V-,. Faith and courage are more than mere words in a dictionary to the Negro students attending Newbold school at Fort Barnwell. Day in and day out, for many years, they have seen a member of their race, and heard him too, teach - without benefit of vocal chords or a larynx. Despair can find no foothold to throttle his spirit, and his heart bubbles over with belief in the goodness of God. Robert Wellington Boley was born in Cambridge, Mass., and aft er graduation from High school he received his BS degree from Shaw University in Raleigh. For 10 years he taught at Winton High, before he accepted a position on the fac ulty of New Bern’s West Street High school. Six years later, on the basis of an outstanding record, he was ap pointed principal. And as football coach he turned out a string of spectacular teams. One o^ the grid- ders he 'developed was. Bob Mann, who later became an All-America end at Michigan, a Rose Bowl star, and a mainstay for the profession al Cleveland Browns. Boley’s service as principal ter minated when, in 1949, he under went surgery at Kinston’s Memorial General Hospital for removal of his left vocal chord, found to be ma lignant. A year later he entered Jefferson Memorial Hospital in Philadelphia, .where one of the nation’s leading specialists removed his larynx. Re- slgpedj to .the Jact that his. schocd etireejr was oyei«'.Be^y’ took orj^ course af A&T College .cin Cfreensboro. He learned to reweave damaged fabric^. Robert i. Pugh, superintendent of Craven County schools was well aware of his ability, and admired his attitude in the face of adversi ty. He figured there was a place for a man like Boley in his school, system. Meanwhile, the handicapped teacher had learned to talk a little through breath control. The Ameri can Cancer Society gave him con siderable encouragement, and for a man as brave as Boley, considera ble encouf^gement was more than ample. Pugh, as many know is a 33rd de gree Mason, and lecturere for re unions of the New Bern Scottish Rite Consistory. Knowing that a la pel microphone and loud speaker was sometimes used in rituals, he conferred with Alfred “Shorty” Kafer, Jr., the stage director. Kafer agreed with Pugh that such a microphone was made to order for Boley’s impediment. They in vited the teacher to accompany them to the Consistory’s auditorium for a try-out. The set-up worked like a charm. The Negro teacher could be heard throughout the auditorium, as he spoke the lines that were to give him back his career. Superin tendent Pugh offered him a job teaching the eighth grade at New- bold school, and he accepted. In his classroom he hung a small loud speaker in a rear corner near the ceiling. A wire ran from it, along the wall, connecting with an amplifier on the teacher’s desk. A tiny microphone that Boley wore alternately on his lapel and around his neck connected to the amplifier by means of a lengthy cable, permitting him to move any where in the room for individual instruction. It worked out very nicely, which came as no surprise to those who knew Boley intimately. Not only is he a likeable teacher and a brave man, but a man of strong inner faith. Until his operation, he had been a lay reader at St. Cyprians Episco pal church in New Bern. He has complete belief in the power of prayer, and likes to give credit for (Continued on bock papo) The NEW BERN ^ ^ 4. ir. •m V He Si Per Copy VOLUME 4 NEW BERN, N. C., FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1961 NUMBER J7 .a i / \:4 ^elci(j^e sign foi* visitors,; B# to when a shark showed up in Neuse riveT Monday ihorifl- the living, but a good look at his teeth convinced us ing. Zeb Jones found this 6-foot, 44nch, critter in his net' I wouldn’t have been advisable anyhow.—^Photo by off Sandy Point. You heard about it, and just as you pre- I Benners. New Bern Television Fans Didn't Yawn Tuesday Night New Bernians already vexed by oppressive July heat that lingered after the sun had set in a cloudy- ribbed western sky, had little cause to be jovial this past Tuesday night. Perspiring mothers, glad to be done with dishes, tri^ in vain to lull their fretting babes into the Slumber Land of Winken, BUnken and Nod. Tired fathers pulled their shoes off, puffed on smelly cigars their better halves detest, or dangled filter cigarettes from grumbling mouths that dropped in discomfort and disgust. Dogs, still panting as if it were high noon instead of early evening, scratched forlornly at real or im aginary fleas, and sought the solace of familiar porches where loved ones wouldn’t spurn their pre sence. Prowling cats, a little slower of step than usual but not to be out done by the weather, slinked fur tively into neighboring backyards. Their immediate intention was to pounce upon unwary songbirds nesting dangerously in the insecu rity of a low-sprawling hedge. Citizens young and old were do ing a minimum of stirring, taking their cue from motionless leaves on trees that stood like weary sentinels in the enciix;ling shadows. (Streets of this ancient town that has seen centuries of similar sum mers come and go had softened and in some spots buckled during a day of relentless sunshine. Throughfares remained warm, and you could feel the feverishness rising from asphalt, and drifting across sidewalks and lawns. Resigned to the fact that this is the season for repeat programs on television networks, but bored to distraction, villagers turned their sets on, and settled back for an expected interlude -of dull, twice- viewed entertainment. Although newspapers foretold it, thousands had forgotten the scdied- uled speech of a worried fellow American, whose boyishness — al ternately admired and scorned by friends and enemies — is fast giv ing way to gravity well beyond his years. , Then it happened. Flashed upon screens in homes all over the city, and throughout the land, was the image of the President of the United States. He had a message to deliver to the nation that had elected him only months ago — a carefully written text he would adhere to. This was no time for ad lib bing — no time for the clever quip. Reading his words slowly and deliberately, he presented in for thright fashion the unyielding stand that America is pledged to and will honor in the Berlin crisis. Voices were stilled in countless living rooms, - here on the Neuse and Trent, agd pulses quickened as John Fitzgerald Kennedy, a wounded and decorated hero of World War H,'warned the Kremlin that the United States would join in the horrors of armed conflict, if forced into it, to preserve its right to remain in West Berlin. Haunted no doubt by the mem ory of Neville Chamberlain — an umbrella-toting British Prime Min- ister who was intimidated by swag gering Adolf Hitler — the Presi dent made it clear that the signi ficance of West Berlin, as a testing ground for the cause of free peo ples, is global in scope. Kennedy, in his remarks aimed at Khrushchev, left no room for doubt that the United States is determined to stand its ground re gardless of the consequences. What those consequences could be were outlined explicitly to fellow Amer icans. At worst there would be war — even nuclear war. At best, there would be billions more spent for military preparedness and civil de fense. Hundreds of thousands, among the young men of the na tion, were destined to don a uni form and serve their country for months, or years. '' The words were uttered by a Chief Executive who know the sob ering effect they x^ouid have on millons of listeners. He mentioned (the disruption that will extend into countless homes, as his plans go into action. The day following his history-making speech he brought a message to Congress, but to rank and file Americans it was some thing of an anti-climax. The big speeOh — perhaps one of the mo mentous ones of all time — was the Tuesday night address. How did the average New Bern- ian react to the President’s pre sentation of his aims and hopes in dealing with the West Berlin cris is? Well, he wasn’t happy about the matter, but a sample survey by The Mirror reveals that citizens share Kennedy’s belief that a firm stand must be taken. “No one in his right mind wants war,” one man we interviewed said, “and I’m hoping and praying that war won’t come. But yielding to a bully never solves anything. Sooner or later you’re forced to fight. If you stand up to him, there’s always the possibility that he’ll back down.” A woman whose husband was in World War H, and who has a son destined for military service in the very near future, said, “War is a dreadful thing to contemplate, and I keep telling myself that it isn’t going to happen. I can’t be lieve that Russia will start some thing that could destroy all man kind, but with freedom at stake in West Berlin, we’ve got to face up to the Communists once and for all.” Most of the New Bernians with whom we discussed President Ken nedy’s speech had a pretty fair knowledge of circumstances sur rounding the crisis in West Berlin. It is obvious that a high percent age of the newspaper readers here are following international events as they are reeled off daily in dis-- tant places. In New Bern, at least, it is the concensus of opinion that President Kennedy — very much on the hot seat — has made the best of a bad situation in his approach to the West Berlin crisis. What will history say about the speech he made on a sultry Ti%|- day night in July? Your guess is as good as the next fellow’s includ ing perhaps the President himself.