Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Feb. 19, 1966, edition 1 / Page 5
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■ |H j«■ BANQUET SCENE of first an nual Human Relations Institute sponsored by White Rock Bap tist Church in church's Baraca 'W 'Jv i y / TYPICAL PARTICIPANTS in one of five study sessions meet ing for two days include the above ministers and laymen: left to right: The Rev. Henry Elkins, director of the United Campus Ministry, North Caro At Home In Capital 1 m jSmk ■ ■ fc. VHHKjW Wmm§ .jt'Jfi ; y •— ■**' M Seated comfortably on a living room chair, Mrs. Rob ert C. Weaver smHes cheerfully during a recent interview (n Washington, D. C. Mrs. Weaver, wife of the new Sec retary of Housing and Urban Development, was a teacher flnd speech therapist at Brooklyn College in New York before moving to the capital. (UPI Photo) Johnson Motor Company _ HAS BUICK'S NEW OPEL KADETT - ~7---^pc=zjr $1895 full price S3OO Down SSB Mo. \ SPORT COUPE SOOOO FULL PRICE S3OO DOWN SSB MONTH ON APPROVED CREDIT COME IN—DRIVE ONE TODAY ■ ! Room February 11. Dr. Frank- I lin H. Littell, professor of j j church history, Chicago Theo- I I lina College at Durham; the Rev. David Curry, pastor. First Presbyterian Church; unidenti fied person; Nathaniel B. White, chairman of the Steer ing Committee of the Institute; Eze-kiel Clemons, member of logical "Seminary, addressed some 300 persons at the ban quet. | the White Rock Board of Dea cons; Ned Johnson, member of J the White Rock Board of Dea cons; and the Rev. Sylvester I Shannon, student, Duke Divin ity School. DBPC to Give Banquet Here On March 1 The Durham Business and Professional Chain, working in cooperation with the House wives League and the Chain In vestment Corporation, will sponsor a banquet at the Stal lion Club on March 1. A fellow ship hour at 6:30 p.m. will precede the 7:30 banquet, an annual affair by the organiza tion. The guest speaker for the occasion will be Randall L. Tvus, special assistant to the administrator of the Small Business Administration. Tickets for this affair are ' avatlable to the public and j may be puchased from any member of the Durham Busi- | ness and Professional Chain. The Durham Business and j Professional Chain is an Or ganization composed of several businesses owned and operated primarily by Negroes in our community. Its primary pur pose is to establish programs and projects which will help raise the standards of these businesses owned and operated primarily by Negroes so that they may be able to compete more successfully for the con sumer's doljar in the total economy. After they have read a book, some people have a way of making you feel illierate when you confess that you haven't read it. Gregory In Canoe For 'Fish In' ■p'jKjf 1 >»., ,i . MiBI , v j- J jf i a "~ w. :Ja ■Hp > :-^.- : H Comedian Dick Gregory cancels scheduled appearances in Miami, Montreal and New York to go fishing in the Nisqually River at Olympia, Wash. Gregory and two Indians caught two steclhe«d trout in defiance of State law and a court injunction pro hibiting net fishing off Indian reservations, during a 'fish-in' demonstration. No one was arrested, and Gregory said that he'd stay as long as it takes to fight the Indians' cause, lit has been their right for many moons to fish in the Nisqually. mm SPEAKER—Dr. Luther H. Hoi comb, vice chairman of the Equal Opportunity Commission, Washington, D C. is shown here addressing Race Relations Sunday audience at White Rock Baptist Church here February 13. Speech was part of the last day's program in three day Human Relations Institute. Gen. Telephone Issues New Directories General Telephone Company |of Ihc Southeast this week ill issue about 54.000 new Dur- | I ham directories in preparation j | for Sunday morning's sched uled eutovor of tons of highly diversified equipment in its Main (Molloway Street) Office that will result in approxi mately 7,000 number changes. Roughly 6,500 home and 500 business listing are slated to change at 2:01 a m. on Febru- I ary 20, the final step in a year- I lons S2 million rehabilitation | program designed to bring fast, I economical and substantially j improved service to municipal j subscribers. Division Manager D. N. War den said the introduction of so much intricate instrumentation in such a relatively short pe- I riod of time makes the whole sale number change unavoid ' able However, he assured cus tomers that the company is making every effort to antici pate and smooth out problems ■ beforehand. He stated that any difficulties arising after the outover will be corrected with a minimum of delay and in convenience to the public. Besides a growing need to phase outaging predecessor company equipment as rapidly as possible. General decided to rr.vork Main Office facilities at this time in order apportion more evenly the constantly in creasing flow of telephone traffic routed through the Hol loway Street installation. The company has wrestled with the problem of overburd ened facilities almost from the very moment it assumed own ership of Durham's telephone communications system in 1955. During the following de- I cade, General found it neces i sary to construct three satellite I offices to lighten the traffic load on the three overworked original offices. And a final solution to the delimma is not yet at hand, what with the city considering long-range plans to expand its boundaries and entice more and more industry and atten dant manpower to relocate here. Two additional satellite structures will be activated in the near future. The "F" office presently is under construction near the heart of the burgeon ing Research Triangle Park, while a "G" installation will be started later this year at the intersection of Humphrey, Neal and Bennett Memorial Roads. Beginning Sunday, numbers Old C & Books Guarded By CARL P. LEI'BSDORF WASHINGTON - Bat man, Superman arri other he roes of the gulden ace of comic books are being kept behind locked doors in the Library of Congress. But, as Batman's sidekick Robin would put it, Holy Thesis! They're off limi's lo'tjhe kids and are for scholarly "research only in the sedate library where the ."jjuiet" -.;ns mean no laughing as veil as no talking, "unless you're a sociologist, a reporter or a graduate student writing a dissertation. \ou can't got near the library's 12.000 or so comic books The comics, d.i!;nn firm the late 1330s to the present, are Jcpt in gray boxes on dusty shelves in two locked corridors of the library's stacks. The col. lection includes about 2 500 ti ties and may be the world's largest. "We don't know of any other library that collects them." says John H Thaxter. assistant chief of the library's serial divi sion. They are still coming,in 136 different titles at present un der copyright laws that require that the library receive two cop. ies of every copyright periodical published. Unlike magazines, there are no bound volumes available, so the library has to take special care of the yellowing, cracking old comics. In addition their value is growing a copy of the first comic in which Super man appeared sold last year for SIOO. "We're giving serious thought to microfilming some of the ear lier editions," Thaxter said. The oldest comic book listed in the library's files is a Janu ary 1938 edition of Detective Comics. Although earlier comic books had reprinted newspaper funnies, Detective Comics be came the first one with original material when it was first is sued in 1937. A year later. Action ContTbs came along and gave birth to Superman, followed by Batman who started in Detective Comics but got his own book in 1940. There seems little difference between the Batman of 25 years ago and the masked figure who darts twice weekly across tele vision screens. ML V v \ MRS. GINYARD STUDENT TO ATTEND PHYS. ED. MEETING Mrs. Janice Glnyard, presi dent of the Women's Athletic Association at NortH Carolina College, will represent the or ganization at the annual meet ing of the American Associa tion of Health, Physical Educa ation and Recreation in Chica go, March 18-22. Headquarters for the sessions will be the Conrad Hilton Ho ton Hotel. A resident of Durham, Mrs. Ginyard is a senior physical education major. prefixed by 383 or 681 will be abolished. Thereafter, only 3 codes—6B2, 684 and 688—will be operative out of the Main Office. Some 688 listings won't be changed but those starting with 688-5, 688-8 688-9 and 688-0 will. , * r .. ifL JHEKBr' */•«• V I ■&-' ,\i • j ffy a - ' * • fif frf. 1 1 Wtt i» | >Hi" tife . , ~'^4^ i&g •, p PARTICIPANTS in first session for rabbis, priests, and pastors at Kuman Relations Institute at White Rock Baptist Church on February 11. Left to right— The Rev. F. D. Terry, pastor. West Durham Baptist Church; STUDENT SHOWS ART WORK —James Newton, North Caro lina College senior art major, holds a critique of one of his T to Teach Creative Dancing Classes in Creative Modern Dance will be offered this spring at the Harriet Tubman Branch YWCA, A United Fund Agency. This class will be taught by Mrs. Nettie Robin- YOU Mil CAN GET A "BETTER DEAL" A L ftteXanderFQ Let's Face It—Records Show That Alexander Ford Sells More Fords Than Any "Other Dealer tn This Area! Isn't That Proof Positive That No Matter What, You Con Get a Better Deal at Alexander Ford? WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! ► C SHOP AT NIGHT UNTIL 9 P. M. N.C. nr.ier FOR YOUR SAVING CONVENIENCE No ,Ss * DURHAM'S ___ - - ORIGINAL VISIT THE LOT WITH THE A-l SIGN VOLUME FOR THE FINEST jN USED CARS DEALER MO E. Mala SATURDAY, FEB. 19, 1966 THE CAROLINA TIMES—J the Rev. Lorenzo A. Lynch pastor. White Rock Baptist j Church; Dr Franklin H. Littell. ; chief consultant and principal I speaker for the Institute; j Father Eugene H. Livelsberger, works 0f... sculpture with two ladies present at the opening of a Student Art Exhibition tft the college Sunday. In the cen son a North Carolina senior who has had ex! training in creative dann niques. Ballet Classes will a! priest. The Emaculate Concep tion Catholic Church; and the Rev. Richard L. Jackson, presi dent, Durham Ministers Asso ciation and pastor of Durham's United Church of Christ. ter is Mrs R. 0. Newman, and on the right Mrs. Hilda John son ri-d at the VW this spring lnldron aaes four years and nicr Miss I'am I'arker a ; Pukr I nivi rsily student will | II .M II this class, j I"i (urlh'T information re | • :ir.imi» ihrvc two classes and juilur spring classes call the j YWCA, {>B4-0191. 5B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1966, edition 1
5
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