Menu Film La PUT?.. toro Supreme Court To Review Ms&ougald°Terrace Eviction Case WASHINGTON The U. S. Supreme Court has agreed to review the case of a mother with three children who re ceived a 15-day eviction notice from a low Income housing project, without a hearing, the day after she was elected presi dent of the Parents' Club, a tenant group. The petition for review was k HpR I V jfl AT HEARINGS ON URBAN DE VELOPMENT—(Waihington) The Senate Govt. Operations Subcommittee continued rts hearings last week on the Fed eral role in urban development. Two of the witnesses to appear Henderson Lee Funeral Held Ebenezer Baptist Tue v Dec. 6 Former School Employe Dies Following Illness Henderson Lee, 801 Grant St., died here Saturday, Dec. 2, after a brief illness. Funeral services were held Tuesday, Dec. 6, at Ebenezer Baptist Church, the Rev. James A. Brown, pastor, delivered the eulogy. Henderson Lee, a long time member of Ebenezer served in many official capacities includ ing treasurer and a member of the deacon board. He was for mally employed by Durham City Schools as custodian, un til his recent retirement. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. M. Ora Sneed Lee; two daugh ters, Mrs. Catherine Haskins of Durham and Mrs. Mary Jack son of Newark, N. J.; one son, Hubert Lee of Philadelphia, Pa.; one sister, Mrs. Macie Keith of Newark, N. J.; five brothers, Richard Lee and Glennis Lee of Philadelphia, Coy Lee ,of Newark and Arvey Lee and Clyde Lee of Durham; eight grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. Interment was in Beechwood Cemetery. Scholars See Hope And Peril In An "Abundant Society" SANTA BARBARA, Calif.— Scholars thinking into the fu ture see an "abundant society" in America holding both high promise and deep peril. Their intellectual explora tions of tomorrow's America are recorded in "Looking For ward: The Abundant Society," most recent publication of the Center for the Study of Demo cratic Institutions, which con ducted the conference. Discussion centered around papers by Dr. Walter A. Weiss kopf, chairman of the depart ment of economics at Roosevelt University in Chicago, and Rag havan N. Iyer, political philos ophy consultant to the Center who teaches at the University of California at Santa Barbara. Weisskopf projected an American society in which "abundance" truly has arrived. Iyer examined principles which might underlie the structure of such a society. The conference assumed the United States is capable of pro viding reasonable subsistence for all, serious consideration will be given to some form of guaranteed annual income and tfctre will be growing concern See SCHOLARS TA filed by the NAACP Legal De fense and Educational Fund, Inc (LDF) attorneys in behalf of Mrs. Joyce C. Thorpe, a resi dent in a low income housing project in Durham. The case is of "substantial public importance." argued the LDF attorneys, since "its reso lution has ramifications affect ing the rights of recipients to are shown in combo here. At right Roy Wilkini, Executive Secretary of the NAACP, who charged that the Federal gov ernment's job training pro grams have been marred by "outright racial discrimina North Carolina Branches Spur NAACP Membership Campaign ■ JM i NATION'S FIRST NEGRO WAR DEN—(Mansfield. Ohio) Ben. nett J. Cooper , associate war den of the Ohio State Reforma tory, sits at his desk here after it was announced that he would succeed superintendent M. J. Koloski to become the first Negro prison warden in the country. Cooper will assume his new post on Dec. 4th, when Koloski leaves to become head of Ohio's newly leased Chilli cothe Correctional Institute. Douglas E. Stewart is Named Director Planned Parenthood NEW YORK Douglas E. Stewart, formerly Executive Di rector of the Omaha Urban League, has been appointed Director of the newly formed Department of Community Re lations for Planned Parent U2QQ3 SHOPPING DAYS TO CHRISTMAS all forms of welfare benefits." This is the first time the nation's highest court has agreed to review the "rights of a tenant" in public housing to be free from arbitrary evic tion. There are approximately 1400 local housing authorities with low-rent projects through out the United States. The LDF attorneys argued tion." Writer Harry Golden (left) proposed that the Negro be paid a SIOO billion "indem nity" for the centuries he has spent locked away from the mainsteram of American life. (UPI Telephoto) NEW YORK—Charles A. Mc- Lean, NAACP North Carolina field director, has devised a novel and effective way to stim ulate his state's 100 branches In the organization's current Crash Membership drive. Each NAACP branch has been supplied with a card to send to Miss Lucille Black, secretary for membership at the Nation al Office, in which the branch pledges to enroll its quota of new or renewed membersips before December 15. The card reads, "Miss Black, tell Mr. Current and Mr. Wil kins to weep no more for us. Our membership campaign ia on!" It gives the number of members the branch will en roll. Miss Black reports that the cards are coming in every mail, arid she is encouraged to be lieve that North Carolina will surpass last year's membership totals. VERSE OF THE WEEK An educated man is one who has finally discovered there are some questions to which no body has the answers. hood-World Population. Mr. Stewart's department will work with local, state and re gional agencies concerned with health, welfare and economic problems and interested in family planning. A graduate of San Francisco State College, Mr. Stewart served for one year as a CORO Foundation Intern in Public Affairs in various public agen cies and voluntary organizations in San Francisco. He coordinat ed the campaign of the mayor of San Francisco and was the Director of Youth Motivation Project hf the Bay Area Ur ban League and Acting Execu tive Secretary of the San Fran cisco branch of the National Association for the Adance ment of Colored People. He was Executive Director of the Oma ha Uifcan League from Decem ber, 1003 until his present ap pointment. Mr. Stewart is married and See STEWART 7A that Mrs. Thorpe, in receiving notice of eviction and being de nied a hearing, was denied rights guaranteed by the due process clause of the Four teenth Amendment, and the First and Fifth Amendments of the U. S. Constitution. "In addition," the LDF brief says, "the broader question is Cht Carcjila COMB VOLUME 43 No. 48 DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1966 PRICE: 15c Wilson To Host Masonic Annual Session Dec. 12-14 Over 1,000 to Attend Grand Lodge Meeting WILSON The 96th Annual Grand Lodge Session of the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Free and Ac cepted Masons of North Caro lina and its jurisdiction will convene December 12, 13 and j 14 in the city of Wilson. The host lodges are Mount | Hebron and Pride of Wilson. J They are being assisted by Sil ver Star Chapter and Starlight Chapter of the order of Eastern Star Lodges. Clark S. Brown of Winston ! Salem the Most Worshipful Grand Master will preside over the meetings assisted by his deputies and the Right Worship ful Grand Senior Warden, Mil ton F. Fitch of W'lson. Plans are being made for over one thousand brothers to supervision of J. M. Miller and converge on the city under the George C. Alexander, Co-chair man. Representation is expected from Massachusetts, Connecti cut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, District of Columbia and Virginia and several other states. Wilson is known as the city that makes the Grand Masters, the last two having been made here, 1947 and 1959, there are no changes in view for this ses sion. The opening will be a Memo rial Service at the St. John A. M. E. Zion Church Monday night at 7:30 P.M. The public is invited to attend this affair and the fellowship Banquet on Tuesday night at 8:00 P.M. The remaining meetings will be closed for the membership only. H WtNNM OP TM« SMM caah prtaa for Ntwmbtr givon by tho CmlliM TlmM Mch month to tha church or church auxil iary itvlnf tha higfhoot amount of purchaw alipa from With titan in tha Carolina Thnaa. involved of the right of per sons receiving any public wel fare benefits to at least a bare minimum of procedural pro tection before the very necessi ties for life are taken from them." Currently, the local public housing authorities follow a procedure of drawing up the i, I Iff * it- ' *"' -m fiP Jp f WM? In ifrt^W HILLSIDE HONOR STUDENTS —Six honor studants wara fin alist In tha National Achiava m• nt Scholarship program which was held hara recently. Thay ara front row, laft to right: Mlssas Ida Rosabud Pag*. Ga. Indigent Tenants Case Taken To U.S.Supreme Court WASHINGTON The U. S. Supreme Court was this week asked to review the constitu tionality of those statutes of the State of Georgia which prevent indigent tenants from making a defense against eviction ord ers because of their inability to post bond in order to obtain a hearing. The petition was filed by at torneys for the NAACP Legal ww tha Community B a»Wa» Church, paalaiail by tha Rov. I. T. Thomson. Proaontatian of tha chock la shown Mn| m*4o at tha church, Sunday, Decan*ar 4, by ■ami J Auatin, iiniftm TP nw pvMimtr ff tenant leases on a month-to month basis. "This practice," the lawyers asserted, "does permit evictions to be accom plished after the giving of a notice to vacate which does not state the reasons therefor." This is the first case in LDF's new program of litiga tion to protect and establish daughtar of Rav. and Mrs. R. E. Pags; Alica LaVarna Sharpa. daughtar of Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond A. Sharpa; Gurnia Car roll Mlchaux, daughtar of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Mlchaux. Back row, laft to rigftt: Fradarick Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) on behalf of two indigent Negroes residing in Atlanta, Georgia, who were un able to defend an eviction ord er solely on the basis of their poverty. The LDF attorneys, in filing the petition for review, argued that the "Georgia Code 61-303 which barred the petitioners from a hearing because of their Tha Carolina Timas. Thoao In tha pictura from loft to right ara Rov. Thompaon, Mr. Auatin an 4 Mr*. OnoitU McGhaa, who rocolvod tho chock on bohalf of tha church. (Photo by Purafoy) the rights of poor people. LDF has recently become in volved in cases seeking to make precedent of poverty law ques tions just as it has done over the years in civil rights. The LDF attorneys who filed the petition are Director-Coun sel Jack Greenberg, James M. Nabrit 111, Charles Stephen Ral Br only Wright, ion of Mr. and Mrs. Vargla C. Wright; Alfrad Robarts, ton of Mrs. Ollia M Robarts, and Macao Kannedy Sloan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ma cao A. Sloan. poverty is in conflict with the principles declared by this court, ana is unconstitutional under the equal protection and due process clauses of the four teenth amendment." The brief also raised an im portant constitutional issue in the developing field of the Law of Poverty, and in a particular ly crucial area of that field, landlord-tenant law. More specifically, the brief Rural Negroes In Ala. Start New Program ANNEMANIE, Ala.—A pio neering self-help program of education for seasonal farm workers here in Wilcox Coun ty was officially opened this week. The occasion marked the first co-operative effort of the South ern Christian Leadership Con ference and the federal Office of Economic Opportunity to bring new hope for long-neg lected rural families. County residents who will help operate and also benefit from the project met with rep resentatives of supporting groups: the national SCLC and its Wilcox County affiliate, the federal anti-poverty agency, and the United Presbyterian Church, USA, of Wilcox County. Junius Griffin, Adminlstrt- See RURAL 7A ston, Michael Meltsner, Charles H. Jones, Jr., and Sheila Rush Jones of the New York office, and M. C. Burt of Durham. They were joined by attor neys. Edward V. Sparer, Mar tin Garbus, and Howard Thor kelsan of the Center for Social Welfare Policy and Law of Co lumbia University. DR. McLESTER Last Rites Held For Dr. C. E. McLester Thurs. The last rites of Dr. Charles Edward McLester, son of the late Richard and Charlotte Mc Lester, and the husband of Mrs. J. B McLester, were held Thursday, December 8 at Morrhead Ave Baptist Church, the church he founded and or ganized some twenty years ago. He succumbed Friday, Dec. -2, at Lincoln Hospital following a period of extended illness. Born in Curshaw County, near Camden, S. C., Dr. McLes ter was a graduate of Tuskegee Institute and Benedict College, receiving both the B.A. and B.D. degrees. He studied fur ther at Union Theological Sem inary, Duke University, and received the honorary D.D from Friendship and Benedict Colleges; his specific interests being in the area of Biblical interpretations of the Original. In 1941, he married Johnnie Blunt of Mobile, Ala., and to this union was born one son, Charles Edward n, who died at infancy. Dr. McLester attributed the See McLESTER 7A Free SSO Cash For Churches Or Auxiliaries Save Purchases Slips From Carolina Times Advertisers RECEIVE SSO EACH MONTH FOR YOUR CHURCH OR CHURCH AUXILIARY The Carolina Times will do nate each month SSO in cash to the Church or church auxiliary in Durham saving from its members and friends the high est number in dollars and cents of cash register receipts or cash purchase slips from ad vertisers in The Carolina Times listed below: Alexander Ford Appliance & TV A&P Stores Appel's Freezer Locker Baldwin's Brittain's Shoes Brunson's Coca-Cola Bot. Co. Eckerd Drug Stores Johnson Motor Company Kress Long's Florist Model Laundry Mutual Savings & Loan Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. Mcßrooms Rentals Mechanics & Farmers Bank North Carolina Mutual Ufe Insurance Company New Method Laundry One Hour Martinizing O'Briant's Motor Providence Loan Co. Rigsbee Tire Sales Robbins of Durham Roscoe Griffin Shoe Co. Sam's Pawn Show Sanitary Laundry Union Ins. Sc Realty Co. Winn-Dixie Weavers Cleaners Roses Central Carolina Farmers Frazier Realty Co. Main Uniform Center Johnson-Forrester Harriss-Conners O'Briant Motor Co. University Dodge Lakewood Shopping Center The Wig Warn Zales Jewelry Zuckerman Fun - Burton's