Lighthouse and informer. (Charleston, S.C.) 1941-1954, July 07, 1951, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

4 ? LIGHTHOUSE"*!* INFORMER, COttl f f ??SSS i , . i in * i . i, . , a ..i m \ j ** ^ I4SAM' Published weekly by The Lighthouse Publishing Cbmpany, Incorporated. at 1507 Har[r den Street,. Columbia 4, South Carolina TELEPHONE v-va^ v Entered as Second Class matter_:n the Post r - T^~' L if ice at Columbia, South Carolina, under p : "the Act of .March* 3, 1879. JOHN H. McCRAY EDITOR SUBSCRIPTIONS-?Payable in advance?: l' year. ^ft_75; ft mng **? ^f>T 7 SI r.O; * P** fyr, 'Ift'-wniatB _ ? The Clarendon Decision Thi The NAACP's legal statt' annouwe* that jl will I'Ue-mi appeal~from the majority ruling in the Clarendon county, anti-segregation suit just as soon as papers can he processed. This announcement, settles the question as to when the appeal to the U. S. Supreme Coutt would be made, and whether the six month 'holding of the case for final orders ;from the trial court would have any bear? ing on the filing of an appeal. That an appeal would be made was a fore?rr* gone conclusion when the case was placed in court: but a perusal and study of the ? majority ruling" reveals t h ht unless TinaT~ action is taken on it, not only does it return -the South back to the lutn i-ppt-m-y wh"" iJiessy v. Ferguson was decided, but it could . well place a threat upon the nation, opening . the way for an expansion of segregation, . rather than lend support to the abolition of it in the Armed Forces, higher education, and in those states desiring it-though they F;-':; have never before practiced it. It is just as proper for privileged for a state like New York- or Illinois to exploit Ne?groes under jimcrowism as for South Carolina or Georgia. These northern states have as much right as South Carolina to withoid equal education from Nefcroes, and pasa a; - long me bonus to the whites. They have? . ?- at: much piutucllbh under such aii action, as . has -South Carolina in -the'present Clarendon county* ruling, - >' - And while such h step nnay be unlikely, it i--? is not being loo presumptive of possibilities in this direction nn a n-i.tinmil h.i.*ix ulmn . one considers that' in recent yearns many it. white southerners.have migrated^ into norihdj ' ^rn aiid_ Western^atai^s^-and- have earned " - wifh ;hem much of tho pi ej udice they partook of down South, t ; =. c ~ We do not presume?to?kno'v what?ex j ceptions will be raised by NAACP lawyers before the Supreme Court. But the average - ' citizen _must- wonder by what teasofftlie court elected to give the defendants time to obey a law they have. -known existed ~ afi~ " t . along. Moreover, 12 years ago South Carolina knew it would have to practice equahty, if the records -of the gerrernFuSsemblv can be relied upon. The Duval, Thompson and Wright cases^ were further warnings. Does it need more time? Does not the record, show that this state has never done anyflu'rwr ?.Kn.a 1J4-. -T xt _ ^ .. . uumu ^udiny iur Ae^roes tt rinsn t. y ^ Ixien* forced to do? _i_..The strangeness of this- lowencv is .ivculiar when it is remembered that courts * aren't in the habit of saying to the thief on "You may-go out aird get rkroTyoun ?loot.?Theny?mftfe back and we^wiH see whether or not you are guilty." No, the court has always found the theif innocent or guilty, and then and there administered gv . tho law. ./ But stranger slill is" that the court?heZT~lfg\fes - or seems to believes - that in six months district 22 caiT'huild a system for Negro(m tlucu Unmw the ^<iuivainot nr,u-~ ? derated tpr. whites, staff it with teachers . . , whose experience and training will be the same as that among white teachers in tho t.:-. district. Texas, sued to end segregation, raked up $17,000,000 and hurriedly constructed a uni< varsity for Negroes. This -did n:>go(d. And North Carolina. fare'1 m ;i i took to ariming-yprTrrtW more per capita in Durham for Negroes Iha* it was spending in Ghapel Hill on white 'aw 'S\. 'students. This did no good either. G.'1 ??-Hmr enrr'tf !"> : h<>ped that in ('llarcndoa ??^eoutihy "there"ran be Tin exception? No Nerra interested in this ts so naive aft to "' believe any equality of facilities can he so quickly achieved in that distfict, and espe___jErally-^ aihco 'the-'Stntrriifrsh't yet thef~firsl ^ Reuny tft lend to that district. ^ / If the reasoning' in the majority mii^r i? jr > In the (JiareDd^^-th#n-^ J'v- j* ihation ~of segregation in the'Armel Fofv \ ? * ; : ? ! ' . ' i' ' * v *.: v * % ; * % *: :*?11;. ' jtijr: ~:~rz;z-.: " *" "?~~~~?'?~~~ * *r" . - ' ' * ???? 1?r? MBlA, US. C. Saturday, July 7, 1951 AUVEKTISIMU KATES turntofned on ap plication ^ Make checks or orders payable The L ght - house-Publishing Company, Inc., and not t< 7 persons representing it. Natlonal Advertising Representative r inter state United Newspapers, Inc., 545 Fiftl Avenue, New York 17, New York. CLOSING SCHEDULES; News, 12 nooi Tuesday J Advert isinjf, 3 I'. M., Tuesday Photographs, iu A.M. Monday. eatens To Throw Us Back ces, lts-vlimination in the public schools o 31 other states, the recent Supreme Cour actions which outlawed it in Teas, Oklaho ma, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia an! Nortl Carolina are all wrong, and even the Plessj v. Ferguson case, the so-called handbook o South, has a gleaning everybody else ha: overlooked. The Plessy case held orignall^, that when and if facilities were equal th< state could segregate. In Clarendon county in district 22,. Jh.e (facilities were not am are hot equal. This is a readily admittec fact. Does it not stand to reason then thai instead?of finding support in "The Piessj case the ruling violates it? l;nle? it ' rnvinu-n.i nn.l nifrnl M| 1 ,, the Supreme Court, there may lie oth?r iase> like it. And lot us not forgot that: tluro waf t he Dred Soott decision of FS57. in \vhi- h ? federal court held that a Negro has no righi a white man has to respect. That 'notion hatted by. the Fourteenth Admondment isn't entirely disavowed. Holiday From Jimcrowism Along with tlic news, accounts coming on of Atlanta last week where, the 42nd annua NAACP National Convention was beinj held, was (lie report that the riiv nf Ailnn t:iand tin Flnti' ui' <Inniyi:i - n,^iiinjnn one. I fa/man Talm'adge, almost violent pro P'onent of white-man's mastery - the stat< Jaw forbidding mixed audiences in publi< nhtces was. quietly shelved. I ^derates and visitors at the sessions sa they pFmw.i. and on Funday. fd; the final program, addressed by Dr. Ralpl ' 1. Kiircm Wa_j?<iiici,nns at (Vnda n< ; or~native horn Atlantans of the mnkwr racedTilpH nib the auditorium and took whatever seats the: found. ' . For the greater part of a week, then, wa: one nlace in Atlanta where all citizens met sat and talked as they pleased. There wa no social j_aunr4y-rtt, nor dThy signs of ahnor mality among the mixed gatherings. It i: understood that Georgia relaxed its jinicrov law-s rather than endure the aTtverse publi city which would have hit the state had i follow-! d another course. Whatever the rea . on, here was proof - even to Talniadge that the segregation laws aiv needless, tin wise and a greater source of interracial ir ritation than was (Georgia's ijoli tax, and ; /? i Cn'oi^ia klan boating. !l jinicrowism can put to flight for i.a. week in (ieorgia, it ran take a permanen "hojday now. An! this ii. shah have to ; ; event UaBj^: - ?The Kernes'Tax fi w ' v\j; South (aroiinians are well into one \\eel of what Governor Byrnes would have then feel is dAIAl city stories of llu; internal device'hail it as j tax 10 equal]/'.' ttic .\ejiro senools, but uo body has yet tried to explain how the stab proposes to do this by dividing" what is let after politic al "peel oil's" into Ivviilcqual.por t lions and applying Uiese halxes upon bot! 1 *;" I: o i s Lu. I. he .S 1.(1 ^mtUon-net-red it erf to X qroes. Tn?1h is, the sales ta.x is the "p.ynies lax." It, makes the poorest h+h4 hitrtfcsi |>res.sed?iuiizc-ir^.-xv-r-U-ht* deeper i n' 'powil \ una strujjgK\ It m the device of~?rf e\v j -> liticians who would tax to death the pooresi wretch in order to give proof to a t.heo?> potrtTCally conceived "some 5:? years ago. ;tir. od -against Negroes. . We call tile South ( aioljua sales tax tTa Mini Crow T.ia". and Mh.'dt ^CrMTfor" so' v (fer to Jt. ? Sl I? 'r*~ 4 ' - ^ '0 - ? ^ . " I ? "But Congress, Has Ye r I ) 4mWmWti? 1 -MMS&y l 1 v the'presioent a t .. . . NFFn rno r A LVZA\ When It I'mches Your I ; S >ii-U'i)ody was toiling ine a ,t, lv V. V. t.-ck.s ;im? thai ;t was r:i- iny <,Vri' 1 > l"!- :-<?vne elements > :' Th< VATttf r pc"! 1*" Tn jTft t!it.- lit t; hi that N( nyt-s v-. re being unap- >t;.' prevail:\-i- ait,| trouble ma'kcr>, f> : the - ;:iupiy reason* tKat cen- the ? r.-h. ;p ;: ii-i doodle-v. addling a:: kept many faels. them |[liS As I icnicni- . ?'-lit ef Ailantiiii.' ; i i a P r.o u P ^Wml M:'Z u nite - w.-men. ilif'i&jH th* i? t : ; ' l:-: y e ; VV, ,\ r' ' - 11 1'S i.-y.AW hi" h'A ! p e-.i i. Ta-..- - sc. har.i-vt ii 0>i,l]y. |)u't cfn-> Wt '-"'tv-; anh group. at -1 . . ^ * 1]' . Ii)"\.te! t f-i". 'i ?vt'r 1 ' ' '* . presented i v * ' l V to. .- The M;t n ' ? ri " : r;i a\| a": ~ t-rr 1 ? ~?' h' ' i: 1 vi. ulii >?*.' 1 '1 .. > ?'- i : atit.?rrr?il is ^letu: t~~ Wi.ai :?i i-e. :: ,j,v.e ah. inn v.r.g' the In -a, h ; e- ;a \ , . 'k, i ' rt ]> ". ten r.u'' * : v. e- k ! : noil- ; .< II. . irj t irk* I: y:nji ' . < ! 1 ri( ;u y . -nine:) s.. ; : (.11 t'u' y.i.-w :v ?T<i\V snirr- U.N." M< it.- ; - :..i 1 >.<'1 nt> f. ; t tt :t ;; ' , v. < fL T? FT7 MM. ~ .|v" y.' t KENDRIX KO 1 in (toiim To \\ est Ajrai ' 'AXlllNtiTt 'X, n i mrr? .1 i: ,p no . 1 -a routi- t.iki a i a . a hv r, I v. A_ v;<. ' ::c V ^ ^ At t?m ' " uHiiuurv I- f p 1 !i < ( ni t ill" it I I t IllfjloYt.vl l>V lll'l.-' J)t-r [,, jj ;V .1. .. i?1 ;.oo.;..;?i, ? | rip ^'Miu tiiiiiy .i.'uu; th.i' i . ; . * So .!, ( .> ; 11 ( , j, . i... 11 ..!. , i I. .1.1 II.y oil .. I . ! j rticiit auui;..vw it..y V \'r n' r.. j, . u . . v ' 7"" : u : v"?" 7T~ ' . -f focn.-^o-;! uiu:r.\? ? M.'-; i v sir ipy H, ;; ,nt. '; i v 7~ ' hopt'ful of thi P.'r s;?i;?* of , *f lej*is)a4 i' Li: c i*i VVa-sh'^ntfm. ?ii"* , <!ul K "i t-'f sixteen .a!11:,i ji' ?? ? 1 ii''p s'l C':\ ,] U.<;i,U Iiivc-tQi y ,| tn" ? \?.* ) ?;?! 1 < Msifl',i'ccl I in Wn?hjn^tnn r.n'rf in 41,11 the Ci n^i s.i ,->f the I'-jito'l pr-!-r Stntrs. Three member * f M then I , ?< t To Pass The Civi -^pilE / ~ i '"TjlLjm^ f \ - . y^ft sup^ff <~{^^;/ ^mgeF^E ^nu ?l#i' ^Rk *i#k? Rg5P' DRESSING THE JOINT SESSION OF 'HANGING ? ?oot 1 Nl1 'i bi'. K Kl C'p '1 I ':! ?: ? iju i by j?/ I' i-bjfi 5H.GS rntvut 1 ' 'I vvgjv. V'.a't tile "iii-.i :.,i'.v waitc(t unt.i Nv.srnj i< i; battK* ovt/ Gh'tuI is.-U" ua ijottu I 1 M ' u '..;g >. i.?111?i avc. NI'Po.l V-. My . ' j _: 11 .fit;. . haw pa<wc; :t rviiTn.-i-'. wh.-, v.MU'.C! hav ; . it hy M.yk.r.il up n.MM- ' : i:sp,.:-.,:i i-ay-un; thnnlph the ~ !'?' .. : C. GU'i;!;!; . :nei\ hanli ,\.ve ; r_r rJry : : !'-t ^ the. V A . ;; I'GvUiiil Tti:.:!.; rr ?i ! "-?r?: v ^ A. t" in- ' :ni r. , or.ts : V ; ' v- ~j' r-JA- VJ. ; - _ '' >?* .'Hi...?;. iiuiif:;?rtnr? i 1 :;ii r.iint !: ./m .- .x i ' < - t.t . i ' Mi,: t vi r ' niy t> ** ''J' 1 i : ':u A r^*r*v ' y_ S Vi-rv^o v. ,lV > ? 1 u!. Si'i) o!r I ;?i( Vi'l* v. ' !'v i'I 'unht, < '.n'j tA . MMENTS 1 11 1 A S. p.-SI :i ! ;:> ii'i,i111 i" \t t i ' nvitrcl. VlSi.ns Oil tho "Hill" ... v, i;i\ ii\ itkttit*it ' ? <t..-rut..i* !? i't *\ I II- Si I:;tt... Hi,jit ; 1 11 ; Hi it I lay1) A i k Si,;. ' ,i' i j..ji |- t 'jibi j 1 '?> <n 'A-ill tft. I a; t: 1VI l KM It .-'in . 1: 11 tii i tu unpin nt not;. _n;j i>r?'grants i n hu!i tights. . iuiip.t .\i- tr.u, i.'.Ai t'oiiMitution r, t u '< ti nit1 it. .4 wide- ope11 ii;s : :i i.ii.. i S.- . pi;!i.i(? tin juvntitc, wn : .'.d. r, T ( 1 ' I' % , 1 , ?*kv' ' 'j * * ^ (!!>r i ' ' n I1.. 1.. V.- ; ' alt! t i Utf 41; Si U- > ,n. ... * A! S'ti'l)., n-t.-ft i ,j; M:. ?t? -i . .. ? V u i.lu ii ill'ii. I Do*. Chailos S Johnsrwi, tl.'l. r I l h T T^Ti i ' ! .'i .low. Rabbi. Thrso \*. orr U_l U-arn what various jnonts of !'ir population jght about the < *vij r,go.t< . i V ' 1 Rights Bill" = . t}l rieflTHAVepEEN PLACED,UfOR U5 I T MO^EMEHT OF EVEWTS. j AH IML lHE_C0lifiRfi55_ WIU TACT 1 n CONG R E '* ; . I >y John \\. Mel ray * , C ~ i', li ankly st olded . ' ;:'1" . byin 14 strried up c Visl-.d I>y outsiders and t: nmtnmn radicals. When he got lu.s eyes flashing and f>;p-' 1-kc liJOO cannon. -I I-Uiiid. -ut some fig 11 res from J ' ]ityA rope: t of the state dev * i-w-tnu 1 :t ol education. Ins ?. ?r< a My popped then. Why ..(hit those tigurev given the ^ A-V-te people?he began'.' Tin;;, 'hi.ndi i h.m some phutpgr.-ohs }. (akin jn school district 112, ap'.i figure* e;i enrollment ;n that v ;l >1: ' ' 1 ^Ion: i d all t'ii'sf. > h ni i-vir-titc lloiid-ny'.peuod. Ife wa.nt.vi t0 show .them a- * r->ur;d ,n;i i hiake some coo*": : ?.. 1 . ......... . . ? a no put on a pair ul , / V :i'- ' >lr>^ &<>"*-' t'T" 1 1 know it, .perhaps, [ 1 1 1 \ "" mi t ;j.,y n : r'mp.ng ii!tie concern. i*'i \ "v., alii agree- "that you >:1 ' 'i-d have betti r c'rse thail.to *" ?1 s<iucd5e yoti" MT-ef int^ 3 ' .-i V :a!'; too small. I * 11* . ' t *' [-Ala.. c novation.. the sr.ee 1 "1 1 i i , ** ci luuKiai ?>n f)v tnv state, and c ..v>c i .> purolv vour fov the s other fellow is'h t irftcresl.nl in ? ? f rrrr-r\ ;t t.ts. 'lake fur example v." w< nnn who Tea ted' a pr a. tu ?s :.t 'm.. V\ITA .0- ? ii. paying it vvettljj^ iijtake iar to,, snk t;.? siei-p. 1 wonder f she and those hearing ' :txheve:' uut around to realizing x ;t N' .: ev a. t _i ust as sic a \ ::e' : . i-uua --and under ten- ' ; : ,ip> sicker - an i * !ily .? -k :v\ef. We don": need n I .. n r a radical, to ltd1 ' TP"?r*~~ pinrr.es. \ V~ feel" ' havi t wear it. 1 By M. H.?Ktrmrrrx?$ concern. % i?y liie tunc- 1 was ready to ia.r\ t;ie nroadcusl circuit into the We>t and K.ist had furnishcd a warn iet tul background a?'a inch?t-o?oust Western?? oprrimn on the vital subject of rJunuJp -afed tnvil rjglhts,- and . there were son^e interesting expert-noes ahead. ,'i 1 - -r~rrr- -* - tu . fuller experiences. There I met? . John W Hamilton, of Gerald L. K. Smith's Christian National ' ist (Tu-ado .who told me thyt E the only solution to our na ton's civil' tights program V 'Aniiid be to "tvt'urn" the Ne- f Pidesllne-i-well! ??T~~? T gro to Africa and the Jewg to 1 P.ih . tin.- \< ell! c !aiy? M'-t:on Picture Industry ^ 1 :i ' .' 1 i, pointed Up ' e :e t.it the movie in- ' i- :.4 i.i it- efrof't ^ t" curb rat-tal intolerance. This 1 a.'uJca.st v .?s relayed to Wash-, ngj r, fr >:u a RKO studio sot. F . ut Mao Jjliancuco. f~chat- ? d wuh Stu.ut Richardson ^ War.J, Bay area radio personality and director of the inl tin! Commonwealth Club, who hid Ih-itii in i In i i mill Iff ' "h i: the problems given to San * Krani iso thru the great influx * of new populations, ivhite and r colored. from the South. Bn. k across the rountry. Civil --WEEKLY SI 'he Declaration Of ++ v By Rev. James Keller . ? I ' ;* When our Founding Fatbits ri years ago, drew uo and a>pted a charter, now recog zed as one of the'noblest doc" nents of all times, they baser; > authority on Almighty God. In so- brief a document, these en /tnight have made but on< deran'ce?ty>?he?Greater.?-ftrr ley wanted -to hammer homi ruths which they feared other icy knew were fundamental U emocracy. Woven, therfore ito -the texture of the Declara on ?f Independence are. friu gniftrnnt sentence*.???-?Direct Quotations 1. Note the wording, tlv rst: "When in the course o umnn events, it becomes ne ?ssnrv for one people to Jls dve the political bands, wTik?! avc connected them with ano ler, and 9s<ume amdn* th owers of the earth, th? sepyrt nd equal station to which th a\vs of Nature and of Nature' !od entitle them Our fore Tihers mi^ht hiyve establishe heir claims on; the' "Laws c Mature" alone. Instead, the mphasized the fact that th .'itnrr.l?Uw?iI self?depends?n2. The second sentence i quallv positive :"We hold thes ruths to he self-evident, tha MEANTS 'N Vn Interesting lnte By W. M. Bowman On last Saturday, 1 sat dow n.'the well appointed dinin oom of the Hotel Savoy in A1 :mtg, Ga. X ordered r?v' me: nd just before it was served, cry nice looking young vvoma :r,U i?U??- u..i 'ildl uOnte erself at the able opposite nv She se?j$Uid^ you if yoiirB v4fo?docs? nind?' I ass^ir-^? d her ihat m} wife was uioi turn two .hundred miles awa; nd my being public persoi lie understood that I must b iocial, I must confess I di trT4?"i'i t!'il lady?at f11 s Our conservation ran the Ui rovering the NAACP conver ion. She chose her. fo"bd ver avefu'lly as she said that sh vas on a diet. I have always "dc no interest* n diets, so J questn.fud hot i /out the efTectivene..a of her lite conservation l!pn drifte i. her oeeupat"! ./n^.atid-llumuiwned on -me who she wa Shu tool me that she was th piano "player for Hoy Milto md his band. 1 asked her : lands, she rrssured hie "that th >out the strain of tjie Qnc mgl: vas hard work, and that "the ' ivi i"i 1117' i~t Ti til ;ifM \f h. r> ve\ TTTio ' uUl play for two or thre lights. She saifi that this, was th iu!y~t7m<? wiivn tvei husband,ailroad man fould get to se ter. She told me that contar u popular opino n. a lot of'mi SK-inns were regular in the: iex H-+H4 tl>at she pel ouallv did not make it a hab Rights Inventory had a-s :1 [west* such pt rsons as John r Ifthnsoti. LLony-Negro' Dige.s1 )iih., Chicago Don E. Weave ditor of the COLUMBUS (C :.i CITIZEN, Ororjfe S?hfi uor. vliroc'tor of the TliTvrrr ommittee or human relotior A Delvoit.- nnd Lilt Munn or tiri OirRTER n Pittsburgh. (>n this nop. it is going, to? nleresting " meeting again M iamiltnn in St ..Louis, Mr. Ai Ihur in Hollywood and M Vard at San Francisco. Thes H-i'-ons had 'yipwpoirvfs whic tvouTfl like" .to re<.heck a-ftc wo years. Especially would :ka to meet Mr. Hamilton 5 jain. I woula like to know if S imils still tolerates the sort OU1 its a> were represented by th >mith and Hamiltons. Califm lia, itscerho<t,~ wan quite read o meet any problems cast upo it front, but I would like aga V V I Independence & God all men are cheated equal, that they are endow/d by their Cre. ator with Certain unalienable Rights, that among, these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit * of Happiness. ." "/ ' . 3. Toward the end ot the doc ument. the Founding Fathera appeal, in their own words, "to the Supreme Judge o< * world" for the rectitude of their ( intentions; -i! 4/The Declaration closes with * the following statement: "And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the : protection .of divine Providence, J\ we mutually pledge to each "other our Lives, our Fortunes, j s met our sacred Honor/' ; -J They Recognized God Evidently, the Fathers of our i most explicit. They were* God- ] c fearing men. For them the idea c of God had to be integrated ' 0 witn everything if men were V~] s not to forget that their rights, liberties and life iself came: d from their Creator. . ;.v.?. >f," Those great men sitting in j y the second Contintntal Congress i e in Philadelphia .must have had -*?-W.ilium Perm's warning Th i -fflmd they drew up the He?' larf.iion:. "Those Rebple who are ... c not governer by God will be ' it' ruled by tvrants." ' ,V 'COMMENTS rview ^ of letting strange men date her. She is known as a 'low ^ dawtn" blues. player^ yet ^he confided "To rruf that she liked . to play semi-classics, and said ? a a lot of white nite club pafrohs n liked for heir to play such music, .Uui it seemed that Negroea. that is the majority of them that like the type frequent Ne-\ ' a. gro nnte cluhg. songs which till H them that they wild cut some* ? 2 body's throat if they catch; them J /with" another man err-woman.--j|. She thr^" a ranniriiL' in, ~rrr? B oreve m : s Who condomnp 1 mu- ] 1 -sicians for entertaining people^ | while^OTne_oT_those same miri- _ I- lsters exploit the people for j j, tinarw al gain only, She re- ' e vealed something that T ain be- 5 /, earning extremely aware of i, these last few days, and that >e is these "religious singers" wharf travel all .over the country for*^* 1 profit and gain, she said that j- sortie of them had morals so bad LS- th.lt -:hf jng-t rrrnlH nnt -SPP >..W _J i they^could pretend to-be. Chrisy tians so much when they go" a_. on the stage. f She said that a lot of music-J d idns had drug habits, and <ts~ t- in every profession, there are s. some bad musicians and soma d good ones, ghe personnaly. did it?not iike to associate- with them, s. .a? they gave the music world e a bad name. ' n - Yes. I had a revealing nleri view with Camille Howard.. I Is iett there with a high and grand : it opinoin of the profession that y 1 .hear sq niuch about. I gave y~ her my address and inV'ted her e to visit us when she comes to Columbia again. I hope she ie does. . /. e cry Sunday morning 7:15 and ^ y Sunday nights at 11:15 over.' t station WNOK the 1230 spot on ? Li v^H- ~~ .' Hret?us watcTr, Figfrt and it Pray." ts to meet Mr. Arthur and Mr. I Ward,, for review purposes, t- REGRETTABLE OMMISr, SIGN: In the recent column on )- the National Newspjaper.ptrt^ oromittod th^n-ynr nf Thi in '? lisln.'i'S Association. this column i?, W. Young, Norfolk Journal and? ps TukTc. <.s c>njp of Jhe past presi* dent, of the NNPA cited at the reyent ronvention. Thig OTTUS. r . sion is regretted. r- , ! . r. PLATFORM GUESTS i% i>? ? ? ? * ? ' * r- r*-? |7T\ rt ? .t . U.I. ? mQSl o> ? ,r the 66 plaintiffs who instituted - I the Clarendon County antl i- jimerow lawsuit, . fin* of its kind *ver tried in this country, ' ' vrrrr pr- "rrm ~jnierta eftlm NAACP's 42nd annual convehr_... tlon here Sund'ay y?- All had tra\Mtle?.hf?* from n Summerton, S. C. in a charterin od bus. " 1__ ' V . , tV ; I' , ; r . y ' "wSifflp ~ ' 'V'