Injunction May Be New Weapon Against Protests REV. BROWN HETAiir Swann Advances To Front Ranks; Wiiliams 2nd B*v. J. A. Brown of Durham continued to clin^ to the first place ^sition this week in the Cikrolina Ttoes Ministers Popu larity Contest, The surprises of the week were the advancements mad* by Rev. W. L. Williams of Weldon, who took over the •econd place from Kev. Johnny “W. Barnes of Durham, and that of Rev. M. C. Swann of Dur ham, who advanced to the ttiird place in the standing of con testants. Another spectacular Jump was that thade by i^ev. J. C. Gray of Durham, who ad vanced from 15th portion last to fifth place this week. Aa the cfintest enters the Jourth week, the balloting is .eatpected to become even heavier than the past three weeks when .tabulators in the Times office were forced to work far into the night to get all of the ballots .tabulated by press time. With fifteen of the top contestants within' throwing distance of tach other, the contest manager would make no predictions as ta Wtw will be the winner of the tniee top prizes which are an airplane round trip to the Holy Laod, first prize; an airplane Tound trip to Bermuda,' the li«eend prize, and an airplane l^iHid trip to New York, the third prize. ' Winners of(,the gthree_top iptixes are certain to be those eoatwtants whose members and frienda support them with bonus Mlot* os- a oneryear subscrip ts to Ckrolina Times. Re- ■ ‘ wbl$h appemr in ■ eirant for only- 1,M0. iMlita ^U« the. Sonus Ballots •CCbmpanicd with - a one year ■i&Mc«49tloa will count for 12, 800 until' the' close of the secojid period March 31. After iben a. one year subscription ,^unt tor 10,000 poinfts. The number pi points fo^ aff- i^tional yeai^ will be found on In Ai^iclvtlTf adverti^e- OMOt of -tiM contest is publish ed. The relative standing of con- tfttants for this week is as fpUows: . RiV. J. A. Brown ■■i>ufham —— 702,000 W. L. Williams r Weldon 694,500 M. C. Swann ■ .Durham 682,500 M«v: Johnny W. Barnes Durham 680,000 Rev; J. C. Gray • Dtirham 657,500 Rev. E. J. LoVe ■ High Pdint 626,500 Rev; W. R. 'Foushee ' Chapel Hill 620,500 ■Rev. Morris T. 'Mitchell Baltimore 618,000 Rev. C. R. White Durham - 602,500 ■Rev. G. H. Brooks Hillsboro — 596,000 Rev. A. J. Holman Hillsboro 572,500 Rev. R. L. Spealcs Durham 572,000 ■Rev. Z: D; Harris ■'Durham 570,500 Rev. J. R. Manley Chapel HUl —— 566,500 R»v. W. J. Hall Brooklyn 565,500 Rev. J. M. Vinson Rox)boro 508,000 R«v. C- McLester Durham 508,000 Rev, Walter Yarborough , . lYanklinton 501,000 Rev. A. W. Lawson Durham 488,500 ^y. T. C. Graham I^rham —r 406,500 Rev. L. T, Daye Vebane - t----,-- 394,500 Rev. Wm. Lake ’ See C0NTES1| 2-A Denies Chargis ' EDENTON — V.h. Walker; ' principaJ of Edekiton high ' iie^l her*, hat ref^ a slate- MMt ait}xlbut*d to 'tUitet that ha war drivers that ioe* their Jobs U tl ewue their activi' flttienvdeiMastr ITTHE^OTMTfrlBRiSE^ VOLUME 38 — No. 12 DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1962 RITURN RiQUESTED PRICE: IS Cmit« Raleigh, Greensboro Groups Press Cities For Equal Jobs Features Philly Minister City-Wide Revival To Commence In Durham on Monday, April 2 ’'tijll - te tha student might did set Prominent Area Resident, Dies RALEIGH — Funeral services for Lewyn Eugene McCauley, one of the area’s most promin ent citizens, were held_ here Wednesday aftemdon., Dr. McCauley died suddenly at Wake Memorial hospital early Sunday. He was 75. Death was attributed to an acute abdominal obstruction. Dr. McCauley was stricken at his home at 8 North Tarboro road and Uken to Wake Me morial late Saturday. Relatives said he had spent a normal Saturday morning, ob serving his office hours and making Calls early Saturday afternoon only moments before tile fatal seizure. Dr. McCauley’s, body were taken to Shaw University at noon Wednesday where he lay in state until the funeral service at St. Paul’s Epsicopal Church at 2:30. The Bev. l! S. Penn, pastor, presided over the services, at St. Paul’s. Several high- rank ing Episcopal churclimen, out standing businessmen and civic See DR. McCAULEY, 2-A Details for the first city-wide revival sponsored by the Dur ham Ministeriar Alliance were released this week. The event will be staged for two weelcs, beginning April 2 and ending on April 13 at the St. Mark A. M. E. Zion Church. Tlie Rev. Dr. M. M. Peace, of Philadelphia, and several pro minent ininisters of Durham will be featured in the two weeks services. Dr. Peace will be the main speaker for the two wtekM. Each night of liie two Weeks series, ministers ffcan various Durttam ehurdi;^i«ttl taiM part bi tbs devotional tervices. ’They »i>UL jpMte* liy-i|*eir* liaoin r Ihe nMfiM e{ DttiliiBm Miniaters v»bo will participate Me aa lol- lOWBt Monday, A^ril 2, Reverends Oeorg* Ttaarrington, C. R. Whit*, 1. a. Hodge, Jr., E. T. Thompson and J. T. Jones. 'Tueaday, AprH #r RertOTHds |" R. L. Speaks, J, W-. Smith, ^ L. Conyers, and C. T. Bellanjy. Wedneeday, April 4, Reverends See REVIVAL, 2-A REV. PEACE Hillside Pr|ncipil III JL^colxi JHospitui ^ I admitted to Upoahi on Mondar. it waa leamei tUa week. Hospital ^authorities reported his condiMoa a* "satisfactory" lata this . weak. - F,.M, AWon. assistant to the .principal, is In chii»g* *f *ha idhool 6»riag hoIvi«^' ^ Lincoln Hospital ^ts $15,000 For Medical Education Program Appeals Made To Governing Bodies in 2 Cities Equal job opportunities and other non discriminatory policies were called for this week by citizens groups representing the Negro communities in Raleigh and Greensboro. Members of the Raleigh Citizens Association appeared be fore the Raleigh City Council on Monday to protest racial dis crimination in city empolyment. Representatives from the Greensboro branch of the NAACP asked the Guilford County Commissioners to hire qiAlified Negroes in county j(^; to integrate the county tax btoks; to integrated restroom tt^litlef in county buildings, to. reviat the eouaty map to m. aiiiilt fbilptii ClMnjrtiell,' tS" ffiie Rallili^ cr^Pi Wbmitt- ed a report concerning a recent failure of a Negro woman to acquire a job with the city’s See 2 CITIES, 2-A DEMONSTRATION SCENE —Two of tlie more than 200 Negro students who formsd a block long line around the Carolina Theater last week are shown as they neared the theater's l>ox office In a vain rsqueat lor tiekets. White on lookers are pictured in back ground. A $10,000 grant from the Mary Duke Biddle Foundation and an award of $15,000 from The Duke Endowment have t>een received at Lincoln Hospital to develop a program of medical education, Frank W. Scott, Director, an nounced tills wMk. Earlier the Biddle Foundation awarded $10,000 to Lincoln’s program of Nursing Education. ‘These grants’”, Scott said, were the result of a conference held earlier with local, state, and national medical and hos pital authorities headed by Dr. W. C. Davison, retked dean of the Duke University Medical Center, and now consultant in Medical Education for the Duke Endowment, who is keenly in terested in medical education programs for community ho»- M*'s. Glenn Retired Teacher Is Eulogiied pltals.” The need for a program in medical education for the com munity liospitals grew out of the facji /liiai. small hospiitads iiave found it difficult to com pete with medical centers and governmental hospitals in re cruiting and training interns and residents. Some small commu- ity hospitals have attempted to attract interns and residents by See HOSPITAL, 2-A lawyers Group, fleah Wheeler, ilnsurance Men The role of a lawyer as social engineer was outlined in an address l>efore the semi-an nual meeting of the.Southeastern Lawyers Association meeting in Durham Saturday. The speech was made by John H. Wheele'r, a prominent Dur ham businessman and a practic ing attorney. Wheeler addressed the banque* meeting of the two-day con clave of lawyers. In addition to Wheeler, the lawyers heard speeches from at torneys representing 5 national insurance firm, and were enter- See LAWYERS, 2-A demonilrationB group oontrol leMHiaers pwtuieA THEY INTEGRATED DUR HAM THEATER — Pictursd here is a part of th* first group of Negroes to inttgrafe tha Carolina Theater in Durham. Ar:aed with tickets purchased b/ V ..te friends, they slip ped yast theater ushers last Wednesday as mere than 2Q0 of tlieir fellow demoastxators staged a mass staad-ln it the box office. Pictured here, left to right, front row. u$ Joe Ann Marrow, Shirley Hend erson, Bakbaia Hwcrlngton, ai|0 Ida Baker. On the second row*. in tha same order, are Otbetn Bridgeford, Morris Johnson. Jr., Quinton Baker, Walter Riley, Nathan White and Lee McDean. photos by Purefoy. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary McMannen Glenn, retired school teacher, were held Satur day, March 17 at the Red Mountain Baptist Church. The Rev. James A. Stewart presided,. and the eulogy was delivered by the Rev. L. W. Reid. Mrs. Glenn died at her home on . Wednesday, March 14. She was 83. She had suffered a lengthy illness. The deceased was a prominent meml>er of tlie BaiiamarRouge- mont Community, where she spent most of her life. She taught in the pubic schools of the county for a number of years .before retirement and was active in the religious life of the area. Mrs. Glenn was lx>m on May 9, 1878 in Rougemont, daughter of the late Austin and laicy Jones McMannem Slie was married in 1906 to Lucious Glenn, and they had ten children.. • • . • ■ Mrs. Glenn received her e(lu- cation a^ B«nnet Col^ge, in Greensboro, and taught in tiie county schools of the area for many yean. She .was a mem- t)er .of Red Mountabi Bap tist Church, of Rougemont, w^iere she wm active in the churdi’s work, l^e served at one time as pzcaident of the Home See TIACHIR, 2-A Durham Theatre Owner Uses Legal Device To Halt Mass Student Demonstrations by Local NAACP HOME AGAIN—-These mem bers of the Pearson sebool student newspapoi staff and their toacher Mrs. BeraadlBe Bailey were photogr^lied as they atepped from tttriag fcem Mew Tork where flwy- attended tha Colamblk Unlvefslty Pnss jAasoctatton coBVMitloa las# The FeaasM school Voice." won a first place iMdglng at Hie oonventien. on the greud with conductor axe Mrs. Bailey and Carolyn Walker. On the \atepe fxmn bottom to lop are Oail Mason,. MUton Olenn, James Lilly. Joe Johnson, Bsisssfle Haninfgon, Dearie lUitliff and (top eenler) Do- IH»ah Reffo^ A temporary injunction by a Superior Court judge here last week halting ’ anti-segregation demo^rations by Youth and College Chapters of the NAACP might be used as a weapon for other segregationists, infromed sources t)eleive. The fact that Charles Aber crombie, owner of the Car olina Theater, was so successful in obUihlng a court order to temporarily restrain students from protesting segregated seat ing. at 4he theater^ might lead other segregationists to follow the same pattern in the event their buslhesses ' were attacked, qba^rves beleive. In. the suit against 34 mem' b«rs of the NAACP Youth. Group, Abergrombie is seeking $5,000 compensation for lou of business and' $29,000 punitive damages. He claims that as a result of the protests, . his business has fuffered tremendous losses. In a two-day demonstration were successful in entering the last week, a group of students Raleigh Movie House Integrates RALEIGlI— Negro students at North Carolina State Col* lego are being atoittoE to tbo Varsity theater here, it was. revealed this wofk. The theater is located on'' Hillsboro street, U dcfwatotrB Raleigh, and Is operated • Raleigh Mayor W. Q. Enloe. Enele reported that the first Negro students were edmltt-' ed two weeks ago wtthont cident. theater with tickets purchased fbr them by white demonstrators. Otheirs were lield back by theater employees when they sought (o enter. Mieatiwhile, hundreds of stu dents matched in line around the tiieater after thCir attempts to purchase ticicets failed.- Jbls restraining order, Judjje HanKilton Hobfood for bade the pickets from entering the theater building without permlaaion of tlie manager, from Int^er/ing in any manner with ingraas or e^ess to the tiieater of other persons; from continu ing ta -line up at tiie ticket wladew . after they have once bern tol4 that they would not be sblii tickets; and from inter- The Varsity hero, to tl^i^ theater In the itato’ tt’ KA^ ^ierfihg In any manner whata»- with- the lAwftd opentiBB NegrMs. la Chapo^ -Mttt'-'te* .Carolina aad Va*aUr,Aeetoi admit .Negroes. tiieater. if*' .(vrthec - instructed . shii&t of Duriiam to poat Hil • Bae'THiATilC-»A'.

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