Saturday, May 11, 1968
Section B 6 Pages
YOUR PICTURE-NEWS WEEKLY
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Tony Award Winners With The Coveted Silver Medallion
The 1968 Tony Award winner* hold the coveted sil
ver medallion following the presentation ceremonies at the
» Shubert Theatre in New York April 21. From left are:
England's Patricia Routledge; Robert Goulet: Leslie
Vggams; Martin Balsam; and Australia's Zoe Caldwell.
Misg Routledge (of "Darling of The Day") tied with
Mi* Uggams (of "Hallelujah Babyl") for honors as "best
Detroit Free Press Staff,
John Knight Get Pulitzers
NEW YORK - John S.
Knight and staff members of
two of his newspapers won sep
arate 1968 Pulitzer Prizes for
Journalistic excellecce Monday
in an unique three-category
sweep of the awards.
Never in the 52-year history of
Ihe prizes had members of one
group of newspapers won three
awards in a single year. There
have been double sitords on
seven occasions.
Knight, editorial director of
the Knight Newspapers, was
honored for distinguished edito
rial writing. The Detroit Tree
Press staff was cited for in the
field of local reporting for its
coverage of last summer's riots
there. Eugene Gray Payne of
Knight's Charlotte. N.C., Ob
server, was named the out
standing editorial cartoonist of
1967.
The Free Press has been shut
down since last November by a
labor dispute. It was believed to
be the first time a Pulitzer
Prize has gone to a newspaper
which is not publishing.
The Riverside, Calif., Press-
Enterprise won the Pulitzer
Prize for meritorious public
service for its expose of corrup
tion in the courts in connection
with the handling of property
and estate's of an Indian trioe in
California.
The Pulitzer Prize for fiction
went to William Styron Tor his
book, "The Confessions of Nat
Turner," based on the only ef
fective slave revolt in American
history.
George F. Kennan, a veteran
diplomat, became a two-time
prize winner. He received the
1968 award for biography for his
"Memoirs, 1925 1950. ' He was
the 1957 winner in history.
For the fourth time in the past
six years, the Columbia Univer
sity Board of Trustees omitted a
Pulitizet Prize for drama.
The prizes were established in
the will of the late Joseph Pul
itzer, who died in 1911, and were
first awarded in 1917. Pulitzer
was founder of the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch and publisher of
the old New York World.
The awards are made by the
Columbia trustees, based on re
commendations by the Advisory
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MM. ftFAUiOINO MR. MIUIR MR. OUARUS
N.C. COLLEGE in Durham, installed its fourth
president, Dr. Albert N. Whiting on Saturday. These
photos were made at the Saturday noon luncheon
Board on Pulitzer Prizes, com
posed mainly of newspaper ex
ecutives.
The meritorious service
award in journalism is a gold
medal. Individual prize winners
in journalism and the arts re
ceived SI,OOO each, with an
equal sum to those who share
an award. In the case of the
staff award to the Detroit Free
Press, the SI,OOO will be sent to
Managing Editor Frank Angelo
for disposition by the staff.
For the first time this year, a
category ofTeature news photo
graphy was established. It was
won by Toshio Sakai of United
Press International, for his Viet
nam war combat photograph,
"Dreams of Better Times." It
showed a weary American sol
dier asleep in the rain, while a
buddy kept watch.
The award for straight news
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POOR PEOPLE campaigners presented demands to the State
Department Wednesday. Conferring are, from left, Revs. An-
Che Carolia Cwws
(*f—■ —Ht-"" —»i /7Q
acctress" in the musical category. Goulet wag voted
Happy Time." Balsam was chosen "best actor" in the
dramatic category for his performance in "You Know
I Can't Hear You When The Water's Running." and Mis»
Caldwell took top honors as "best actress" In the drama
tic category for her roie in "The Prime of Mis» Jean
Brodie."
photograph went to Rocco Mor
abito of the Jacksonville, Fla.,
Journal. His pictures, captioned
"The Kiss of Life," showed an
unconscious utility lineman
being revived by mouth-to
mouth resuscitation.
Alfred Friendly of the Wash
ington Post was awarded the
prize for International Report
ing for his coverage of the Mid
dle East war in 1967.
The national reporting prize
was joinfly awarded to Howard
James of the Christian Science
Monitor, an(t-Natbsar~"Wck"
Kotz of the Des Moines Regis
ter. . .
A series of articles on "Crisis
in the Courts" won for James.
Kotz was cited for his reporting
of unsanitary conditions in
many meat packing plants,
which helped insure the passage
of the Federal Wholesale Meat
Act last vear.
DR. ANO MRS. WHITINO
for 600 special guests and after the inatallation
later In the afternoon. Left to right, Mrs- George
Spaulding, Baltimore; Paul R. Miller, Va- State Col-
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
Vote Protested
In Hillsborough
- A
protest has b«n lodgeo
against the 403 votes recorded
in Hillsboro's Eno Precinct dur
ing Saturday's primary, raising
the possibility that the votes
may be thrown out.
County elections board Chair
man Marshall Cates of Hillsboro
said Monday night there was a
dispute over the judge appoint
ed to oversee the election in the
small precinct, which borders
the Durham County line, v
Cates said the elections board,
in accordance with the law, ap
pointed a judge for the Eno pre
cinct. When the judge arrived,
however, the precinct's regis
trar, Mrs. Lillian Griffin, had
appointed and sworn in another
judge. The first judge filed a
protest.
Cates said the registrar is al
lowed to swear in a judge only l
when the proper judge does not
appear at the polls by opening
time. This, said Cates, "was not
the case Saturday in the Eno
precinct." i
drew Young, aide, and Ralph Abernathy, president of SCLC.
Seated behind Abernathy is another aide, Rev. Bernard
Mrs. King,
Abernathy
set pace
MEMPHIS, Tenn.
Launched on their way
by the widow of Dr. Martin
Luther King, 570 persons
set out Thursday on their
"Poor People's" March on
Washington, singing "We
Shall Overcome.".
The procession stepped
off at 2:25 p.m. (EST) with
the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, King's succes
sor as head of the Southern
Christian Leadership Con
ference, marching in the
lead.
He was accompaniedrSby
Mrs. Abernathy, other
aides of the late civil rights
leader, Reies Lopez Tije
rina, a Mexican-American
from New Mexico, and
Linda Aranayndo, an
American Indian.
• • •
THE NUMBER of march
ers is expected to swell
into the tens of thousands
as they converge on the
nation's capital from all
sections of the nation May
12-19 to dramatize the
plight of the poor. They
have vowed to set up a
shantytown and stay there
until the government takes
action.
Dressed in black and
standing on the Lorraine
Hotel balcony where her
husband was slain, Mrs.
Coretta King told the
marchers before they set
out:
"On this spot where mv
husband gave his life, I
pledge eternal loyalty to
the work which be so nobly
began. His legacy will lead
us to the point where all of
God's children have shoes.
"Like those men of old
who saw a star and were
wise enough to follow it let
our steps be led by the
light which he continues to
cast." ' , -
BEFORE BEGINNING
their trek, the marchers
dedicated a gray marble
tablet, inscribed with a
star and a cross, on the
balcony of the Lorraine
Hotel, where Dr. King was
killed by a sniper's bullet
April 4.
The star carries a quota
tion from the Book of Gen
esis:
"Thev said one to an
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M. AND MRS. MISHOI
lege and Acting President Walker H. Quarles Sr.,
Va. State College. In the third panel. Dr. and Mrs
Whiting greet guests. Panel No. 4, Dr. and Mrs.
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King's Father Visits Detroit Under Tight Security
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A plainclothes policeman, right, conceals an automatic rifle under hi» '
coat, part of the tight security surrounding the visit of the Rev. Martin Luther
K'ng Sr. to Detroit April 22. The King, cener, wearing glasses, in
commenting on the strict protection being given him. said at a news conter
ence "and maybe my life will have to go also." ,
other, behold, here cometh
the dreamer ... Let us slay
him . . . And we shall see
what will become of his
dreams,"
THE MARCHERS' stop
lng point Thursday night
was Marks, Miss., 75 miles
Lee. Other members of the group in right photo »ho\v in
tense interest In proceedings. (Cabell photos.)
MR. AND MRS. SCHOOLER
Luna Mishoe of Delaware State College. Far right,
Mr. and Mrs. James Schooler, Durham educator*.
> News of Sports World
State, National And Local
from Memphis, where
seven organizers for the
march were taken into cus
to d y Wednesday. Orig
inally, the demonstrators
had planned to march all
the way to Marks, but de
cided instead to walk only
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PRICE: 20c
2 3 / i miles and take buses
the rest of the way.
The seven organizers who
were arrested in the small
Mississippi town were freed
on bond during the day.