As GIVE TO THE CHRISTMAS CHEER CLUB HELP MAKE SOMEBODY HAPPY CHRISTMAS Patronise Oer Adrertis- | 1 GOOD CONDUCT an — Their Adrertisinr I P w ^ WILL ALWAYS GAIN in this paper shows that I W% #P U£ ^P fl R YOU RE8PBCT. ttay appreciate ^P % II II Watch Your PnbHe Volume XVI—Number 29 Jackson, Mississippi, Saturday, December 7, 1963 PRICE TEN CENTS j South Africa Segregation Under Growing Attack In United Nations THE NATION’S FIRST FAMILY: Mrs. Johnson, daughter Lynda Bird, the President Lyndon B. Johnson, daughter Lucy Baines. Religious Groups Seek Racial Accord In Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia — Leajders of 31 major Protestant, Anglican and Orthrodox bodies gathered in the City of Brotherly Love Saturday to oil the machinery of inter-denominational coopera tion and seek a united stand on race relations, foreign policy and other national problems. The triennial general assemb ly of the National Council of Churches-America’s largest re presentative religious meeting brought together more than 5,000 church leaders from every part of the country. They were marvelously varie/i group-reflecting America’s un ique religious diversity. Plain speaking Quakers rubbfcjd el bows with bearded Greek Orth rodox bishops. Delegates from the African Methodist Episco pal Church shared luncheon tables with delegates from the (Continued On Page Four) Leaders Of Kenya Freedom To Get Presbyterian Scroll Nairobi, Kenya — A major American church body will be officially represented at cere monies marking the first anni versary of the Government of Kenya on December 12. The Rev. James H. Robinson will present a scroll to leaders of the newly independent nation on behalf of the 3.2-million member United Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. Dr. Robinson is the founder and director of Operation Cross roads Africa, under which A merican students of different racial backgrounds have partici pated in work camps and re lated projects in several Afri can countries. He also serves as a consult ant on African affairs for the United Presbyterian Commis sion on Ecumenical Mission and Relations and the U. S. State Department. Dr. Robinson will participate (Continued On Page Eight) Additional $75,000 Is Given To Train Rights Lawyers New York — The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund this week received a com mitment for $75,000.00 from the Field Foundation in continued support of its Legal Intern Pro gram. Announcement was made by Jack Greenberg, director-couns el of the Legal Defense Fund following communication with Maxwell Hahn vice president of the Field Foundation, long time supporter of the civil rights struggle. • Mr. Greenberg announced the unprecedented Legal Intern Program in August of this year. The Field Foundation granted the intial $25,000.00 with which the Intern Program was start (Continued On Page Six) Pres. Kenedy’s Equality Appeal Slated For “Bill Of Rights Day” WASHINTON. — The nation, plunged deeply in mourning for its fallen leader, will hear a now heart-rending appeal from President Kennedy for rededica tion to the principles of free dom, justice and equality, in a short speech in observance of Bill of Rights Day, Dec. 15. The speech was filmed before his f I assassination on Friday, Novem ber 22. Filmed in the White House, the Him was made at the re quest of the Council of Motion Picture Organizations, Inc., as part of a drive sponsored by the movie industry to remind the American public of the signifi (Continued On Page Five) African War Threats Looms Border Dispute See Tension Rising On Kenya Ethopia Frontier MOGADISHU, Somali Repub lic ' —The threat of new Af rican war looms over the horn of Africa as tension grows along the Somali Republic’s border with Kenya and Ethiopia. Thousands of restive Somali tribesmen are on the warpath^ raiding Ethiopian and Kenyan police and army posts, and demanding annexation to Somalia. The Somali govern ment says the raiders have been spurred to action because of “arrests, killings, atrocities and torture.” The government denies aiding the rebels but warns it may not be able to remain inactive for long. In the Somali capital, the dream of a “great Somalia,”— (Continued On Page Six) Several Dead In Senegal Election Riots DAKAR, Senegal Rioting killed several per* sons and injured 30 others in Dakar on national election day Sunday. Early returns in the balloting favored incumbent Leopold Senghor and his Sene* galese Progressist Union. Police said the rioting was started by youths from Da (Continued On Page Seven)' -0 Kenyatta Asks Stern Measures Along Frontier Prime Min _ ___n yatta has called for tough measures to deal with violence on Kenya’s northern frontier. His warning came in the wake of a report that a Shell oil company employee — be lieved to be British—and an African soldier were missing after the ambush of their jeep near the Somali border Thurs day morning. The ambush took place about seven miles from an oil test camp. (Continued On Page Six) r Adoula Taking Charge Of Congo Foreign Policy Foreign Minister Dismissed From Office Arrested LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo, — Foreign Minister Au guste Mabika-Kalanda was dis missed from office and arrested Sunday. Sources close to the govern ment said the arrest followed lisclosure that Mabika-Kalanda lad provided Katanga’s exiled former president Moise Tshom be a Congolese passport without consulting others in the govern ment. Radio Leopoldville, announc ing the dismissal, said Premier Cyrille Adoula was personally taking charge of the Congo’s foreign policy. Mabika-Kalanda, a 30-year-old teacher brought into the govern ment last April to help provide (Continued On Page Six) Say Aparthied Abhorrent To The Conscience Of Mankind A Norwegian Resolutibn On South Africa May Be Considered -The U.N. Security Coun cil holds its third straight meet ing on South Africa’s race seg regation policies Monday and may consider a Norwegian reso lution branding apartheid—ra cial segregation—as “abhorrent to the conscience of mankind.” h*,y.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson became president of the council Sunday in alphabeti cal succession to the United Kingdom’s Sir Patrick Dean with the start of a new month. The Norwegian resolution is expected to be introduced Mon day or Tuesday, and one U.S. (Continued On Page Six) Industrial Relations Manager For Ford Motor Company Jackson was born on August 2, 1926, in Branford, Conn., at tended New Haven public schools and was graduated from New Haven High School in Jan uary, 1945. He entered the armed servic es the same month and served in the U. S. Army quartermast er corps until July, 1946. He was discharged as a sergeant. Enrolling at Yale University | in the fall of 1946, he was graduated in the class of 1950 with an A. B. degree, with stu dies in sociology, psychology and economics. He was a member of the Yale footbal Ream, from 1946 to 1949, and captain of the team during his senior year. In 1946 he received the George Bulger (Continued On Page Seven) I - Levi A. Jackson, Industrial Relations Manager Ford Motor Company One Million Dollars By 1973 Is Goal Negro Women’s Business Group New York, Dec. 2—“One Mil lion Dollars By 1973” is the goal agreed to by a group of nearly one hundred women meeting for a luncheon work session on investing under the leadership of Wilhelmina B. Drake, Director of Women’s Activities for Special Markets Inc. The meeting was held at the internationally famous res taurant “The Coachman” in New York’s financial district on Monday November 11, 1963. The women represented various organizations and clubs in Penn sylvania, New Jersey and New York, and were invited by Spec, ial Markets Inc., 55 Liberty St., (Continued On Page Five) Esso Education Foundation Grants For 1963-64 Near $2 (M) Grants of nearly $2 million, the largest annual program of the Esso Education Foundation since it was established in 1955, were announced today by M. J. Rathbone, chairman of the Foundation. The current grants are for the 1963-64 academic year. Mississippi institutions re ceiving grants included Bel haven College, Jackson and Blue Mountain College, Blue Moun tain. By the end of the current academic year, the Foundation, since its founding in 1955, will (Continued On Page Five) State Supreme Court Upholds SIS'OQC Award Against A. Henry . The State Supreme Court Monday upheld a $15,000 judge ment against Aaron Henry State President of the NAACP. The Court ruled that there was no evidence that Henry was framed in a morals case in which he was charged with making improper advances to a young White boy. The high court upheld a $16, (Continued On Page Seven) Two Methodist Conferences In Joint Meetings Hold Convocation On Parish Minister In The Church Nashville — Two Methodist annual conferences, one in the Southeastern Jurisdiction and one in the Central (all-Negro) Jurisdiction, came together here November 22 for a convocation on the “parish ministry” of their church. The Tennessee Conference (C. J.) headed by Bishop Charles F. Golden, and the Tennessee Con ference (S. E. J.) headed by Bishop Roy H. Short met to (Continued On Page Five) -o Johnson To Get Lafayette Freedom Award NEW YORK s. _ Presi dent Johnson was named to re ceive the Order of Lafayette’s freedom award and was invited to the order’s dinner here on Feb. 10. An earlier dinner was can celled on Nov. 22 after Presi-! dent Kennedy’s assassination.. Former President Dwight D.| Eisenhower and others who are to get awards are expected to I attend the February gathering! The order confers the award upon leaders distinguished for fighting Communism. The or-> ganization is made up of offi cers who served in France dur-i ing World War I and II. -o-— Advocate Editor Recalls Letter On ‘60 Editorial Backing Johnson Recent developments in Am erican history have led the Edi tor of the Jackson Advocate to recall a “letter to the Editor” received on his editorial back ing the nomination of Lyndon B. Johnson as the Democrat Party’s Vice-President candi date in the 1960 convention. United Press International, (Continued On Page Five) -n Meredith Says Johnson Will Slow Down Civil Rigths Los Angeles, Cal. Dec. 2 — Janies Meredith the Mississip pi Negro whose enrollment at the University of Mississippi, backed by federal troops and U. S. Marshalls, led to the bloody rioting in Oxford, Mis sissippi, who subsequently be (Continued On Page Five) ■■ . o " The Battle On Rights Slated To Begin Monday WASHINGTON -Presi dent Johnson Tuesday threw the full weight of his administration behind an all-out campaign to win the earnest possible pas* (Continued On Page Six) i Pres. Johnson Given Enthusiastic Assurance Of Confidence And Support By NAACP Executive Sec. Wilkins Expresses Great Faith In President’s Attitude On Civil Rights PRIZE FOR SKIING—U. S. Ambassador to Finland Carl T. Rowan holds the new Finlandia Trophy Cup in Helsinki after he received it in behalf of the U. S. Ski Association. The award, designed by Tapio Wirkkala and presented by the Finnish Ski Association, will be awarded to the outstanding cross-country skier in the U. S. beginning in 1964. ► WASHINGTON. — President Johnson Friday won enthusias tic assurances of confidence and support from Negro leader Roy Wilkins as a Southerner deter mined to carry out the goals of the Kennedy administration, in cluding civil rights. During a strenuous day of high-level conferences at the White House, the new chief ex ecutive also told his military chiefs he wanted them to make sure the government gets ‘a dollar’s value for dollar spent” in the next budget. Fiscal r e s p o nsbiility and prompt action on civil rights legislation were keynotes of Johnson’s speech before Con gress Wednesday. He reaf firmed these policies Friday, a long with renewed appeals for help and support. Arriving at his office at 9:36 a.m. EST after a quiet Thanks giving di.ineV with his family the night before, Johnson im mediately plunged into a heavy schedule of meetings that ranged over the entire spectrum of domestic and foreign policy. Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), emerged (Continued On Page Five) Johnson Stand Against Bigotry fold In ‘62 At AJC Awards Dinner New York, N. Y. Dec. 2 — “I am against bigotry and dis crimination because I think they are wrong. I am for human un derstanding, for equal justice, for equality of opportunity be cause I think they are right. “May this country always be the kind where a man needs— and the people demand — no greater explanation than this.” With these words Lyndon Baines Johnson concluded an address before the Maryland Chapter of the American Jewish Congress in Baltimore on April 3, 1962. (Continued On Page Eight) United Presbyterian Group Pledge Unflagging Support to Johnson New York, N. Y. — The Unit ed Presbyterian Commission on Religion and Race has pledged its “unflagging support” to President Johnson as he seeks to carry out the civil rights policies of the Kennedy Admin istration. This pledge was made in a telegram to President Johnson from Dr. Marshal L. Scott, com mission chairman, and the Rev. Gayraud S. Wilmore, Jr., its executive director. The telegram expressed sym pathy to the Kennedy family and assured the new Chief Ex ecutive of the commission’s “most sincere good wishes and (Continued On Page Four) President Johnson’s Commission To Probe Kennedy Assassination Washington—President John son’s special commission pre pared quietly Saturday for its investigation of the assassina tion of President Kennedy amid now demands for a full public accounting. It’s chairman, Chief Justice Earl Warren, was reported in (Continued On Page Four) Washington Man Arrested On Charge Of Threatening Johnson WASHINGTON ( —Robert A. Weatherington, 40, was being held here Sun day on a charge of having made an oral threat against the life of President Johnson. Weatherington, who has a record of erratic behavior, was arrested by secret serv ice agents at his home Satur day night on a warrant ob tained earlier in the day. Secret service agents said Weatherington complained that he had been discharged by the Corps of Army Engi neers because of a nervous condition. He alleged that the President and beads of three local banks were involved in a news blackout >6n files which would clear ■ The thcTblackout were raised by the president, Johnson would have to die. (Continued On Page Six) %