Catholics Shout Defiance On Race Issue - DLynx
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Transcript of Catholics Shout Defiance On Race Issue - DLynx
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Catholics ShoutDefiance OnRace Issue
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1956
DEAN TO SHOW CAUSESTUDENT’S ADMISSIONFOR LIMITING
To Explain Denial Of Room,Board To Entering Student
fBIRMINGHAM, Ala. — (INS) - The University of Alabama Dean of Admissions was ordered Ihursday to explain why he should not be cited for contegnpl of court for refusing dormitory space to the University’s first Negro student.
ORDER ALA. U.NEW ORLEANS—<ANP) -Rabid
pro-segregationists shouted abuse and defiance on Archbishop Joseph Rummel here Monday night and accused the Catholic church of "pushing Negroes on us.'
At a tumultous meeting of the Council of Catholic School Cooperative Club«, made up of premdent and past presidents of the Catholic school parents elite in the area, the arciibishop was called a Yankee because of archdiocesan integration plana.
One woman charged that the church and the north are "the same thing." when the Rt Rev Henry Besou superintendent of archdiocesan school, Mid It made no difference where th« arciibishop came from since integration was a church matter.
(Archbishop Rummel was bom in Baden. Germany, ordained in Rome in 1903. and served parishes in Yorkville. Kingston and Harlem. N. Y. He was bishop of Omaha. Neb before moving up to arciibishop of New Orleans in 1936)
Some of the psrents accused the archbishop of "not being fair to white people”; others of "trying to above integration down our throats' throats ."
Applause greeted in unidentified man who asked! "Why does the church insist on pushing Negroes on us?”
New Orleans is the only city in the south where more children attend parochial Hum public schools
Msgr Charles Plauche, chancellor of the New Orleans Archdiocese, told newsmen Sunday that racial tntergrellon may come in Roman
Federal Judge Hobert Grooms set a hearing for February 9 on the petition of Attorneys for Miss Auther- ine Lucy, who was registered at the school as a student Wednesday.
The order instructs Dean of Admissions William F Adams to personally appear In court tn show cause why he should not he cited for contempt The court had ordejred that the girl could not be barred
(Continued on Page Sit)
►LABOR LEADER VISITS - Cornelius Maiden (right) longtime international organuer with the Ar of I (now mciged with the CIO into the AFL-CIO), is visiting Memphis this week and while here renewed acquaintance with his friend the Rev. J. A McDaniel, left) executive secretary of the Memphis Urban league. — (Staff Photo by Tisby)
from school solely because of her i a<:e
When she was accepted as a student, however; after two years of effort, University authorities acting under instructions of the Roard of Trustees, said she would not he allowed to live or dine with other student« on the campus
Emory 0 Jackson, editor of the (Continued on Page Slil
PRINCIPALS’ GENERAL SESSIONSLATED HERE FEB. 1O&11TH
Several Memphis Individuals, Firms TakeOut Life Memberships In NAACP Drive
A side highlight of the appearance here Thursday at Metropolitan Baptist Church Walker and McDowell, of Atty. Thurjood Marshall, chief NAACP counsel to keynote the open, ihg of lhe Memphis NAACP’s annual membership drive was the pre- tentation and acknowledgement of reveral Memphians and organizations who have taken out life mem-
• bershlps in the NAA^P IThree Memphian» and one insttu-1
tion were reported as having paid I in full their »501 life memberships. They were Dr J . E. Walker, presi-1 dent of the Tri-State Bank and the founder of the Universal Life Insurance Co.; Dr. Julian Kelso, medical director of Universal; A. Maceo; Walker, president of Universal, and the Tri-8tate Bank.
Dr. B. B. Martin was acknowledged as having paid his third installment (total $300) on his life membership while Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, B. G. Olive. Jr.. Mrs. Johnetta Kelso. H H. Johnsoa. C. C Sawver and the Top Hat and Tails Club were reported »s having paid the first (100) installment of NAACP life memberships on the five year plan
Making »50 payment« on the 10- vear life membership plan were: Attorney A. W. Willis, Jr.. H A Gil- ---- -------------■/ ■ ■; ■ 1 —
Fire Prevention Rates High At Gen. Depot
• For the fourth consecutive year J the Memphis General Depot has not |
ham and Dr T D Northcross.Mrs KeLsO also presented a »50
check to the branch’s letral defense
fund in behalf of the LinksThree other persons In the audi-
cure- signed up for life memberships Atty Willis is lif1'.membership chairman and says the Memphis life membership goafTs 100 member
Owens Gagers In Car Mishap
One of the cars carrying member» of the K. A. Owens Junior College hasbcthall team from Holly Springs, Mixa. Thursday night hit a hridgr in the blinding rain near Byhalia. The Hornets were returning to Memphis after posting an 86-77 victory over Rust College
Although the car was severely damaged nene of the players were seriously Injured. Coach Bill Fowlkes of Rooker T. Washington, who was one of the officials al the game, trailing the Owens car when the wreck occurred. — Fowlkes aided the junior collegians in getting bark to Mem-
According to an announcement by Ezra Fbrd. principal of Cuplc- ville school and president of the Tennessee Principal's Association, the association will meet here Friday. Feb 10 and Saturday, Feb 11.
Friday's session will constat of a meeting of the executive committee at 7 30 p m , with the general session set for 1 p m Saturday in I/Moyne College'« Bruce Hall
Theme of the meeting wiU be "The role of the principal In preparing all achool jrCrsnnncl and student* for better Human Relation" «nd consideration will be given to the four tollowing questions, Mr Ford said.
1. What practical stops can be taken in schools and communities to facilitate better Human Relations?
2 What can the principal do to Improve communications and to increase understanding and acceptance of tile individual?
3. What human relation ties will bring about better standing of individual differences?
4. What should be work on an emergingbetter Human Relations?
Guest speaker for Faturday’s session will be Dr Pcrpener, lane College professor of education. Mayor Edmund Orgill will welcome the group to the city and
Sidney Harris, »principal of the Bedford County Training school will respond
George A Key, principal of Orchard Knob school, Mrs. N. O. Rucker, principal of the Rutherford County school; Dr. Johnetta K Williams, supervisor of the Chattanooga city schools and L Hobson, principal ol Manassas high school chorus, Blair T Hunt. Cornell Wells and Lsalah Goodrich Jr. Mr Ford will preside
Memphis Area News In Brief
and
actlvi- u nd ergroup
groundthe program of
PARK COMMISSION OK'S NEGRO USE OF CITY COURSE
Thursday the Memphis Part Commission recommended that the Sam Qualls Golf Club be allowed to use of Ute city’s “white" golf courses to accommodate a tournament of the Central State Golf Association which was invited to hold its tournament here by the late Mayor Frank T Tobey.
Park Commission chairman Harry Pierotti said “this action la not to be construed as a change of our policy heretofore prevailing for uae of our golf courseFinal approval la up to the City Commission.
ENROLLS AT UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA - (TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - (SNS) - Miss Autherine J Lucy, 26-year-old Miles College graduate, registered at 125-year old University of Alabama on Feb. I and began classes Feb. 3 Born at Shiloh, Ala. in Marengo County, she has worked as school teacher and business secretary. She is enrolled as on under graduate and is working toward a degree in
library service.
SIAMESE TWINS HOSPITALIZED
Linda and Lillian Matthews, Siamese twins bom last September to John and Missouri Matthews of Indianola. Miss and who were successfully separated by surgery last October, reentered John Gaston Hospital last week to undergo surgery for a “large hernia.“ .
At press time Lillian had already undergone surgery and Linda was slated to undergo a similar operation In a few days
Rain Fails To Hamper NAACP Meeting AsV »
Thousands Turnout For Marshall's Taik» -
URGES REGISTRATION DRIVE — Congressman Charles C luces
had a serious fire lo*». according i',r • R Representative from to Charles Mclesn. Chief of the Michigan.^tn a telegram to Hay-
Firt Department. A serious fire loss is a fire which causes more than»50 damage
The 18-man Fire Department lias achieved this enviable record by virtue of a well-rounded Fire Prevention Program which Includes quarterly classes for all Depot employees on fire prevention, periodic fire drills,, contlnuoui fire hazard Inspections, and a thorough orientation in fire safety which is given all new employee«.
In addition, the Fire Department has been training an auxiliary fire fighting force compoaed of civilian personnel for additional protection during working hours.
mond F Tisby, managing editor of (he Memphis World, urged a “huge regist rat Ion campaign among all potential Negro voter«" to offset the opposition of pro segregation forcer
The text of Congreswian Diggs' telegram, "Threats of Pio Segregationist demonstrators last Monday to organize in every county In your state In opposition to valiant stand by Governor Clement miist be offset by huge registration campaign among all potential Negro voters Urge you to arrange meeting of (Negro community loader; and spearhead drive."
(Staff Photo by Tkhyt
73 - «9 for a maintains 230
of the last fight
Universal Life Credit Union
meeting 30th. at
In their third annual Monday afternoon January the Company’s assembly hall, members of ULICO Employ«*« Federal
• Credit Union voted a 24 per cent dividend on shares and increased the salary of the treasurer, w L. Brooks Tlie credit union is a saving and loan cooperative with a Federal charter.
Reports were made'of activities, for the year from each committee Mr Brooks reported that the shareholdings or savings stands at »6.857.14. a gain of abput 45 per cent over the previous year He reported that the credit union made 98 loans during the year, ranging from »5000 to »150.06 the total amount of »10.855 00 and that it has a membership of 174.
Members of the managering staff are as follows: W L Brooks. Jr.. R L. Wynn, Mrs. Helen Bowen«. Mrs Alma Ross. Mrs. Maggie Coleman Mr* Francis Hassell. Miss Lovie Montgomery are members of the board of directors; Bonner Chandler
Miss Ida Fag? and Miss Betsy Jones are membcia «1 flie Auditing com- miflee, Mr John A Olive. Mrs Celeste Hamler and Mrs Julia Springer are members of Credit Committee Appointment-, 'for Educational rommlttee which includes Publicity. Program and Project and Mcnilicr- sliip follows. W L. ^Baxter. Mrs C. E. Rowan bliss Naomi Gordan, Mrs Earlene Nelson. Mis Willie Mae Aleaandei. Miss Gussie Sweet. Miss Carrie Smith. Miss Ida Mag Walker. Mrs Freddie Wesley, Mrs Martha B Whitney. Miss Yolanda Harris. Mrs. Marie Smith. Miss Sarah Smith and Miss Lovic Montgomery
Miss Montgomery, «ho was reelected president presented W F. Broxterman. Fieldman of Tennessee Credit Union league. Chattanooga. who made a brlnf talk for the purpose of stimulating more interest tn the credit onion This talk was followed by a number from Miss Juanita Reddick, who sang “Danny Boy" accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Mamie Davis.
The Owen College Green Hornets, team the evening before, unleashed riding high on a crest of six vic- one of the most unrelenting and toiles of their last eight games _ beaten only bv lane College and Albany State College arc slated to lake on the Tougaloo College Cage Quintet 'Diesday (February 7), In the Abe Scharff VMCA Gym Game time is 8 o’clock
The Intra-Squiid scoring rivalry between Thomas Lott, and Arthur Lawshe should prove an added Interest Uhls tar, through the last three games, Lawshe is ahead of LotfTiy 4 points — 24 3 average Inft point average
The six victims —games are Rust College, twice; Okalona College. Natchez Junior College; Coahoma Junior College; and Mississippi Industrial College.
The rejoining of the squad by Thomas Lott, and the newcomers Arthur lawshe and Willie Frank Hunt has done much to.bolster the already fast climbing Green Hornet«.
Other foes currently scheduled to appose the Green Hornet« in Memphis include: Stillman College. February 11. Talladega College. February 15; and Coahoma Junior College, February 18
. JTEDwn College GiernHornets, fresh- from defeat at Hie hands of the Albany State College Basketball -------------------- :______ 11_________
vlclous scoring sprees ever witnessed In the Abe Schsrff YMCA Gym. On .the very short end of a 1Q5-3R score was Okalona College Tills massacre took place Tuesday night (January 3D.
It was so very obvious Trotn the moment the game was two minutes of history that, our tall Mississippi “Cousins" were to end up a much scored on quintet.
By halftime the Green Hornets had lashed out with their devastating sting and racked up points past the half-century mark (Ml. as weak Okalona managed 16.
Thomas "Long Tom" Lott, last season's Hornet sensation, put on a show, though not alone, as he led the scoring parade with 29 points (Lott managed a 243 point average over last season's 15 game state) His return to the fold, along with newcomers Willie Frank Hunter and Arthur Lawshe, has bolstered, considerably, the already sky-high charges of coach Paul Collins.
The Hornets' new fast-breaking and defense-ripping offensive is beautiful to watch. The deceptiveness "Of the team is amazing! As large as the Basketball- Is. It is not unusual to find yourself actually trying to locate it. when suddenly
(Continued on Page Six)
Sherman Robinson ChosenAs Presbyterian Delegate
...At a meeting of Presbyterian churches last week at Norrfs Memorial Presbyterian Church. Sherman W Robinson, mcmlier of Parkway Gardens Presbyterian Church, was chosen as one of the lay commissioners and a delegate to the U. S. Presbyterian Assembly meeting May 31 al Charlotte, N.«C. —
This marks the first time a Negro locally has so befh appointed.
Mr. Robinaon. whp was elected to a two year term u lay commiMion-
JA7.7.WI8E NAACP SUPPORTING MINISTER IS TURNED DOWN AS OLE MISS, SPEAKER
J D Williams, chancellor of the University of Mississippi, announced In Oxford last weekend that he had cancelled the speech of Jktndae Uw. RrV A1v1h Wmaw. who picked up 132.060-on the »*4.000 Qu ret I on for his knowledge of Jan. because the Ohio minister disclosed he was giving part of his winnings to the NAACPYankees' Billy Martin was tagged at
home plate by lhe Dodger's catcher Rov Campanella.
"Martin danced up and -town. He shouted at Campanella. He shouted at the rrtwd. He shouted at lhe umpire. But when he was through ’ with bls dancing up and down ar-i 1 xhouilng the umpire still Mid 'you're out.' •
Atty Marshall said that many are curious as to the NAACP goal
The main goal of the NAACP. according to Mr. Marshall “1» to lake oil the lenoks every form of law requiring compulsory segregation and the prohibition of any right» because of race or color.”
In lhe wry. but yet significant humor typical of him. the NAACP leader then added, "We are then going to get another law passed to
(Continued on Page Six)
Citing Ute fact that NAACP conventions have been addressed by- Presidents Harry Truman and! Dwight D Eisenhower and Vice- President Richard Nixon, Attorney , Marshall asserted, "the NAACP has! enjoyed the respect of every Brest-1 dent of the United States since it I was organized In 1909"
Further pointing out that FBI' Chief J. Edgar Hoover "»ay» we're not subversive” and declaring that "thl» church, the Catholic Church lhe Metholist Church wouldn't lei us through their doors if we werr subversive." Mr. Marshall urged his audience to "consider thr cited facts ■nd thr charge« of Eastlands and Cooks and make up your own mind,"
The NAACP chief counsel also [»luted out that when the NAACP won the right for Negroes to attend graduate schools in the South,7 it was predicted that blood would flow In the streets "
In rebuttal Mr Maishall pointed out that Ndfcroes are attending 13 "white" colleges In the South and "not one incident of bloodshed har. been recorded" He cited the fact that tlie window ol the dorm room of a Negro student at Louisiana State Uriiveislly was broken but fell thl* wag offset because of the fact that "Immediately after the Incident white students, set. up a 24-bour guard around tlie Negro student's room" .................. . .......................
The arguments and rabble rousing of thr pro-segregation forces, Mr Marshall likened unto a 1955 World Series incident when the
By RAYMOND TISBYThe rains cam* to Memphis Thurs
day night, but failed to deter the more than 2.MM) Memphians, while and Negro from turning out to hear the NAACFs Thuigood Manhall!
Atty Marshall, chief counsel for the NAACP. was keynote speaker lot the kickoff meeting opening the Memphis NAACP's annual membership drive Thursday night at the Metropolitan Baptist Chdrch, Walker and McDowell.
Mr. Marshall, described by Le- Moyne College president, Hollis Price, who introduced him hs "one of the few men who markedly affected lhe era In which he live«," said that the strategy of the NAACP following the Supreme Court's ruling on public schools was to "be quiet and let the others talk", but felt that It was now Ume “to clear the air,” because some in the dally press "are deliberately confusing the Issue."
The NAACP legal leader dubbed Mr Civil Right«" for his many le
gal battles and victories for the NAACP—and America, pointed out that despite the many pressure moves of various pro-segregation organizations throughout the South, the NAACP In 1955 enjoyed It* best year, both in membership and fin- snee. since Ils Inception
Even In Mississippi and South Carolin» “where lhe pressure was the greatest" NAACP membership In those state was the largest in history, Mr. Marshall said.
Marshall advised his audience not to be confused by the many arguments of the pro-segregation forces pointing out that most are the same arguments used each time the N A A C P. is victorious in lhe court«
He cited th« fact that when the NAACP was vtetortoos in outlawing the "grandfather cause." the "intelligence elaure" and the “white primary." »nd the old argument of “Intermarriage" was used even then
The current devices being employed by the segregation forces" were position" »nd "nullification" were clted'a'nd denounced by the speaker
Interposition, whlrh Mr. Minhall described as the right of a state to Interpose Itself between the federal government and the rltltens of the state, "died when the V. S. Constitution was »dopled " *
Nullification, the act of a state in declaring an action of the federal government null and void, was settled by lhe Civil War. Marshall asserted as be avowed imagine .whai would happen to our government if each state had the right to rule that anv act of th« federal government that might not suit Its thinking be declared n’lii and void "
Msrshalt who argued against and bested John Davis, acknowledge» as A meric»'s be-t canstituUonal lawyer, In the Supreme Court hearing on public school segregation rebuffed the claims by Georgia's Attorney Gen, Eugene Cook and Mta- stssinpr« V. g. Senator James O
er,-Serves as president of the men s group pt Parkway Gardens. Hie Bev A E Andrew is church pastor
The new lay commissioner. an official at Southern Funeral Home and secretary of Tail Iota 8tgma chapter of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity, resides at 1524 S. Montgomery with his wife Mrs Minnie Robinson. secretary at Manaasas high
Pearl Jeans. __ _ ___ munistic.
12 HOMEMAKER SCLtlR TO HOLD MEET THURSDAY.
The 12 Homemakers Club of the Bungatow-Douglasa subdivision *• meet Thursday night, Feb. * at lbe v home of Mrs Evie Larry of ITRR Orr Street.
The club met last Thursday at the home of Mrs Franc:: Fields of 1453 Oriole After lhe business sreslon the next hour was devoted to Bible reading and sewing.
One of Uie projects for the dub this ye«r Is lhe reading of the Bible In Ils entirety. The club Is also making a quilt which will be raffled off at a later date.
Prior to Thursday's meeting the club visited station WDIA and dur-
(Continued on Tage Six)
Negro Applicants FailMSC Grad School Exam
i
MID TERT WAS OF TWO TYPESMinor Dandridge of 1524 Gabav
railed i lie Memphis World Friday and revealed that he was one of lbs three Negroes seeking admission to •hr Memphis State College Graduate School and who failed the school's rcc-nlly Innovated rremlng testa.
On Jan 13 the Memphis State College Administrative Council approved a scries of tests for transfer end out ot state students, ostensibly designed to limit enrollment in meeting proposed accreditation changes
Mr Dandridge took lhelesi along with two other Negroes and two whites. Of the five only one white st'idenl parsed
Dandridge. a 1961 graduate of Le- Moyne College, pointed ou that the test was In l wo parts. The first consisted ot the standard multiple choir- objective test which Dan- drier competed to the Freshman Entrance Elimination
The second part w»s bii re ay tvpe test In whjrh the applicants were asked to write » short biography In from 250 "nd 400 words and then
to write another away on the reason the applicant wanted to do graduate study also In from 250 to 400 words
Tlie appliesnls were given an hour to ronipl°te etch part of the test,
Dandridge, who had hoped to sw- dy Economic History and Geography. said he wm disappointed whea R. P Clark, MSC registrar, called and staled that he had failed to pass the test but added that Dandridge •cored high In lhe objective part ol the tert but was low in the ease/ part which was judged on "coher«^’ ence clarity. Interest, neatness, mechanical lift grammatical correctness."
School officials refuged to give the names of thore taking the test, but Dandridge said the one white who did paw lhe test was a sailor stationed a' Millington «nd a daily paper later idgntifled the other two Neero« who took the tert as Fred 1 Williams of 432 Laclede and OFerrell Nelson of 1391 Sliver.
7h#re,«ho failed the test may reapply for entrance to Memphis State for th- suremer »«m-ster beginning Jun» 8 registrar Clark said.
Attorney Looby To Be CitedSPEAKS FER 12 - Dr W W Gib 1 eon. head of the biology department! of LeMoyne College, wifi be prlnct' pal speaker Sunday. February 12.! for the Brotherhood Month obaerv- ance <of First Baptist Church. Lau-1 derdaic Dr Gibwin. who has i>een 1 associated with LeMoyne (or •«'me, 20 years and who last year served
! as acting president ot LeMoyne inthe absence of preside:;' Hollis,
' Price, will speak at 315 P MCharles B Graham is chairman is directing the acttvitlea of the brotherhood; the Rev H C
i Nebrlt is pastor.
During Negro HistoryNAFHVTLLE - Progressive, echo-
larlv pr. Z Alexander Loohv. Nashville attorney, will he cited during the Negro Histon’ Week"' Feb 12- 19 sponsored hv Tennessee s Association for the Study of Negro Life and History
Dr Merl R Fppsr. tüsfory geography department head Tennessee State Universitystate director for the association.
god at
and
Highlighting the week will be a dinner meetng at Tennessee State
•vhere Attorney è
I for lits contri lof thr Nègre h»
and the nattaDr Bertram
j the-Ms'hodist ner speaker. His Philosophy of Race
Tennnssta State C tory Study Wub wf hour on the thème. " In an Ere e( Chat tateoiu.' ttektel ' MempbR, le club
known
ThISTANBACK Against Any Preparation You’va Ever
Used
Wlllx'r- he later advance Juilliurd
! Virgil
Leontyne Price To Visit J. C. Smith
Evening vesper all endanta heard President of the Coller' Dr B E Evans emphasize the importance <>l preparation for careers
MELROSE DISTRICTMelrom District Lieutenant Mrs
Althea Pyles wishes to thank her captains’ contact Mothers and
Both students, faculty and visiting consultants assembled in a general conovicalion in the Administration Auditorium at. 8 3ft a. m . and heard the keynote speaker say. ’If you’re not prepared to do your job. you are not prepared to run tn the loceu-
are baked by women
Music for the two-day conference was rendered by the Colleger Choir and nr: mist Don White
The New Light Civic Club of Orange Mound will hold its regular monthy meeting. Tuesday, February 7. to elect officers for the coming yearNOMINEES ARE:
President • Rev P C. Polk.Anderson Mitchell. Jt-Sc Edwards
Vlce-Prcsiden' - Yaiuy I loyd, Rev. Preston Dubcrry. A 6. Edwards.
Secretary - tElinhue Stanback. Mrs. McCargo. Mis. P C. Polk
Oorrespondimt-Secretarv - Mrs P. C. Polk. Mrs. C Booth. Mrs Lucille Hill.
Trea.’urci - Mr. J. S. Edwards. Rev. Preston Duberry
The club is urging all citizens in the community to please attend to help formulate the program for 1956
ALUMNI DAY-SPEAKER - Samuel Peace, a 1949 graduate of Le- ■Movne College, will be principal speaker for the annual LeMovnc Alumni Day Sunday. Feb 12. in Bruce Hall announced Mesdames Ann Lawrence Hall and Mary F Cotton, speech committee i (-chairmen.
Mrs Bernadine Holme- program chairman, also announced that the LeMoyne College Choir, which has ¡mined national repute through the United Negro Collnge Fund choral broadcasts over the ABC nctwoik. will appear on the program
; Mr ‘Petuc.-chaplain ol Tail Iota .Sigma chapter of Phi Beta Sigma ■fraternity, is an executive of the i T>nne*<r Employment Service, working pm of the emj>! o mint of- *!<< .1 Brand al Beale
Find Garphr is Alumni Day gcnerrl chairman teflny Van .hihnsih is president id the local LrMoynr Alumni Association Hollis Price is I eMoyne president
Mrs. Laura Lampley, hint. Miss Ruthie fee Emogene Riley, Miss 1 Miss Annette
an outward stimulus to make Him happy. He had learned a SECRET that allowed Him to live above th-
• circumstances of life and fear of the future He moved with calmness, certainty and serenity through the most trying circumstances . ev»n death! Whi t was His secret'’ He gave it to us In the Beatitudes. Let us go with Christ and discover the
I SECRET of happiness as BILLY GRAHAM. THE GREAT EVANGELIST. puts in his recent book.The S“ciet of Happiness" Call at
your Vancq Avenue Branch of the Cossitt Library and get your copytoday
AFROTC unlts'at colleges and. ec state are Harvard’University universities currently >»vidmg this i Amh-rlCollege. Lowell Technologi- tralnine ■ I al Institute. Tufts College. WiL
■ hams College. Columbia, University ' University ol Rochester, and East Carolina College .it Greenville. N.
MOLER BARBER COLLEGE
173 S. SECOND, AT BEALE
Howard Univ. GradJoins Prairie View
BosWfll, vice president ot Tenncs- ■■e Stat" Unnersitv, John Hull liiiniipal ol Cameron High School: Dr. William J Simmons. Dean of Men and University Minister. Tennessee State W M Day. past president Nashville NAACP. Flem B Oley. 11.. business man and civic leader: Dr. R T Smith, physician; Attorney C L Ennis. Nashville City School Board m»mber; Dr. Robert A Thoniton. physicist and dean of Basil Co'lcgi Fisk University: John H Sha. |»e. Tennessee State Univer-
' sity organist and music department Ezekial Bell-and Samuel Robinxm
'of Memphis hind Earnest Brown ofJackson. Miss. were the outstand-
I mg students named
BY MAPI I It ( ROOKS TWO I ROM Ml MI’IIIS ( III 1»
NASHVILLE - More than 50 graduate and undergraduate Phi Beta Sigma members celebrated tie fraternity's founding and honored "Sigma’s Most Outstanding Men" in Nashville at Tennessee State University last week
Dr. Robert A Thornton, dean .>1 the Basic College at Fisk University was speaker for the occasion wWir marked the fraternity's 42nd anniversary'. George Berry and University Organist John H Sharpe fur-' nished music.
The graduate and undergraduate members named "Sigma's Most Outstanding Men' were: Dr Alger V
The announcement made in December had indicated that economy of operation had prompted the Au Force decision Io reduce the num her of institutions participating in the program.
The.other institution.! aitcctcd by the new order along with Tonnes-
Aiken SaysPRAIRIE VIBWr-'We have a dy
namic world situation to reckon with and anythihg Shorter than the best is not acceptable,’’ stated realtor and building contractor, Walter H. Aikens of Atlanta. Georgia in his remarks to the All-College Career Conference recently held at Prairie View A and M College.
PRAIRIE VIEW. Texas. - Tbe School- of Engineering at Prairie View A and M College has .been joined by Lawrence A. Collins, a graduate of Howard University, Washington, D 0
For five year she was employed by the firm of MeCmughan and Johnson Architects in Washington During this pejiod he participated in the design and the site planning of a large housing development which included over fifty houses, and the design and panning of industr ial laboratories, schools, hospitals, warehouses, and in several pre-fabricated buildings.
The instructor is now a registered architect in the State of Texas
Three thousand miles of paved toads and a host of pleasent mountain and seaside towns to explore, are causing more tourists to do their sightseeing in Puerto Rico in drive-yourself cars, according to Pan American World Airways Rates are $8 a day plus 10 cents a mile. That includes gas. oil and insurance
Students, faculty, and alumni Werel>*‘«rt J*®»
concerned when the'Drcember'announcement was made In urging I Air Force authorities to continue the university's AFROTC program. Dr. Davis among other things pointed to "the interest tn and apprecia- • lion tor Illis training on the part I ol students" and thy institu-1 Doti's department ot aviation offering a degree with Hight training I navigation and meteorology as basic I requirements tor graduation as well is its department of metallurgical j engineering. Tile majority of the, university's AFROTC graduates are I now serving in the Ayr Fort/. I
Commanding the detachment al ’ Tenth sc. State is Major Dudley I M Watson, proiessor of air science.
! other stall members tire Captains 1 Edward I Schcneck. Frank it
I'lioinp'oii and Olis (' Russell, and I F,V Marcus Crowdci i.Jiistant pro-
I le- son ol air s< unce.
CRAY HAIR
Biked white you steep
j
SLICK BLACKL AT YOU A DRUGGIST
CHOIS ROBES
II 'J
Manassas Hi School NewsBY MELVIN GREER
I LIGHTNING STRIKES AS MANASSAS THUNDERS
OVER DOUGLASS RED DEVILS, 73 TO 59Th« Manassas Tigers unleased a hurricane and cydoned the
Douglass Red Devils, 73 to 59 Thursday night at the Manassgs gymnasium In a prep league basketbail game.
Playing,heads-up ball, the Tigers completely dominated the first period. It was the old Jimmy Bullocks that was hitting from all angles and positions. Manassas led 13-11 u the buzzer ended the beginner period.
Despite the sharpshooting of DoagUas players Elbert Parrish and William Kincaide, which was ever a threat, Marvin Doggett Collaborated with Sylvester Ford and Jim- Uy Bullocks to’take a commanding 35-31 halftime lead.LIGHTNING STRIKES
Lightning continually m truck against the Red Devil team in the 3rd period as the Tigers completely oulctaaed their opponents, attacking without let-up. Sylvester Ford was snatching the rebounds. Sub-
• «Ulate Joe Gentry was hitting from all angles, while Marvin Doggett was brilliantly callbg the plays. Manusaa ran wild agk..ist the Red Devils to take a comfortable 55-38 third period lead.
Precipitation continued to prevail in the 4th quarter as the Tigers continued to outplay the Red Devils, finally beating out a 73-50 victory over a snowed-under Douglass five.
Elbert Parrish hit 25 for Douglass, the highest number of points tallied individually, while Tigers Sylvester Ford and Jimmy Bullocks sizzled the strings for 19 apiece. Doggett hit paystrings for 15 and William Kincaide racked ten for the Red Devils.Pos. Manassas (73) F — Rayford 2 F — Simpson 4 . C — Ford 19 G - Doggett 15 G — Bullocks 19
Substitutes — Manassas: Hart 4. Gentry 8. Bradford 2.
Douglass: Gibson 4. Mitchell 4. DOUGLASS UPSETS MANASSAS IN A GAMEThe underdog Douglass team came
^Pback in those last few minutes of that game to take a 1 point .M-50> decision over Manassas’ favored B team, which was a surprise. But in such a well-balanced league, anything can happen
Eddie Wilson hit 17 points for Manassas while Neal hit 22 for Douglass. It was Manassas' B team's 2nd loss Of the year .Pos. Manassas (56) Douglass (51) F — Mitchell 5 ..,.......... Mason 4F — Adams 4 ..... Parrish 8 C — Harris 2 ..................!. Neal 22G — Wilson 17.................... James 8G — Cleaves 10 Tatum 4
Substitutes: Manassas — Matthews 8. Wright, 4. Walker.
Douglass — Boyd 8. LEADING TEAMS TO CLASH HEBE TONIGHT AT MANASSAS
The red hot Manassas Tigers will face the equally red hot Booker T. Washington Warriors tonight al Manassas gymnasium. Washington is currently atop the prep standing, with a 5-0 record while the Tigers possess a 5-1 record which is good for second place. PREP LEAGUE STANDINGS:
W. L.5 05 13 22 31 50 ’ 5
WashingtonManaauu ...Hamilton MelroseDouglass St. Augustine
Pct. 1.000133.600.400.167.000
Douglass (59) Parrish 25
'Bankhead 4 K incalde 10
Yates 6 McDonald !
GREATEST PALMIST
I
Pet. .833 .800 .600 .500 .200 .000
B TEAMS W.
Manassas .................... 5Washington .......... 4Melrose 3Douglau 3BL Augustine 1Hamilton #TODAY’S FEATURE:“LITTLE MAN WITH BIG IDEAS'
perhaps Jesse Edward Jones is[ more famous a-i round the Big "M” as a come-J dian than an A- rate student, but) the diminutive Senior's records show him to be (among those o! the top in scho- lastfc abllity.
Standing only! 5' 2" J floor, into when he originated the Cunning- hamAlones (Established .1954-55) comedy team starring himself and Miss Bertha Cunningham, a '55 grad.
In 1954 he ran for tlie vice-presidency of tlie Manassas Student Council, and though he was defeated by Charles Delane in that (lection, he went oh to become the President of the Operators Club and the triple treasurer of the Honor Society. Camera Club, and Nature Study Club. He is a member of the St. Paul Baptist Church where he sings ip the Junior Choir.
>' ' I
Jesse canif ■popularity Jesse E. Jones
"Doctor IQ”, as his classmates call him. plans to attend Purdue Univ., Colgate Univ., or Denver Univ, where he will major in electrical engineering as he plans to compete in that field.
Jesse Jones has some big ideas
MADAM BELL
The Madam Bell that you all know who stayed at the
Mississippi State Line for years, will not be reading for
awhile. Due to bad weather she is unable to complete con
struction of home. Don't be mislead! Madam Bell has no
daughter or sister reading under her namel There will be
no one reading under the name MADAM BELL until it has
been announced in this paperl Watch the MEMPHIS WORLD
for notification of resumption of readings. Soon as the wea
ther warms up she’ll open her new, permanent office.
8UIIMKS SPECIALNOW! All the fixture» you need for a 2-bedroom house! For the Kitchen, Bedrooms, Bathroom, Dining Room, Hell end Outside Porch.
All for only
the local De-ofROY AND DALE? Well, no, not really they are editor and general manager _ just pseudo Texans I. Alex Wilson and Miss , fender chain weekly, and Miss Watkins, society Emogene Watkins in their custumes which won . editor of that paper, are expected to exchange them an award at the AKA sponsored Beaux I marriage vows in Sprinq nuptials. (Staff Photo Arts Ball Friday night at Club 'Ebony. Wilson, | By Tisby)
- ■ ■ —"
Walking Peace Pilgrim Visits World Office
and plans to "Invent an electrical I device that will be beneficial to all' mankihd."
Jesse resides with his grandmother. Mrs. Mary Durant. 499 N Seventh Street.MAN! DIG THAT CRAZY
IFETAGlE SANDERSI That's what we've been trying to; j do but we still don't "dig"'i how he cuts a person's neck off without really cutting it off, how he pulls scarfs from nowhere, cooks
Lin a hat without ruining It. turns a [stick into a handkerchief, etc.
But maybe we’ve got something here. If we did “dig" how he per-
, formed magic, he wouldn't draw , such enormous crowds. The hand is quicker than the eye. and we'U
i probably never learn how he does I it- [ So. we'll just observe and enjoy land-try to "dig" the "real gone" niggle of Fetaque Saunders.HERE, THERE, AND
AROUND MANASSASThe Manassas P-TA will meet to
morrow (Wednesday) night in the Cora P. Taylor Auditorium at the regular time. ALL PARENTS ARE URGED TO ATTEND AS THIS MEETING IS OF UTMOST IMPORTANCE!THE MANASSAS SENIOR CLASS
is all set for its Pre-Valentine Ball on the 14th Keep reading this paper for further details.
BEA'S CORNER - Robert Doss ! is sineing "Bells In My Heart" to Mary Johnson of Hamilton What about that, Thelma Russell?
Mary Bratcher says that Billy Burrows is her man but reports say that Emma Jean Gibson is wearing his watch and Racine Wilkerson has his ring. We suppose that Miss Bratcher will have those, though, shortly.
Doris Young has a choice Miss Young can choose between James Austin or Bobby Dillard of Melrose Maurice Young, whydon't you give Joe McDonald a chance?
CURRENT COUPLES - Carroll iGholston and Irene Dunn. Louise Dallas and Robert Spruell, Tennic Smith and James Thomas Herman Herron and Jaquelin Allen, Phil- more Wilkins and Claudette Traylor. Robert Frison and Siiiricy Up-
Bv RAYMOND F. TISBY"Little people van. do much to
unng about world peace.," believed one of the "little people" in the person of "Retire-Pilerim." the silver
' haired, blue-eyed unidentified "pil- ! grim of peace." who was in Mem- phis last week on the second lap oi her "Walking lOJKX) Miles for
' World Disarmament" pilgrimage.Pence Pilgrim, who will not re-
' veal her name, is from Cologne. N.J and during a visit to the Memphis World office decribed herself
| as one of the "Jittle people" seeking to bring about world pence
Clad In blue flacks and wearing rohlier snt<vi canvas shoes her lath
WALKS FOP. WORLD PEACE _ ‘■Peace Pilgrim.” the spry anonymous native of Cologne, New Jersey. who baa walked more than 7.700 miles the past two years in her peace pilgrimage for world disarmament, Is shown above durin? a visit to the Memphis World office prior to her departure for Nashville, Renee, who walks 103 miles in’ each state ending at the state capitol, said she would hitch hike as far as then walk the
SAVANNAH, Ge. — (ANP> ~ One 1 das training meetings to instruct
the Negro 4-H Club boys and girls who were elected to serve on the newly, oqpuiizd Negro 4-H Club dis-
| trict councils have been scheduled,
according to Alexander Hurst. Negro 4-H Club agent for the University of Georgia College of Agricul-
' lure Extension Service.Hurst said that in these meetings
lie and other state 4-H Chib leaders working with Negro county and home demonstration agents, will give the district officers training in carring out the responsibilities of their respective offices and instruct theta in tlie basic rules of public speaking and purliamentaiy pio-
I cedure,Tlie training will enable the boys
and girls to take a more active j part in planning and conducting
4-H Club activities," lie explainedThe 4-H CluB leader pointed out
ihit the district councils were organized among» Negro 4-H Clubs for the first time last year in order to make tlie Negro 4-H Club program more effective Serving on each of the six district. councils
| in the State is a president, girls' j vice president, boys' vice president, secretary treasurer and reporter. Presidents and vice pesidents or Ne-
[ gro 4-H Club county councils and I Negro 4-H Club State Council also are invited to attend the District training meeting, Hurst said
• a
Glib NewsHOLLYWOOD COMMUNITY ’ CLUB
The Hollywood Community Club [held its meeting at the home of Mr and Mrs Walter Handy, recently with the president in charge. Plana were discussed for the club's
; installation.I The dub was honored on WDIA spotlight program for Uieir dona- tion to the Marcli of dimes. The club will hold its next meeting at the home of Mr. and Mis. Rozcle Jies, loio Hnrrtaon Street.
Mrs. Lorane Bajnger, President, Mm. Viola Houston, secretary, Mm. ■ Joannu Hundy, reporter.
I
pair since beginning ner walks three years ngo, Peace Is In the second lap ol her 10.000 miles pilgrimage Emblazoned on the front'of her blue sweater are the words "Peace Pilgrim" and on the bock "Walking 10.000 Miles for World Disarmament.'' x |
Pilgrim, apparently healthy and well educated,, feels her pilgrimage is a prayer as well as an opportunity to talk with thousands of i>er- fons and draw attention to her message.Hf.lt MESSAGE
peace, you must overcome evil with good, and falsehood with truth, and hatred with love. We plead with you to free us from the crushing burden or armaments—to free ns from haired and fear—so that we may feed our hungry ones, mend our broken dwellings, and experience a richness of life which can only come in a world that 1b unarmed and fed."J^ce.-who said she has seen two
Qf her peace prayers come true, the ending of the Korean conflict and the establishing of a “Secretary of Pence" office (Harold Stassen), left Memphis to hitch hike to Hunting- *"n “nd then walk the 100 miles to Nil shvine. The peaCf MySaverages 25 miles a day.
AKA SCHOLARSHIP WINNER - Min Bernio Williams (left) of 894 Eldridge bepms proudly as Mrs. Georqia Harvey, basileus of the local graduate chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, presents her with o nursing scholarship to the E. H. Crump Memorial Hospital. Miss Williams, a qraduate of Manassas and a junior al LeMoyne Colleqe, received the award at the AKA Beaux Arts Ball Friday night at Club Ebony. — (Staff Photo by Tisby)
Attorney Looby To Be Cited During Negro History Week
NASHVILLE --Progressive, scho- lory of lite Negro in Nashville, Tenn., and the nation.
I Dr. Bertram W. Doyle, bishop of the Methodist Church, will be dinner speaker His topic will be "A
s Philosophy of Race Relations,"
Tennessee State University's History Study Club will conduct quiet hour on the theme, "Negro History m an Em of Changing Human Relations," Ezekiel Bell, a junior of
1 Memphis. IS club president.
larly Dr. Z. Alexander Looby. Nash viUe attorney, will be cited dur-
ing the "Negro History Week" Feb
12-19 sponsored by Tennessee’s Association for the Study of Negrq, Life and History.
Dr. Merl R Eppse, history ana geography department head at Tennessee State University and state director for the association, is directing the activities
Highlighting tile week will be a dinner meeting at Tennessee State where Attorney Looby will be cited for his contributions to the hls-
Bluff City Society Column Next Friday
Due to late arrival, Bluff City Society will appec'r ill Friday's edition. Sorry, but weather is the blame. The Editors.
ENJOY UTMOST SHAVING EASE AND CONVENIENCE
Gillette Super-Speed R AZO CWITH BLUt BIADI DISSENSI» AND STYRENE CASI
"The world situation is grave. Humanity. with fearful, faltering steps,
j walks a knife edge'between complete | chaos and a golden age. while strong
forces push toward chaos. Unless we. the )wople ol the world, awake from our lethargy and push firmly and quickly away from chaos, all that we cherish will be destroyed in the holocaust which will descend.
"This is the way of pence. Overcome evil with good, and falsehood with truth, and hatred with love. The Golden Rule would do as well Please don’t say lightly that these are just religious concepts and not practical. These are laws governing human conduct which apply as rigidly as the law of gravity. When we discrg'ird these laws in any walk of life chaos results Through obedience to these laws this frightened tr.r-weary world of ours could enter into a' period of peace and richness of life beyond our fondest dreams."
Peace can ies no provisions of her own, not even a change of clothes, but vows to "remain a wanderer until niafikind has learned the way of peace, walking until I am given shelter, fasting until I am given food, using money riven me to spread the peace message "
Peace Pilgrim has walked more thaii 7.700 miles in two years (she dian't count the mileage the first year) and walks 100 miles in each state usually ending in the state capital.While here she addressed a student
assembly at S. A. Owens Junioi Collece and read her plea for world disarmament and reconstruction. HER PLEA:
•To the United Nations and World Leaders:
•If you would find the way of(Staff
ia dectars' testi os lassiai graded, 3 eel el 4 w<®»» pt relief ei eervees distress, pie !
Huntington and 100 miles to Nash-
Photo "by TÌsbv > ""
Outside Porch
Kitchen
stopped ... ot strikingly relieved .., pain and discomfort ! 3 out of 4 women got glorious relief!
Taken regularly, Pinkham's re
Get Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound' ? or convenient new
SAFE, NEW, EAST WAT STOPS
BED-WETTING IMnl ublrt rtrevray olM DRY TABS m« Wkul BED-WETTUrG pamM/.Mlb. bM, ■ ■MMy Uck Ne a«tnr»! SevKrt- no njbb-r tiara» or dirt All (or DRY-TABS-«.), S3 M
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MEMORIAL STUDIO889 UNION AVENUE
Designers, Builders A Erectors ot Monuments. Outstanding m a n J years for courteous service and reasonable prices.
PHONES JA. 6-5466 JA. 7-7862
haw. Ronnie Taylor and Barbara Binds,-Dorothy Seaborne and James Crawford,' Loretta Currie and Russell Nickelberry, Addie Henderson and Young Foqg. Willie Hams and Annie Tucker, .and Johnny bfcke and Alberta Woodland.
Bedroom
Bathroom BEST
Article in Readers Digest Reveals Jittery Pre-Menstrual Tension Is So Often a Needless Misery!
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MEMPHIS ELECTRIC COAt 285 Madison Ave. Since 1907
MEMPHIS/ TENN.
PART of a Salad KA NtA» CITY
Do you suffer terrible ncrvcis tension—feel jittery, irritable, depressed-just before your period each month? A startling article in READER'S DIGEST reveals such pre-menstrual torment ia needleu misery in many cases!
Thousands have already discovered how to otoid such suffering. With I vd!:i Pinkham’s Compound and Tablets, they're so much liap- pier, less tense as those "difficult
lieves the headaches, cramps, nervous tension ... during and before your period. Many women never suffer -cren on-the first day.' Why should you? This month, start taking Pinkham's. See if you don’t escape pre-menstrual tension.. .so often .the cause of unhappiness.
days" approach! Lydia Pinkham's has a remarkable soothing effect on the source of such dtrtmss. In doctort' tests. Pinkham's added. At druggist».
eÿy BvWJ docUf
*
1 • FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE!YOUR SEMI WEEKLY MEMPHIS WORLD (FIRST WITH THE HEWS) MAY BE OBTAINED DY VISITING ONE OF THE DELOW' LISTED PLACES:Central Prescription Shop550 Vance Avenue
Shegoe’s Sundry1287 Wilson Street
Thompson’s Sundry Store543 Mississippi Boulevard
Bea’s Sundry & Grill639 Vance Avenue
Cade’s Barber Shop523 Georgia Avenue
Service Drug Company675 S. Lauderdale
Davis Bros. Sundries No. 1 1447 Florida Street
1
Peoples Drug Store1014 Mississippi Boulevard
Gillian Sundry Store898 Florida , ■
Davis Bros. Sundries1246 Florida Street
Unity Cash Grocer No. 91679 Kansas Street
Wonder High SchoolWest Memphis, Arkansas
Golden’s Sundry2533 Park Avenue
Regent Fisheries1251 E McLemore Avenue
East Side Sundry Store284 Tillman Street
Magnolia Sundry Store2037 Boyle Avenue
Sandridge Grocery & Market,1662 Hell/wood Street
Bungalow Sundry Store3092 Cheken Avenue
PhiHin’s Pharmacy793 N -Claybrook
Strozier’s Drug Store2192 Chelsea Avenue
Westbrook Sundry Store718 Wells Avenue
Klondyke Sundry Store1293 Vollintine Avenue
Walls Sundry Store666 Hasting Street
North Side Drug Store1098 Thomaj Street
Alexander’s Sundry Store387 Leath Street
Merriweather Sundry Store330 Jones
Plaza Hotel , j.Calhoun and Hadden
Hill's Barber Shop317 Ayers Street
Wyatt’s Hatt Shop314 Beale
Pantaze Drug StoreHernando and Beale >
McGowen’s SundryVance and Fourth
King Cotton Sundry linden and Hernando
Larry’s Sundry ■ • - • —
BETTER STILL: WHY NOT ASSURE YOURSELF OF RECEIVING THE WORLD REGULARLY BY TAKING OUT A HOME DELIVERY SUBSCRIPTION? 1 YEAR, $5.00; 6 MOS., $3.00; 3 MOS., Sl.SO. Make All Checks, Money Orders Payable To Memphis World, 164 Rauls». , . • > t • jl.
\ 1 _ , 0
V■J
A.V'
1 » MEMPHIS WORLD • Timdoy, Fttoary 7. J9M
Speed-Cooking With Controlled Heat!
Many of you have enjoyed the easy convenience and many savings of speed-cooking “without looking," in a pressure pan that gives ifou automatically controlled pressure, at your choice of 5,10, or 15 ba. But the big news, today, is an electric pressure pan that adds
automatically controlled heat to its already .familiar advantage of selective pressure! There’s never been anything like it, anywhere!
;This newest development means that now you can fry, stew, braise and bill as well as pressure cuuk and cun, all in this new completely different appliance. By setting the heat control at 175 degrees, food can also be Kept serving-hot until needed. This new electric pan can be used anywhere, in the home or in cabins, trailers, cottages or on the patio. Simply plug it into any standard 110-120 ~olt AC outlet and you're ready to prepare dozens of tempting dishes. Laura Wilson, of the Mirro Test Kitchen, has prepared thia special “teat recipe," to demonstrate huw practical the full heat range uf this newest electrical sensation really is. Try it yourself, and see!S 4»“ «—•<»• Mexican Scramble
2 lbs. round steak, cubed ■x 1/4 teaspoon pepper6 tbsps. onions, chopped ' 2 No. 2 cans whole kernel
1 2 tbsps. green pepper, chopped corn (drained)' 4 tbsps. fat - - - 2-1/2 cups tomato juice| 12 tsps, salt t J 1 tsp. chili powderI. Plug in Mirro-Matic Electric Pressure Pan, set Thermo Heat \ Control at 300", to brown meat, onion, and pepper in hut fat. Add Z salt and pepper. ‘2. Add corn, tomato juice, and chili powder.8. Cover and set Selective Pressure Control at “10". When Control V“ jiggles ehange Thermo Heat Control to “10". Cuuk 20 minutes.4. Disconnect pan. Reduce heat under faucet. Remove cover.6. Connect pan and set Heat Control at 212*. Thicken gravy with I 2 tbsps. cornstarch dissolved in 1/4 cup cold water.6. Reduce Heat Control setting to 175‘, to k«ep Mexican Scramble \scrvir.g-hot, without fuithei cuoking.
you re ready to prepare dozens of tempting dishes. Laura Wit. of the Mirro Test Kitchen, has prepared this special "test
Egg Scramble With Soy Tuna Sauce
Scrambled eggs make a quick main diaii and are always a ood nutritious food buy.
In this recipe, lender cooked rice and grqen peppers ad Interesting texture and novel flavor to scrambled eggs The tuna with soy sauce to topping I
EGG SCRAMBLE
sauce is spiked make a tasty
Write Deanor al,til Auburn Are.
iRosalia Scott y.
COOKING HINTS
WITH SAUCEButtered Broccoli
Pear Salad With Grated Cheese Hot Rolls
Chocolate Ice Cream Cookies INGREDIENTS
1 and D3 cups water1 teaspoon salt
2-3 cup uncooked white rue
3tablespoons finely chopped onion1-4 cup chopped green pepper
. ‘ 5 eggs, beaten1 teaspoon salt1-8 teaspoon black pepper1-2 cup milk1, 6 1-3 oz. can tuna fish1, iO 1-2 oz can condensed cream of mushroom soup
3 tablespoons milke
METHOD: Put the water, ltea- spoon salt and rice in a 2-quart saucepan. Bring to a vigorous boil Turn the heat as low as possible. Corer with a lid and leave over this low heal for 14 minutes Re
move the saucepan from the heat but leave the ltd oh 10 minutes?
While the rice cooks, melt Die bacon fat in a large skillet. Add the onion and green pepper Cook slowly, stirring occasionally, until Die green pepper is tender and the union Is tnder and yellow Stir Die 1 teaspoon salt, black pepper, 1-2 cup milk and cooked rice into Die eggs After Die green pepper and onion are tender, pour tlie egg-rice mixture into the skillet over Die
i green pepper and onion Cook over In low heat, stirring occastona.liy,
I until the mixture sets
Wliile the eggs cook, heat together the tuna, mushroom M>up.
J soy sauce and milk
Pelion Keeps Outer Fabrics SmoothUnless slimness blends
figure-flattery and "coolUi." wont make even the must determinedly chic woman happy next summer. Thats why believes Do- vid Morgenstern uf the Pelion Cur- poratlon, the vast increase In Pelion-lined sheath dresses ts almost
equalling the yardage of Pelion which has. for three years underlined a worlitfdl of whirling 'full
skirts.Pelion’s lunch party fur the visit
ing editors attending Press Week,
pointed with pride to Pelion's co- starring role in the current play on the slender silhouette fur Spring and Summer." Used as a subtle do ception to hold the n»irow-<ut ....... ,„rskirt aw from the tummy and |tume has a white organdy blouse
with shaped slenderness was presented it ialter the luncheon.
Among the costumes were:I — .... - 1
Gothe's black silk linen after- : noon sheath with back fullness un- Iderimed with Pelion The dress is
sleeveless with a hirli neckline; the bodice has a close-titling pretend- bolero that gathers into a soft bow .The- lieclhine dips. :ir"tlie back" in" a deep V.
. A bark brown and white flowered costume designed by Arnold fkaasi lor Dressmakers Casuals. Pelion controls the shape of the cropped jacket and smoothly moulds the midriff ol the slim skirt which uses high in back dips down to tlie normal waistline iu front The cos-
Fudge for Christmas! Make it for the family...giveJt to friends. When you make fudge the Carnation way, it’s no chore at all. So easy, and you can depend on the same creamy texture every time you make it with better- biending Carnation. The rich chocolate flavor of this easy, to-make fudge has made it my favorite. Do try it soon.
CRIAMY CARNATION FUDGE
(Makes about 5 pounds). 32 (I ounces) nurthmallowi, dlcsd
1 % cups (large can) undnufod 4 cups semi-sweet chocolate pieces
CARNATION EVAPORATED MILK 1 teaspoon vonllla
4 Vi cups sugar1 teaspoon salt
Combine butter, Carnation, sugar and salt In a saucepan over medium heat. Allow to come to a boll. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring constantly. Remove from heat. Stir in diced marslmialluwi, chocolate
% cup butter
1’/, cupa chappad nuh
.«/k'7pieces, vanllja and chopped nuts. Stir vigorously for about 1 minute or until marshmallows are Completely melted. Pour Into buttered pan. Allow to cool Cut into squat sa,
Armn’e tile egg-rice mixture on a hot platter and pour the tuna mixture over the eggs or top individual serving» of the rice-egg mixture With spoonsful of the tuna sauce
'Ulis recipe makes 6 servings.
filllerEasily cooked rice, hard-cooked
eggs and convenient canned vegetable soup make a tasty casserole. Cook I cup uncooked. white rice, 1 1-2 teaspoons salt afiti '2' Hips water over a low heat for 14 min-
.utes: Add a can of condensed vegetable soup, 1 1-2 cups milk and black pepper Layer this mixture with sliced hard-cooked eggs in a greased baking dish. Top with grated cheese and bake at 350 de- ree F until the cheese about 30 minutes.
browns,
legs and to give a smooth roundness to the hipline. Pelion linings were shown under sheer wool jacket dresses, under linen and slubbed silk. The unfitted waistline avoids a limp, crumpled look by Pelion interfacin’, as does the whole contour bular coat of
of the straight tu- wool, silk or linen
crash.
Ooo ness inance due to Pelion's happy faculty of keeping the outer fabric from creasing, comes via Pelion Interfacing. which lets air circulate all around the body and through the “pores" of this Unique patented tnermo-chemically bonded con
itruction of fibers into Pelion
fact and in appear-
A brief showing of new Spring- into-Summer fashions stressing
Gehing Up NightsIf worried by "Bladder Weaknes«" (Oettm< Cp Nlfbts Itoo frequent, burning or ltib- ing urination) or Strong, Cloudy Urine) due to common Kldnry and Bladder I rrl- taUom, try CY8TEX tor quick, gratltylni, tqwtartlng help. A bUllun CY8TEX tablet« »«ed la past 25 year» prose lately and Success. Ask druggist for CYSTBX under «aUafsctka or money-Pau guaraptea.
with bow neckline, the jacket lined to match.
A pule beige wool .suit by Bellci- aiio, with a semi-fitted htplenzth jacket permanently siiaped by Pelion. The neckline is flatteringly draped into a cuwi-shaped collar that buttons high.
A moulded, semi-fitted coat in heavy wheat-colored silk tweed by Harn- Frethlel, its silhouette Pel-
i lonrontrolled. It has a high single breasted closing; shaped seaming
| its tapered lines.
land low-placed flaps accentuates From the Christian Dior-New
York Collection, a smartly fitted town coat of black and white cot- "on tweed, simply stated, smoothly «haped with Pelion It has three- quarter cuffed sleeves, a wide
I notched collar and jutting cuffed
[ pockets.
I
Two Standbys Used jIn Coffee CreamLouisian A Quickie
In the deep South they like their coffee “stout" and their rice three times a dav This dessert uses both of these Southern "standbys" in a most satisfying way for coffee flavored desserts are irresistible
I This one's made quickly and easily on top the stove. Use your choice
I of toppings: toasted paeans or shavings of unsweetened chocolate
■ Fruit Cup Fried Haddock Tarter sauce
Mexican Com Buttered Broccoli
Hot Bread
COFFEE CREME LOUISIAN INGREDIENTS:
Miguel Ferreras's dramatic white re-embroidered lace evening gown The bodice is draped with a square neckline. The skirt. Hat in front, is shaped at the hipline with Pelion and Hows toward the back in deep pleats.
1 and 1-3 cups water1 teaspoon salt2-3 cup uncooked white rice1 cup milk
Relieve RHEUMATIC Pain* AND ENJOY MORE PLEASANT PERIODS OF GREATER COMFORT ’ If you're (ufferinz the annoying pain of rheumatiam. neuritia. muscle ache«, arthritu. help yourself to greater comfort taat with the proved aaUcylate action of C-2223. Thou- aanda keep it handy use it regular-
ly. Ume »nd time »gain whenever the pain make» them miserable. Many call C-2223 "the old reliable". Price of first bottle back if not satisfied. Today, for pain relief you'll welcome every Ume, aak for C-2223.
PRESCRIPTION TYPE RELIEF FOR RHEUMATIC PAIN
♦. • • :/
f.?.
F”'h be.
1 w.
i&.\
L* fl-
I
1tj
Prepore your hair prop’ely for "lightening
ASK FOR rRi-blRAU
BY I,. MASCO YOUNG FOIt ANT of Die Brave.'' qualified him for NEW YORK Earl Bostic's sell-f
National offer ot g, *6.000 reward to announce who can turn up a genuine 1913 V-Liberty Head nickel will,
! stir up new interest among aniateiir' i (and professional) cum collectors : [ But the truth of the matter land I even Earl will admit this) is that: those who have tlie valuable nickel! in tlifir possession arc not likely b| | want,to part with it. since they're probably‘aware of its value. .
HARIF.M SNAPSHOTS: Bab' k Gonzales, who was among the many | celebs who showed up at Smalls Paradise for the “Count Basie Partv" gave this scribe and several others in our booth a sneak preview uf his new Bob-style platter release The tune, which Bab prefers that we don't name right now. sound': like an even bigger hit Dian his earlier "Be-bo|i Santa Claus" effort. Other celebs on hand at Smalls Paiadlse for the Basie shindig, held on Bill Doggett's closing night at Tommy “Dr. Jive" Smails" ilcW 7th avenue property, included Sarah Vauglian, George Treadwell. Joe Louis and his attractive spouse, Rose. Billy Rowe, Junior Gilliam. Joe Black. Bennie Green and Joe Williams. Publicity man Mike Hall has been bombarded with calls from Lionel Hampton's Harlem buddies, who're anxious Io know if) there's anv truth behind the’rumor that Hamp's quitting the U. 25. A
acres he can't dig
I
salt
1-2 cup beet or cane sugar jfimarshmallows. cut up 1 cup very strong coffee 1-2 pint whipping cream <1 cup I1-2 teaspoon vlnilla Toasted pecans, unsweet ened chocolate or maraschino cherries
METHOD: Put the water,and rice in a 2-quart saucepan Bring to vigorous boil. Turn the heat as low as possible Cover the saucenan with a lid. Leave over thic iow heat M minutes Stir in the milk Cover and cook over the low heat to to 15 minutes Stir frequently The mixure will be creamy. Cover and cool. '
After the mixture cools, whip the e-oam until sUff Stir the yanilla
I into the . ream Fold the coffee and rice mixture Into the whipped
.creamSerie topped with chopped toast
ed pecans, shavings of Die chocolate or maraschino cherries
This recipe makes 8 servings
Fashion ChatAdmirers of Mrs Eisenhower's
gay ¡mod taste in clothes are amused tli'^_daja-lo see how often she is seen and photographed in the Utt die ihristened "Mamie's Folly" «hen she bought it three years ago.
1 In ill id violet taffeta, with a " rhteh-toi*‘med tucked bodice, scoop
ner k and full akirt with a pleated hipline the dress, by Mollie pamis Mrs Eisenhower's favorite designer was one of , those irresistible things to the First Lady, but she was “at>- solutelv sure she’d never wear it.” she has worn it steadily since on gala occasion». Most recently Mamie's Folly was the choice of Mrs Eisenhower for the great Salute to Eiunhower dinner. u.
*
ELEANOR
Hie web of marriage is made by propinquity in Die day to day, living side by side, looking outward and working outward in lite same direction II is woven in space and m lime uf Ute substance ut life itself ."—Anne Mmiuw m "Gift from the Bea."
Dear Eleanor:1 would lite to be a pen pal of
Mr. Sammy Davis, Jr 1 am very fund of iijs singing and 1 like to read about him.
- M C1 am 5 feet, 8 inches all; 36-in.
in bust, and have hips 37-in., waist 26 and I am of a light complexion I am hoping to hear from him or you soon. I am 26 years of age.
Answer: I regret that I cannot give you the address ut Mr Sammy Davis. Jr.
□ear Eleanor:I am an unmarried expectant mo
ther of 17 with no place or home to go to have my baby.
I am wondering if there isa place here in Georgia where I might go for about a month and a half. I will be unable to keep my baby due to the fact that I cannot meet the many needs of the baby. I have no money.
—WorriedAnswer: Much has-been said about
the great need of a home for the unwed exrectant mothers of our croup. But the progress Is rather slow toward actually getting a home
Perhaps one big reason that the move Is rather slow — is the fact that (Ally a few of our babies are asked to be adopted Very few peo- ole want these Babies—mainly because our people have far less mon- “y as family income Quite tlic contrary is true about the babies of Die Caoearian race.
There Is no home here in Georgia •I'here von rn'iv eo Tlie home at Chao'blee is for white girls oniv
Talk vonr nroti'em over with aulh- arjt|ps at Child Service, 44 Eleventh "i here m Atlanta. Telephone AT 5761
top producer ranks and who “discovered" sepia star Junies Edwards, has been in Spain since April of last vear. preparing "PRIDE AND PASSION" for spring shooting. - Norman Grant’ "JAZZ A LA CARTE" with its Saturday night date nt the Shrine Auditorium, was as- i iireil of a capacity crowd bv the unusual advance sales. Ella Fitzgerald., a favorite since her eariv dates with Chick Webb, and George Shearing Quintet, are the
■top attractions of n great bill
MANTAN MORELAND, formerly, an adopted Angeleno, was welcomed back via the eoreen when that fun-packed muslb-jamed film “Ruck | 'n' Roll" hit four theatres Manlan' hasn't bem here in person since he left with his vaudeville partner, the late Ben Cart t several vears ago Outstanding hi the musical 'Rock n' Roll jambnUree are other old favorites ot Ideals. King Cole. Dinah Washington. The Delta Boys .and others
B’LLY WARD and his NOES scored big at the Room, coming here direct from I as Vegas; Singin« Star Billv Eckstine. and Perez Prade were added to the big_'\fazz A La Carte” troupe by Norman Gran7, for the Shrine Auditorium show.
A-traffic stop for 01’ Kolvum Identification: This Is your Harry Lcvette. 4266 S Central Avenue. IjOS Angeles 11. Calif.
the
Rhythin
DOMI- Melody
this month to farm 300 bought in Israel We just Hamp behind a plow .
PEOPLE: Ruth Bowen, wife of Billy Bowen, the small combo leader now playin« at Die Packer Hqjel in Forth Ambov. N J is fast winning a reputation of selling mon*1 houses to well-heeled celebrities | than any other New York realtor Ruth sold Hank Thompson his big apartment building .and recently , sold Willie Mays a big building in i Washington Heights Phllly's pro i minent Mae McCrary was voted out of the Philadelphia Press Club at a recent meeting because she’s nit a member of the working press Ma- j bel Smalls, the Washington. D. C,. vocalist-songwriter who now works in the Pentagon, and who's supposed to wed Hal "Hot Rod" Singer next June, is no amateur in Die show business--same Mabel, one of the original "Cabin Kids," has appeared in several movie shorts, and
' has sung witli such bands as Duke 1 Ellington. Buddy Johnson and Erskine Hawkins as substitute vocalist
DISK N DATA Epic lab-1. anxious to cash lit un Count Basie
.and Joe Williams' current popular)-1 i ty wave, are trying desperately to i come up with anuf'er hit like
I Every Day," Ixil so far have had ; litUe if any luck Nolxxiy knows | 'how haM Jilts.are..to..make aux .I more than Basie, who went hitle'.s j for a number of years- before i
| Evmjjav" A new breadwinning in the ' ' ’ “ ‘ ------ '
i vuy pel Fix Here' in cahoots w Die Golden Keys vocal group West Coast publicist Herman Hill writes to sing praises uf Du- Blair Goqiel
I Singers_ Of Evansville, Ind., who Signed a long-term |iact with UI-',
I Ilan Cumber's Herald Attractions And for right now this "Lowdown reporter is siening off from our 117 I West 4Wh Street, New York City. |
1 location.'
HASrY HEADLINES: - Coast still excited over Look magazine in- > terview “confession by Bryant and Milan of Emmett Till s kidnap-murder. • PETERS BI&TERS welcomed back to Hollywood by star Van { Johnson after 10 years absence j touring capital« in Europe; -1
STANLEY KRAMER, whose "Home dispenser and priced st |1AO,
Dear Eleanor:I am 15 years old and I'm In the
lfli’i grade at schoolMy family is depending upon me
to do something In life I mn good in n't and sewing Who do you advise?
—A F MAii'wer I advHe that v>u do
whatever vnu permnallv fe»l that vhu »ré he«t adapted to There I' ••ood livtn» in sewin’ Peonie don't mind pavlii» for fin" fitted »nd well made varment», And von ran open "p a p^e sh°o ri’ht In v«'ir own 'ionie If pn"‘'il>ip develnn other art- ii-tie tninof that ¡s available tn at .school. * f f f1
HomentO'ierHints
"MEET ME" musicals are com-
INSTANT NONFAT DRY MILK BOTH THRIFTY AND GOOD - This smart young homemaker knows by using instant nonfat dry milk she can cut corners on food budgets with nutrition dividends for her family. Above she is adding on envelope of instant nonfat dry milk to a quart of water. She will use two cups for the Beef Vegetable Goulash recipe; remainder she may store in the refrigerator fur later use as a beverage. (ANP)
Rcipresent All South- TrumanBY I.IH IS LAI TIER I
WASHINGTON. D C-'NNPAi I -Former President Harry S. Tru
man declares that he never be- I heved that the great mass of i Southerners had the same attlude i toward civil rights aS the minority ' Dixiecrat element I
Mr Truman wrote in Ufe maga- I zne Wednesday that most of liis ] followers In 1948 were dismayed of tile threat of a split In tile De- l mocratic party over civil rights i
He said the defection of some | Southern states had been nnlici- ■ pated by him when he took a firm i stand on civil rights i
The splinter opiiositlon, he said. < began on Dec 5. 1946 when he appointed a committee to investigate and report to him on the status of 1 civil rights in this country. 1
After the committee submitted its report to him. lie sent a special 1 message to Congress on Feb 2. : 1948 urging specific civil rights leg- ' ¡station
Mr Truman takes credit for in- cirporatmg his civil rielits recommendations into the 1948 Democratic platform
TIlLs does not Jibe with the facts. ■■ Former Senator Francis J Myers,
and tlie like Pennsylvania, was the chairman <.i. rpsu]utjons committee and
reported a weak civil rights plank. I nP wliclh he said had the endorse-' wuh
ment of Mr Truman.A floor fight led bv Senator Hu
bert Humphrey of Minnesota, Representative Andrew J Biemiller of
i Wisconsin and others resulted in Die adoption of a much stronger civil rights plank and the walkout uf the Mississippi and Alabama delegations
"The platform of a political party is a promise Jo the public," Mr. Truman says. “Unless a man can run on his party's platform-and
Polishes, plastic finislies waxes, non-slip, coatings i should be avoided for ceramic tile floors. The original. tile surface Is ideal from the standpoint of walking safety, sanitation and ease of maintenance. .Special floor treating compounds are never required in the home. Because of,this easy upkeep. a long-range economy is another tile bonus. Once installed, tile needs no remodeling—it will last the life-time of your home. LAUNDRY LOOKS
Most women still do the family wash in the basement But there's a big difference today. No longer a hidden corner, dark, damp and unlighted, todav's basement laundry ’2"
i is surrounded with pleasant prac- | .
try to carry it out if elected he is not an honest man
"To me. party platforms are con^ tracts with the people, and f~i^h ways looked upon them as agreW
ments that had to be carried out. That is why I was perfectly willing to risk defeat in 1948 by sticking to the civil rights plank in my platform "
Some of his advisers Mr Truman states, were anxious to prevent any sort of split in tile Demotratic party, "and efforts were made to soften the approach to the civil ' rights issue i would not stand for any double talk on this vital principle"
Mr. Truman says everv Democratic platform since 193ti "has stressed the devotion" of the Democratic . party to civil Tighs But what aroused the DlxiecraUs in 1948 he assets; was his intention td put this pledge Into practice
When Senator J. Strom Thurmond, then Governor of Soutji Carolina walked out at the I'JM convention with his delegation; Mr. Truman, sa vs. a reporter asked the Dixieéraì candidate or president tiun
that year to clarity his posi-
in« in a series from MGM follow- liC8| materials Bnd equipped with |°f tl”' school system, commanding Ing the gnat success of "Meet Me tldv cninpgtt appliances There's better teachers through higher
salaries, eliminating class-room shortages and increasing instructional supplies and equipment.
Dr Jarrell pin-pointed the Ivey report ami explained Die part that the one one half mills tax increase would play in bringing about 'he improvements which would start us on the way to the kind of schooLs we ulUmately hope to provide for our children.
The Crogman PTA and Pittsburgh Community there represented voted to send a resolution to the Mayor and the Aldermanic Board, requesting them to approve the tax Increase.
. Las V<vas" which Pra'sed good reason for this. When fami- hirblv bv top writers who saw Die lies expand the basement is usual-Imai between ban Dailey and Cyd ly madp lnl0 an a][.purpoge
J'harJene. Dan says: "Where do you roflm Naturallv lhp taundrvthmk we slvild go next year*' tltfoned off at one end. is gTamor- Thut not oniv U-na Horne, but waterproof yet attractive ce- (;ther top sep a musical stars uill rHm|C y|e ¡s extended from the have an oppoilunitv to P^Y^^Ehe room int<) thp |aundryl.w.w «... —----------- - < . .11.,,.- (W... ...W W.V .OU.IUIJ, , .VLA"Meet Me" musicals with famous ¡esg appliances do their jute effi- .„^,ri. n. iht.ii* irwalps is a fore- ....
Atlantic Reroute stable is a named Rev B It crum.ji «os- siiii’it wli<> has waxed "He’ll It For You ano "So Glad I'm
resorts as their locales, is a foregone conclusion. The same policy of many "names" of both races, with a couple of songs or dances will also be continued; adding up to fine variety in entertainment
PREVIEWS OF THE WEEK -Paramount's ANYTHING GOES," I T",” with a special strictly invitational ' ...M minute, you 11 have to screening at mamoth elaborate Wil- ' , h c?or’ the con-tern Theatre, with Bing Crosby 1 ftor ho ,n ’tock' By ordfrin’ 1,1
(in asjjood a voice as he was 20 yrs. a;oi Ore-top star, others were Mitzi Gayqor. Donald O'Connor, Phil Harris. Dorothy Neuman. ArgentinaBrunetti and others.
Incidentally, my targe beautifully embossed invitation followed on RSVP by two reserved seat tickets, could be a lessen to committee on
i the. Langston Law Club, and ..Utt, Pacific Town Club They must have
I ignored or considered It; unimpur* 1 taut ho invite the press of their race David Williams Except for photographers. who came voluntarily, only one sepia re|iorter .a society edy tor. was said to have been present
ciently. Today's laundry has kept pact with modern home design.ORDER TILE NOW
If you're planning to modernize vour kitchen and bath or to install a new outdoor terrace next spring,
I be sure to order your ceramic tile ' as soon as possible. Don't wait until the last minute; you’ll have to
I settle for colors which the con-
quotes Thurmond as agreeing the reporter that President
Truman was only following the platform Roosevelt advocated, but saying, "Truman really meaps it"
“I never did agree that the great mass uf Southerners had Die same viewpoint as the minority Dixiecrat contingent,” Mr. Truman wrote' "I was raised amidst some violently prejudiced Southerners myself, and I believe the vast majority of good Southerners understand that the blind prejudice« of past generations cannot continue in a free republic.
"Much progress in civil rights has been made voluntarily by the South itself, and it was to help and to s|ieed this progress that my program was designed. It was because they understood this that reasoning people of the 11 that had onoe formed the Confederacy did not withdraw from the Democratic party and the splinter party "
Mr. Truman says he Dwight D Eisenhower was "using good judgment" in refusing to run for the Presidency because getting into politics would
(only "detract from his reputa-
join with
told Gen. in IMS he
Looking Hair?' r
Women who know demand
advance you’ll have more than 200 I different colors to choose from,
because the contractor will then have time to order from the factory If your choice is not' in stock.
.. ..J,
Crogman PTA Hears Ivey Study Findings
To an overflow audience in the W. H Crogman Oafetorlum, Mr Jarvis Bams Director of public Per- wnnel for the Atlanta Board of Education, and Dr Ira Jarrell, Superintendent of Atlanta 9choote. told the story of the Atlanta School Systwn based on Dr. John FT Ivey's report. ’ •
Mr Barnes implored his listeners to shoulder their responsibilitv- that of providing the kind of schools we should want for our children.
!
4 ACTUAL MAKEUP FY>r a falwless complexion. Coty suggests 'either of two types ot foundation depending upon individual prefer
ence.SUB-TINT — a creamy all-day
base that comes in a convenient disc form, and evailaile’ in a choice of five comulexion shades'
INSTANT BKAUT7 - tor thoseI who prefer the popular quick-drying liquid form of makeup. Available in a choice of sFx skin tones
To help acquaint women with Coty's beauty plan, all of these preparations will be especially priced it cometlc counters this month. A necia) feature will be a giant size
Oacon of . the Vitamin A-D Lotion that has been fitted with a pump
"There is greatness In ench child," he insisted "Schools exist for the individual rather than the group"
Well vented on the findings of the School Study Committee. Mr Barnes gave a Vivid picture of he condition of the school system. Using slides with his well appointed comments, he told of a rapidly increasing school population and the needs created by it Certain recom
mendations include reorganisation
Want Smooiher, -^7, | Softer, Silkier / W I I • _ M
Many smart, well groomed women know that riuko’ is the perfed hair dressing. Try it your- self. Sec luiw much softer your hair looks, how
itglcams with highlights, how much easier it is■ - • ■» A. _•'-n* — *to arrange. Get 1‘luko and uae it daily. At cos
metic counters. Amber £(!, White only 5ty.
PLUKO“-I...—'—
Congress Of Colored Parents And Teachers In National Meet
MEMPHIS WORLD ’ 6 Moy, ' Msrvory 7, IfM G
KNOXVILLE POLIO QUEENS VISIT ATLANTA — From left are Jock Watkins, WORLD linotypist showing the press to Mrs. Beulah Stephens, Mrs. Elizabeth Atkins, Mrs. Irene H. Bryan and Mrs Katherine I. Anderson, lhe group is from Kno«-
ville, Tennessee. Mrs Bryan is the "March of Dimes Queen" and Mrs. Elizabeth Atkins is the Polio Queen" having wore the titles and the
trip to Atlanta for bringing in fop sums in their respective divisions. r,tr„
Top Winners In Knoxville "L
Polio Drive Visit CityATLANTA. Ga (SNSiIn.Atlanta enjoying the pa:t week
end were charming Knoxville, Tennessee visitors whu received tlie trip tu the Gate City for having participated and won in the collection oi fund; through llii-U' effuits m the Puiio Drive.
Tl.e gioup included Mib Irene II Bryan who was named the ' March
• ol Dimes Queen ’ for the elyurUies
In Knoxville with thirteen churches participating fur which she reported 9311.90 Mbs Bryan, a member of Logan Temple AME Zion church of which Uie Rev H A Cotnicill is
i pastor, was sponsored by_ Mrs.Katherine Anderson who accompanied her tu the city
Mrs Elizabeth Atkins, the ’Polio Queen' foi thi civic clubs, was sputi- iirtd bv the Beauticians’ Lagne
ul Kiuy .ill winning tin title mi remit.nv f4Kü Kg Hu- tuo was ac-
i.umpanied by Mrs Beulah It. Stephens a friend
CHICAGO, Ill —A joint meeting of the Intergroup Relations Committees of the National Congress of Culured Parents and Teachers and he National Congress of Parents
und Teachers met at the NaUonal leadquarters. Chicago, Illinois. Janu ii y 22, 1956 to make progress resu is and revi'e rei ommendauuns u Uie state brunches as .they deal Aiih rapid Bucial cl.xuges atteettng iiitoreri and youth ut the NationHeading Uie two groups were Mrs
Mamye WHiiatns president of the NCc'PT. Florida and Mrs Rollin Brown, president ot tnr NCPT, eatr- fornia Other representatives were From the Nc’PT — Mrs L W Alston, secretary Mississippi. Mrs James Parker, first vice president, Midii.'an: Mrs. Helen larwrence. vice pre'identuf Region 1. Vermont: Ruth A. Bottonily. director of Office uid Admlnstrative Assistant. Chi- eago: Marr A. Ferre managing editor of putdicalions. Chicago; Roe M WiR'ht, Business Manager
Fiom the NCC’PT wen- Mrs Ada larnagin. chairman of Intergroup1 Relations Committed. North Carolina: Jeannetla Chase, secretary, Maryland
Significant Highlights of the National Congrcs of Colored Parents and Teachers included a reversion of and evaluation of their jjy-hws in light of Important changes in our social order; the initiation of plans to award u scholarship to an adult lender for work in the area of parent education'; Plans for a workshop convention for l<>5C in Shreveport. La . in June continuation of plans lor comnilini! a national history; untiiiuanon of featuring sludv uiires in the ullaial organ. 'Our
NhIiuihI Fuiiilly' Ini'rcisiiw la- illlles in lle'lr null"il:l| office head-
'I' "in i' in 1k>"er Di'I'-waieRe|xiils ul Uie National Congress
of Parents and Teachers indicate significant progress in states concerning integration.
Mrs Ada Jarnagin, recently appointed chairman of the Intergroup Relations Coinmitte, to succeed Dr D Cannon Partridge, reported Uiat t|ie states making mumeniuua strides toward integration are Missuun Kansas. D C and Maryland There ij rw dtiu-membership ip tiiese ■tales Many oilier,states have ui- tei-ghH'p eumnilttee£ woikmg toward an tntegiatrd P T a aud uhoul service in accordance with the Supreme Cutlrt dretakm FWafar lias muted Mia Charles I. Williams to become a member of their Intergiuup i'oiitu'il West Virginia. Texas, North Carolina and others conduct workshtips, intergroup meet mgs, and lliey have cow all groups The National Congress of Culured Parents and Teachers recommend- bi-raual gioup meetings to be continued
Incltoied in the recommendations by the Joint Committee were:
1 That each state congress set up group relations committee, and ona______________________
a local l«sb> where needed2 That such committees sponsor
rei'Ularlv scheduled conferences ut which the will
a Assess the existing mt nations in field of group relations
b Plan for future activities on the basis of need
e Stimulate definite programs of action - national, stale and local.
The Report also recommended I* at local parent teacher grou|>s en- coin use school authorities to
1 Expand so Hurt all children will he alien the onuortlinlty to develop the '.kills, Intelligence, mid moral ' I tiriii ter that will enable them to leirn how l<i live niceessfully as individuate and us lamily members loent ehu ks
HONORED GUESTS - Dr. Ra'ph J. Bunche (center), UN Under Secretary General and Charles Abrams (second on right), newly-oppointed chairman of New York State Commission Against Discrimination, were honored guests at a recep lion Monday evening, given by the National
Committee Against Discrimination in Housing. The reception was held at the home of Mr». Walter White in New York. Others in photo art Algernon D. Black, vice-chairman of the National Commitlee, Mrs. White, Mrs. Bunche ond Frances levenson, director of the Committee,
While here they were shown courtesies bv tile Atlanta Daily World which included sightseeing. visiting
I hi.silo ss e tubli'hments and an evening of i ntertalnment.
“,0N THE REEL■ J Published Weekly In Interest of Religious Progreu
■" JT’ -t¡4 Z?>.I
By Rev. Taschereau ArnoldReligious Editor, Atlanta Daily World
k
-i-t- ■ - -p ’GROWING C HRISTIANS , .lulu: the Bapti.l ul John t.ie Bap-
Have you imasiin'd yuiiisell lately, u/ei by your lather ul your mother ui topic ctiier tall peisuu' It you have Devui.1 lew. had been looking yuu have been UituiviUg as mu t 11,1 11,1 I” *-A'" ,ul a lung Dine T hey Jutuurr. du-And many who we nut^'*“1 *" ’" -waitin’! geht-iatlon altei Juniors.
There is something in all of us tath makes u> want tu grow, »spec-
, tally to grow ’’big" physically. W< need also to t ¡ink about growing in our know ledge of God amt uui luve fur Jesus.
Tlie best way to do that is to read your Bible thoughtfully, and try to see exactly what it mean . How does it teach you about God? Is there any thing in it that makes you
• love and understand Jesu ?To begin with you want to study
the Bible reading print'd in your Training Union Quarterly. In addition you may want to take up the books of the New Testament place to start b with Mark, the first. Gospel written and eariest to rend Ikin't try to chapter a day. That is too much for | you realty to think about ami un-! derrtand. A good way to prove to I yourself that, you do understand is to tell someone else, a child if possible in yuur own words what a para-1
• graph means.—Tuneto th» first chapter of Maik ! and bl’s talk about it.'
Vers» 1 is the chapter title Mark has b»en going around with the Apostle Prter and has been led to write down some of the things about J»sus that he has heard Peter say and h»s seen him do They will be needed after Peter is dead and there j is a generation of people who did ! not ki.jw Jesus and His disciples in person.
In the early days authors of books not only save a title to their work but ouoted a poem that gave a clue to what they were going to say Mark does this very thing in verses 2 en13. T'ese verses tell of a forerunner, a person God will raise up to nreech and vet peonle’s hearts
— ready to underhand «nd love Jesu' This verv important person was
A good It was Ba Un l ead a
, eneiatloii II was Johnson's place j to U li tin hi tu accept Him as l ie I ’mil ul (tod and tile on? whom God ha .'sent a; their King and leader.
The story Mark tells, then. actually begins with verse 4 For your Irist n .iftmg-yuH might take verses I to 8 What do they teh ul John? It you will turn to Luke 1:81). you will see why he looked and ate as he did. Perhaps the wilderness in which he lived was the very one in which Je us later was tempted no one can be sure about that, but it is interesttrg to wonder, isn’t it? See. how many things you can find in i.n i day's reading to Wunder about
I
I-AMILI BIBLE
tty Edgar A. Guest
Other books we gave away,Lent to Hunds or tossed aside
B it lor condort day by day,On the Bible we relied.
Old ' we called It. Ours it stayed. There for all who wished to see
None, and dates of birth displayed As our lamily history.
Now it stands up my shelf. Mine to cherish while I live.
I V" bought others for myself, Some to keep and some to give
T at's the Bible mother read. That’s the record father penned
That's the Bible at her bed. Kept and treasured to the end.
In the family may It stay.This mv hope when I have gone
That, as I, try children mayTo their children pars it on.
And that’s that
and to make a living tor themselves and others
2 To eqaullze personal and physical facilities of sc'hkiI systems in the form of transportation, building and instructional equipment, in order that such expanded rurrieiila niav be fiiltyto'llei live —=«
Tile joint eummiltee plans In iii*t «oshi hi Jaiiuaty, 1951
Boy Scouts Mark 46th Birthday
MARRIAGE for THREEBy Elizabeth Seifert
< Hh'Ailo < INS* Drifting snow cuiitiiiunl to pile up in tire Texas paljluilidle and Southeastern New Mexuu today and mow accompanied
■freezing ram in OklahomaWind ot 45 miles per hour caused
numerous accidents in Texas and New Mexico. Snow plows had difficulty in clearing snow which piled as in h as three feet in many sections.
Amar.Ilo reported two inches of .How and most ot Texas shivered in top-coat weather ar tar south as the
i (lull id MexicoRain tell earlier today from the
(i ll states to Southeastern Ohio with '.lei t accompunylng the rain in Northern o.'no and Western Penn- •ylvania
I lie lest of the iiallun. however, rnjuyed sunny skies as tenipeiatures leuuuied in the 30s ond 40s Florida had aliolhti warm day with laiii|>a renirdlli ga IikIi ul til deeiees
Alabama Lulu.¡alia and Eastern Keiitiu H were hit hard early today
mure Uia nan iiii li oi rain.
NAACP’S TUURGOOD MAR- PHALL, addressing an overflow crowd of more than 2.030 as keynote speaker for the opening of the Memphis NAACP’S membership drive Thursday at Metropolitan Baptist Church, said the "stage of peace and quiet" by the NAACP is over with the "other side' having now revealed their
| "hole cards" and promised legal action avainst all states that re
fuse to move toward compliance with the Supreme Court ruling,
Mr Marshall outlined the NAACP , goal as the eliminations of all laws ! requiring segregation and prohibiting rights. (Staff photo by Tisbyi
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Get a large bottle of Crcomulsion at ybur drug stored For children get milder. tasUer Creomuhion for Children in the pink and blue package. Adv.
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/ * MnmtuM Hur '
•l0JA’25C iÿORouié* SIMM .NMC,V'C—
»VMII'SI«Bunlnf** »rtvtte'F tiU'l tuf-td Adadi '
I -ten d lv »pH lltr I it r u h f e t.jtl hiilll K«‘!UirllV Mt- iH l"i Ann | hl» til hit* I tiliHlipk in flip Blliull »lull I
| iiiritl h< wltiili Ibr l.iii'ilh ItHtl iliinrtl I Ann l«iiind kjIu t* in lolniihM-i wuik »1 Ut»* hi'al En»*»pTfai H»*ir <iiF iiipI l.»i AiMxamlH t nut I'm hHiipilv manipd ii.Mil ul ttirul ('liHitii' wtllt wlinrn fuhid vh\ ♦it’ilh fall in mv»* AiIhiii j<h> IiriI fotutd up* ditPiihm in Hip datk dji'Miiiit ppi'iuii -I I.ni»)» Van •rfanl » liune un Hip hfs|»tl»l «Ud The I.R.IrdH iiiRiital ipliitirin* l»n«m» hadh sUained 'iniil Hi«’» found i n»*» in tHfM tn tuiildiiiR a if* nomp In rHhPi Hnl I .Ind» VanSuiil footi ilia l. il»d fl.« n hope of i<« ti'p in lhai «ihhI.I liavrii Ann in qulH mite wab lied liplpkewlv »? Linda uurgued her bu» bMii<1 «fliemiriH (oi time and at (enflon Then one d»v l.lnda over •lepped a? inuat camblen du She hinted Io Adam (hat he break with Ann and wed t.ei It wa» a FUfRteMlori whldi |pnt thl» fiirhtened hueband (tinvina prof lively homeward tu tils
wile AmL_fLniyldGnre furihei inter <»»ned by laklnr ihe l^hda off lu New M«*'bo whiTp Adam would work uu a government lot'
/ ( HAPTER KLEVKNTHINGS had been gating a little
out ot hand for Ann al the hospital From the first she had liked the chief surgeon tar loo well She was too much aware ot mm. His physical presence disturbed ner deeply. She was always trying to please him, and not In any Impersonal way.
She said things, and did things, with Curtir approval alwayr in view. She had called nim Cartw first tn her thoughts, then once she shyly spoke the name at a time when they were alone. He was driving her home from the hospital—
Because hia wife was so utterly careless about her appearance, Ann increased her natural tendency toward neatness to a meticulous attention to all Items ot good grooming, ner skirt hems, the set of a jacket collar, the crispness ot ner blouse and gloves. The suit which Adam admired, and the little white hat, had been selected, she acknowledged with a guilty blush, tu attract Curtis Alexander's at tentiun, to win his admiration.
He'd voiced that admiration, and she'd gone about lor days with her teet eighteen inches above the floor. Of course, he Knew that; his was a keen and diagnostic eye. His smile had taken on a slightly different quality, which increased Ann's "excitement." She called her feeling that, afraid to put a more honest name to IL
He talked to her Intimately of his family problems. "1 want a son -any man does—but Mary doesn t do too good a job with tW girte. There's nothing wrong' with Sally and Mollie that a good firm Tio' wouldn’t handle. Mary does a lot Ot talking about emotional blocks and that sort of thing—but It's all talk. The girls are growing up like little savages."
During the past summer, "Mary" had taken the children east to a college where a euthenics course was being given; Ann didn’t know much about It except that the doctor snorted In derision whenever tie thought ut what bis wife was
duiug al a time when she was needed at ttyme His n.uthei had sufleie.l a sti.ifi'eTnd l.afi tv be hospitalireo then moved to a nursing home
She wont live lung It only I could make hei l«*l Weeks happy m my uwn home!"
Ann tried toTisten without teel Ing too much Bui she agreed with the big doctor, and <ouid nut help sympathizing deeply And hei reeling came through, ot < nurse
Curtis had every reason, it nut a right, lu luuk elsewhere lol worn aniy comfort and undeistanding
Ol cuuise, Arm was Adam's wile, and luid no light lu utter consolation to another man She had warned hei sxll s bundled limes- su it was with relief when die told fir. Alexander that she must give up her woik at tl.e Hospital be cause she and her husband were moving to New Mexico. She had to gel awav and Hie sooner the better. _____
He stood gazing down al her, a big min in a fine suit of dark blue Shantung. Ills eyes were wise, ms mouth sensitive. "I'm sorry," he said deeply.
Her eyes darkened, and her lips trembled a little. "I am, too,” she said breathlessly.
"Is that why you are going?" he asked.
Ann's lips parted as If she would speak.
"You don't need to run away from me, Ann,” he told her.
She turned away, stopped. He saw net head lift, her shoulders straighten. "I do need to," she said tensely.
He came on into the little office and closed the dour behind him He put, his hands on het arms, turned her so that he could search her face. "We could . . ." he began
She shivered. They could! She knew full well that they could, but—
"I don't want to,” she said pas sionately. "I mean—I want to be good, to do the right thing! (’lease let me, Curtis? Please!"
She was asking tor help. For strength where she was weak.
All the rest of her life Ann Laird wu to think of Curtis Alexander, to speak of him, as a fine, good man. Because, on that morning, he drew her gently to him, he bent gently and kissed her cheek. And released her.
"You’re exactly what you want to be," he said so.ily in hia deep voice. He stood very still for a moment, looking at her. Then he opened the door and went out
She was doing the right thing, she told herself emphatically as she walked home from the hospital that afternoon. The only tight thing. Dr. Alexander had his wife and his family. His obligation wu to them. Just u Ann's wu to Adam.
The difficulties which existed tor all ot them were not hopeless, they could be cleared ‘ up-or al least
k-pl «mall Dr Alexander prof»- aiilly could not tore» his invalid niulhet into his home, but lie could make Mary diisa more neatly, and do a liettei |ob with the gula
As lot Anns piohlems. she and Adam would stall utresli in Sauls Fe They d establish a home And have children.
Adam seemed agreed on that He hail mannged. lie told himself, to pull hiinsill tbijrthri Jusl aa he had hoped. Ins tevri about Linda had subsided That episode was over.
• • •
It was rally spring before Uiey got off tur New Mexico, what with a ceitlflcatlon tor Adain a Job, the FBI check and the disposal ul their udeieals tn Kennerly.
They went west by tram, deciding to buy a car after they gut to New Mexico Ann sat with her nose pressed to tlie cold windowpane. gazing in fascination at the mountains which she was seeing for the first time, excited to identify the white streaks and stippling as snow. It was April! She was swed by Uie general green and red tones of the landscape, the tumbled rocks, the sparse vegetation.
“D'you like it?" Adam asked her.
She didn’t turn. "1 don't know. It's different "
They had to change to a bus at Lamy-Santa Fe was the capital but had no direct train service.
"Wow!" said Adam at their first sight of the city nestlod on the mesa with the mountains rising grandly behind It.
"Where's L>s Alamos?" asked Ann.
The driver turned III his seat "You folks for the Project ?" lie asked.
"Yes." suid Adam, "but we'll live in Santa Fe."
"Oh, construction, eh?""That's right?’The driver slowed "Ix»s Alamos
is oir up the-road," he told them. "At night, .you can see It plain. But now, If you look where I’m pointing, yuu can see lights winking—probably the sun on al) those glass windows they got up there."
"We make windows out of glass in Missouri, too," said Ann crisply.
’’Yeah, but wait'll you see them windows!"
The bus driver wore a rolled brimmed Stetson and tight jeans. Ann sat back in the seat and sniffed. Missouri wasn't all bad.
Th< quarters which had bean provided for them turned out to be a half ot a low adobe duplex, ft was a "cute" place, and very small. The living room and bedroom were of fair size, the bath wu a cubby with a shower and the other fixtures packed into a tiny space. The kitchen wu so small that Ann had to step Into the living room if she opened the oven door. There wu a small service porch, big enougl for a garbage pail.
Adam usured her that it would do -and want off to lx»s Alamos.
; (To Bs ContmaadJ
46 us AMMUfftSATtv 1956
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA
(H FICHI. BOY SCOUT WEEK POSTER
Mme 11 .an 4.100.000 Cub Scouts. Boy Scouts, Explorers, and adult
• leeders throughout the nation will observe Boy Scout Week, February ti to 12. mat king the 4Cth anmveisary of the Buy Sc«'uts of America
Since 1910. Scouting has served g-inwr 24.500.1)01) boys and adult J
leadeis.The new Fonr-Yeui Program,
"Onward for God and Mv Country," is launched in 1956 to help
in today's wuild and to prepart them to carry their full shait in the years ahead
Bov Scout Week observance will feature rededication cefe> monies to be conducted by each of the nation's 104.000 unite at their meeting places on February 8, the actual bn tliday of Scouting in America Demonstrations and exhibits will drama-tizc the purposes of the Boy
uy. is I..mu ni'u in i:>ou m unii'Scouts of Ameiiiu and its rich prepare Annina's buys tu livallientage
plan for gradual Integration of colored and White pupils in its public schools.
Moncure .¡aid he acted at the re- qui.'t of 'the good people of Arlitig ton." Two memb»rs ol t’'e Arliiiz ton delegation. Mrs. Kathryn H Stcne and C. Harri'on Mann, promptly condemned the Moncure move.
Mrs. Stone charged that “Mr. Mnncuro's comments reveal that, his intent Is purely punitive." Mann said h» was certain the Arlington delegation would oppose the bill.
Moncure deportmented from a reneraily followed custom v.irich leaves the Infroduotion of loeaU bills to renrcscntatlves of the hren affected. His bill is co-spnnsored bv thirty-six of his colleavr«''-'
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Plan To Penalize Arlington County Set In Motion
RICHMOND. Va INNPA) - A plan to pfte.li/.e Arlington County was set in motion Monday when Delezr.te Flunk P. Moncure, of Stafford, introduced In the House of Delegate» a Trill to take away iron the people of tha* count’' the light to elect their sci.uoi board.
The Atlii’gton County School Board is the only one in the entire state that is elected by the voters Others, generally, are appointed by trustees who are named by. circuit judges? who themselves are elected by the General Assembly
The reason behind the move to nenahre Arlington County is that «48 school board Is the only one ir. the state which has aaoouaced a
| Horses must wear hats In Buenos Aires during the summer, according to a muncipal decree. Draft horses must oiiserve an eight hour day and get Sunday off
I. POSNER. Inc. Ill
th
Le Moyne In Last HomeGame Fri. Vs. Miss. Voc
The LeMcyn“ College M'td Muni- • the fcllowin,' week on the roao. The clans will end their home season on ' ’ Friday night against Mississippi Vocational CoHeae of Itta Bena. The Purpl- Waves were scheduled to entertain Tougaloo College last night (Monday) at Bruce Gym.
LeMoync will continue its season of a mixup in scheduling.
four-game tour includes contests with Tougaloo, MVC and Mardi Oras weekend «imes in New Orleans With Diilard and Xavier Universities. LeMoyne’s game with Xavier here last week postponed because
II
Gipf 1955, Kinj Fmiu.-« SaJ>oic Im.
Order Ala. U. Dean(Continued from Page One)
QUICK/WE'RE ENROL' 'NG AS
VOLUNTEERS TO HELP THEHEART FUNP on
HEART SUNDAY FEBRUARY Z6I!7
half of the closing session, the Dons had a 28 point lead, 59-31
Russell was not high point man
out. the Ne-
RAIN FAILS TO HAMPER
SAN FRANCISCO - (INS) — University of Son Francisco's Dons, the nation's top-ranking team, ran their string of unbroken major basketball wins to a record 42 Friday night.
. • ‘ iThe 42nd. victim of the Dons was
Loyola pf. Los Angeles by a 68-46 score.
■f he Dons, with their al) American {although he collected 14 markers in center Bill Russell playing almost flawless defensive ball in snagging rebounds, Jumped quickly into a 12- 0 lead in the opening minutes and lengthened it to 24-4 midway in the first half which ended 35-22.
Before Coach Phil Woolpert took Russell and his other all-America candidate Casey Jones out of the lineup, after they bad played only
the first half and only two in the second for a total of Ki points. High point honors went to Don forward Carl Boldt with 20.
Loyola’s top man with 12 was guard Dave Benaderet, leading scorer of the California basketball association.
A capacity crowd, of nearly 6.000 Jammed Kezar Pavilion for the game
Manassas Hi OutclassesDouglass Hi Cagers, 73-59
BY BILL U’CTLE
■Hie Manassas Tigers slashed the Douglass Red Devils 73-59 Thursday night in the Tiger's Gym to get the second half prep league schedule underway. The surprising Tigers finish in second place in the first half of the
Tl’.e 'Tigers only loss was hands of halfway. champs T. Washington.
Douglass’ Elbert Parrish 26 points to take Icoring hov.wer, the Tigers’ threw balanced attack against the Red Devils with three players hitting for 15 or more points.
Jimmy Bullocks. • and Sylvester Ford led the Manassas attack with 19 markers each. Mnrvln Doggett
loop race
at the Booker
tallied honors a well
High Flying Owen(Continued from Page One)
Pos.FFC
GG
Okalona 38 Brooks 10 Thomas 6
. Anderson IPanean 9
Rosenburg 4 — Moore, 3; 4: Payne, 11;
Birmingham World, accompanied i Miss Lucy during hw whirlwind registration Wednesday. She was
1 rushed through the paces with a ; police escort. ,'
2; Harris, 2:
Soon after the young Library Science major was told that she would not be allowed to live or dine with white students, Editor Jackson told reporters thé young lady would seek a court order for her.admittance to
• - | A-v- g"all tttf rights of a student."
you do see it as it swishes throughthe hoop.Owen 1(5 Kelly 6 Lott 29 Lawshe 20 T. Becton 12Lane 8 ........
Substitutes: Owen _ Hunter. 6; Freeman,
Young 6.Okalona Collins. Gates, 1; Darten; Felix.
The Owen College cage Quintet then traveled to Holly Springs, Miss. Thursday night (February 2). to meet (and> beat the Rust College Baaketeers the second time this will represent Miss Lucy Thursday season. The Hornets gained the victory by an 86-77 score — though behind at halftime 40-41 (The Hornets’ Rust "Cousins" were un
successful in their first bid for victory January 24 whe nthey were by a 73-62 score)
Arthur Lawshe. one of the recent additions to the squad, outdid "Long Tom” Lott by 10 points. He duplicated Lott's Tuesday night feat aaginst Okalona — by swishing the nets for 29 points. Rust's Marble took second place scoring honors with 22 points. Lott managed 19 points. ' *Owen 86
Arthur D. Shores, attorney for the plaintiff throughout the years of litigation, filed the complaint and
DENIED ADMISSION
7"The university denied admission to another party in the case on charges that she, a divorcee, and mother of a young child, is of Unsuitable conduct. Clarification of the reasons for denying admittance to Mrs. Polly Myers Hudson have not been published. She. however, threatens to bring another suit against the university and the dean of admissions.
Pos. Rust 77
Mrs. Hudson, a well-known social figure here and for lometime society editor of the Birmingham World, attended Miles College here and was a classmate of Miss Lucy.
include anything we might have missed in the other laws."
Opponents, Marshall pointed are spreading the rumor that NAACP doesn’t represent the groes.
' We don't represent them all. but we represent a darn sioht more of them than the daily press does.”
II'- said. We have the NAACP members, the Negro Masons, the Negro Methodists—all three groups: the Negro Baptists, all 18 groups. If that many Negroes in each state are for desegregation, who’s left?"
“They say the Negro doesn't want desegregation. How can anybody with a straight face sav Negroes don't want integration? How ran they say a human, intelligent being wants somebody to keep his foot on his neck?”
COLD SUFFERERSCOLD diMomfort« yield quickly to STANBACK'S protcription formula. STANBACK tablets or powdtrt work fait to bring comforting relief from tired, .ore, aching muiclet, nturalgia and headachri du« to coldi.
F... F .
C G G
Marble 22 . Banks 19
Slate 21 Scarborough 4
Richardson 8 *- Freeman, 4;
Marshall then proceeded to debunk the argument that “Negroes aren't ready for integration" with the assertion that "the Neero has been ready for integration since the first one laid 'down his life for hif country. If the Negro could integrate his blood on the battlefield iie can integrate in Tennessee ”
Marshall, who said he was “bom up South” in Baltimore. Md, declared that some sav the Negro is not educationally qualified and added that “little" Gloria Lockerman, from Baltimore, did al) right on the $64,- 000 Question” ani in pointing out that she was a “product of a Jim Crow School" avowed "God know; what she would have done if she had been in an integrated school.” ,
"The school boards admit that Negro schools aren't up to par with white schools but they say they are rorry they can't admit colored kids because they are below standards."
In another of his significant, yet hutnorns statements, Atty. Marshall said the run around of some school board members reminded him of “a friend In Texas who killed his father ani mother and then pleaded for mercy because he was an orphan."
A solution to this problem was suggested by counsel Marshall who declared, "I say test the children fair and square. Then put the smart Negroes with- the smart whites, the dumb Negroes with the dumb whites and inbetweens with the inbe- tweens."
“They say Negroes have a high- disease rate. Records show maybe this Is true. Negroes often can't get the health service provided others htrauae they don’t have the-money . Let’s give tests and put the healthy Negroes with the healthy whites, the unhealthy Negroes with the un
with the iubetweens. We want no special fvvor. Just don t use riu-e as a base."
Pointing up the fact aht any white man “be he rapist, perpetual criminal or a traitor" is able to go to any hotel in a city as long qs he has the. money" while a man "like Ralph Bunche can't go to a certain hotel,’ he asked, "why is this?"
"Why should the Negro bp excluded from everything good? Certainly not because of color. Walter White (late executive secretary of the NAACP) was blond and blue-eyed.
"It couldn't b° because of previous condition of servitude for there are no people in this country who do not have slavery in their background if you go far back enough.
"The only reasoh for this"’ as Mr. Marshall saw it, "is somebody has to Ire a whipping boy and the politicians need the Negro for their whipping boy."
"My Bible.“ the NAACP counsel said, "says if you,are hit on the left cheek then turn the right one. After that you are on your on."
"We were waiting for the other sle to show their hole cards. They have and we are prepared. The period of peace and quiet has passed, i oraNe action onthe railroad request Whichever state continues to defy ' '''the law will have to answer in court.
We have the other side licked. Th“ only way they can be successful is to split us down the middle They are going to try it . . fools that they are . . . but we will fight them; in every alley and thefrbring them down the main road to face the man (Supreme Court) and he will say, •yoq’re out.' "
"We wil! iinisn the fight we started in 1951 and not for one moment will we deviate from our goal," Attorney Marshall avowed. /. •
• M. Marshall also pointed out that the NAACP will njeet Saturday F"bruary 18. in. Atlanta. Ga., ’Talmadge’s front yard," in a conference of NAACP state presidents In 17 Southern States.
SKIRMISH - Tennessee State University freshman forward Richard "Skull" Barnett, (No. 35), dribbles his way out of a situation as he is surrounded by Jackson hardwood men Forward Jesse Downey (No. 3), Georqe Smith, (No. 10) and Center Guy Orlinger, Jr. (No. 14) - (Photo by Clanton III)
Benson Asks ICC To Suspend
I WASHINGTON. D. C. - Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson today peitioned the Interstate Com- merse Commission to suspend an application of the railroads for a 7 percent inn ease in freight rates with respect to raw and processed farm products, farm supplies, and fish.
In his jretition to the Commission, the Secretary emphasized that fav-
income from non-farm sources was larger.-incom« per capita of nonfarmers rose 48 percent.
Lincoln Univ. Grads Enter Med Schools
Newsprint SillMade Into Law
QUEBEC,—<1 N 8)—The upper chamber of the Quebec Legislature today passed into law Premier Maurice Duplessis’ Newsprint Control Bill.
Kelly 111 Lott 19! Lawshe 29 .Moore 10Lane 10
Substitutes: OwenBenton. 1; Payne; Hunter. RustJames. 2; Peters; Alexander; Holmes healthy' whites" and the" inbeïwrëns
"We ask the support of all Americans who believe in what we believe, excluding only Communists and the Ku Kluv Klan. There is room for everybody on the bandwagon, but remember there is room for only one in the driver's seat and that is the NAACP!”
Dr J. E. Walker presided over the meeting. Others appearing on the program included the Rev. S. A Owen, church pastor; Atty H. T. Lockard, branch NAACP president: the Rev. D. 8. Cunningham, mem- beiship drive chairman; Atty. A. W. Willis, Jr., life membership chairman. ar.dthe Rev. D W. Browning. program committee chairman.
A delegation of Mississipiana, Including Medgear F.vers. Mississippi NAACP field llrector, also attended the meeting.
I would, to the extent of the increase, nullify concerted efforts now being made to relieve the farm producers' difficult economic condition.
threw in 15 to enabled his mates to breeze tq victory.
The night’s biggest surprise was Douglass' upset conquest over Manassas in the B game. The Manassas B ^quad was previously undefeated. The loss throws them into a deadlock for the league lead
'with Washington
' This week’s games send Wash- | ington against Manassas to-night at Manassas Hamilton will open play in its newly constructed Gymnasium to-night also as they
1 battle Douglass. Thursday's action
pits Washington against hard luckA St. Augustine on the Warriors^ court. At Manassas the Tigers are
'set to match baskets with Kjpl- jroac.
j Manassas (73)POS.F. Rayford 2F. Simpson 4 C. Ford 19G. Doggett 15
Douglass (59)
i Parrish 25 Bankhead 4 Klncaide 10 Bullocks 19
Shaving Is Slicker — Blade Changing Quicker
The measure requires Quebec news print producers to continue to supply domestic consumers at last September's price level. The law cancels ,u $4 to $5 u ten increase imposed at that time.
However, the price increase to American consumers remains as be-
, for-. The bill does not regulate prices to be charged to American newsprint consuméis.
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pa. - According to figures recently published by the Association of American Medical Colleges, sixteen graduates of Lincoln University were admitted to American Medical Schools in 1954. Three were admit
The p“tition referred to the President’s State of the Union.. Message of January 5. which stated that:
"Our farm people are not sharing as they should in the general prosperity. They alone of all major groups have seen their incomes decline rather than rise.' They are caught between the two/ millstones — rising production i costs and declining prices. Such
ted to foreign medical schools.
The total - nineteen -sets 1 new annual record for graduates of this small Pennsylvania College long famons for its prodution of ministers and physicians, for medial school admissions in any one year. Enrolling only one third of one-percent of all Negroes In American colleges, Lincoln continues tonmvs aim urcimiiij’ prices, such ----- - w
harm to a part of thr national I contribute from seven to eight per-
economy so vitally important to everyone 1» »f great concern to us all."The Secretary pointed out that
siKi; tally 1946, the railroads have I obtained II general freight rate in- j ci eases, Tiie increases which applied I to agricultural products totaled 63 percer.t. During the same period — from July 1946 to Dec-mber 1955 — prices received by farmers for thefr products fell 8 percent, while prices paid by farm operators fell 29 per-
j “ent in the nine-year period While jver capita net income of fanners fro mail sources rose 8 percent from 1946 to 1955. chiefly because their
cent-25 times its numerical expectation - to the select group of medical college admittees. (One of the 1954 admittees was a white graduate).
Memphis Area News(Continued nom Page One)
ing Ford Ndron’s "Hallelujah Jubilee’’ program presented 120 dimes to the polio drive.
Mrs. Flora Ellison is club president and Mrs. Ruby Williams, secretary.
you are tolerating a lot that isn't right along the way."
About 27 percent of New Orleans' Catholic school children are Ne-
I groes.They have been attending sepa
rate schools.
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1. THE COOPERATIVE INTERCOLLEGIATEEXAMINATION
J
A
■ 9
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Catholics Shout(Continued from Page One)
Catholic schools here this year.His remarks came following a pa
nel discussion at Ursilino Academy on integration, a topic that split up a meeting of the Parents Club at Jesuit high school two weeks ago and is becoming a hotter issue every day.
Msgr. Paluche said the timing of the Intergration was under study and ’no definite decision has been made." He said, however, “it’s very possible, that it may come this year.”
The chancellor said the church had tolerated segregation through the ages because “often when you're working for an ideal that's right,
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LEMOYNE COLLEGE OFFERS $14,000 IN SCHOLARSHIPS TO HIGH SCHOOL SENiOR
* • *
The Awards Include:Eight Full Tuition Scholarships Renewable Up To Four Years! Four Full Tuition Scholarships Renewable For The Second Semester!Thirty Three Partial Tuition Scholarships Renewable For The Second Semester!
PROCEDURE FOR COMPETING FOR THE AWARDS:. t. • H * rl • 4 ’ " , ' *
A Student Who Wishes To Compete For These Scholarships Should Arrange To Take Two Examinations.
The Student Should Secure An Application From His Principal Or Advisor Before Feb. 10, 1956, And Arrange To Take This Test And Have The Score Sent To LeMoyne College.
e
CHILDREN or ADULTS Can Furchase CIRCUS TICKETS From Any High School Student For Nite Performance For Only
5fc - Wc59sFill» Hlg*’ School Ski ing Most Ticket*
will Receive »REt WESTINGHOUSE CONSOLE 2R T.V. SET
2. LEMOYNE COLLEGE’S ENTRANCE EXAMINATION
This Examination Will Be Given At The College At 9 A. M. On
April 14. No Prior Application Is Required To Take This Examination. — /
Any Quezon« May Be Directed To Rev. John C. Mickh Chair
man Of The Scholarship Committee, At Whitehall 8-6626.
I
■V
SPORTS OF• I • '
THE WORLDBY MARION E. JACKSON
Seldom in sports history has athletic been mairea" by olf-the- playing-field hostility by spectators against coaches, owners, and a governor. Hangings in effigy last year were open season stuff. Losing coaches throughout the U. S. were assailed with public demonstrations. In Georgia, the governor wos lied neck fashion by the neck and left dummy fashion dangling from o lamp post. The owner of the San Francisco 49ners and his coach Red Stroder were given the treatment. Statistics reveal that approximately 26 cooches were posse-strung by sports vigilantes.
Mbck violence against losing coaches remind me (hey share the •e fate as baseball managers
tv'they have ttjp material they are r/pniuses When they don't, they are hums.
Ox Clemons often enthrall Asteners with a story on the thesis coaching versus material. Al a young coach boasting a string of successes al Edward- Waters College he iitok over the tnpklck spot al Rust College In Mississippi There he heat the britches off South Central Conference rival* and finished with an unbeaten season. Clemon tells: “I was flushed and
happy over beating such teams as Mississippi Industrial, Tousaloo. Jackson College. Alcorn A and M etc. and told my president I wanted io play one of the real |>ower- houses.’’
FEB. 4-11Monday, February 8
Alabama State vs Bunehte Alabama State vs Bethune Cook
man, Daytona Besch. Fla.Tougaloo vs IeMovne, Memphis.
Tenn.Morehouse vs Fort Valley, Ma
con, Ga.Benedict vs Florida A. and
Tallahassee, Fla.Tuesday. Feb. 7
J Benedict vs. Clark. Atlanta. | Alabama State vs Florida AM. Tallahassee. FlaWednesday, February 8
Benedict vs. Tuskegee. Tuskegee. Ate
Fort Valley vs. Knopdlle, Macon GaThursday. February 9
Benedict vs. Morris Brown. Atlanta. Ga
Fort Valley vs. S C State. Orauge bury. S. C
Miss. Vocational vs. Lane, Jack- son. Tenn
Alabama State vs. Talladega, Talladega. Ate.Friday, February 16
Fisk vs MorrisGa
Morehouse vsMontgomery. Ala
Fort Valley vs.8 C
Knoxville vs Bethune Cookman, Daytona Beach. Fla
Grampllng vs. Tuskegee, Tuskegee. Ala
Xavier vs Florida A and Tallahassee, Fla.
Mississippi Vocational vs. Moyne, Memphis, Tenn.Saturday, February II
Clark vs Morehouse, Atlanta Knoxville vs. Florida A tuid -M,
Tallahassee. FlaGrambling vs. Tuskegee, Tuske
gee. AlaFort Valley vs. Benedict, Colum
bia. S. C.
M,
Crfl and
Brown. Attenta.
Morris Brown Wolverines mp Xavier Sold Rushers 91-TO-75
Alabama State.
Allen, Columbia.
BY JOEL W. SMITHThe Morri»' Brown College
Purple Wolverines swept back in the win column Satuiday nite by cruising to a 9175 victory over the Xavier University Gold Rush eagers, in a fast moving game played at the Joo louis Gymnasium.
Displaying some uncanny marks t
Lhuui_!uil_1 superb play a round the board;
: the Purple Wol verines jumped ti *
1 a 12-6 lead In th- (fust five minute of play with Geo Williams. Willi- Rivets. W a 11 c i Atkins and Howard Glover sink Ing a barrage of shots Cirite Manego. Xavier sopho more of New Orleans, lai . teamed with Warren Saunders, Chlc.u o. Ill and Alficil Thoma;., -enlm lioni
{Houston. Texas as the Gold andWhite hoopslers -pulled up Im an
Glover Tops Scorers
With 27; Manego Hits
26; Atkins Sinks 24
fop.tl»c court at intermission on 42-30Will W RIM S M AINTAIN t'OMFORTAHLE MARGIN
; lunders and Manego attempted Io touch oil a Xavier rally as the second hall got underway, but the' Wolverines, weir able to maintain a comfortable margin, with Atkins| controlling the board;; and with Wil-llanis atifi Gliner doing most of the scoring. Capt Icroy liewls also rippled the string to put Morns Brown in cohunand. 69-49 lit lilt’ lell- nunute-maik. ’
who were rtenoun- 'dents and alumni
Manego was right on his heels with 26. Other high scorers included:- Waioi Atkins' 24: George William» 22 and Kotiert Th. mal, 21.
SVMMABYXAVIER Manego,- f Goldsmith, f Saunders, c Prevost, g Timm»«, g Naah . . .!Thompson
Davis .... .
TOTH«
departed Maryland A
outburst used «o
football
“He agreed and i wrote Fred laing out at Wilev for a game Long wrote hack 'okas' and put
< ns on his schedule. The next fall Wiley beat us so had that from then on I never rated
•»chlng loo much unless you’veI the horses.”
"And from then on I know we had to have players big enough and mean enough to-play against big teams Coaching will never get you to first base unless you've got horses to win "
There 1.« perhaps a grim lesson in this Whenever ~ coaches arc strafed and burned in effigy by alumni and students it doesn't necessarily mean that he tectav the coaching sciences 1>ut has failed to corral the proper stable.
• < • • « » • •
When Jim Tatum the University of there was a vocal afaif’l his having many Pennsylvaniaplayers. Tatum hently imothed the complaints hy citing the fact that Maryland had only
^fcciillv developed a statewide ■item of high schools and the
calibre of plav was not sufficiently for winning football. Tatum recruited them amhl- tlous and mean from lhe Pennsylvania coalfields and they produced
» • * •Tiro Durocher, ex-manager of the
N Y Giants once argued "Nice Guvs Finish Last.. .'' That, truism still is fact Most of the coaches hung In effigy w-err essentially iik-c guys like George Barclay of North Carolina. Harold <Rcd> Drew of Alabama. Oslv 6 Gates of Fort Valiev State. Red Strader o4 the '4l>ners. Johnny Cherhcrg of Washington and many, many others who were felled by the firing axe folloving the '55 fooUxill campaign
The most ambitious experiment built on use- of home- grown hova Is that undertaken hy A. 8. (Jake) Gaither at Florida A. and M. However. Gaither who once rcmarkrd to «, "I don't put all mv eggs
one basket" has never hcsl- rrf to enroll a top-calibre
athlete from such province« a« Ohio. Masaachu«e(ls and Pennsylvania.
• « • •
soned pros around"Haaging in effigy brings to
mind what one coach puts down as the most important requisite of winning. It is organlni- lion. Organisation means not Ally selective recruitrtien, skilled analysis of available personnel, keeping a steady flow of first-rate, arademlcall.v-accept- able students, keeping them in «■■hool and In good health rm- phasirlng campus and community responsibility, and strict enforcement of the code and letter of c >m»*tiUon.Those coa- b
ced by theiralmost to s n n lost the confidence of tl team first After careful scruti;.»' of the ouster stories I note a trend of player criticism of methods, alumni complaints against recruitment and highly sensitive rcjxirts of lack of judgment in appraising personnel.
Believe it or not, I have not to date read a tingle coach ouster story where anv coach was put
[under handicap because of ineli- vi^ility created by hostile faculties In every Instance there are stories of deans and department 'I heads leaning backwards to qualify the triple-threats
Penn State provided an illumi- natiii'.’ example or this when the dean there gave a qualifying examination to star back Lenny Moore at'the beginning of the semester.
• • • • *
Many coacne« have blamed their failure on warped, embittered and skeptical Instructors who zeroed (heir aces In examinations. However, fellow student« are far more honest. Most readily admit that those falling to make the grade deserved the goosr-egg they goL
• • • •Almost daily college students stop
me on the street to chat about thek athletic teams. Many sadly tell of star athletes who arc doing nothing in class and whose status worry them because of approaching tournament play
They ask me why don't we speak to the offenders This would ner- ,haps be wise but whv should a I sportswriter co over a coach and upbraid a kid over scholastic failure.
* « * «
roaches tell me that badgered registrars In crack athlete with poor
When they've enroll a secondary harkgronnd It worries me. For no coach Is skilled enough Io build a championship tram on a vear-to- year basis. A la»y high achool athlete Invariably flunks out his freshman year In college.
No coach can build a team with kids without tile conimniixcnsc to vet their classroom work EVen if they play a whole year then sit on probation the next lhe athlete becomes a lost cause For the manhour . spent in teaching them to execute a complex tactical position goes down lhe drain And the reflexes for pertervid and imagina- Uvc execution of a key position arc lost forver when an athlete sits out a
i
M
Le-
i i
WINNERS IN GEORGIA GOLDEN GIOVES1st» representing the Butter Street YMCA ........ ..Gloves Tournament reflect their happiness offer being declared tot Xavier, but Monts Bihwji In champions left to right are Wilbur judne Middleweiahf Charlo. crewed the lead to 34 31 a lew mo-
»V 11144 Iitnipni' I|«aam «a ««r
rour ot the five final |g.|j nrt|d( midw.iy the tust half in fho Georgia Golden Manego und Ummas kept lying
champions left to right arc Wilbur Judge, Middleweight; CharlesMarshall, middleweight, lorenra Sims, lighfwellcr, and Charles "”enU l»'cr- l"_1'A. A ■ . i —I I _.. I 1 II,. Aiii #. 1 ■ _ ■ , " ■ ■ - ■ "1Marshall, middleweight. A fifth Tighter, johnny Byrd, won ou' in the light heavyweight division.
Bobby Bragan, newly-hired man- a?er nt the Plttaburgh Pirate«, catches the spirit of winning competition. In debunking the youth movement, of Branch Rickey. Bra- «an exclaimed. "I want some sea-
(or in
season* * • *
'55 «a» lhe npen «cs«on hanging football mache«elflgy. Prrhaps they brought It on Ihemaelvex When they have the m artrlalh le hare the material they're gen- tunes. When they don't they're bums!!!
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULEMonday, February 6
Ballard Hudson vs. Howard. At- ¡tanta, Ga„ Howard
Price vs. Washington, Washington’Tuesday. February 7
South Fulton vs. Turner, Turner Ballard vs. Carver, Price
I Thursday, Feb. 9Washington vs. Carver, Price Turner vs. Howard. Howard
Thomas started lulling from long- range and wits aided hy Arthur Davis,,ol New Orleans.. Herman I’rv- vost. also ot New Orleans. Robert Nash ol Chicago, mid Manego. hut the Wolverines continued to pull nway and put the game mi ice
Prevost «mt lewis were sidelined in (lie closing moment:, ol the game Im cxc-ssivc louis
Howard Glover. "I Maron. Oa milked olf with ;.ruling honors
!■> leave with a total »1 27 |»unls mid Clrilo
MORRIS BROWNWilliams, f(■lover, f .........Atkins, e ............Lewis, gRivers, g
34 23 91
B. F. TF.1« 1 28
1 9 14 1 12. 1 S7 1 21
2 » 4
2 1 4
2 9 4
36 IS. W
B F, TF.11 8 2311 S 277 10 242 5 94 1 9
TOTALS
OFFICIALS: Aaron WbIboo
i('lark) referee; T. Herman Gravea
(MotcbvuM-i umpire.
Jack Dittmer Refuses Milwaukee Contract
Morehouse Maroon TigersYMCA BOXERS SWEEP GEORGIA Defeal IhSkcget 69 ToGOLDEN GLOVE CHAMPIONSHIPS
Setllemeyer Will Address Hungry Club
ATI.ANTA. Oa, - iSNS)J. C. Settlemcyer. Executive Di
rector of the Atlanta Public ibrar- iea, will address the Hungry Club of the Butler Street YMCA on Wednesday, February 8.
■ Setllemeyer ts expected to bring the community up to date on the existing facilities of our public library system as well as projected
(plans frtr the expansion of these- f acuities.
Tlie Hungry Club, through the' years, has chosen noted speakers In various fields who have informed the community on pertinent Issues and situations and have therefore .substantially conlrilaited Io the pro
gress of the community With this lilt mind, the Director of the Atlanta I Public l.ibiarie.s will bling to the Hungry Club facts on the existing facilities of our public library sy-- stem and will relate the need of .the..
1 eommiihlty Io these facilities. [Reservations should be made early by calling the Butler Street YMCA 'La. 024«)
ATLANT^, Ga frSNSiLorenzo Sims, the tournament's
ties! welterweight in the novice division. completely beiildred his opponent. Benjamin Conner of Marietta, with right and left combinations and superior infighting The referee", shines Swinney, stopiied the match after two minutes of the third round Sims was winner by a TKO
Two 'Y' team mates were matched in the next match but Robert Rocker. who sustained a neck injury In his winning effort during the semifinals on Thursday, whs not able to fight and Watson Williams was declared winner and champion
In the third mutch for the Butler Street Y Team. Charles Marshall won a iinaniious decision over Jerry
ATLANTA. Oh 18NS1Flank Forbes' Moi chouse Marumi
Taters swelled Ilin season .record to a 14-2 ligure Saturday night as they luiued back Tueskegee's Golden Tigers 69-50 in tile Morellouse gym
Showing considerably lets lire mid
lies'--
Scott ol Macon.The match between Wilbur Judge
of tile 'Y' Team and Johnny Stin- j Wllu„„, aon ot Macon had the crowd to Its destruction tliun they did Fiulav a-
gninst Morris Brown, and o|>eiat- ing witii out the tire power <>t Ozzae" Bynum, continued their blisl.-niig pace as one of the winningest teams in the conference, as tliey coinpletii- ly mastered the visiting Tigers..
The "house" held a conference 37-27 advantage at halftime, and widened the gap even more. 53-40, at thp three quarter murk. With less than minutes to c<i, the Maroon men were able to reach into the hag ot
—43 , resened players without serious el- -2 feet.
feet as they stood toe-to-toe and battled even after the ball Judge | om poipted Seott to get the decision
Johnny Byrd, the 'Y's promising light heavyweight, went uiiclialleng-
| cd to ,win the championship in division.Y' SENIOR LEAGUE BASKETBALL SCORESCrown Eagles 59 Dobbins AFB Masterpieces 38 Vets
West Side Celtics 50 Blay tonWERD—38 Masterpieces
Crown Eagles 53 WERD Pur' crlccrs 49 Crown Eagles
Tan Major Leat jers SignBaseball Contracts Early
' rUTPAfin lANOi W.»l. r>... «1-____ ._________CHICAGO iANI’i With Roy
Campanella mid Jackie Robinson names on the dotted line, most ol the tan major leaguers were in contractual fold last week
(ampanrlla signed a record breaking Brooklyn Dodger pact. The stocky catcher, the National League's most valuable player. will receive an estimated $42.500. a 12 per rent increase over the reported $3«, OOO he received in 1954. Going Into his ninth season with the Dodgers. < ampry has never rnrivrd a cut in pnv.
Roy incidentally, supplants Robinson as the highest paid Dodger Jackie was asked to lake a cut, a- mounttng to about $4 5<K» from his $38.000 pay ‘check in 1955 in that Mason. Robinson had his worst year since he entered the majors in 1947. He hit only 256 bad eight home runs and drove in 36 tallies. Injured most ol Dm season that saw him
Veterans CornerHere are autlioritiltive answers1
Horn the Veterans Administration to in and out of the lineup. Robinson lour queiUoM of intmat to forma j nMerthek* waa'a spaik plug in the ervicemen and their families:Q I am going to school less thin
half-time under the Korean OI Bill What will be the amount of my monthly G1 allowance payments?
A You may receive cither < 1' the established charges for tuition and I'.es paid by non-veteruns for the imirs" or <2> a pro-rated amount 4>ased on $r I a month for a full-
j time course—whichever Is less.
world scries, fielding brilliantly und upsetting the with his base
New York Yankees running.
wcck, Elston Howard
MOKI HOt M
Ills
M70
-39
William Penman stellar Morehouse toiward orabb’d'individual .scoring honors by sinking nt total of 19, followed by teammate lion Clendcnnon with 17 Edward Scarbrough, the Tic kegee flash was in third place with 13. and was waved out of the "nine in the) third stanza for excessive fouls.
Bynum, who played only during the flrst'quarter dunked in nine before making his exit, bccatise_oL ill-
50
Oírle Bynum Wm. Penman Itonald Huntlev Don < lendennon It. Johnson It. Johnson Jim Wortham l.r.inv John on
TOTALS'
It. Sterling Ed Scarborough N. Iiaiii-r
FrazierDudley
('. Stewart W. Morris E. Houston J. Griffin
S.It
(Is1
3
059904
(Is9««-,
(I I)I a
ip,9
194
17•
. *>
613
!l 69
ELKADER la - <INSI- Jack Dittmer. Milwaukee Braves' utility inllelder, swld Thursday he has refusal tn accept a salary cut In his 1966 contract (•ague Club.
Dittmer has his father In Elykader, la. leaving ba.'ebHll to devote full time to the business He said he sold a new car yesterday and a used one today.
A 1956 contract offered by the Braves was returned unsigned but Dittmer said he planned to discuss the matter with Braves officials in Milwaukee “before spring training begins”
He decliiiedto stat? what offer was made or what he wouH demand in the way of salary" to ac
cept a 1956 contract.
with the National
been working for an auto agency in and has considered
ItsI33
fgs«
542 1 Ii
I1•
FIs Ips2 55 132 113 52 2I 8I 21 22 4
Basketball ScoresMorehouse I'liskrgcr
Morris Brown Xavier (La.I
•« i «
It79
Morehouse 37, Tus-
'Terni Piww; ,
') *
y. How unirli money may I borro* <>n my jM'rnwnrnl OI insurance pol-
* icy? It has been in force for more j than one year.
A. You may borrow up to 94 per cent of the reserve value of • your l»hcy Any VA office can determine
i the exact amount for you
Earlier last oiiUtaiiding ;< < ynnkee rookie last season, signed Ills 1956 contract Ho- ward, wlio played the outfield and caught, will receive armind HOM) for his sophomore year.
Al Smith, lhe Clevelatvf Indians' teek-of-iill Irailea, Mgmwl for a reported $|X.0(Hi 11 ink Aaron, thr fine <
i young outllrldcr for the Milwaukee
Q I am drawing VA disability com pensation payments. If I move, is! it possible for my checks to be for- ,
| warded to my new address’A. No Under the law. VA benefit
checks may not be forwarded from one address to another So if vdu are planning to move, be sure to notify VA—and give both new and old address .full name and ”C" number
Q. I am receiving a monthly pen- ’ •inn from VA <Recently a relative: willed me a small plw of undeveloped land ¡(lust I consider the value of this tepd as Income?
A Tile land need not lie consider- led a» inromc until It Is converted 'info rash, bv selling or renting It ?nd »ven then, von may deduct '’hatevn money you had to |Mit into the tend for faxes, improvnientx; and the like In dctcrmln" the irt j Ipromc
VS. TURNER - Price High s Charles Bivins (44) has little ble in grabbing this rebound during the Wildcat s first tangle
the Turner Wolves Friday night. The best Turner s Harold on (14) ran dn tn stop Bivins k qt'nrd with nutstrrlehed arm«,
rner won the gome «6 38- I
Sugar Ray Robinson To Meet Bobo Olson
NEW YORK - (IN® ~ Middleweight champion Sugar Rav Robinson agreed to terms Wednesday Io defend hte title in a return bout with former champ Bobo Olson in Los Angeles on April 27
Robinson agreed to a 30-30 split In the gate and the International Boxing Club »«Id It was taring to contact Sid Flaherty. Olsons manager. to get hia okay on the match.
Rrthln.«nn rrmvlned the crown last December w hen he kayoed Olson in Chicago.
Braves, will Ket about 315,000 for hia service«.
I arry Doby who was a perennial i' alcltrant with the Cleveland ln- diaiis, signed without any trouble with the Chicago White Sox. The outfield will get about $32.000 Pcr- hapfr he Influenced Minnie Minoso, the veteran White Sox outfielder, who didn't balk at the 30.000 lie will draw.
Ernie Banks, a scnscatinnal for the Clilcaro Cubs hr de for a hefty raise, that will jxit him between the $15.000 Hnd $30.000 class. Hie shortstop's keystone mate, Gene Baker ought Io make the $15.000 bracket Slid Sam Jones, the Cubs' workhorse on the mound, test season, should get $12,000 Monte Irvin, drafted by tin Culis horn Minneapolis of the
rAiu'ilcan A'.'relation, wifi lie paid around $15,000 if he makes his come bark stick (
On (lie champion Dodgers, Don Newrnmher, lhe brilliant righthander. will i-ollrct $25.000 Junior Gillian), infielder. is lahhrrl for $12.906,- (t|.am.,|i(. oulbin st oi ’’’■ring which and Sanrlv Amaros, the Cuban out- l;iw |hl, c.(lrt(l)a| Hnd rir.fielder who>e sensational World Series catch probably saver) the championship for Broklyn, Is ano’- ther in lhe $12,MM category.
Vic Tower, aecord In Ihr American la-ague halting race; Harry Simpson, who made a remarkable <omeh.uk In the mtffleld, and Heeler l.opet, noilifs Io fake high scoring honors rookie star al Ihlerf bise lad season all pi< ked up handsome raises from the Kansas City Athletics.
Halftime —kegee 27.
Officials: Charles Boswell and Raymnjid Wainwright.
T tisketee Fort Valley
Hillard Philander Smith
W.J
ar,U
Xavier Gold Rush DownsClark College 11 To 60
ATLANTA. Ga tHNL'Xavier University of New Or
leans, La. turned hack Clark College 77 A0 Itidoy night in Joe louis Gymnasium. Ahead by lhe slendet margin of 28 25 at halftime the 49nets won go , iiig away in the final period ! against a Ponfher defense that collapsed beyond repair.
It has ihx'U close titilli f' at final
tense virtually collapse as the Gold V I Rusher; limited mi the pressure tn
win gniug awayX avier led mo t of Ihr wav agaln'J
the ■ biggish i’anllirrs mid whs never headed in during the final moments id phv f’hailr. Branch tallied 15
KNOXCILLE, Tenn. - An amazing Knoxville College basket-1 ball feom blasted the Tennessee Stale Tigers 97-91 before a gym full of East Tennessee sports fans here last week.
The determined fantastically accurate-shooting charges of Julian Bell ròse to new heights as they decisively ^trounced the Nashvillians and avenged an earlier season loss.
Knoxville's trick senior guard. Charles 'Chuck' lewis, from Dayton, nhio, almost s|iiglehandod1y engineered the victory as.be registered 37 points en II field goals and 15 »hardy tosses. He was aided and abetted by Jarkic Fitzpatrick with ib points, Andrew 'Rookie' Brown who dunked 19. Jatpes 'Hoss' Davis and hi ; 17 pointe and Robert Austin With :
Tl NN STATEIl Mrs AHEAD
i ■ *
but with 5,minutes remaining, the K . C. bulge had shifted to 41-33
During the closing five minutes of the opening stanza. K. C. tallied sixteen |ioints with Lewis Ratting 10, Fitepahiick. Brown and Davis two each. At half time. K. C. lead 57- 40. •
With lb- ' haractei Lrtic second half j splurge the K C advantage had Ix-cti ipped tn «0-62 with ten mlnti- I tes remaining, hut Johnny Mi^UIcn- den';; talented group was not yet • 4<W And. in seven agonizing I minute:. 'Skull' Banirtt. Ron Carlton j aud Company had pulled up to 88- j
"1
Robert Naso ¿core» 22 Points For 49ncrs Win Over Panthers
lege playmaker who had Ix-cn idle since Deccmlier 1« returned to thr lineup tail lie showed the eflccl of I lie long lavofr. Bunn arrowed only two poinls through the knitted cir-
jclc but on the other hand moralewas gnpmved hy hfsjrturn
Claik College returns to lhe waxed woods Feb. 7 when thr Panthers engage Benedict College of Illa. S. C.XAVIER
Colum-
!or the losing runthcrsRobert Nash targeted 22 points
through the hdo|>s tn take lop scoring honors lor Xavier. Joseph Leon targeted 12 isiihls tlnnugh the tiel-sio tak< second place scoring hon-1 ore.
Manegn I.eon Thoma« Golilsmitli Nash Blunder. Provost rhompson
a«
«i4«
■ 5•9
41
II«94241I1
2
Ip»I'46
rt1»H)6
II9
BranchWalker Carlton Bonn Cohen
TOTALS
ftl
351•
7
fli
I
9<tt
tp«
IS
13•9
21
22 IS 13 M
VITAMIN A-D LOTION-a flowing pink cream fortified with lano
lin, slightly less concentrated than Vitamin A-D Complex Cream, but works the same way in revitalizing .•km cells Recommended for use on the whole Ixxly after a hath, especially helpful Io areas such as hands, elbow;, and hets
EYE Ct INCENTREE a .special concentrated cream to me for conditioning the very sensitive skin of (he Ulis anil eye area Helps prevent, the development of wrinkles around the evei.
Tennessee State jumped to a quick 0-4 advantage Ix'loir Rookie Brown Ail his 'Pogo-Stick' Jump shot broke
I the ice "tor K C Then, Chuck' j Lewis of K C look over and on three field goals <>nd four free throws, rcgrtteinl If consecutive points More State roiitd score and gave K C a JJ-I? hrlrr After to minutes K C wa«jilt1 ahead 28- 21, but not rithout ticklish" moments to the end
With most of Xhe credit dur to thr oolrtt rho«tir|'» of State's Dick Rar- neu. t. e gap dozed to 30-28 with 8 uunuta rem&lihng in the lust Iwlf,
Bui it uns Knoxville's night and Chuck' Lewis, 'Andy' Brown. Big .tackle Fitzpatrick and James ‘Hoss' Davis and Boh Austin of K C each dunked two pointers in the frantic shooting at the tn build up the final margin
Finn! KC 97 -Trnnrssrr Stale 91
WHLt.f. HITS CAR ...Ivy, Vn. John S D»nnel'. R»ate
trooper ?w a wheel come off a trailer behind a trmk and headed str-Blght toward his car but the wheel hit rieht Mw"on hi« hrad- iithit -i.. h,ug the radiator back over the engine. He was not hurt.
TOTALS 31 15 22 7'Julius Bunn, the crack Clark Col
- t
MY WEEKLYZEEUSKI
Letters To
Member of SCOTT NEWSPAPER SINDICATE W. A, Scott, II. Founder; C, A. Scott, General Manager
It’s welcome in my work
Aaron Willie
.......... /........... Manaring EditorPublic Relations and Aavertlsing ............... Circulation Promotion
•invi I,'Tanya, internationally jamnn.i fashion deiner
The MEMPHIS WORLD la an independent newspaper—non-aklarian and non-partisan, printing news unbiasedly and supporting those things it believe« to be of Interest to Its readers and opposing those things against the interest of Ito reader«
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:Tear 15H - I Months |3.M - 3 Months IIM tin Advance)
New Philip Morris. , .gentle Joe modern taste
The Tip-Off
-tnsts/navo' I 1doaege Special-1 ASPIRIN I
dosage Try ft1 BbmmbsII«»»
NEW YORK 'I N Si-Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson o( far Rockaway, N Y.. scored a majority deci ion over s"coiid-rank(d heavyweight televised swatfest nt Madison Square Garden
Funeral Rites Wednesday Mrs. Arneta Barbee Dies,-
F'or a quarter-century^ Perlclean Club has tried to lie In a portion of its program with the celebration of Negro History Week During that 'une it has brought to the city 2? speakers who are contemporary history-makers Dr. Kenneth B Clark of New York City will become the 23rd speaker over the period of 25 years this club has given emphasis and impetus to the significance of a group’s history.
is play-^^^^™Z^
kind’s battle for survival.
Arnold Toynbee, the famous English historian, has pointed out that with the new weapons of human destruction humankind must understand how (o live together as a single family in order to survive "Mankind is going to destroy itself,” he says, "if it cannot learn to live as a single family on the rapidly shrinking surface of tills planet.”
Toynbee observes: “Till our day man’s Improvement of his physical means of communication lagged far behind his advance on thr spiritual plane What mankind needsnow, above all. Is time for different peoples to become familiar with one another’s diverse wavs of life, In order to learn first to tolerate and i’ n to appreciate (hem as parts of a unified mankind's common fulure heritage"
"Whatever our prevnt.-day governments may do or say." writes Toynbee, "the tide that is now making for the unification of the world will. 1 believei go roilin': on irresistibly. I do not believe that it can be stopped before it has brought, upon mankind one of the other of the two prospects that now face us
either union or self-destruction.”He goes on to say: " . History
has also been acquiring a nrw spiritual dimension, thanks tn the nrw pioneer wmk of Western psychologist within our own lifetime."
I Some obstinate minds of unworthy use have been trvlng tn belittle the new role of the social scientists Tills came to light with furious and emotional extremeism after th" Mav 17. 1951 ruling of the IJ. 8. Supreme Court In the school cases The social scientists played an important role In the cases as exiiert witnesses.
i This taunted some o’f those opposed 'o "Social change that will benefit the downtrodden Prejudiced minds are usually unreliable In the search lor progress and improvement.
Dr. Clark Is one of the social I scientists who has functioned In the classroom, in the courtroom and in the clinic where he has been called upon to serve. When he comes to
' Birmingham on February 17 that ought to be an opportunity for some of the freedom-makers to hear
| him other than at the forum, lie I has worked on some of the prob- I lems which are still working on | dbadvantaged groups.
Dr Stuart W Cook, retiring presi- I dent of the New York State Psy-
In the struggle of our group to retrieve its lost prestige and that patronage - hold it once enjoyed some decades ago when Republicanism was in flower, we are daily coming into the realization of many a first in the selection of men and women to fill important government posts.
Upon the appointment of a Negro Federal Marshall in the Virgin Islands, there comes another important first.
If taken politically, lhe record in less than fifteen months of the GOP Administration must be very distressing to the Democrats, becouse the Republicans have not only filled the jobs that Negroes previously held, but hove given nineteen more than they had ever held before
In other words, we see a change-over from just giving them such jobs as have been held out as traditional Negro jobs. No "block cabinet" is held together in a conspicious corner designed for it.
In a survey around Washington, Negroes may be seen holding such jobs as Adviser to the War Claims Commission, member of the Federal Parole Board, member of lhe Battle Monument Commission, secretary in the White House, Assistant Secretary of Labor and head of the U. S. Educational Mission in Afghanistan
Thusly, the Federal government is laying an excellent exam pie for those states thof need most of all economy in government through the selection of competent officials, without having to observe lhe possible color barrier.
In many fields of specialization and scientific research where the members are not so conspicious, many persons of color ore carrying on in key positions. With somewhat of a division of the Negro vole in both major parties there are no reason why other firsts should not be forthcoming.
While political strength cannot he built on patronage alone, there needs to be patronage as those stabilizers and evidences ol recognition.
So, the race and those friends who place fitness first are elated over the coming of still another first info the government family.
chological Association and head of lhe department of psychology at New York University's Graduate School of Arts and .Science, said in a talk on "Dcsegi eration A Psychological Analysts'", suggested that close'contact modifies attitudes
He went on to sar, In part; “Per- tom opposing desegregation seem Io he older and less well educated PerMin« who support desegregation do primarily on lhe basis of moral and religious allegiance, on the one- hand, and on law-abiding grounds on the other. Desegregation seems to be accepted relatively easily within such organizations as the Army and the Catholic Church, which have strong and enforceable sanctions. Kegrrgatlon Is abandoned more easily when It conflicts with some other need than where thrre
, Is no such opposing force ”It is In the findings of the social
scientists blended with the ethical teachings common to all religions together witlj the American concept of fair-play that hope lies for decent relations among al) population groups In this country, it seems to me.
TELLS REASON EUR STRTING JUBILEE
Dear Mr. Ttoby:The Memphis Cotton Makers' Ju
bilee was or'fMWtlFTn-'TTO It Was organized to meet a need for expression ot a minority group and to help solve some of the problems. To advcitise the South’s greatest rgiicultural staple, cotton; To present and represent Memphis and the mld-South ar places of good abode;
. mn to create a better unde"landing and relationship between the races
| The Memphis Cotton Makers' Jubilee is the only organization rpon-1 sored by a Negro group which ad-1 vertires and publicizes Cotton and the ao'ith" both Insid» and tuti Ide of the nation Furth“r it i- the ontv
| rflebation of its kind in America ' among Negroes It has been a goodwill media creating a better under -
i 'landing of the South and this Ma- | ole "Cotton' than any other orgqn- ‘ Ization erected by Negroes any>- I where. It has broadened the Inter- I cultural perspectives m other conn- I trie’ If haa attracted State enactment endorsement I t Is a definite
; part of the community life of Mem- Iphto end 4he rwllon---------------- The 19MI Jubilee celebration Wil)
be held May 14th through May 19 The theme King Cotton stoves Forward. i
Your paper has rendered an Invaluable service to this program thru- out lhe year For this we are grateful and are soliciting your full coopera lion through pictures and news 'twice In your, paper for the 1965 celebration.
Thanking you In advance for your many kindnesses to us.
Respectfully yours, DR R Q, Venson, General Cbairtnan
SERMON
PASTOR
MISSISSIPPI BLVD. CHRISTIAN
CHURCH, MEMPHIS
SUCK BLACKAT YOUR DRUGGIST
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