City School sys tem. She was also a member of St. Joseph's where she sang in the Senior Choir for several years and was active in other departments of the church. In addition to her school work, she was connected with the Girl Scouts, a director of the City School playground and an official of the State Teach ers Association. Her husband, Edward J. But ler, succumbed forty-five years ■go. Surviving Mrs. Butler are ine son, Edward, of New York; mental agencies, looked em barrassed when a reporter ask ed about the all-white nature ; of a conference whose 17 mem- j ber states include more than ' half of the nation's Negro pop ulation. He looked around the room ; of white faces, carefully not- j ing that many newsmen and \ public-relations representatives i ■*ere among the governors and their parties. "It's symbolic of the white j problem," he said. "There are j many different agencie s and organizations represented here, j Why don't you write about it?" I looted four-letter foul word* at the armed police in foreground. (UPI Telephoto) ■' i H MRS. BUTLER three sisters, Mrs. Bertha Shaw, Mrs. Leon M. Christmas, Dur ham, and Mrs. Dorothy Woods of New York, New York; two nieces, Mrs. Lois Shaw Ray, Durham, Mrs. Wilhelmina O. Lawson, New York; two neph ews, Dr. Thomas H. Shaw, New York and Joseph Morris, Wash ington, D. C. Interment was at Beechwood Cemetery. It was a meeting of the I Southern Governors' Confer | ence, but geographically the | body is "Southern" in name ! only. Its members include such non-Southern "Border" states ias Kentucky, Missouri, Mary ; land, Delaware and West Vir | ginia ! A governor from one of the i border states told a reporter I that "off the record" he has Negroes on his staff but did i not bring any because he did j not want to "offend" any of I the other governors The conference traditionally | eschews the racial issue and WASHINGTON, D. C.—Presi dent Lyndon B. Johnson urged the Bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church Tuesday to help "drown out the sounds of violence" which are hurting the Civil Rights movement. The President said if «*he sound of violence "should drown out the voices of rea son, frustration wifl replace progress and all of our best work will be undone." The President also asked the church leaders to raise their voices in politics and urge "all of your members to live up to their responsibilities as citi zens" and vote for the candi dates of their choice He asked: "What good does it do us if we seek freedom and secure it and then do not utilize it." Bishop George W. Baber pre sented the Bishops to the Presi dent in the Cabinet Room of the White House and Bishop E. C. N. Hatcher, President of the Bishop's Council, read a statement in which he pledged the Council's "full moral and spiritual support" to the Presi dent's program of the Great Society." Follorwing the President's statement, 88-year-old Bishop R R. Wright of Philadelphia offer ed a brief prayer. CHOIRS TO SING AT WHITE ROCK SUNDAY OCT. 16 The White Rock • Baptist Church and St. Joseph's A. M. E. Church Senior Choirs will present a joint musical program at the White Rock Baptist Church, Sunday evening, Octo ber 16, at 7:30 o'clock. The 75 voices will be under the direc tion of John H. Gattis and Jo seph T, Mitchell, directors of White Rock and St. Joseph's Senrbr Choirs, respectively. The program is being presented in connection with the 100 th an niversary observance of White Rock Baptist Church. Rev. Lorenzo Lynch is pastor of White Rock and Rev. Philip R. Cousin is pastor of St. Jo seph's. As the announcement of the joint appearance of two of Dur. ham's leading church choirs began to circulate over the city, enthusiasm and interest of music lovers and civic minded persons began to mount. It has been predicted that a capacity audience will be on hand to witness the program on the evening of October 16. Already, there is much talk in music and civic circles of mak ing the joint recital of the two choirs an annual affair. In the one hundred years that White Rock and St. Joseph's churches have existed in Dur- See CHOIRS pa?e 7A other sensitive subjects, but j this time, because of the white i backlash to demonstrations and j violence in Negro ghettos, the I governors departed from dis- | cussions on tourism, natural re | sources, interstate compacts! and highway safety long enough I to adopt a resolution against the U.S. Office of Education's school integration guidelines. . The 17-state conference that j is using its influence to try ! to further blunt the effective- j ness of a tool which has been j far from successful in ending "tokenism" in school desegre- j i > i £[ ' T 1 i &'■ ! % I ®K ■^ a _j' ' ■i si T3| -. r , m ASKED TO RESIGN—(Macon,! Ga.) —Dr. Thomas Holmes '(C), and hit assistants, Minister of j Music Jacfc Jones, (L) and As- I Ex-Basketball Star Named Labor Department Attorney f ' • ' v -_ ** $ - %J ; - _ .JF i V-'- TURNED AWAY FROM; CHURCH—(Macon. Ga.) Sam Jerry Oni, a Nigerian attending Mercer University here, walki to claea September 16. Oni wai j one of leveret Negro student! NAACP Steps Up Campaign For Additional Members NEW YORK—Spurred by the shelving of the civil rights bill of 1966 in the U.S. Senate, units of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People throughout the country are stepping up the Associa tion's crash memebership drive to enroll an additional 200,000 members between now and the end of the year. NAACP units in 50 cities have launched drives to exceed the memberships enrolled last yar. Branches in scores of other cities are mapping plans to get their campaigns under way as soon as possible. Reports from cities in which the drive has already been launched indicate enthusiastic support of the NAACP goal. "Memberships provide us with the muscle needed to get our job done," says Roy Wil- Vins .NAACP executive direc gation. More than 95 per cent of Negro students in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama. Georgia and South Carolina still attend all-Negro schools. "Black Power" seemed far from the minds of t'Ao segrega tionist governors George C. Wallace of Alabama and Orval E Eaubus of Arkansas—as they rode the Belle of Louisville on Kentucky Lake, Both governors chatted ami ably with the Negro musicians and each stuffed a dollar bill into the coat pocket of one who smiled broadly and shuffled his feet while blowing a melody sistant Pastor, Rev. Douglas Johnson, talk it over in hit home here. The three were ! asked to resign from Hie Tatt turned away from the Tattnall Baptist Church whose member ship asked their Paster, Dr. Thomas J. Holmes, and his as sistants to resign for advocating opening services to Negroes.. tor. "The public and the poli ticians consider the size of our organization. A growing organ ization means more power; a loss in membership can mean a diminuition of influence. In a time such as this we cannot afford any loss. We can only move ahead. Accordingly, mem bership is the No. 1 job of the NAACP from now until the end of the year." Gloster B. Current, director jof branches and field adminis tration, and Miss Lucille Black, secretary for membership, have set quotas, in excess of last year's enrollment, for each of the Association's more than 1,- 600 units in 50 states. "The response has been gratifying," according to Mr. Current. "The branches ate rec ognizing the urgency of the need for increased membership in order to accelerate the drive t ; from a brown jug. j | But back in the press room jJ of convention headquarters, J Wallace and Faubus talked of I how the white backlash against | "Black Power' and federal en ' I forcement of civil rights laws j was going to reshape the poli tics of the action. t ' i Wallace spoke of himself as I a third-party candidate for • | president in 1968 and said he 5 hoped his candidacy would 1 i "hurt both the Democratic ) i Party—of which he is officially > | a member—and the Republican / i See GOV.'S CONFAB 7A nall Baptist Church here for ad vocating. opening services to Negroes. (UPI Telephoto) WASHINGTON Walter Dukes, a former college and professional basketball star, has been appointed as an attorney in the Labor Department's Of fice of the Solicitor. Dukes, a professional basket ball player for 10 years, will 'tfork out of the regional at torney's office in New York City In his new position, Dukes will be concerned with legal issues arising under the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Labor Management Reporting and Dis closure Act and other laws ad ministered by the Labor De partment, A native of Youngstown, Ohio, Dukes attended public schoQls in Youngstown and Ro Chester, N. Y. He received a B.S. degree from Seton Hall University where he starred in basketball The 36-year-old attorney ob tained an L.L.B. degree from New York Law School and a master's degree in business ad ministration from New York University. He also attemled the Sorbonne in France. Dukes, now a resident of New York City, was admitted to the Michigan and Pennsyl vania Bars in 1961 and 1963. respectively. Since 1963, he has practiced law in Michigan and in the Federal courts. From 1953 to 1963, Dukes See EX-STAR page 7A for full equality. We confident ly, expect to go over the top this year," he says. OAK GROVE PASTOR TO CONDUCT REVIVAL AT FAUCETTE MEMORIAL Revival services at Faucette Memorial C. M. E. Church will begin Monday, October 17, and continue until Octo ber 21. Service will be held each night at 7:30 o'clock. Rev James F. Bowden is Pastor. Speaker for the week will be Rev. Z. D. Harris, Pastor of Oak Grove Freewill Baptist Church. Music will be rendered by various choirs. THOUGHT OF THE WEEK: The man who is born with a talent which he is meant to use finds his greatest happi ness in using it. —Johann von Goethe