the carolina times (durham, n.c.) 1965-02-27 [p...
TRANSCRIPT
TBI CAROLINA TiMtS-DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY. FiBRUARV IMI
Capacity Audience Hears Dr.Frankljn a! Winjjon-Salem College
Wimton-Salkni-i-X ea/pa&tjr aiid)State Col-
fege heard Dr. John Hope FrahKltynoted Negro historian, laud thecomming of a more objective type
of -A-riting by American historians.
"Historians -who either ignorethe contributions of Negroes, give
inaccurate accounts of their acti-
vities or refer only to Negroes in
an uncomplimentary way are com-mitting a crime against history.
This is also a crime against nat-ure. It is disgusting, dishonest andUnmoral", he said-
Professor Franklin, a visiting
scholar under the Piedmont Uni-versity Center's Visiting Scholars (
evening «t February. 17 on thecsthrpus 1 't>|; WnstdrfSalem StateCollege. Winston-Salem State and
16 other neighboring .collegeshave formed the Piedmont Univer-sity Center to do jointly some of
the things which individual in-stitutions cannot do singly.
Dr. Franklin, professor of Amer-ican History at the University ofChicago, held an informal meet-ing with the students at the col-lege in the afternoon and deliver-ed a public lecture in the even-ing. He discussed "Historians ofthe American Negro" in his lec-till*. '
"
.?
In his public i«cture Jr. Frank-lin traced the evolution of therecording of Negro history fromthe time when historians eitherignored of gave inaccurate orfalse accounts of the Negro to thepresent Wjen .white as "wellas Negro- historians regard thestudy and recording of Negrohistory a respectable and honor-able activity.
''The new role of the writers ofNegro history vil! be that of re-visionists. They will have to we-
ave the history of the Negro intogeneral history and correct the
\£6'rks of the earlier historians.Professor Franklin mentioned
many factors which have been responsible for making research andstudy in Negro history respecta-ble. Among those were the Worldwars, pressure from the federalgovernment, the rise of new Afri-can nations and the civil rightsmovement.
~Mt. GileadContinued from page 2B
Rigsbee are being honored fortheir service with the Missionaryprogram, while Mesdames Dunnand Martin are receiving awardsfor their long and devoted Christ-ian service with the community
and youth, respectively. EditorAustin will be given an avard inrecognition of his long and distinguishea service in the City andState in both Christian and civicendeavors.
"Till GILLETTE
f -sg FoamyATTT+TU SHAVING CREAM
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SUPER-SATURATESYOUR BEARD!
. "Every major historical assoc-iation discusses Negre history to-day,'' he said. "At long last histor-ians of every race in every partof the world art studying the Ame.rican he continued.
In a guestion-and-answer pariod
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, . STRAIGHTfid PROOF .C 1964, ECHO SPRING DIST. CO., LOUiSVJUt, KY.
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firmer Named lo;To Youth Coip Sfaff In Washington
[-OfficeContinued from paga SB
passage,. In last year-s legislature,
an effort to abolish the deathpenalty failed.
In addition, Howard has intro-duced two other bills, both aimedat equal justice for the underpri-vileged. One povides that bail beganted on a person's oWn Recog-
nizance arid another stipulates
that arrest records be fcpnfidential until a person iscodvictedof a crime. >
"
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"The appearance of a :»estaman,House member in such ii keyrolecomes as no surprise to those whofollowed Howard's election i;lce litSt. Louis's tenth district," com-mented the St. Louis Post-Dis*patch. "The 29-year-old lawyercampaigned on a program of"overhauling the archaic statutes
with the depressed areas of AfestVirginia.
He served in the J. '\u25a0 S. Army1943- 1945.
He will make his home In Wash-ington, D. C. with his wife theformer Miss Caroline Hamblenand his two children.
following lector#, fr.lin said that the revision of his-tory textbooks for the public spho-ols has become a by-product of thecivil rights movement.
"The textbook industry iftonostsensitive to the wills of influmtialpeople and groups," he said. "The
textbook ?Arriters must write abook that is not offensive to anygroup that matters so the historybooks of the past havevery much. They contain a la>ge
number of catch phrases and lotsof pictures," he observed. "J am"happy to note that some books
are being revised to give Negroes
better treatment or just includethem," he added. »h
to iMMfamt* fn Mhwuri '
"Howard ha» practiced law in~St. Louis tor three years.'He serv-ed eight dafs In jail for contempt
Of court when acting as an attor
ney for CORE in
Bank demonstrations. re _
Louis Court of Appeal ßjn(
«
vesed the contempt fin ifreed him." ?'
Washington?Dr. JamefHfi Tueker, well known Economist and
Educator, has oeen appointed
Chief of the Division of Project
Review and Analysis of th«tH*iSh-borhood Youth Corps,. JIJ theWashington national offgH| All
NYC project proposals come dir-ectly to his attention f«itfeviewand approval.
Dr. Tucker comes to tlHmeigh-borhood Youth Corps thefaculty of North Carolina at Dur-ham, where he served from Sep
tember 1962 as Chairman of and
Professor in the of
Business and gyringthis time he also gerved£s?a.Con-
sultant with the U. Depart-
ment of Labor's BureajE gf Em-ployment Security.
Well known in West ? Virginia,Dr. Tucker while serving from1996 to 1962 as Chairman of the
Department of Business Admin-istration at West Virginia StateCollege, was Founder and a Char-ter Member of the West Virginia
Governor's Council of Economic
Advisers, 1960-02. He was also
the first economic conslutant for.
the West Virginia Federation of
Labor AFL-CIO, 1958-60, and wasa member of the first AdvisoryLegislation Council in West Vir-ginia, 1960, 1561 and 1962.
A native of Brooklyn, NewYork, he was educated at Prairie
View College in Texas where asan athlete he was All-ConferenceHalfback in 1943; at Howard Uni-versity in Washington, D. C. wherehe earned with honors Bachelorof Science and Master of Science
Degrees and as an athlete wasCIAA Sprint Champion in 1946;at the University of Pennsylvania
where he received his Ph. D; andat the University of North Caro-lina where he pursued graduatestudy.
Mr. Tucker holds membershipin the Southern Economic Asso-ciation, the American Associationof University Prosessors and As-sociation of Social Science Teach-ers. He is the author of severalstudies, some of them dealing
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Professor Franklifi war ne dagainst Negre pressure groupswhich push "to hard" ofr revis-
ion of textbooks and courses ofstudy in history. disturbedby what can he said. "In
one city where the history bookwas considered inadequate, thesuperintendent asked the Negro
committee to find the new text-books and aids needed to remedy
the situation. "This was a job forprofessionals. Not anybody canput (anything together Ne-groes", he said; "Not evffi a Ne-gro if he is not qualified "
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