Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 31, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY. AUGUST SI. IMS 2 YOU ARE THE DETECTIVE For more than two month*, a gang of four vlctou* hoodlums has teen terrorising a certain district, robbing and wantonly beating up ammo of their victims. And now Just a few days ago. your good mend. Detective Jim Pierce, has been ruthlessly shot to death by one of the gWIB vast network of the police has finally succeeded in rounding up and bringing In the four hoodlums, and difficult though It tag been to break through the sullen deflanoe of the four hardened cri minals. you have managed to gather the following Information: Their names are Charley Aiken. Woody Briggs. Pat Callahan, and TTanfr I>mn One of the four lg a great man with a switch-blade knife and has never been known to use any other weapon. Briggs uncle la a well-known professional gambler and Is married to the elster of Detective Pleroe's killer. Briggs and the switch-blade man are both redheads. Charley Aiken and the switch-blade carrier re cently prevailed upon Hank Dunn to devote himself exclusively to the driving of the gang’s getaway car. despite a few mild objections froni The killer and the switch-blade specialist have been close friends for several years. A week ago, Hank Dunn and the killer collaborated on a robbery of their own. unknown to and against the rules of the gang Now after studying these notes you have gathered, can you de termine which ol the four men killed Detective Jim Pierce? SOLUTION The knife-carrier is not the killer, sinoe Detective Piero was shot. Briggs is not the knlfe-carrler nor the killer. Aiken Is not the knue carrier. Dunn Is not the knife-carrire nor the killer, and since Aiken Is not the knife-carrier, Charley AUten must be the klLer. Raleigh Embalmer Gets National Position In O. The National Funeral Directors and Morticians Association, Inc. held Its 26th Annual Convention on August 11-15 at the Dsshlsr Hilton Hotal in Columbus, Ohio. Th# or ganization represents a member ship of nearly 3,000 morticians and funeral directors from ooast to coast Over 500 delegates and their families attended the sessions which were highlighted by numberous ed ucational and social activities. Elected to the national office of secretary of the Board of Di rectors was a native of Raleigh. Clarence E. Llghtner, who also servos as president of the East ern District of the North Caro lina Funeral Directors and Mor ticians Association. His election by unanimous vote Is unprece dented In the election to this office. Other officers elected were: pre sident, Theodore Hswes, Illinois; genera! secretary. Robert Mlllor, Illinois; chairman of the board, Charles Lew, Maryland; treasurer. Handy Beckett, Pennsylvania; vice chairman of board, Camie Bragg, New Jersey; Ist vice-president, C. W. Lee. Alabama; 2nd vice-presi dent. Jenifer Renfro, Ohio; 3rd vico president, Malverse Mack, New York and 4th vice-praeldent, Par ry J. Brown, North Carolina. F. Sentenced Invoked In Tax Cate GREENSBORO Raleigh and Greensboro Attorney Herman Le roy; Taylor. Sr., began serving a two-year prison sentence Tuesday aftft- Judge Edwin M. Stanley ruled In U. S. Middle District Court at Greensboro that Taylor hact "deliberately and willfully” violated terms of his probation, issued earlier In two Income tax chatges. Taylor, who now resides In Greensboro, filed an appeal as a paiser which was denied by Judge Stanley, who stated that Taylor's claims of pauperism were untrue and designed for the purpose of delay. THE CAROLINIAN "Covering the Carolines" Published by the Carolinlaa PubUshlai Company SIS E. Martin Street Raleigh, N. C. (Entered as Second Close Matter April S. 1140. at tha Pott Office In Raleigh. North Carolina under the Aot of Msreh. ISTS). ! SUBSCRIPTION RATES Six -Months sen Solti Tax J» TOTAL «N Ono. Year RSO Saloa Tax 14 •' - - Total' *«.«« Payable In Advance. Address all communications and make ell checks end money orders payable to THE CAROLINIAN Amalgamated Publishers. Inc. 810 Madison Avenue. New York J7. N Y, National Advertising Representative and member of the Associated Negro Press and tha United Praia Interna tional Photo Service. The Publisher la not responsible for the return of unsolicited news, pic tures or advertising copy unices nec essary postage accompanies the copy. Opinions expressed Dy columnists In Skis newspaper do not necessarily re present the policy of this paper Need Extra Money? Is Your House Full? Does Your Closet Contain Clothes You Never Wear? Do you have something to swap or sell? that you never use. •e " , Rent that vacant room! Sell those clothes, furniture or items I You Can Sell It! j*4 If You Tell It! • itfl is In the CLASSIFIED Columns THE CAROLINIAN ; /; WRITE OB CALL 518 E. Martin St TE 4-5558 - 11 * v CLARENCE E. UGHTNER H. Purnell of Toxaa la Immediate past president The next National Board meet ing will be held In April In Hot Springs, Arkansas. Next National Convention will be held In August in Detroit, Michigan. The noted civil rights at torney'! probation was revok ed early In 1963 when ho eonld not pay the 520,000 In fine* levied agatnta him. Both ths f, sentence* and fine* were bn posed In 1961 after Taylor pleaded guilty to one charge of evasion and waa found guil ty by a jury of another. He appealed to toe U. 8. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals In Balti more on claims the five-year pro bationary sentence should be re voked since he was unable to com ply with the fines. This court ord ered a hearing on Taylor's pau perism claims. Judge Stanley reviewed Attor ney Taylor’s financial background Tuesday, taking special not* of hi* home library, furnishings, ex pensive automobiles and his bank account*. Th* Jurist (toted: “It is appar ent that the defendant. If ho earn estly desired to do so. could have paid all or a substantial portion of his flnre. "He has a long and contin uous history of totally disre garding his obligations os a cttlsen and taxpayer, and Is a person Interested in provid ing himself and his family the luxuries of Hfe. even at the expense of defrauding the government. While enjoying a lucrative law practice, ta has preferred to own his own numerous expensive automo biles rather than meet his ob ligations as a taxpayer," th* jndfß oonelnded. Judge Stanley also noted that Taylor has paid no tax on claims POAG HEADS U. S. SHRINERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Sigma Fraternity, the Pigskin Club, sod a prominent church Worker. Poeig Is tha first Imperial Poten tate from Norte Carolina since 19- 29, when CecU Blake of Charlotte ascended to the “port- Persona attending the week-long cession from Raleigh, tee capital city, were: C. A. Haywood, Sr, Il lustrious Potentate of Kabala Tem ple No. 177; A. E. Brown, Deputy of the Oasis of Kabala Tample; D. D. BrightwCU, past Illustrious Potentate; and Nobles William Laws and Lax Colson. The auxiliary. Daughters Os Isis, was represented by tee following; Mrs. Esther Michaels, Illustrious Commandress of Kabala Court No. 67; Past Illustrious Commandress Julia Brightwell; Past Common dress Clinton Llgon; and Daughter Ernestine Laws. 200,000 IN D. C. ‘MARCH’ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) William Malone, Eugene Snipes, Dr. Howard Miller, Miss Vivian Irving. Also Mrs. Martha Wheeler, John M. Williams, Mrs. Phyllis Tyler, Seth Tyler, Rev. Grady Davis, Miss Madelyn Yarbrough, Phylip Ztlazo, Rev. Oscar McCloud, Father Jones, Mrs. McTyre, Miss Elizabeth Lee, William M. Turner, Mrs. Dorothy Allan, Mr. Bernard Rogers and Mr. J. W. Yeargin. Also Mias Virginia Smalls, Mrs. E. M. Yeargin, Mrs. E. Y. Raid, James O. Reid, Mr. McSowell, Du rant Jones, Ross Fowler, Mrs. Ma ry E. Perry, Mrs. Virginia Harris, Miss Betty Stevens, Bernard Holt, Dan Dunn, Mrs. Henry Slndos, Henry Sindos, Mrs. Leroy Richard son. Mrs. Gladys Johns, Mlm Be -1 a trice Dunn, and Mrs. Leola Mc- Cray. Alao Loon Penn, Jr., Arnold Am bers, Decather W. Mlllor, Joyce Fllppln, John They*. Lloyd Jeffries, William P. Parka, Harlon Eugene Clark, Deborah Jean Sorrell, Alice Stella Clark, John Williams, Jr. and Henry L. Whitehead. Loaders of the gigantic rally wore proving themoetvee quite saeeoosfal at keeping tea dem onstrators orderly. The loaders all agreed on one statement: "We march to redress old grievances and to help resolve an American crisis.'" Tha demonstrators, including thousands of white civil rights sup porter*, poured into town aboard 20 special trains, nearly 700 chart ered buses, nine special plana flights and thousands of cars. First of the special trains rolled into cavernous union station before 7 a. m. Buses waited to take their more than 26,000 passengers to the Washington Monument grounds. Staging area for the demonstration. FIRST BUSES ARRIVE The first chartered bus to wheal Into tea city carried 36 hymn-sing lng, hand-clapping Negroes from Clarksdala, Mist. Tha first of tha special trains brought 538 persons from the Pitts burgh area. A spokesman said tha group was about 60 par cant Ne groes and 40 par cant whites. A nother train from Cincinnati quickly followed. A police helicopter reported that traffic leading to tea city waa light at 8 a. m. Later, Maryland state po lice reported traffic had become “heavier than ueual” but with “no serious bottlenecks or tieups.” At teat hour tee monument crowd totaled only about 3,000 persons, predominantly Negro. At 9:30 a. m. Washington police estimated 22,800 demonstrators had arrived In the capital. Os theae 10,- 500 were In the Washington Monu ment staging area. - SEE CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS Leaders of the march called ear ly on congressional leaders to make their plea for a strong civil rights bill. They got a frelndly reception but no guarantees that Congrats would bo able to advanco Its time table for action on tha lagialation. Demonstration leaders had promised their best efforts to maintain order. Two hours be fore the scheduled march of eight-tenths of a mile from the monument to the Lincoln Me morial. police reported: No ar rests, no violence, no Incidents. At the 25 first aid stations set up for the rally, health officials said they had been called only to ad minister "a couple of aspirins for headaches.” The first congressional call of tha march leaders was on Senate Dem ocratic Loader Mike Mansfield of Montana. A. Philip Randolph “fa ther" of the demonstration, said they were received cordially. Dr. Marita Luther King, Jr., president of the Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence. tald they had -a very fruitful dtocumlou" with tha Democratic leader. Walter Ren ther, AFL-CIO vice president, •aid Mansfield voiced support for President Kennedy's civil rights bill. The leaders also spent 35 minutes conferring privately with Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen and House Leader Charles A. Hal lack. NAACP secretary Roy Wilkins said the session was “all right " Wilkins told a reported after wards that Dirksen repeated his op position to ths President's public accommodation proposal. He said the GOP leader was said to have promised "full support” to other sections of the bill. BUMPRR-TO-BUMPER TRAFFIC? Although the buildup of march ers got off to a slow start, Mary land state police reported at 10 a m. that Baltimore-Washington Ex pressway was "partically solid" with Washington-bound buses run ning “almost bumper to bumper" at times. Baltimore authorities aald Wash ingtbn-bound buses since around 8 a m. had been passing through the city’s harbor tunnel at the rate of about 100 an hour. A high point of the demon stration waa the program at the memorial which houses the brooding figure es Abraham Lincoln, the man who proclatm tae filed in 4958, 1959. 1960, 1661 and 1962, while reporting Income Tor these years of more than s3B>,- 000. He was ordered taken Into cus tody immediately. ed tee end es slavery. There the leaders <<-*»»— a complete and immediate end of ra cial discrimination in ft Thai Ira Some said Kennedy's civil rights legislation was not strrong enough. Wilkins said: “We want freedom, we want employment and tee pride and responsibility and self respect that goea with equal access to jobs.’’ He called the President’s bill “little more than sugar water.’’’ SEX ASSAULT CHARGED BY WOMAN HERE. (CONTINUED FROM PAG* 1) said she first thought the man had blackened his faoe so she would think he was a Negro, but claimed eta found later that she could not be sure whether tar as sailant was colored or white. The man allegedly used some rags which he tad In hie hand to tie a blindfold around her face and gag her before forcing her to leave the house with him. Mre. Bands Is said to have told police her assailant threatened to kill her and tar parents If she made any noise or refused to ac company him. Although the man was said to have had a pistol in his person. Mrs. Sarvte said that she she didn’t see it. “I offered him money or anything in the house, but he refused It,” the victim is quot ed as saying. Mre. Sarvte said the man forced tar to walk blindfolded to a spot near some railroad tracks where the alleged attack took place. The attacker was described as being six feet tall, weighing about 170 pounds, wearing a light shirt and dark trousers. Detective Lt. R. A. Lttee aald a window to the apartment was op en and a screen tad apparently been removed. N. MITCHELL GIVEN RITES AT RALEIGH (CONTINUKD FROM PAGE » He started working for the Winston Mutual Life Insurance Company as field supervisor in 1821 and was transferred to the Raleigh District as manager, built up the first local debit and estab lished ths first Raleigh office of ths company. Mr. Mitchell retired from the company in 1954 after 33 years and was cited for his efficient and faithful servioe. He was alao associated with The CAROLINIAN in the circulation department fol lowing his retirement. The deceased was a member of the Pint Baptist Church In his home town and-was later affiliat ed with the First Baptist in Wins ton-Salem. where he served as superintendent of the Sunday School. Upon coming to Raleigh many years ago. Mr. Mitchell beoame af filiated with the First Baptist where he served until his death. He had resided with a daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren at 115 Pettigrew Street for 'the 'last 13 years. > Mr. Mitchell is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Thelma M. Keck, Mrs. Olorls M. Banders, and Mrs. Lerlaine M. Leviater; one son, Norman T. Mitchell, Jr, of Honolulu. Hawaii; one sister, Mrs. Marie M. Spaulding, one bro ther. Walter O. Mitchell; five grandchildren and a host of oth er relatives. Mount Hope Cemetery. The re- Temporary interment was In mains will be transferred to Bibli cal Gardens here upon Its com pletion. SKELETON FOUND IN CEMETERY (CONTINUED FROM PAGI 1) here Sunday. Local police made the prediction that /the bones may be the remains of man known only as "Pete.” He disappeared from, his horns about tlx years ago. Moore County Deputy Sheriff J A. Lawrence said the bones may be the remains of this former Sea board Airline Railroad employee. -According to Lawrence, tee skeleton was dug ay by doge from a grave bearing the body of Will Love, an Aberdeen Ne gro. who also died In 1957. Found alone with the were the remains of a brown suit. No indication of how or when the body was placed in the grave could be ascertained. The skeleton was taken to the Moore County Memorial Hospital for laboratory tests. MEREDITH IS ENDORSED FOR MISS. SENATE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 lor of Arte degree with a ma jor In political science Sunday, August 18, at Oxford. Grady O’Cummings. 111. chairman of the NCRP and publisher of the weekly newspaper, SFEAKOUT, Included Meredith's name among 175 persona he said his party would .endorse. Plans of tee party were explain ed in detail at a news conference at the Hotel Americana here. An official of the party aald It would orovide a forum for persona dissatisfied with civil rights efforts of both the Dem ocratic and Republican parties. O’Cummings, a Negro and Brook lyn resident, reported that the par ty will endorse or nominate other Negro or white persons In tee fu- ' tore. Meredith was not available for comment on the endorsement INTEGRATED BUSINESSES AFF NAMisn (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 aurants. Gleenwood Village and oil Hillsboro Street; LAM Dairy Bar. Glenwood Avenue; Howard John-" •on Restaurant U. S. 1. North, Hof brau Restaurant, 407 Daniel St, Cmaeron Village. i Also Balleffttne’s Restaurant. till • Oberlin Road. Cameron Village: Gino’s Italian Restaurant. 516 S • Salisbury: Fanners’ Market Rest aurant U. S. I, North; Chipa Drive- gjpisij&y jjH IVHHH «BT SOUTHEASTERN TRUSTEES APPROVE BUILDING PLANS Trustees ol outheesU am Business Collage look over plana tor a new building program which they approved recently at e Board Meeting in the Jack Tar Hotel. Membere ol the Board ol Trueteea are (eeated left to right ) A. T. Spaulding, Jr., President D. W. Stith, Dr S. B Fulbright'end J. T. Taylor. Standing are (left to right ) Attorney Harvey Beech ol Kineton; J. D. Chase, of Charlotte, and Dr. J. E. Campbell. W. C. Chance: Appreciation Tribute Paid To N. Carolina Educator PARMELE— WiIIiam C. Chanee, Sr., a native of Parmele, founder and former principal of to* W. C. Ctanoe High School, was recent ly honored at a special servios by the Parmele community and the Oliva Branch Baptist Church for his significant contribution in the field of education and civil rights. Ths honoring servios was tald prior to ths Annual Homecoming Service at the Olive Branch Bap tist Church on Sunday, August IS Dr. Charles Lyons, an alumnus of toe Chance High School and pnwntly serving as executive sec retary of the North Carolina Tea chers Association, was toe prin cipal speaker. Using as his sub ject “A Call to Service’’, Dr. Lyons paid tribute to Mr. Chance as a great man, friend, and servant to humanity. Citing hi* history and many accomplishments, Dr. Lyons characterised Chanoa’s leadership end educational program as a liv ing and vital part of education in North Carolina, having produced Ex-NC Chief Executive Fails To Comply With Senate Request WASHINGTON Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges' si lence on President Kennedy’s civil rights program is viewed by some here as an indication that Hodges may leave tee cabinet to run for In, U. S. 1, Norte; Char-Grill Drive- In, Hillsboro Street; Charco-Burger Drive-In, 905 Downtown Blvd., Ca roline Hotel Restaurant. 228 W. Hargett; Canton Case, 406 HilUboro St.; Candlelight Restaurant, 309 Hillsboro Street; Bu* Terminal Restaurant, 217 W. Morgan; Bax ley's Mignon, 2500 Hillsboro and Baxley's Cate, 3116 Hillsboro. INDOOR MOVIES Ambassador, 118 Fayetteville; Colony. 1680 Glenwood Avenue; State, 320 S. Salisbury; and Village, 511 Woodtourn Road, Cameron Vill age. Several lunch counter* have bean open to Ntgroes since tee sit-ins of 1959 Mre. They are: Walgreen'* Drug, Fayetteville St.; Ecksrd’s Drug. Fayetteville St; McLellan’s and Woolworth Five and Ten Cent Stores, also located on Fayetteville St. F. W. Woolworth in Cameron Village <* also operating an Inte grated lunch counter. It Pays* To ADVERTISE Large Roosters— 6 to 8 lb. avge. lb. 21c Dixie Classic Ice Milk 1-2 gal. 39c Blue Plate Salad Dressing <it 37c Rib Stew Beef lb. 29c Good Weiners lb. ,39c or 3 lbs. 99c FRESH Ground Beef 39c lb. or 3 lb*. $1.14 End Cut Pork Chops lb. 49c FrwhSpareßibs lb. 39c or 3 lbs. 99c Peach Halves no. 2 1-2 can 2 for 49c Fresh Regular Fryers lb. 27c Pure Pork Sausage lb. 39c or 3 U*. 99c Good Bananas lb. 10c Opaa Friday Night Until 8 P. M. HORTON’S CASH STORE many great people and leaders in this grata social revolution. Chance, who reoently retir ed as principal ta the Parmele Elementary Weheei wae also honored with tee preoeatetion of a silver tray tnsorlbed: "In recognition ta merttorons eerriee rendered in behalf ta W. a Chanee School. Parmele Community, and ta the public inters**. Program participant* Included Dr. Chariot Lyons, guest speaker; The Rev. W. R. Alston, minister; Milton Armstead, and toe Rev. J. B. Kearney. Special music was furnished by the Medley Chapel Choir of Bethel, North Caroline under the direction of Mrs. Mil ton Armstead. Mrs. Beulah Saun ders Carom was the soloist. Carol Wilson, oldest grandchild of Mr. and Mre. Chance presented tar grandparents with a carnation and oorsage. Following the honor ing and worship servioe a dinner was given in their honor. another term as governor of Norte Carolina next year. He waa governor from 1964 until e few weeks before becoming Sec retary of Commerce. Bedfss lata week filled to eomply with a Senate commit tee saggataien that hq outline Us views on th* Administra tion's civil rights program. Because ta was on vacation when tee committee elooed Its hear ings Aug. 2, Secretary Hodge* wae asked, at the suggestion of Com mittee Chairmen John O. Pastor* (D-Rhode Island) to write e letter to the committee outlining his views cm tee legislation. Hodges' sides sold that the com mittee suggestion tad been discuss ed with tee deportment, end lt was "th* decision of tee department that « letter was not called for" ■ . ■ i ..-in,—-■■■—— I - ■ - Personals Mr ft Mre. McKinley Taylor ta Washington D. C. spent th* week ed with hi* sister, Miss Ruth Tay lor. Utile Miss Gloria and Barbara Taylor ta D. C also and Martin of M. D. has returned home after spending the summer with their aunt, Mias Ruth Taylor. Mr. Ludie Johnson pad week end with ta father-in-law, Mr. Fanny Hinton. Mre Dazola Johnson mid «*, Ludie a has rturnad to D. C. af ter spending tar vacation with her father. Attending the sendee wan friends, former students, and tea otan from far and near. Includ ed ware toe following children of Mr. end Mre Ctanoe: William C. Chance, Jr., New York City At torney. Warren O. Ctanoe, Social Worker with the New York School System, Anson a. Ctanoe, em ployed with toe Seaboard Airline Railway Co., Harold P. Chance, Teacher Warwick State School, Warrick, New York, Mrs. Anloe Chance Wilson, Executive Direc tor Lynchburg YWCA, Wilbur J. Chance, Fredericksburg, Virginia, a teacher at toe Bowling Green, Virginia High School, Edward A. Chance, Psychiatric Social Work er and chairman of CORE, Balti more, Maryland. A. B. Wynn, a deacon of th* Olive Branch Church and former co-worker of Mr. Chanee, served •a 00-ordinator ta toe planning committee for the appreciation service which waa planned as a surprise to Mr. and Mrs. Ctanoe. f *' 9 LEARN "FREEDOM SONGS " Miss Elisabeth Haiti ( left ) looks on as Meritt Hodgeman, well-known ooncart artist, teaches Missee Eleanor Jenkins, Joan Welle, end Hesel Tompkins "freedom songs” in prepartaion tor National Council ol Churehm stall participation in Aug. 28’a Match on Washington lor Jobe and Freedom. Employees ol the National Council, the ladies are part ol a larger group now being trained at the Inter-church Cen ter, National Council ol Churches, New York City headquarters, to lead tinging during the march. Participation by church and other religious groups in ths massive civil rights demonstration exceeded 40,000. <• MAKE EXTRA MONEY SELL -The- Carolinian Your own state newspaper, with news of your community while it is still news. Liberal Commission Fill out and mail the coupon below at once. ! THE CAROLINIAN , 518 a Martin St , ( Raleigh. N C. , i Please send details of how 1 can earn money selling i I The CAROLINIAN in my community I think I can sell | • rtifUm weekly. I 1 NAME | s I l ADDRESS - - | • CITY OR TOWN - 1 i—— ‘ —■ i News Coverage Equalled An Inauguration massive March on WMhedfton got aa much coverage by national and local media aa the inaugura tion of a President. All TV and radio netwarts and new* and picture wire ■irrtmi (rtf 1 -* 1 -! tee United JUiJiAFiJd 6fcai •ent i tort* end doi^lptc n ‘ tathfhtatorte maaTreUyto every village and hamlet ta tea Untied State# and ta every m|i-p in tt»* world including bmm behind the ben Curtain. Moot at the nation’* larger newspaper* supplemented their win reports with on the spot cov erage by their own personnel. The whole Washington praes oorpe de voted itself to repotting every phase of the March. All the larger Negro newspaper* had their own men on the aoene. One, the Afro Amertoan, tad SO writer* ami photographers cover ing the day’s events. It was a field day tor free lance feature writers, sketch artiste and art photographer* who hoped to find a ready market for their ef fort*. v In fact, then waa w much scribbling and picture taking teat lt was difficult to attain gulch ligimltate reporter* and new* photographer* from marcher* who wen taking personal notes or ntklni pfto* tare* for their acrapbooka It 1* hard to imagine any event that has been more thoroughly covered than the March on Wash ington. The three television networks, pooled teohnlclal facilities to cov er the March at least SS camera* tor live telecast* were stationed at various points in the city. hi the number of camera* and the amount of other tech nical equipment tee coverage was the biggest tans* tee Tro dden tial inauguration, ac cordlng to William R. MeAn drew, executive vice president of now* for tea National comnanv. NBC had three special pro grams, from S to 3:35 P. M,, 4:30 to 5 and U:ls to midnight. The Columbia Broadcasting System televised a special report from 7:30 to 8:10 P. M. All network* Interrupted reg ularly scheduled programing throughout the day to present re port* from Washington. \ , Ron Cochran of the American Broedpetalng Company presented his early evening news program from the capital. The “Calendar'’ show ol CBfi-TV alao originated in Washington and Included In terview* with participants in the march. , Men in every situation of life love to te praised, and ! found that you must make men pleated with themselves before they will ; be pleased with you or listen to : your story—D. P. Map** in Bis- : tory of Ripen (1873).
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Aug. 31, 1963, edition 1
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