Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 10, 1965, edition 1 / Page 7
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I Sllfei i;-i r NOTED BEAUTY CULTURISTS —and stylists will b« present In Waihlngten July 25 through 31 whsn the National Institute ol Cosmetology gats undarway at the Washington Hilton Hotal. Undsr sponsorship of th» Na tional Isauty Culturlsts' ■ mm The National Institute of Cot. motology, sponsored by the Na tional Baauty Cultrists' League, Inc., will feature at numbar of J widely known stylists July 25 I to 31 at Hi* Washington Hilton Hotel. Tho Institute will bo fol- Bui r aBL BBrTM > a' lg^^^B^^B ROADS ARE LIFELINE In Harry Haywood, Taborg, N. Y„ economy of a nation llko Cam*- here txplaln* th* operation of • roon, Africa, and mutt bo main- road grador. tainod with heavy equipment. PHONE 682-9295 WA\ A/%,| Laundry and I Mew W'{ertvx} Dr » I CASH & CARRY OFFICES Conor Roxbore ni HeUeway Street « S B Quick AM A Wlak—Roxbore R4. at Analik Dr. Drtro-la, Cor. Broad aad Eaflamiad Art. You OOght to Be iB|L in Our Shoes Stacy-Adsmi Shoo an so obviously superior in their distinctive styling, fiawless craftsmanship, and Kixuiious leathers you'll wear them for years knowing Aoy'ra the finest you can buy. t SONNY'S PHONI SU-2231 329 W. MAIN ST. DURHAM, N. C ,'C^3BUy Jlr yjMm : |jF / jjik 1 da* J^M it 1/ J Laagua tha Instltuta will fea tura from left, Robert Fiance, ownar-diractor of the interna tionally famous Robert Fiance Hair Design Institute, New York; Mrs. Varsla Lee Bailey, beauty culture and barbaring j f V ■•- 'jtlt •••" iP^^KHB lowed by tho organixation's na tional convention August 1-5. Among tho stylists will bo, from loft, Adolph Ella, Now Jorsoy, president of tho International consultant to halrdroasors; Mrs. Dayzollo Hill, outstanding hair \ teacher of Omaha, who hai studied under European Mas. ters; and Walter Black, promi nent New York Beautician. The 46th annual Beauty Culturists' Convention will follow th» In stitute, August 1 through 5. stylist of Detroit, and Paris Harrlntfon, Kansas City, who Is listed among the ten top mala stylists. Mrs. Hill was ono of the first graduates of tho Cos metology Institute. Prominent N. C. WomarrNow* In Politics WELDON Mrs. Antonio (Marie) Orsot, prominent Wei don, socialite, has recently be come involved in politics in North Carolina apd, Virginia and has made frequent trips to visit with congressional lead ers in Washington. Mrs. Orsot who will use her Weldon home as base, is ex pected to return to Capitol Hill later this month for fur ther congressional briefings. Representative John Conyers (D-Mich.) and Mrs. Orsot were entertained at a recent Wash ington dinner party by Attor ney and Mrs. John Owen Plum mer of Washington. Attorney Plummer who is also involved in politics, is Mrs. Orsot's bro ther, and a member of the Young Democrats' Club. Other guests included At orney and Mrs. Sylvester Thompson of Washington, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Cooke (she's Marie's sister), Durham, and Charles Backus, Mrs. Orsot's foster son. A member of the National Organization of Junior Leagues and a volunteer worker with the Travellers Aid Society and the American Red Cross, Mrs. Orsot has recently attended many session of Congress on her sojourns to the Capitol. Mrs. Orsot recently entertain ed at a dinner party at the Sheraton Park Hotel honoring Attorney Plummer and Repre sentative Conyers. Other guests included Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jackson, Attorney and Mrs. Sylvester Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Edmonds, and Mrs. Beatrice Harvey, all of Washington (Mrs. Edmonds and Mrs. Harvey are Marie's foster sister and daughter respect ively). and Mr. and Mrs. Tanner Collins, and Charles Backus of the Virginia State College staff. nJjVtrTt: SPIAKS AT NATIONAL SCOUT OFFICI Vleo President Hu bert H. Humphrey, former Scoutmaster of Troop 6, Huron, S. D., talk* to Scout C. Donnlt Jonoo, Troop St, sponsored by Battle on for Zetas's Grand Basileus Post at 45th Session NEW YORK As Zeta Phi ( Beta sorority prepares to open ; its 45th annual convention Sun- j day. July 11 at the Waldorf As- ! toria Hotel, a behind the scenes battle is shaping up among tap I officials to inherit the Grand i Basileus post being vacated by j Dr. Deborah P. Wolfe. Declining to seek renomina-' tion. Dr. Wolfe has refused to, handpick her successor, prefer-1 ring to let the 750 delegates' expected here to make their I choice at an open floor fight. | Among the leading contenders | for the top spot in the 5000 member nation-'vide sorority j are the following: Mrs. Mildred Cater Boone, the first Anti-Basileus. A resident o» Richmond. Va., she's a so-' c-ial worker at Central State, Hospital in Petersburg, Virginia, and has the strong backing of ( scrors li-ving in her home state, I W. Va.. and North and South | Carolina National Secretary Mrs Isa-, bcl Herson. associate professor | J TRY SELECTION METHOD KLASTED BY AMERICAN TRIAL LAWYERS BOSTON, Mass. The Way th? American jury is selected today is unconstitutional, the head of the 20,000-member American Trial Lawyers Asso ciation has declared. ATL President Bill Colson of Miami, Fla., made a public de mand in a speech before the Hc'vard University Law School in Washington, D. C., that the jury selection system be re vamped throughout the United States to meet full Constitu tional requirements of any de fendant or plaintiff to the fright to be tried by one's peers." "Under our Constitution, a DM-son has the right to be tried by #• jury of his peers, but this is not happening in many states, especially in certain sec tions of the country," Colson said. • Colson followed his demand with the appointment of a com mittee of eminent trial lawyers assigned to work with Congress on a national jury selection law. Br ■ Vj f ■ I f, - fel '* CHILEAN YOUTHS, unablo to r gat any other aducation, r«c«lv« initruction In carpontry at a , govarnmant-tpontorad training \ FUNERAL RITES HELD FOR DEMPSY FLETCHER HAYES SILO AM CHURCH ROUGEMONT The funeral of Dempsy Fletcher Hayes, 64, the son of the late Archie and Mollie Pettiford Hayes, was held at the Siloam Baptist Church, Rougemont, Friday, June 18. at 2:00 P.M. with the Rev. Andrew Chanis officiating. Hayes died suddenly, Monday, June 14 following an extended illness. Hayes was joined in holy matrimony to Laura Petti ford on Dec. 27, 1923. To this union two sons wer born, Sam- ♦hs Presbyterian Church of New Brunswick. N. J. after ad dressing a gathering of over 400 persons at the Natl»nal Office of the Boy Scouts. Mr. Humph , it Southern University in Ba i ton Rouge, La. An outstanding j social worker, she was a recent ! Zeta Woman of the Year reci pient and has a wide know- I ledze of sorority affairs. Mrs. Nora E. Lockhart of Raleigh. A school teacher. Mrs. ■ Lockhart is the national treas ' urer and her supporters say I her qualifications to occupy the Grand Basileus seat are "un- I beatable." In her 11 year reign. Dr. | Wolfe, a Professor of Education lat Queens College on Long Island, has put into practice j many programs that have im | oroved th e Zeta image and ' trained them for leadership roles in their local communities. In 1962 she took a three year j leave of absence from her teach ing position to become Research ! Chief of Congressman Powell's j House Education and Labor i Committee, helping to write i many of the bills that were i enacted into law. t • "Many states today do not have a true cross-section of the public represented in the jury box because of archaic methods of jury selection and the whole sale acceptance of excuses from jury duty. Many juries are se selected predominantly from the elderly and retired, and often from employees of large corporations able to make up lost pay," Colson said. "Many states do not allow Negroes to serve on juries," Colson emphasized. "Negroes now have the right to vote, right to education, right to a job, and what is just as Impor tant in rights, must have the right to serve on the jury." Colson urged trial lawyers, la'v school graduates, and civic leaders throughout the country to join in an offensive to In sure passage of a pending bill before Coneress. The bill would require all nationalities, all races, all colors, all religions, and all economics strata to be represented on jury panels. | cantar from Wandall Gorun, a Paaca Corps voluntMr from i tha Bronx. uel and Ozzie Hayes Hayes joined Young Chapel Baptist Church in August 1927 and later moved his member ship to Martin's Chapel Baptist Church in Alamance County. He 'was faithful to his church as long as his health would permit, and gave freely to his service and errands. Surviving are two sons, Staff Sgt. Samuel D. Hayes of Wash ington, D. C. and Ozzie S. Hayes of Roxboro; two grandchildren; rey said, ". . . You're polng to expand this great movement and take this message and this program of Scouting to those that need It . . V J* jii^,+. AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS—; Mitt Henrietta Buckmaster, j left, lecturer and author of "Let 1 My People Go," and "Freedom Bound," talks with teachers en \ I TEACHER STUDY AT NCC— James McCall of Raleigh, and Lucinda Rot* of Charlotte, two teachers enrolled in the Na Negro Voters are Now Vital Force in Political Affairs of U.S. NEW YORK—Negro Ameri. cans attained a new signifi cance as a force in the politi cal affairs of the nation in the 1964 presidential election, the annual report of the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People asserts. The 112-page report, entitled "A New Birth of Freedom," was released by Executive Di rector Roy Wilkins this week, on the eve of the Association's 58th annual oonvention in Den ver, Colo., June 28-July 3. "Negro citizens," the report says, "emerged as a very signi ficant force in the political af fairs of the country in a cam paign in which the civil rights issue was of paramount impor tance." As a result of an intensive voter registration drive, a re cord 6.000,000 Negroes were qualified to vote and, of those who- actually voted, approxi three sisters, Mrs. Luthennie Bass and Mrs. Daisy Daye of Rougemont; Mrs. Galia Brown of Washington, D. C.; one bro ther, Lucious Hayes of Rouge mont and several nieces and nephews. HOME FROM VACATION Mr. and Mrs. Goldsmith Park er, 1007 Moreland Avenue, have returned home from vacation. They visited Mrs. Bettie Bass of Ne 1 * York City and Mr. and Mrs. William Turrentine of New Jersey. They did a lot of sight seeing and went to the World's Fair. Joues Freed ATLANTA, Ga.—ProtesU from throughout the nation resulted In freeing of the Rev. Ashton Jones from the Fulton County Jail. He had served almost two more months of an 18-month sentence imposed in 1963 after he tried to worship at a Baptist church here with two Negro friends. Freedom came through action of the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles. Mr. Jones had pre viously served six months of the term becsuse of inability to raise 120,000 bail. METAL EXPANSION The roadway of the Verra zano-Narrows Bridge linking Brooklyn and Staten Island is 12 feet closer to the water in sum mer than in winter. ' SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1965 THE CAROLINA TIMES- rolled in the A. and T. College Summir Institute for Elemen -1 t»ry Teachers of Disadvantaged Youth. The teachers are from I left to right; Mri. Elizabeth tlonal Science Foundation Insti tute for High School Teachers of Science and Mathematics at N.C. College, are seen decanting mately 90 per cent cast their votes for Mr. Johnson, the re port notes. "The achievement above all others in the civil rights field in 1964 was enactment ... of the most comprehensive Civil Rights Act in the history of this nation,"f the report states. However, it adds that the "new law provided no remedies to solve the increasingly impor tant and vexing problems of de facto school segregation and discrimination in housing. Contained in the report are detailed accounts of the many activities the Association has engaged in throughout the country including litigation, education, employment, politi cal action, church activities, membership promotion, and public relations. LAUNDERERS-CtEANERS Phone 596-830 • 2505 Angler Ave. • Village • So. Roxboro St. at Lalcewood AT*. Here's Our Suggettion for a jm j Lunchtime Treat »v Can you imagine any thhig as good as a juicy, I tender hamburger and a bottle of cold, refresh ingbeer? Of course not, so that's why we suggest you make that your lunch HAMBURGER OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY *** y»yf kMt Stop UD Ralntk YOWHU at Elvira's Blue Dine-Et 440 I. PITTIORIW ST. DURHAM, N. C. • SANDWICHIS • DINNIRS • LUNCHIS • FOUNTAIN SIRVI& I Wright, Winston-Salem; Mrs. I Mildred Bryant, Madiion and Miss Mifflie Jean Fulton, ef Greensboro. silver obtained from copper In •liver chloride during a labora tory session. McCall la on th« faculty of Washington County Union High School, and Mlaa Ross teaches at West Charlott* High School. Here's An Old Summer Adage You Should Know A 1-HOUR MARTINIZING 1-HOUR DRY CLEANING 1-Day Laundry Service ALTERATIONS UPON REQUEST Original 1-Hour Martlnlilng •t Fiv« Point*, Downtown 1-B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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July 10, 1965, edition 1
7
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