IEE f " t ? , Keep Up With The Time^.?* OM PUBLK Oo\^C **? VOL. 26, NO. 24 , Gtf* * tz/t/re Outlook! GREENSBORO, NORTH CARt. M FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1967 PRICE 10 CENTS BETHEL A M E CHURCH NEWS NEWS SILVER TEA Immediately following the morning worship service Sun day, April 2, the Stewardess Board No. 1 of Bethel Church will sponsor a "Silver Tea" in the Education Building. Dona tion 25c. Mrs. Catherine Lamar, President. Worship Service At 3:30 P. M., Sunday April 2, the Pastor and members of Be thel will worship at Gethsemane Baptist Church on Gorrell St Dr. Leon S. Penn, Sr. will be the speaker. Raleigh Visit The Pastor, Rev. Penn and members of Bethel have been in vited to worship at St. Paul A. M. E. Church in Raleigh, N. C., Sunday April 9, -at 4.00 p.m. Dinner will be served free. The two adult choirs of Bethel and Senior Usher Board are expect ed to be present. Plans are' be ing made to charter two busses for the trip. Round trip $2.50 Tickets are on sale now. Choir Anniversary The Gospel Choir will observe its Anniversary Sunday, April 16 in the Fellowship Hall at Bethel Church at 3:00 p.m. An Inter esting program has been plan ned. Te public is cordially in vited. Fashion Show Members of the Sarah Allen Missionary Circle of Bethel are busy making plans for their uni que Fashion Show to be held in the Fellowship Hall Sunday, April 16, at 6 p.m. You must not miss this treat! Souvenir Bulletin Have you secured your Sou venir Bulletin? Contact any member of the Souvenir Com mittee ? James Fuller, Jr., Leon S. Penn, Jr., E. E. Nance, Phil lip M. Cole, B. W. Harris, Dr. F. E. Davis, and Mrs. Frances Enzlow. This is a keepsake any family of Bethel or friend should cherish. Get yours now before the supply is exhausted. $1.00 per copy. Reasonable, huh? States Rally Underway Several representatives as Governors of the various states of the United States and its possessions and their workers are busy raising funds to help build the much needed Sanctu ary at Bethel. The Governor re porting the largest amount will be named President, the work ers will be named Cabinet mem bers. The competition is getting mighty keen. Workers, help voui Governor to become President by doing your share! The Rally will terminate in July, 1967. Gratitude Governors representing the states of Oregon and Mississip pi are grateful to all persons who contributed to the success of their Easter Breakfast held at 7 p.m. Sunday, March 26. Bene fit, States Rally. Boy Scoots Meetings Thomas Isley, the Boy Scout Master at Bethel, is asking all parents to remind their boys of the Scout meetings every Satur day, 1:30 p.m. at Bethel Church. Flower Show and Tea A cordial and warm invita tion is being extended to you and your friends by the Begonia Garden Club to attend their Annual Flower Show and Tea to be held in Cooper Hall Lounge at A. and T. College, Sunday April 2, 1967 at 4-6 p.m. The theme of the Show is "Springtime Is In The Air". Arrangements of spring flowers and others will be displayed by members, most of them grown in their own flower gardens. Tea will be served to all attending. Admission 50c. Mrs. Donnell Pearce, Flower Show Chairman. Miss Janet Jenkins Bennett Pay Queen Miss Janet Jenkins, senior home economics major, of Cam den, N. J., has been chosen queen to reign over Mav Day lestivities at Bennett College on May 6, according to campus wide elections returns just tabu lated. ? President of the Student Sen ate for 1967-68 will be Mis? Cynthia Frierson, of Florence. S. C., a rising senior foods and nutrition major. Serving in her cabinet will be: Misses Jo Anne Coble of Wilson, N. C., vice president; Angelene Johnson of Reidsville, secretary; Vera Fow ler, of Albany, Ga., treasurer, and Dorothy Childs of Pittsburg, Pa., partliamentarian. Miss Sandra McFadden, of Philadelphia, Pa., rising senior, special education major was elected president of the David D. Jones Student Union Other Union officers are Misses Pa tricia Kersh, of Chicago. 111., vice president; Gwendolyn Morse, of Ninety-Six, S. C., secretary, Patricia Herring, ol Greensboro, treasurer, and- Wan da Dula, of Lenoir, pianist. Named student representa tive to the Central Administra tive Committee was Miss 7!ev erly Roberts, of Newark, N. J., rising junior English major. Miss Cassandra Feaster, of Greensboro, a rising junior so ciology major, was elected Ben nett's "Miss UNCF " and Miss D'iaris Raeland, of Birnvis ham, Ala., a rising junior biolo gy maior, was named coordina tor for the Nationad Student Association. Other election results fo'lnw: RECREATIONAL COUNCIL ? Chairman. Hedv Hunt, of Hen derson; vice chairman, Cons tance Clarke of Akron, Ohio: secretary - treasurer, Bonnie Warren, of Glen Raven, N. C.; assistant, Peggy Richmond, of Charlotte, and publicity chair man, Patricia Galloway, of Winston-Salem. INTER-DORMIORY COUN CIL ? President, Juanita White, of Mt. Pleasant, S. C.; vice president, Paulette Coble, of Wilson, N. C.; secretary, Nar ( Continued on Page 8> A. A. VANCE Elks Implement Efforts To Get Negroes Hired In Washington, D. C. Chapel Hill ? Approximately 200 persons, men and wcmen, of the 5th district, State Associa tion, Improved Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks of the World, led by A. A. Vance dis trict deputy of Raleigh, met here Sunday and endorsed the program of the Civil Liberties Department to get the solons, who are members of Congress to qualify Negroes to their staffs in Washington and in their state offices. The Civil Liberties Depart ment announced that a mass rally has been scheduled for Kyles Temple A.M.E. Zion Church, 409 Dunstan Street, Durham, April 15, as a climax to the observance of Appomat tox Day, which went into his tory, April 9. when Lee surrend ered to Grant at Appomattox Courhouse, Va. The Elks took new courage from an attack on N. C.'s Ne (f. ontini'Ml "f> AlabamaHSfhooIs Must End' Bfasf Text Fall Miss. & La. Next LDF Targets Alabama this week became the first southern state ordered by a federal court to desegregate all its public school districts. The cou?t ordered 99 school districts to end segregation by next fall. This unprecedented action <-i the three judge federal court came in response to four years of litigation by attorneys of the NAACP Legal Defense and Ed ucation Fund, Inc. (LDF). Alabama Gov. Lurleen B Wallace, State School Superin ? tendent Ernest Stone and in other state officials were direct ed by the U. S. District Court in Montgomery to "take affir-. mative action to disestablish all state-enforced or encouraged public segregation." They were also told to "eli minate the effects of past . . . discrimination." LDF Director Counsel Jack Greenberg called the decision, "an important step in closing the doors to evasion of the Consti tution and the desegregation guidelines of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. We plan to follow this up in those hard core states where massive resistance remains the order of the day, particularly Mississippi, Louisiana and S. W. Georgia," he said. This injunction marks the first time since the Supreme Court's desegregation ruling of 1954 that an entire state has been placed under a single in junction to end segregation, Mr. Greenberg added. The Court ruled that Gov. Wallace and other state offic ials have through their control and influence over local school boards flouted every effort to Senator Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) congratulates his ap pointee, Walter White of 5641 Lansdowne Ave., Phila delphia, to the U.S. Capitol Police Force. White is a pre-med junior at Howard University in Washington, D.C. Senator Scott has one of the best integrated staffs in the Nation's Capitol. <* make the 14th amendment a meaningful reality to Negro school children in Alabama. The Federal Court said that Gov. Wallace and other state officials had used two chief means of encouraging local Ala bama school boards to resist in tegration. * "They used thir authority as a threat and as a means of punishment to prevent local school officials ... to desegre gate schools." * "They have performed their own functions in such a way as to maintain and preserve the racial characteristics of the system." LDF attorneys based their case on the successful argument that Gov. Wallace and other defendants: * Exercised their pervasive powers to frustrate local of ficials who attempted to in tegrate schools. * Controlled school finances and fiscal policies in a manner that maintained and promoted segregation. * Controlled instructional pro grams and policies in a man ner htat maintained and pro moted segregation. * Controlled school construc tion and consolidation pro grams and policies in a man ner that maintained and pro moted segregation. * Controlled school transporta tion programs and policies in a manner that maintained -md promoted segregation. LDF attorneys participating in the Case were Fred D. Gray berg. Charles H. Jones, of Montgomery; and. Mr. Green Melvyn Zarr and Henry M. Aronson. all of New York City. DEADLY FRIENDS Bill Pvle and Chuck Farley, long-time friends and actors ap pearing with Dean Martin in Universal's "Rough Night In Jericho," saw each other for the first time in 20 years ? and one friend 'killed' the toher. Pyle plays a trader who is killel by Farley, a seedy buffalo hunter, in "Jericho." FROM REEL TO REAL Johnny Watts was having a great time portraying a tank crewnyn recently in Universal's "Tobruk," until he was called away. But hell keep his tank orientation manual; he was called to active duty with the First Armored Division, U. S. Army. you're<#eM TM0j to learn |fjl SAFETY \ - w -v KUifS, !