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School Corner 1 I
District P-TA
Holds
IMeelino -
fpe Savannah District oi
Parpnt-Teachers held their an
_ "institute _
nuad Saturday morn-
ing at Beach-Cuyler school
The Rev. F, W Bagby, pastor of
BethelAME church, conducted
the devotional period.
f*tof. Peter Smalls presented
a short program of songs and
readmes ® which was highly en-
joyed, and Acting Prln , , ipa) ,
Douglass extended a hearty
welcome to the body.
Mrs. Curtright of Liberty
County Training school, gave
the acceptance speech for the
principal. Mr. Rawls.
* Jesse Brinson gave a short
demonstration by use of cray¬
on, showing that a good start
will always result in a good
ending The district president
Mrs. Josephine Brinson, fully
explained the purpose of the
PTA organization, which is to
serve the needs of children and
youth. The National Congress
of Parent-Teachers has devel¬
oped certain principles to safe¬
guard its PTA associations.
'j ^irs- Galvestus Orr, presi¬
dent of the Beach-Cuyler PTA
was hostess and served a sump¬
tuous dinner. There were rep¬
resentatives from Camden,
Liberty, Chatham, Bryan and
Effingham counties present.
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WOODVILLE NEWS NOTES
The first six weeks have
passed and the pupils of the
Woodville school are busily en-
gaged in their many activities.
We have a new piano in the
music department and enjoy
community singing during de-
votions, with all of the rooms
in the high school building par-
ticipating, several times a week,
Tin glee club, the NFA quartet
and the chorus and pupils arc
n dy to put on the annual tal-
ent show, November 3. in the
community center.
The ' cn ___have ‘\ ;un b !‘ ndS
been installed in , the cen
wher< w ; . uow OU r moving pic-
u '
ThLs WPC k we are saluting
|a\|> <;kant COLLEGES MAY
KEEK LEGAL MEANS EOR
Continued from page one
blaze last week during the 25th
annual session of the Confer¬
ence of Presidents of Negro
Land-Grant colleges, meeting
here Octotber 21-23.
Dr. Horace Mann Bond, pres¬
ident of Lincoln university (Pan
struck up the theme in the an¬
nual address when he said that
the inequality in financing
, inslilut adden-
1
Invitation. ..
,,
Continuing. Bond declared.
“It. is our duty to insist in this
American nation which never
j hesitates to teach democracy to
other nations that this democ¬
racy be applied in equalizing
1 expenditures of public funds
for our own public institutions.”
Dr Felton G. Clark picked up
the theme again when he led
a dismission on, “Federal Aid
Available to Land-Grant col¬
leges.” It was evident as Dr.
Clark began speaking that 20
years of waiting in vain for
equalization of federal funds
(despite “carrying hams and
shining shoes” as President
Lawrence A. Davis qf Arkansas
State put it) had worn the pa¬
tience oi the land-grant presi¬
dents pretty thin.
Clark started out by listing
the inequalities in federal al¬
lotments. He revealed that
Negro land-grant colleges were
receiving less than three per¬
cent of all federal funds al¬
lotted to land-grant colleges in
i NU’ S.mthem States for Ptiwa-
tion and research. For exam-
pic, in his own state, Louisiana,
the Negro NeKI'O iand-graht college
r6CCiVCr» Ollly $37,000 111 federal
lands annually while tne , while . .,
the Girl Scouts in their annual
j Scout week celebration, and
Woodville school is proud that
j Senior Troop 65 is active in the
; program of this worthwhile or-
j ganization. The Boy Scouts,
NHA and NFA are already in
action, and the School Council
j is in the process of reorganiza-
lion. Meanwhile the whole
school and community are be¬
hind the Reds and the Blues as
they draw near the close of
their campaign to complete the
Initial steps in organizing the
School-Community Council at
a rnornrn °th mass meeting " on "
November 5.
We are centering our atten-
tion around American
tion Week, November 9-15.
powelC laboratory
P-TA MEETS
The Parent-Teacher Associa¬
tion of the Powell Laboratory
School of Georgia State Col¬
lege held its regular meeting on
Tuesday night.
The bases and implications
for the re-grouping of our stu¬
dents were discussed.
The faculty and supervisors
are presently in the process of
surveying the communities
from which the pupils come and j
are administering pupil ques ■ j
tionnaires and a series of oth
er tests, which by so doing it i
is planned to get a true picture
of each child.
land-grant, college receives
$1,087,070, or about 30 times as
much. As for rural population
which ought to be a sound ba¬
sis for apportioning the funds.
Negroes make up 44.7 per cent
of it in Louisiana. In other
states the percentages range
from 0.8 in West Virginia to
55.3 In Mississippi.
The land-grant colleges ad- j
mitted that there had been an
increase in extension person-
nel, but pointed to the dispar-j
ity in salaries. The average
vhite county agent receives
$3,500 a year, while the average
colored agent receives only
$2,100 a year. As for confer¬
ences, they said they had tried
them, but got nowhere.
Officers of the conference
and members of the executive
committee were reelected. They
are Luther II Foster, Virginia
State college, president; Law¬
rence A. Davis. Arkansas State,
vice president; Rufus B. Atwood,
Kentucky State, secretary; Fel¬
on G. Clark, Southern univer¬
sity, Louisiana, treasurer.
Exeeuttive committee is as
ollows; John W. Davis, West
Virginii State, chairman; w.
i. Banks, president-emeritus of
Prairie View A. and M- college,
Texas, F D. Bluford, A. and T.
college, North Carolina; F. G
Clark, Southern, J. F Drake, A.
and M. Institute, Alabama; G,
L. Harrison, Langston univer-
sity, Oklahoma, and S. D.
Scruggs. Lincoln university, Mo.
Other presidents in attend¬
ance at the conference were
Howard D. Gregg of Delaware
State; C V. Troup of Fort Vain¬
ly State college, James A. Col¬
ston of Georgia State college
'associate member), Rufus E.
Clement. Atlanta university
Alcorn A. and M. college, Mis-
sissippi; M. F Whittaker. S. C.
State; E. B. Evans, Prairie
View ,own . Manuel W. R. Valentine, Training Borden-J school,
New Jersey: F. D. Patterson, ■
Tuskgee institute
member). i
FOUNDERS DAY SPEAKER
Continued from Page l
member of the Talladega Col¬
lege Board of Trustees, and a
Talladega alumnus, class of
1916. will deliver the Founder’s
Day address.
The college is eighty-onc
than twelve hundred students I
well-prepcred for varied careers
and has won the approval of
the top rating national associa-
tion and graduate schools ■
Alumni, former students and
friends throughout the country
will review together the back-
Ground and accomplishments of
Talladega College and celebrate
Founder’s Day with programs
similar to the one planned for
the campus. “ m
T«.E SAVANNaH TRIBUNE
• PETEY AND HIS PALS '■> J maxwell |
_.
>IANY TO ATTEND CONF. ON OMEGAS TO OBSERVE
TEACHER EDUCATION ACHIEVEMENT WEEK
COMMITTEES
_
Continued from page l
tion begins at Georgia State
College October 31, and ends
November 1, in Meldrim hall,
Miss Alma Stegall, head
of the department of elemen¬
tary education at Georgia State
college, as chairman of the pre¬
service education and certifi-
cation committee, . and i W. „ K
State college, as chairman of
the committee on in-service ed¬
ucation and improvement of
institution.
Representatives from all sec¬
tions of the state are assemb¬
ling for the conference.
The program is outltined as
follows
Friday afternoon, October 31,
3 to 5:30 p. m.:
1 . Unfinished business,
Aaron Brown, chairman.
2. Report of organization of
committee for action, L M. Les-
ter.
General discussion, confer-
ence members.
3. Committees formed and 1
personnel, Aaron Brown. i
General discussion, including
common agreement in attacking
problems in study group to fol- ) |
low, such as:
A. Problems involved in each j
area. * j
B. Plans for operation.
C. Plans for evaluation. |
Second session, Friday even- 1
,
ing, October 31, from 7:30 to
9 o’clock:
4. Stucfy groups of four ap¬
pointed with consultant.
Third session, Saturday
morning, November 1, from 9
to 12 noon.
5. Reports of study groups
on findings.
A. Committee I, Recruitment
and selection. H. A- Bowen, Ft.
Valley State college, chair¬
man; J. h. Medlin, State De
partment ol Education, Atlanta;
Aaron Brown, Albany State
college. Albany, Georgia.
B. Committee II: Pre-service
education and certification,
Alma Stegall, Georgia State 1
college, chairman; J. A. Col¬ I
ston, Georgia State College, Sa¬
vannah; L M. Lester, State
Department of Education, At¬
lanta.
C. Com.iutiee III: In-Serv¬
ice Education unu improve-
ment of Instruction, W. H-
Brown, Georgia State College,
Savannah; J. H. cook, State
Department of Education, At¬
lanta; Maynelle Dempsey, State
Department of Education, At¬
lanta; C. V Troup, Fort Valley
State college, Atlanta.
D. Committee V: Leadership
Education, J. Max Bond, chair
m£ . n , At i an ta university; Helen
The ooirmicvee on rCci’dit-
me nt would be concerned with:
i Reliable information on
dpmanc i anc j supply and oppor-
tunities for training in the sev-
era i fields.
2 . Future teachers of Ameri-
ca in high schools and colleges-
3. Vocational guidance which
emphasizes the opportunities
and the needs for superior in-
dividual teaching.
The Committee on Pre-Serv¬
ice Education would be con¬
cerned with:
1. Studies of the responsi¬
bilities for which teachers are
to be prepared.
2. A statement of principles
to be used as guides by insti-
engaged in planning
curricula for teacher education
and its several phases.
3. Certification policies and
standards for approving insti-
tutional programs in a state-
wide cooperative program of
teacher education.
The Committee on In-Service
Education would be concerned
with:
'
1. Studies of the level and
continued From Page One
State college will speak at
Home on Wednesday. On
trida y ( Dr . E B . sarrelas, pro-
{essor at* Georgia State college
will address the assembly at
Beach-Cuyler school
Also during the week, there
11 be two radio programs.
will be heard over Station
weep Tuesday, and Dr, J.
WTOC Thursday.
To culminate the observance,
the fraternity will present Dr.
W. M. Boyd, Sunday, November
,9, at Meldrim Auditorium, Ga
State college. . Dr. Boyd is
chairman of the department ol
social sciences at Fort Valley
State college.
HINTS REGIONAL COLLEGES
MAY BE UNCONSTITUTIONAL
Continued from page 1
S. Supreme court decisions that
no state will be able to satisfy
the requirements of the Four-
teenth Amndment to the Unit-
ed States Constitution by set-
ting up regional areas of Negro
higher education while at tlje
same time retaining separate
and individual state-wide uni-
versities for white students
only
“in the Missouri case of
Gaines v. Canada, the Supreme
court' of the United States held
that the requirements of, the
14 th Amendment of equal pro-
tection of the laws were not
satisfied by a section of state
iaw providing tuition for Negro
students at out-of-state univer¬
sities.
“The fight of the National
Association for the Advance¬
ment of Colored People for
complete equality of education¬
al opportunities will continue.”
WHITES FIRE HOUSE WHEN
NEGROES MOVE IN
Continued from page x
wbat W!l1 t " lce place.’
Shortly ^hoitly afterwards, afterwards, flames
burst from the rear of the
house. The officers, who were
at the front, had to break down
doors to evacuate the family,
They had barred themselves in
the house when the mob con-
gregr ted outside. No arrests
were made.
The Waltons were the first
Negroes to move into the neigh¬
borhood which was the scene
of activities last year of the
anti-Negro organization, The
Columbians, Ine.
j INSIST FREEDOM ON TRAIN NO JIM CROW ON
j TOUR
Continu ed from Page l
nessee were alerted to work for
a program insuring that there
will be no jim crowing the
Freedom Train as it passes
through the South.
type of training of teachers in
service.
2. Clarifying the needs of
such teachers and recommend-
ing ways of meeting them.
3. Improvement and exten¬
sion of workshops, summer
school offerings, and pre-ses¬
sion planning conferences.
The Committee on Leader¬
ship Training would be con¬
cerned with ;
1. Helping individuals with
superior qualities to find them¬
selves and to prepare for posi¬
tions of leadership.
2. Studying ways of develop¬
ing the competencies needed by
leaders and initiating new ways
for providing the training
needed- %
3. Immediate attack upon
the program for training sup¬
ervisors and principals, follow¬
ed by studies of graduate
training for teachers.
2,000 DELEGATES TO ATTEND
GA. BAPT. CONVENTION
Continued from Page 1
-
Y Jemison, president of the
.
National Baptist Convention,
wil1 also be the euesl of lhe
Georgia Baptist Convention,
1 and speak on Wednesday morn-
ing. ’ Dr. Jemison ; is pastor of
Tabernaci Baptl: , t church
-
Dr. Leander Asbery Pinkston,
Atlanta, pastor oi the Travelers
dent for the past ll years, will
preside over the three-day con-
clave- His annual message will
j be when delivered both bodies, Tuesday the evening,
women
and men. are in session togeth-
er. Dr. B. H. Atkinson of Grif-
j fin will present the president,
| The convention plans to raise
| this year not less than
lor the promotion of its pro-
gram of Christian missions and
; education.
HONORING THE “MOSES
OF THE NEGRO RACE”
Continued From Page One
opening pair of concerts.
It is Miss Davis’ plan to pre¬
sent to the public library of
each city in which she appears
one of the Washington Memo¬
rial half dollars, the first coins
of the land bearing the like-
ness of a Negro, which have
been struck by the U. S. Mint
as legal tender and are being
sold for $1 a piece as a means
of raising money for an indus¬
trial and vocational training
sphool on the site of Booker T.
Washington’s birthplace at
Rocky Mount, Va,
FOR RENT
Nice Furnished Room For
Couple Dial 3-7566
507 E. Huntingdon St-
DRY CLEANING
OVERCOATS — HAT>
SUITS — i»it ESSES
50c
j LAMAS BROS .
j Oof, Drayton and
Hrtv\igli)a>n Sta.
PHONE 8S0f
Call lor 1 nd Deltrei
Five Chapters, Order of Eastern Star
Savannah, Georgia
Will Present
Lois 1^0 1a
T as 9 r;
fn Costume
Recital
Friday, November 7 8:30 P. M.
At St. Philip Mon. A.M.E. Church
560 West Hull Street *
FOR SOL C. JOHNSON SCHOLARSHIP FI ND
GENERAL, ADMISSION 75 CENTS PATRONS $1.00
CHILDREN — 10 CENTS
The Public Is Invited
OCTOBER 30, I9v*
RACE-OWNED BANKS
SHOW BIG INCREASE
Continued from Page l
—
dividu.'is, partnerships anrJ
corpora con ■ lose to .->3 ,o..> <
an advance 01 27 per cenl '
G:o-s earnings surpassed to-
tals of pr evi0llii Vears by S1S5,-
C00'with a Go per cent increase
of $197,452 being shown as net
-3
. j , j f ... hank „ nnw ., nprat _
. , states and the Dis-
ber deludes two recntly char-
tre£} institutions the Tri-State
bank Memphis ‘ and Kansas' the
Eoup;|as stcte bank 0 f
Kalis
Tri-Slate, opened for busi-
ness last December 16 with a
paid-in capital of $2L0.030 and
paid up V-trplus or $40,000,
’
showed resources exceeding
$975,000 as of last April 21, ac-
,
j cording to bank examiners ol
| the Tennessee State Banking
; department. Douglas was capi¬
talized at $125,000, with surplus j
and undivided profits totaling
$43,750, when it received a
charter during September.
1946.
For The Host
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An c
CAKES
FOR AM, OCCASIONS
, GO TO
KRAFT’S BAKERY
Duffy and Jefferson Sts
Rhone 5244
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FIRE— WINDSTORM—AUTOMOBILE—PLATE GLASS
MARINES, ATTENTION!
members of Montfor/i
i*.,in( Detachment Marine
League, 417 W. Gaston
ntreci. hi ret i. Your i our headquarters urauqum wn
clu|) n , om w j|] f )e opened
daUy at 10 o'clock a. m.
]{. J. Mclver, Commandant
Get *;». v«..r your «,r,n.h watch ehoriteri checked ••
Today
t
t
I
i +
+
•• Your Watch Is Checked 4 .
!! and Tested before leaving 4 ,
” our bench, aiso tested for £
;; accurate time with our f
A XIME-O-GRAPH by hear -I
ing and record. Your time
4 . ing Headquarters. .|I i
WASHINGTON’S
JEWELRY SHOP .j) J
-j- 348 West Broad St.
F Savannah. Georgia X
X i
!•
SHOP AT
AI a n
Harry’s
The Home o? F'ne Clothes
2G Broughton St. W-