^Jlic futu* Keep Up With The Timei VOL. 27, NO. 13 GREENSBORO, NORTH CARO : i SMock* ~~.r: cr/ ' it me Outlook! s "" i C : ? ' JARY 19, 1968 PRICE 10 CENTS Final Kites Held For Greensboro Minister Reverend Joseph C. Melton, ago 86, retired minister, former ly the pastor of United Institu tional Baptist Church of this city, passed away at L. Rich ardson Memorial Hospital on Monday morning after a brief Illness, following more than a year of declining health. He was a native of Gates County, N. C., and a graduate of Shaw University. For many years he was active in the civic and religious life of this com munity. He established the first branch of the Girls' Scout Troop for Negro girls, and active par ticipated In the establishment of the first Y.M.C.A. branch for Negro youth. He is survived by a son, Jud son C. Melton of Laurinburg, N. C.; two daughters, Mrs. Etta M. Mitchell of Zanesville, Ohio and Mrs. Elreta Melton Alexander of this city; two grandson a, Joel C. Melton, U. S. Army, and Girardeau Alexander III, and one great-granddaughter, Jeni fer Claire Melton. His late wife, Mrs. A A. Mel REV. JOSEPH C. MELTON ton, retired public school teach er, passed away in 1964. Funeral service was held Wednesday, January 17 J 1:00 p. m., Providence Baptist Church. Rev. Howard A. Chubbs, pas tor, officiated. Burial followed in Piedmont Memorial Park. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. Ground Breaking Next Sunday For New St. Matthews Church The Bishop Will Preach St. Matthews Methodist Church on the corner of Ashe and Lee streets will conduct its "ground-breaking" services on Sunday, January 21. The serv ices will be twofold with the regular Morning Worship Serv ice starting at the usual time, 11:00 a. m., and immediately following there will be a motor cade to the new site on the corner of Asheboro and E. Flor ida streets where the ground breaking ceremony will be held. The time for the latter service is 1:30 p. m. The present building was erected in 1903 and since that time has served the city of Greensboro well. One signifi cant contribution has been that out of the basement of its for mer building, Bennett College was founded. Long before de segregation of public facilities in Greensboro, St. Matthews was something of a city auditorium for Negroes. The institution has had and is having a great influ ence upon the social, economical and religious welfare of our community. The guest speaker for this special twofold service will be Bishop L. Scott Allen of Nash ville, Tennessee. Bishop Allen has recently been assigned as resident Bishop for the North Carolina-Virginia Conference. To these services, the pastor, J Rev. J. C. Peters, extends a I cordial Invitation to all. Economic Power, Not Long Hair, Key To Ills, Says Bev. Jackson "Wearing long hair won't frighten anybody. It's only put ting Negro barbers out of work." That's the kind of biting logic 26-year-old Rev. Jesse L. Jack son advances In his crusade to gain civil rights for -Negroes. In a series of weekend ap pearances at A&T 'State Uni versity, Jackson, national direc tor of Operation Breadbasket ?aid: "At its worst, black power is a reaction by Negroes to the cruelty of white America. Black power raises the questions of who the Negro is and how he j can have power In a society of power playa." Comparing the plight of his people to that of the ancient Jews, Jackson added that "the ancient Jews were in slavery because although they formed the base of the Egyptian econo my, they did not control any of the modes of production. They furnished the labor only. The Negro might be said to be in the same position today." "One must take a look at the hard realities of life," Jackson continued. "The most essential (Continued on Fi|i 8) $230,000 Grant For Negro Ministerial Training Program NEW YORK, Jan. 5 ? The Ford Foundation today an nounced a $230,000 grant for a Negro ministerial training pro gram in urban leadership to be conducted in fifteen cities of the North and South by the South ern Christian Leadership Con ference (S.C.L.C.). At the same time, the Foun dation announced a $522,200 grant to the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Jus tice for a national program to influence equal employment pol icies among commercial firms that do business with churches. (Details listed later in this arti cle.) In making the announcement, McGeorge Rundy, president of the Foundation, said: "The grant to the Southern Christian Leadership Foundation is for educational work among Negro ministers. Religious lead ers of all faiths are recognizing the need for a new and broader role for the ministry in the crisis of the cities, and this Foundation has made earlier grants to other groups for work in the same field. There is an obvious and special opportunity and responsibility here for Ne gro clergymen, and it seems to us clear beyond argument that Dr. Martin Luther King and his associates are qualified to give unusual leadership in educa tional work with member.- of this group. "This grant therefore is for a specific set of educational activ- ! ities, and not for general support of the Southern Christian Lead- I ership Conference as a whole. ? Dr. King and his associates have ' other commitments that fall out side the areas in which a tax exempt foundation should give support. But Dr. King and the S.C.L.C. have a standing among American Negroes, a passionate commtiment t o non-violence, ! and a proven concern for the social commitment of the clergy which make their Southern Christian Leadership Founda tion, in our judgment, an out standing instrument for this particular educational effort." The grant to the Southern Christian Leadership Founda tion, a fiscal arm of S.C.L.C., is the fourth within the last year to major Negro organizations. The others were for programs of the National Urban League, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and for a program in Cleveland of the Congress of Racial Equal ity. (Earlier Foundation grants for training clergymen in deal ing with urban problems have included assistance to the Urban Training Center of Christian Missions In Chicago and the National Council of Churches, to help acquaint clergy and lay men with significant urban work of church groups.) With Its grant, S.C.L.C. will conduct seminars, for about 150 Negro ministers, that are de signed to provide leadership training for urban programs in ?uch fields as education, hous ing, employment, and business opportunities. The seminars will be offered for five days semi annually in cooperation with the Metropolitan Applied Re search Center in New York which is directed by Dr. Ken neth B. Clark. The seminars will cover more than forty subjects such as the history of the civil rights move ment. urban sociology, econom ics. urban renewal, housing, employment, small business de velopment, and government an ti-poverty programs. P a r t i c i pants will receive study and reference materials for use in continuing education activities in their communities. S.C.L.S. hopes to offer the seminars to additional ministers who will receive funds for par ticipation from other sources. The ministers who complete the seminars will be assisted when they return to their communi ties in organizing continuing economic, education and social change programs. They will help organize courses in employment and economic development, housing, political processes and voter registration, welfare, edu cation, and legal services. The educational effort begun with the seminars will continue through local retreats, local seminars, and discussion meet ings. The seminars will be eon ducted in fifteen cities which will be selected from among the twenty-five in the United States with Negro populations of more than 100,000. S.C.L.S., whose founder and president is Martin Luther King. Jr., was formed in 1957 as a permanent consulting body of Negro ministers after the Mont gomery, Alabama bus boycott. It has advocated non-violent protests by ministers and their followers to achieve civil rights goals. The grant to the National Catholic Conference for Inter racial Justice (N.C.C.I.J.) will be used to expand Project Equality, a program to over come racial discrimination in employment. The project, which now oper ates in twelve metropolitan areas ? Detroit, St. Louis, San ' Antonio, Hartford, Seattle, Lan sing, Columbus, Los ""Angeles, Nashville. Minneapolis, Omaha, ' and Kansas City ? has the par ticipation of lay and religious bodies of the Jewish, Protes tant. Eastern Orthodox, Unitar i ian-Universalist, and Roman Catholic faiths. More than 15,000 business firms ? from two-man shops to corporations ? have pledged co operation with Project Equality. Each of the firms does business with churches. They include suppliers of goods, construction contractors, insurance compa nies, banks, and real estate firms. The National Catholic Con ference for Interracial Justice was established in 1961 as a lay organization to mobilize the Catholic community for positive action on equal opportunity programs, and to lend technical assistance to and join forces with other denominational groups similarly motivated. Project Equality was begun in 1965, on the premise that religi ous institutions have a responsi bility to spend their money in a moral manner and, job discrim ination being both morally and legally wrong, should use their purchasing power to encourage their suppliers to avoid it. (Continued on Page 4) Funeral Services Held For Booker T. Washington NcClain Mr. Booker T. Washington McClain, age 58, of 545 Cross Street, Asheboro, N. C., died January 14. Funeral services were held Wednesday, January 17, from the Church of God of Prophecy, Asheboro, N. C., Rev. Floyd Mclver officiating. Burial was in Mt. Calvary Cemetery in Asheboro, N. C. He is survived by four sla ters, Mrs. Katie Walker, Mrs. Mandy Aurman, Mrs. Eldora Larkins, all of Asheboro, and Mrs. Nora Gross of Washington, D. C.; two brothers, Rugus Mc Clain of Asheboro and William of Fayetteville, N. C. Hargett's Funeral Service in charge of arrangements. MR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON McCUUN