quits on liberal and negro vote praised die...

1
North Carolina College - NCC Instructor Quits After Drunken Party On Campus * * * * * * * * -\u2605?* \u2605 * *\u2605 * * * * ** Growing Liberal And Negro Vote Praised Increased Political Action is Called for By Congressman \u25a0H Ss Si ' BERKELEY, Calif. "The 1965 elections have shown the political effectiveness of the growing liberal movement in this country and of the in- creasingly sophisticated and in- formed minority vote," today declared Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (Dem-Michigan) in a speech prepared for delivery at the University of California at Berkeley. "A vital necessity for the increase of the political power of the liberal movement in America is the expansion of political activity by the young people who have worked so strenuously for equality of op- portunity and equal dignity for all Americans. It is time for demonstrations to be backed up by grass-roots political ac- tion." "The election of liberal Re- publicans in New York City and Louisville, Kentucky shows that both the liberal and the Negro American voter will sup- port the candidates with strong civil rights and liberal records regardless of party affiliations," Conyers told the group as- sembled at Boalt Law School at 12 noon. Expressing an analys- is similar to that recently giv- en by Senator Robert F. Ken- nedy (Dem-New York), Conyers said that "one of the reasons the Democrats lost the New York mayoralty race was that they took the Negro and Puer- to Rican votes for granted." FRIENDLY COUNTERPARTS ?Patricia Monterio, left, a sen- ior physical education major at North Carolina A. and T. Col- lege and the college's "Miss Homecoming," shows the A. and T. campus to Linda Wilson, "Miss Homecoming" for North Carolina College at Durham. The occasion was \u25a0 recant vI«H to the Aggies' campus by tha Eagles' Miss Wilton, a senior health education major at NCC. The two queens will meat again Thanksgiving Day in Greensboro when the rival schools' football teams clash in the annual Carolina Classic. George D. White, Jr. Passes At Veterans Hospital Wed. Conyers cited the close ma- yoralty race in Cleveland, Ohio in which Carl Stokes, a Negro state legislator and leader of the local chapter of Americans for Democratic Action, is now within 1900 votes of winning and the recount may yet show that he was elected. George D. White, Jr. of 812 Dupree St., treasurer of Serv- ice Printing Company in. Dur- ham died Wednesday, Novem- ber 17, 1965 in the Veterans Administration Hospital after an illness of several months. He was born May 8, 1916 in Hertford, North Carolina, the son of George and the late Annie Wood White. He re- ceived his education in the public schools of Norfolk, Vir- ginia and graduated from Hampton Institute in 1940 with a B.S. degree in Printing Edu- cation. As a resident of Durham for the past twenty-five years, he *was very active in many civic, religious, business and scouting activities of the community. He was a trustee of White Rock Baptist Church, treasurer of Moore Bible Class, the advance- ment chairman of the Chey- enee Leaf District, Boy Scouts of America, a director of the Durham Business and Profes- sional Chain, the Chain De- velopment Corpoartion, a Ma- son ,a member of the Dur- ham Committee on Negro Af- fairs and the One O'clock Luncheon Club. He served as a First Lieutenant in World War II with the 92nd Division and saw duty in the Pacific The- ater. He was recently honored by the Youth Committee of White WHITE Rock Baptist Church which dedicated a service to him and the Cheyenne Leaf District of the Boy Scouts of America which presented him a trophy for outstanding service to Boy- hood. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Josephine Harris White; one son, George D. White, HI; one daughter, Connie Jo White; his father, George White of Nor- folk, Virginia; three brothers, Nathaniel B. White of Durham; John J. White of Washington, D. C.; Joseph M. White of New York City; one aunt, Mrs. Es- See WHITE 2A ym DR. FLOYD Omegas Honor Dr. Floyd as 'Citizen of Yr.' By MAUDE M. JEFFERS GASTONIA Dr. C. W. Floyd, distinguished citizen and leader, was honored as Omega Psi Phi Fraternity's "Citizen of the Year" during an impressive Achievement Week service at 3 p.m. at St. Stephens AME Zion Church, Sunday. This was the 13th an- nual observance for the local Epsilon Chapter of which Prin- cipal C. R. Hamilton of Stewart Elementary School is basileus. The audience was filled to capacity for the program. The Mixed Chorus of 75 voices of Lincoln High School ren- dered music directed by Mrs. Margaret W. Wilson, State President of the Association of Classroom Teachers and Statewide chairman of the De- partment of Piano Teachers of NCTA. Speaker for the occasion was Ellis F. Corbett, First Vice Grand Basileus of the Frater- nity and Public Relations Di- rector of A. and T. College. He spoke on the subject, "Ameri- ca's Responsibility for the De- velopment of Human Talent." He showed how the fraternity is helping to share in the re- See FLOYD 2A I \u25a0lifli BROWN Names High Point Man To NCC Board HIGH POINT Robert J. Brown, president of B&C Asso- ciates in High Point, was re- cently named by N. C. Gover- nor Dan K. Moore to the Board of Trustees at North Carolina College in Durham. At 30 years old, Brown be- comes the youngest member of the Board of Trustees to ever serve in this capacity in the history of the college. Born In High Point where he attended the public schools, Brown has attended Virginia Union University in Richmond, Va. and A.&T. College in Greensboro. He has worked as a patrol- man for the High Point Police Department and as a Federal Narcotic Agent for the U. S. Treasury Department in New York City. During 1960, Brown resigned from his position with the Treasury Department and re- turned to hU hometown where he started his crvn public rela- See BROWN 2A die Car|o|& II^ETRUTMJNBR idCED"/ VOLUME 42 No. 43 DURHAM, N. C SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1965 PRICE: 15c SCLC Stages Massive Attack On Segregated Justice In Ala. Uf \u25a0«v< \ A mm JS MM FOCUS LIGHT ON OUTRAGE ATLANTA, Ga.?Leaders of the Civil Rights Movement in the South are beginning a com- prehensive campaign to focus the spotlight of public outrage on what they call "Segregated Justice." Dr. Martin Luther Kin g's Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) is spearheading the initial at- tack on the system in Alabama. John Lewis of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Com- mittee (SNCC) has said this will probably be "the largest, most dramatic formal campaign and concerted protest since Selma." Announcement of the new drive followed a recent meet- ing in Atlanta of several reli- gious and civil rights leaders. Present at the meeting were SCLC's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. Rev. Ralph Abernatfiy. An- drew Young, Randolph Black- well, Hosea Williams and John Barber; SNCC's John Lewis and Cleve Setters, Atty. Charles Morgan of the American Civil Liberties Union, Father Henry Stein of the Episcopal Society for Racial and Cultural Unity, Rev. J. Oscar McCloud of the Presbyterian Commission on Religion and Race, and Rev. Bruce Hansen of the National Council of Churches. SCLC Executive Director An- See JUSTICE 2A AFTfR THK FORUM P. K. Banerjee, third from left, min- ister in the Embassy of Indie in Washington, sjves further comment on "India Today and Tomorrow,'' to this group fol- lowing an addrasa on that top«e at North Carolina College last Monday. From left in the photograph are: the Rev. Henry Elkins, di- rector of the NCC United Cam- put Christian Ministry; Or. J. Neat Hughley, professor of eco- nomics; Mr. Baneriee: and Carles Daya. president of the college's Student Government Association. SEEKS AID IN RESTORING BOMBED CHURCH VANCEBORO The Craven County Good Neighbor Council met in regular session Thufv day night November 11. I The council voted unani- mously to make public Ahe following statement: "The Gra- ven County Good Neighbor Council is troubled because of the bombing of St. Joe Free- will Baptist Church, on Sunday morning, October 31. We wish to encourage the churches, or- ganizations, citizens and other friends of Craven County tc help these fellow citizens to restore their church." Funds given may be sent to: Mrs. Willie Bellamy, Route 2 Box 405, Vanceboro. Rev. Albert F. Fisher is chairman of the campaign and Rev. C. Edward Sharp is co- chairman. Union To Name Anti-Labor Workers And Hired Scabs A special committee compos- ed of members of the Durham City School Employees Union No. 481 was reported busy this week compiling names of all members of the union and scab workers. This list will only include those who refused to cooperate in the effort now being made to improve the wages and conditions of non- academic workers in the city schools and scab workers brought in to replace those now out on strike, The Times was informed. A representative of the local Union stated this week that a complete list of all workers and scabs will be posted and circulated throughout the city as well as given the press as soon as the compiling effort is completed. The representative further stated while no im- mediate reprisals were planned against those listed as being against "our efforts to improve our lot," the names of such oersons would be recorded in the records of the Union. At present it appears that out of approximately 300 work- See UNION 2A NAACP Files 26 New Complaints Of Racial Employment Discrimination Continues Its Unrelenting Fight for Jobs WASHINGTON Continuing its unrelenting pressure for en- forcement of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the NAACP filed 26 new com- plaints charging racial discrim- ination with the Equal Employ- ment Opportunity Commission on Nov. 8. Accompanying the complaints were sworn affidavits from NAACP members. Among companies against which complaints were filed were: Cannon Mills, Kannapo- lis, N. C.; Radio Corporation of America, Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.; Voice of Music Corpora- tion, Benton Harbor, Mich.; Southern Paci ft c Railroad, Houston, Tex. AT THE MEETING of the Dep. utles of the Grand Chapter of the Eastern Star held at the Masonic Tempi# her# 1 on No- vember 13 the deputies were presented the plans for a youth department to Include girls from ages 10 to 17. The above picture is that of the Grand Chapter Youth Supervisors Committee responsible for pro- viding the plans for the new department. From left to right they are Mrs. Maggie Strong, Ayden; Grand Worthy Matron, Mrs. Dali Rogers, Durham, Dis- trict Deputy end Mrs. Marga- rette Trott, Salisbury, Grand Lecturer and Chairman of the Committee. See other picture on page 3-A. Unions named in the com- plaints included the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Electri- cal Workers, Cincinnati, Ohio; Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, Lovejoy, 111.; Union, New York City; and the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Houston, Tex. A joint complaint was filed against the U. S. Steel Corpo- ration and the United Steel- workers of America, Bessemer, Ala. A complaint was also filed on behalf of NAACP members in Macon, Ga., against the Georgia State Employment Service. Typical of the complaints was the one filed on behalf of Anderson L. Dobbins, a mem- ber of the Cincinnati NAACP Bran£h. Three N.C Colleges To Share In Alfred P. Sloan "Matching Grant" NEW YORK, N. Y. Three North Carolina colleges have been selected to share with twenty other predominantly Negro colleges a $1,000,000 "matching grant" made by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation of New York City. The grant was announced this week by Dr. Frederick D. Patterson i chair- man of the Cooperative College Development Program with which the twenty-three colleges are affiliated. The North Carolina institu- tions are Bennett College, Greensboro; Livingstone Col- lege, Salisbury; and North Car- olina College at Durham. The grant is designed to en- courage the twenty-three in- stitutions to develop additional sources of private support, with particular emphasis on alumni and local giving. The colleges have been placed in two groups by the Foundation, with seven institutions in Group I eligible for matching funds in the amount of $66,666 each, and the sixteen colleges in Group n eligible for matching funds of $33,333 each. To stimulate an increase in the flow of gifts from college alumni and local givers, the matching formula of the Sloan Foundation will give each col- lege (up to the prescribed mon- ey limit of its group) $1 of Foundation money for every $2 raised from private donors within the state in which the college is situated. Monies raised from other private sources will be matched by the Foundation at a ratio of one dollar for three. If the over-all average match- ing ratio is one dollar for two, as the Foundation expects, the project will make available to the twenty-three colleges $3,- 000,000 in new funds, includ- ing the Foundation grant, dur- ing the next two years. N. C. MUTUAL PRESIDENT BACK AT OFFICE AFTER SHORT ILLNESS well on his way to complete recovery this week. Spaulding was dismissed from the hospital Monday and the earlier part of the week See SPAULDING 2A A. T. Spaulding, president of N. C. Mutual Life Insurance Company, who has been con- fined to Lincoln Hospital for the past several days on ac- count of illness, was reported Missing Teacher and Auto Found by Police on Alston Ave. Dr. J. Preston Cochran, head of the Dramatics department at North Carolina College, who earlier in the week was report- ed to have disappeared after a drunken night of revelry on the college campus, has re- signed his post at the college, the Carolina Times was relia- bly informed this week. A few hours following what has been described as a party of women, wine and revelry, Dr. Cochran's car was discov- ered abandoned on Alston Ave- nue. Police report that later on, however, during the night, Cochran was found seated In the car apparently in a state of stupor. Along with him were several pieces of his belong- ings such as clothes, etc. IE H COCHRAN! In a telephone conversation with Dr. Samuel P. Massie, president of NCC, the Times was informed that efforts are being made to satisfactorily ad- just the matter. This was in conflict, however, with an earlier report that Cochran had resigned. Dr. Massie further in- formed the Times that the missing dramatics instructor had been located and was at present under treatment by, Dr. R. P. Randolph local phy- sician. A check with Dr. Randolph confirmed the reports that Dr. Cochran had been located but the physician would give no statement as to the status of his condition.

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Page 1: Quits On Liberal And Negro Vote Praised die Car|o|&newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1965-11-20/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · enee Leaf District, Boy Scouts of America, a director of the

North Carolina College -

NCC Instructor Quits After Drunken Party On Campus* * * * * * * * -\u2605?* \u2605 * *\u2605 * * * * **

Growing Liberal And Negro Vote PraisedIncreased Political Action isCalled for By Congressman

\u25a0H Ss Si '

BERKELEY, Calif. "The1965 elections have shown thepolitical effectiveness of thegrowing liberal movement in

this country and of the in-creasingly sophisticated and in-

formed minority vote," todaydeclared Congressman JohnConyers, Jr. (Dem-Michigan) ina speech prepared for deliveryat the University of Californiaat Berkeley. "A vital necessity

for the increase of the politicalpower of the liberal movement

in America is the expansion ofpolitical activity by the youngpeople who have worked sostrenuously for equality of op-portunity and equal dignity forall Americans. It is time fordemonstrations to be backedup by grass-roots political ac-

tion."

"The election of liberal Re-publicans in New York Cityand Louisville, Kentucky showsthat both the liberal and theNegro American voter will sup-port the candidates with strong

civil rights and liberal recordsregardless of party affiliations,"Conyers told the group as-sembled at Boalt Law School at12 noon. Expressing an analys-

is similar to that recently giv-en by Senator Robert F. Ken-nedy (Dem-New York), Conyers

said that "one of the reasonsthe Democrats lost the NewYork mayoralty race was thatthey took the Negro and Puer-to Rican votes for granted."

FRIENDLY COUNTERPARTS?Patricia Monterio, left, a sen-

ior physical education major at

North Carolina A. and T. Col-lege and the college's "MissHomecoming," shows the A.

and T. campus to Linda Wilson,"Miss Homecoming" for NorthCarolina College at Durham.

The occasion was \u25a0 recant vI«Hto the Aggies' campus by thaEagles' Miss Wilton, a seniorhealth education major at NCC.

The two queens will meatagain Thanksgiving Day inGreensboro when the rivalschools' football teams clash inthe annual Carolina Classic.

George D. White, Jr. PassesAt Veterans Hospital Wed.

Conyers cited the close ma-yoralty race in Cleveland, Ohioin which Carl Stokes, a Negrostate legislator and leader ofthe local chapter of Americansfor Democratic Action, is now

within 1900 votes of winning

and the recount may yet showthat he was elected.

George D. White, Jr. of 812Dupree St., treasurer of Serv-ice Printing Company in. Dur-ham died Wednesday, Novem-ber 17, 1965 in the VeteransAdministration Hospital afteran illness of several months.

He was born May 8, 1916 inHertford, North Carolina, theson of George and the lateAnnie Wood White. He re-

ceived his education in thepublic schools of Norfolk, Vir-ginia and graduated fromHampton Institute in 1940 witha B.S. degree in Printing Edu-cation.

As a resident of Durham forthe past twenty-five years, he*was very active in many civic,religious, business and scoutingactivities of the community. Hewas a trustee of White RockBaptist Church, treasurer ofMoore Bible Class, the advance-ment chairman of the Chey-enee Leaf District, Boy Scoutsof America, a director of theDurham Business and Profes-sional Chain, the Chain De-velopment Corpoartion, a Ma-son ,a member of the Dur-ham Committee on Negro Af-fairs and the One O'clockLuncheon Club. He served as a

First Lieutenant in World WarII with the 92nd Division andsaw duty in the Pacific The-ater.

He was recently honored bythe Youth Committee of White

WHITE

Rock Baptist Church whichdedicated a service to him andthe Cheyenne Leaf District ofthe Boy Scouts of Americawhich presented him a trophyfor outstanding service to Boy-hood.

He is survived by his wife,Mrs. Josephine Harris White;one son, George D. White, HI;one daughter, Connie Jo White;his father, George White of Nor-folk, Virginia; three brothers,Nathaniel B. White of Durham;John J. White of Washington,

D. C.; Joseph M. White of NewYork City; one aunt, Mrs. Es-

See WHITE 2A

ym

DR. FLOYD

Omegas HonorDr. Floyd as'Citizen of Yr.'

By MAUDE M. JEFFERSGASTONIA Dr. C. W.

Floyd, distinguished citizenand leader, was honored asOmega Psi Phi Fraternity's"Citizen of the Year" during

an impressive AchievementWeek service at 3 p.m. at St.Stephens AME Zion Church,Sunday. This was the 13th an-

nual observance for the localEpsilon Chapter of which Prin-cipal C. R. Hamilton of StewartElementary School is basileus.

The audience was filled tocapacity for the program. TheMixed Chorus of 75 voicesof Lincoln High School ren-dered music directed by Mrs.Margaret W. Wilson, StatePresident of the Association

of Classroom Teachers andStatewide chairman of the De-partment of Piano Teachers ofNCTA.

Speaker for the occasion was

Ellis F. Corbett, First ViceGrand Basileus of the Frater-nity and Public Relations Di-

rector of A. and T. College. Hespoke on the subject, "Ameri-

ca's Responsibility for the De-velopment of Human Talent."

He showed how the fraternity

is helping to share in the re-See FLOYD 2A

I

\u25a0lifliBROWN

Names HighPoint Man ToNCC Board

HIGH POINT Robert J.Brown, president of B&C Asso-ciates in High Point, was re-cently named by N. C. Gover-nor Dan K. Moore to the Boardof Trustees at North CarolinaCollege in Durham.

At 30 years old, Brown be-comes the youngest member of

the Board of Trustees to everserve in this capacity in thehistory of the college.

Born In High Point where heattended the public schools,

Brown has attended VirginiaUnion University in Richmond,Va. and A.&T. College inGreensboro.

He has worked as a patrol-

man for the High Point PoliceDepartment and as a FederalNarcotic Agent for the U. S.Treasury Department in NewYork City.

During 1960, Brown resigned

from his position with theTreasury Department and re-turned to hU hometown wherehe started his crvn public rela-

See BROWN 2A

die Car|o|&II^ETRUTMJNBR idCED"/

VOLUME 42 No. 43 DURHAM, N. C SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1965 PRICE: 15c

SCLC Stages Massive AttackOn Segregated Justice In Ala.

Uf\u25a0«v< \ A

mm JS MM

FOCUS LIGHTON OUTRAGE

ATLANTA, Ga.?Leaders ofthe Civil Rights Movement inthe South are beginning a com-prehensive campaign to focusthe spotlight of public outrage

on what they call "Segregated

Justice." Dr. Martin LutherKin g's Southern ChristianLeadership Conference (SCLC)is spearheading the initial at-tack on the system in Alabama.

John Lewis of the StudentNonviolent Coordinating Com-mittee (SNCC) has said thiswill probably be "the largest,

most dramatic formal campaign

and concerted protest sinceSelma."

Announcement of the new

drive followed a recent meet-ing in Atlanta of several reli-gious and civil rights leaders.Present at the meeting were

SCLC's Dr. Martin Luther KingJr.. Rev. Ralph Abernatfiy. An-drew Young, Randolph Black-well, Hosea Williams and JohnBarber; SNCC's John Lewis andCleve Setters, Atty. CharlesMorgan of the American CivilLiberties Union, Father Henry

Stein of the Episcopal Society

for Racial and Cultural Unity,

Rev. J. Oscar McCloud of thePresbyterian Commission onReligion and Race, and Rev.

Bruce Hansen of the NationalCouncil of Churches.

SCLC Executive Director An-See JUSTICE 2A

AFTfR THK FORUM P. K.Banerjee, third from left, min-ister in the Embassy of Indiein Washington, sjves furthercomment on "India Today and

Tomorrow,'' to this group fol-

lowing an addrasa on that top«eat North Carolina College lastMonday.

From left in the photographare: the Rev. Henry Elkins, di-rector of the NCC United Cam-

put Christian Ministry; Or. J.Neat Hughley, professor of eco-

nomics; Mr. Baneriee: andCarles Daya. president of thecollege's Student GovernmentAssociation.

SEEKS AID IN

RESTORINGBOMBED CHURCH

VANCEBORO The Craven

County Good Neighbor Councilmet in regular session Thufvday night November 11. I

The council voted unani-mously to make public Ahefollowing statement: "The Gra-ven County Good Neighbor

Council is troubled because ofthe bombing of St. Joe Free-will Baptist Church, on Sunday

morning, October 31. We wishto encourage the churches, or-ganizations, citizens and otherfriends of Craven County tchelp these fellow citizens torestore their church."

Funds given may be sent to:Mrs. Willie Bellamy, Route 2

Box 405, Vanceboro.Rev. Albert F. Fisher is

chairman of the campaign and

Rev. C. Edward Sharp is co-chairman.

Union To NameAnti-Labor WorkersAnd Hired Scabs

A special committee compos-ed of members of the DurhamCity School Employees UnionNo. 481 was reported busy thisweek compiling names of allmembers of the union andscab workers. This list willonly include those who refused

to cooperate in the effort nowbeing made to improve thewages and conditions of non-academic workers in the city

schools and scab workersbrought in to replace thosenow out on strike, The Timeswas informed.

A representative of the local

Union stated this week that acomplete list of all workersand scabs will be posted andcirculated throughout the cityas well as given the press assoon as the compiling effort iscompleted. The representative

further stated while no im-mediate reprisals were plannedagainst those listed as beingagainst "our efforts to improve

our lot," the names of suchoersons would be recorded inthe records of the Union.

At present it appears thatout of approximately 300 work-

See UNION 2A

NAACP Files 26 New Complaints OfRacial Employment Discrimination

Continues ItsUnrelentingFight for Jobs

WASHINGTON Continuingits unrelenting pressure for en-

forcement of Title VII of the1964 Civil Rights Act, theNAACP filed 26 new com-plaints charging racial discrim-ination with the Equal Employ-ment Opportunity Commissionon Nov. 8.

Accompanying the complaintswere sworn affidavits fromNAACP members.

Among companies againstwhich complaints were filedwere: Cannon Mills, Kannapo-

lis, N. C.; Radio Corporation ofAmerica, Palm Beach Gardens,Fla.; Voice of Music Corpora-tion, Benton Harbor, Mich.;Southern Paci ft c Railroad,Houston, Tex.

AT THE MEETING of the Dep.

utles of the Grand Chapter ofthe Eastern Star held at theMasonic Tempi# her# 1 on No-vember 13 the deputies werepresented the plans for a youthdepartment to Include girls

from ages 10 to 17. The abovepicture is that of the GrandChapter Youth SupervisorsCommittee responsible for pro-

viding the plans for the newdepartment. From left to right

they are Mrs. Maggie Strong,

Ayden; Grand Worthy Matron,

Mrs. Dali Rogers, Durham, Dis-trict Deputy end Mrs. Marga-

rette Trott, Salisbury, GrandLecturer and Chairman of theCommittee. See other pictureon page 3-A.

Unions named in the com-plaints included the Interna-tional Brotherhood of Electri-cal Workers, Cincinnati, Ohio;Brotherhood of Maintenance ofWay Employees, Lovejoy, 111.;

Union, New York City; and theInternational Brotherhood ofBoilermakers, Houston, Tex.

A joint complaint was filedagainst the U. S. Steel Corpo-ration and the United Steel-workers of America, Bessemer,

Ala. A complaint was also filedon behalf of NAACP membersin Macon, Ga., against theGeorgia State EmploymentService.

Typical of the complaintswas the one filed on behalf ofAnderson L. Dobbins, a mem-ber of the Cincinnati NAACPBran£h.

Three N.C Colleges To Share InAlfred P. Sloan "Matching Grant"

NEW YORK, N. Y. ThreeNorth Carolina colleges havebeen selected to share withtwenty other predominantlyNegro colleges a $1,000,000"matching grant" made by theAlfred P. Sloan Foundation ofNew York City. The grant was

announced this week by Dr.Frederick D. Patterson i chair-man of the Cooperative CollegeDevelopment Program withwhich the twenty-three collegesare affiliated.

The North Carolina institu-tions are Bennett College,Greensboro; Livingstone Col-lege, Salisbury; and North Car-olina College at Durham.

The grant is designed to en-

courage the twenty-three in-stitutions to develop additional

sources of private support, withparticular emphasis on alumni

and local giving. The collegeshave been placed in two groupsby the Foundation, with seven

institutions in Group I eligiblefor matching funds in theamount of $66,666 each, andthe sixteen colleges in Groupn eligible for matching fundsof $33,333 each.

To stimulate an increase inthe flow of gifts from college

alumni and local givers, thematching formula of the SloanFoundation will give each col-lege (up to the prescribed mon-ey limit of its group) $1 ofFoundation money for every

$2 raised from private donorswithin the state in which thecollege is situated. Monies

raised from other private

sources will be matched by theFoundation at a ratio of onedollar for three.

If the over-all average match-ing ratio is one dollar for two,

as the Foundation expects, theproject will make available tothe twenty-three colleges $3,-000,000 in new funds, includ-ing the Foundation grant, dur-ing the next two years.

N. C. MUTUALPRESIDENT BACK ATOFFICE AFTER SHORT ILLNESS

well on his way to completerecovery this week.

Spaulding was dismissedfrom the hospital Monday andthe earlier part of the week

See SPAULDING 2A

A. T. Spaulding, presidentof N. C. Mutual Life InsuranceCompany, who has been con-fined to Lincoln Hospital forthe past several days on ac-count of illness, was reported

Missing Teacher and AutoFound by Police on Alston Ave.

Dr. J. Preston Cochran, headof the Dramatics departmentat North Carolina College, whoearlier in the week was report-ed to have disappeared after a

drunken night of revelry onthe college campus, has re-signed his post at the college,the Carolina Times was relia-bly informed this week.

A few hours following what

has been described as a partyof women, wine and revelry,Dr. Cochran's car was discov-ered abandoned on Alston Ave-nue. Police report that lateron, however, during the night,Cochran was found seated Inthe car apparently in a stateof stupor. Along with him wereseveral pieces of his belong-ings such as clothes, etc.

IE

HCOCHRAN!

In a telephone conversationwith Dr. Samuel P. Massie,president of NCC, the Timeswas informed that efforts arebeing made to satisfactorily ad-just the matter. This was inconflict, however, with anearlier report that Cochran hadresigned. Dr. Massie further in-formed the Times that themissing dramatics instructorhad been located and was atpresent under treatment by,

Dr. R. P. Randolph local phy-sician.

A check with Dr. Randolphconfirmed the reports that Dr.Cochran had been located butthe physician would give nostatement as to the status ofhis condition.