Times Publisher Is Sued For sso^ooo ******* * * * * ★★★ * * * ★★★ 7 Convicted For Slaying Of 3 CR Workers In Mississippi / frvO-B fl| \j\j3j H i( Ji 9 HPW FRIEND OF SLAIN CIVIL RIGHTS WORKER—(Meridian, Miss.) Polly Heidleberg screams, "Oh Lord help us all," as she is assisted from the Federal Building here after Negro City Commissioner N \ Re-elected In Daytonaßeach HUGER POLLS OVERWHELMING VOTE VICTORY DAYTONA BEACH, Fla Daytona Beach voters returnee. James E. Huger as City Com missioner in Zone 6 with ai overwhelming vote margin oi 1,859 defeating former City Commissioner Glenn Smith with ease. Huger received 4,261 votes and Smith got 2,402. When Hu ger defeated four other new combers in 1965, he became the first Negro to be olected as City Commissioner in Daytonr Beach history. The Daytona Beach New Journal had this to say: "Com missioner James Huger also has served the city well. The first of his race to serv on the Commission, Huger' r election two years ago war viewed by many as an experi ment of sorts. If it was an e' periment it was a thundering success. Huger has emerged as r crystallizer of the Commission, a man who has demonstrated the ability to solidify thought, examine a problem, and sug gest a solution. His experience as Bethune-Cookman College business administrator has been invaluable to his fellov Commissioners. Glenn Smith, Huger's oppon ent Tuesday, seeks to return to the Commission after an ab sence of two years. Smith's main issue seems to be thai has grappled with the prob lems of city government in vears past and that he should be returned to grapple once more. Smith served well during his time on the Commission and was most active in the city's See DAYTONA 3A Ruffin Gives A&T Students The "Word" By KENT R. AUTOR GREENSBORO— Ben Ruffin, Director of Durham's United Organizations for Community Development called for Black Brotherhood and Black Union in an address at A&T State University last Sunday. "Wheth er we're educated or illiterate, whether we live on a boule vard or in an alley, we are all going to suffer together", he said, "we're all in tire same boat and we are all going to have the same suffering from the same (the white) man." Middle class and lower class, upper class and no class are going to have to join together as Negroes and to confront the problems common to all Ne groes. "All of us have suffer ed at the hands of the white man", the popular Durham Ne gro leader stated, "but it does See RUFFIN 3A hearing testimony in the con-1 spiracy trial of 18 men in con- | nection with the slaying of | three civil rights workers in j 1964. Man helping her is un- | Lieutenant Governor Is NCC Annual Founder's Day Speaker Lkeutenant-Governior Robert W. Scott will be the -speaker for North Carolina College's 20th annual Founder's Day pro ; gram, at 11 a.m., Friday, No vember 3, in the college's B. N. Duke Auditorium. Scott, frequently mentioned as a possible candidate for gov ernor of North Carolina, will be the pri*Mp*l ipeaker in a program which also includes dedication of four college buildings. The son of the late W. Kerr SCOTT Local Police Lieutenant Charges Austin With Slander in Suit Lt Jack H. Pendergrass of the Durham Police Department has filed a $50,000 slander suit against Caro lina Times Publisher, Louis E. Austin. The suit was filed in Superior Court here Friday, October 21st The suit states that Austin made slanderous statements in public to the effect that Pendergrass had beat en a white woman who had been rid ing in an automobile with a Negro man. Austin's statement made at a meeting at which more than 15 per sons attended, including police offi cials, the city manager, and members of the City Council, were quoted in a local newspaper at length. Pendergrass alleges that Austin's No. Carolina College Gets Half Million In Grants for 1967-68 Grants and programs funded j by outside agencies at North 1 Carolina College total $589,- 003.85 for the summer of 1967 , and the 1967-68 school year ; a report by President Albert! N. Whiting reveals. The college received $235,-1 219 for 1967 summer programs j and has been awarded $354,-! 284.35 for the 1967-68 aca-; demic year. Summer projects include the Institute for Teachers of Dis advantaged Youth, supported at $76,021 by the U. S. Office of Education, and the Summer In- identified Miss Heidleberg was a "close friend" of one of the three murdered men, Meridian Negro James E. Chaney. (UPI Telephoto) Scott, Governor of North Car olina and United States Sen ator, the liteutenant-governor's first political responsibility was as precinct chairman. He later was a county vice-chair man of the Democratic party and a member of the State So licitorial District Executive Committee of the Democratic party. Founder's Day at NCC is cel ebrated in memory of the late Dr. James E, Shepard, founder of the college and its presi dent from 1910 to 1947. Dr. Albert N. Whiting, NCC president, will participate in the "Truth anT Service Cere mony," which commemorates Dr. Shepard in the form of s re-dedication of the college's faculty, administration, alum ni, and students to the college's ideals of truth and service. Al so participating will be Henry M. Michaux, Jr., Durham at torney and president of the school's national alumni asso ciation; and Douglas Gills, president of NCC's student government association. The four buildings to be dedi cated are the biology building, in memory of the late Dr See SPEAKER 3A statements at that meeting were false and without foundation. He seeks $25,000 actual damages for "mental anguish, embarrassment, humiliation, and personal inconvenience," and $25,000 punitive damages. The suit charges that Austin's statement were not only slanderous per se, but were uttered in the presence of representa tives of the press "having reason to know that his statements would be published in the newspaper and that the general public would gain know ledge of the statements made." (The Carolina Times has not, until now, published any news concerning the charges made by Austin.) I stitute for Educational Media ; Specialists, given $61,938, alsc by the Office of Education. | National Science Foundation \ summer grants were for the ! Institute for Secondary School 1 Teachers of Mathematics and j Science, $75,950, and the In j stitute for Talented Secondary I Science Students, $16,660. Other summer subsidies were | a grant in public health nur sing, $2,450 by the N .C. State Board of Health, and $2,200 for research from the DuPont Foundation. Che Carojiipi Cwnes VOLUME 44 No. 41 DURHAM, N. C.—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1967 PRICE: 20c DURHAM Churches To Stage Protest March On City Hall, Oct. 29 Ministers Back Opposition to Bacon Project Over 25 Negro churches of Durham, including their pas tors and members, will stage a protest march to the City Hall here Sunday, October 29, at 12:30 p.m. The march is be ing sponsored by the Durham Ministerial Alliance and is ex pected to have an overflow crowd as participants. The Protest March is in sup port of the opposition of the 'Negro citizens of Durham to the Bacon Street Housing Pro ject. It also has the backing of the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs, the United Or ganization for Community Im provement, the Durham branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Durham Business and Professional Chain ano' other organized civic and re ligious groups. Every member of the church es of Durham is being urged to participate in the march. In short, the sponsors consider the effore one of "do or die", with the hope of impressing the Durham City officials of the solid opposition of Negro citizens to the Bacon Street Housing Project and other problems affecting the race. Those members who, because of age or other infirmities, find See MARCH 3A MRS. NESBY Mrs. C. Nesby Women's Day Speaker Sun. The twelfth Annual Wom an's Day Observance of More head Avenue Baptist Church will be held Sunday and also the sixteenth celebration of the occupancy of the present Sanctuary. The women of the church will be in charge of the two main services of the day. The speaker for the eleven o'clock services will be Mrs. Clara Nesby of Winston-Sal em, North Carolina. She Is Recording Secretary of the Woman's Baptist State Con vention and a teacher in Statesville City Schools. She is a graduate of Shaw Univer sity and has studied extensive ly at several other schools in the field of Education and Re ligious Education. The speaker for the 3:00 P.M. service will be represent ing the Young Adult Dept. She is Mrs. Delores Watson Estes, Special Nursing Consul tant at UNC, Chapel Hill. She is connected with the Chil dren's Evaluation Clinical Serv- See WOMEN 3A im I I M ifikhjll w iz ■ n fc#sfi9Wr7 ■ iiJ - -•/ , jiM ROBERT C. WEAVER ASA T. SPAULDING Secy. R. Weaver Speaker At NCM Founders Day Program HUD OFFICIAL IS PRESENTED A MEDALLION North Carolina Mutual Life Insur ance Company observed its Annual Founders' Day here October 20 with a program honoring its late past president, C. C. Spaulding, who a long with the late John Merrick and the late Dr. Aaron Moore, co-found ers, made outstanding contributions toward the development and growth of the company. The program, presided over by N. H. Bennett, Jr., vice-president and actuary, featured a tribute to Mr. Spaulding by A. E. Spears, Sr., re tired director of the company, and solos by Mrs. Asa T. Spaulding, wife of the president of N. C. Mutual and John W. McClinton, the company's assistant controller. The occasion was outlined by Mrs. Marion Henry, pre mium data clerk and prayer was offered by the Reverend Philip R. Cousin, minister, St Joseph's AME Church. A highlight of the program was the presentation of the newly initiat ed MERRICK-MOORE-SPAULDING NATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT A WARD to The Honorable Robert C. Weaver, secretary of Housing and Urban Development The award Is given in memory of the Founders and early builders of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, and in recognition of their significant contributions to the American way of life. See PROGRAM 3A ■ IWWM ■l||§ I \ ■II II V HI I II Sj Efcj9B 1 I ! I II H BB ' ~'' ■ > 9 ■ mSM ■ IB'-' JIHBi ™ :• 5 I TIMC OUT—(New York) Frank Sinatra (left) and fellow actor Sugar Ray Robinson talk to the press after a hard day's film Gardner Taylor is Slated For Christian Life Conference Nov. 2 A Christian Life Conference on "The Church's Ministry to the Disadvantaged Family" will be held Thursday, November 2, at 7:00 p.m. at the First Bap tist Church of Durham. It i? sponsored by East Cedar Grove, New Hope, County Line and Yates Baptist Associations. The Associations sponsored z conference last November, at the University Baptist Church Chapel Hill. Dr. Gardner C. Taylor, Pas tor, Concord Baptist Church. Brooklyn, New York, a Mem bership of more than 12,000. will give the Theme Address at 7:20 P.M. and Rev. Warren T Carr, Pastor, Wake Forest Bap tist Church, Winston-Salem and formerly Pastor, Watts St Baptist Church here, will give the Summary Address at 9:25 p.m. Forty Group Leaders will team up in twos to lead twenty Discussion Groups, centered around four subjects: (1) The Church's Ministry to Families receiving Welfare Assistance, (2) The Church's Ministry to Broken Families, (3) The Church's Ministry to families in the Ghetto, (4) The Church's ing at Manhattan police station, where they are making a movie called "The Detective." Sina tra plays the detective and Su DR. TAYLOR Ministry to families in Finan cial need. e> . The Leaders will come from the Churches of the four As sociations. Some of the mem bers of the Planning Commit tee are: Rev. U. R. Booker, Moderator, East Cedar Grove; Rev. A. D. Moseley, Moderator, New Hope Baptist; Rev. Juilus Corpening, Temple Baptist; Rev. Henry Turlington, Univer- See TAYLOR 3A gar Ray, better known for his boxing talents, a policeman. (UPI Photo) Convicition of Whites First In Deep South NEW YORK - The conviction of seven of the 18 white men tried for the 1964 lynching of three young civil rights workers near Philadelphia, Miss., "is a history-making develop ment in the administration of Justice in that state," John A. MorseU, as sistant executive director of the Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People, said here today, Oct 20, immediately after the verdict was returned. The defendants were accused of killing, in cold blood, James Chaney, 21, of Meridian, Miss., and Andrew Goodman, 20, and Michael H. Schwerner, 24, both of New York City on June 21, 1964. All three were engaged in civfl rights activity in the state. Eight of the accused were acquit ted and a mistrial was declared in the cases of the other three. Among the convicted was Neshoba County De puty Sheriff Cecil R. Price. The civil rights workers had been arrested and held until the mob had been notified. They were released, to be captured on the highway by a gang of killers. Dr. Morsell further said that the verdict demonstrated that the Depart ment of Justice can secure convic tions in civil rights cases and should now proceed to prosecute pending cases in which the state has failed to act Such murders should be a Fed eral crime as "provided in a civil rights bill now pending before the Congress." The full text of Dr. Morsell'i statement follows: The conviction of seven of the 18 men tried for conspiracy in con nection with the 1964 lynching of See CONVICTED 3A Stewart Urges Special Panels On Ghettos Municipal governments across the nation should establish special committees on ghetto problems and structure them to include "respon sible Negro leadership and represen tatives of the poor," according to Durham City Councilman John S. Stewart Stewart says new commissions or committees must be set up and existing committees must be reor ganized to include representatives of the poor and of Negro leadership, in order for the governments to establish better lines of communica tion into the heart of city ghettos. His comments are included In an article appearing in the October i»- sue of "Nation's Cities," official ma gazine of the National League of Cities. The article, titled "New Voices from City Hall," gives the com ments of Negro aldermen, council men and commissioners from five cities throughout the country on questions related to the summer doting. Concerning his general reaction to the riots, Stewart said: "Person- See STEWART 3A Last Rites For Mrs. Georgia P. Joyner Oct. 21 Graveside rites for Mrs. Geor gia Pearson Joyner, the daugh ter of the late Rev. and Mrs. George W. Pearson of Greens boro were held here, Saturday, October 21. He Rev. Philip R Cousin, pastor of St, Joseph's A.M.E. Church, officiated. Mrs. Joyner succumber Octo ber 19 at the home of her bro ther, Attorney C. O. Pearson, Cooke Road, following a leng thy illness. Mrs. Joyner was born in Durham where she spent the most of her life, following the death of her parents in early childhood. She attended the Durham City schools and later Wilberforce University. After her graduation, she taught at Hillside High School of this city. Following Mrs. Joyner's mar riage to the late Alexander Joyner of Wilson she moved with her husband to New York City where she worked aa a kindergarten teacher at the Church of the Master. She re- See JOYNIR 3A