League 6aM for %m\ in Groups, Behavior Code fc Crowe. He i» ki^owik “big | go back lo before bjseba. ; ly” and is mast Ufeeiy tp' be “If white people come liearifl^ ircdpd by Bill White , who is gifts, you’re lesry. It’s probably only player ccuicedod to not] your subconscious, but yoM'i “hog-eutUEf." (Hi^-cuitpr: onej wondering if the inviation is re makes an embat^’asain; mis' What’s his reason? on or off the field.) |rhile.Negro players >ill tejse other in racist t^rnis apd will veiled race ^okes ’in front Kvhites, they will fight of a Why? doing wonder, ‘Why’s ho What’s he want?" ■ Another player mentioned men and general tension as more problems which keep ic player makes a racial re- i races from a more intimate lo a Negro. At ^he same the Negroes do not care white players avoid them and feel they generally get along |er with wjute Southernerp than thernersj ays Don Newcombc’ ' " The them white knows he has to with you and because he is |thern, he is going to try to trouble down. He’s more Itious of what he has to say.” rooks Lawrence, who is also [Oder among the Negro players, Boyle that Negro players to reject invitations from the les because of reasons which sociation. The Nogro players havq yerj; few complaints about the majors, but the subjects which cause the most gripes are: ,1/ ■'■'Lack of advertising cprfqrsc- ments opportunities. ^'Having lockers for Negroes all in a row at clubhouses. '• ''Training in the segr^fgated South. -The feeling that Negro plkyers have to be “better” than Whitcii to stay. J ^Bonuses for Negroes ar(i?ntieh lower than fot' whites. SQUAW VALLEY WONDERLAND JUIIP^S from all over the world competed 911 thfa* ifr'IBMcli’ liM M-neter runs Kpeeially constructed at Squ«w Tal* f#r the 19M Winter Olympic Oame*. At richt la one of nearly 150 ABC Vending Corporatiun installstioiu t* -«o|ipl}' Hot foo4' and drinks to ijcarly (fiitdoor aporU fA^a yrjif) altaaded the 11-day ice aiid snow spectacle lout Streams, Ocean Piers Oi»n lain as Channel Bass Moving ALEIGK — Mountatri trout wa and ocean fishing pier 4n th Carolina reopen to anglers isurfcasting from Kitty liawk lo labash is accelerated by the il run of channel bass, and fish and freshwater bass hit ^4, lures in lakes from mount^iiis tq I coast. Five r.3W fishing pier«. .W(|U| readied for use this spring‘bflHs the o;;ean pier couot up to 96 along the Nqrth Carolina eodst. In the Blue Bidge and Great .^oky Mountains, 1,300 milds of trout streams and 1.900 aci^i of niouotain lakes designated as trout valcrs becomes availabU April 2. An additional 600 miles of troirt itreams ^within the Great Smojcj Mountains National Park are open ed to fishermen May 16. Two streams ^re off41i)ittg to men. The portion of Neal’s Creek flowing through M2unt MUc^el) Wildlife Mai^f^ment Aren and a section 'of Pigfon Jliver in Sher wood Wildlife J^'igemiht'Are are resi&^Tt^ lof^womm,-a^ ‘ihf children-un^r lUi. Nell’s Creek has been faiiiQua with t^ pawd^ puff brigade f»i' ye«ura: River’s west pron| i; i|ewly reliev ed for distaff anglers and ,voung% lers. Surfeasting for channel baa* along some 200 miles of lieach is usually best around mid-April. The !Hin show up iiefore the end of| March. April' and early Mav are prime ior going after the bronze back fightere witti trolling rigs in Oregon Inlet and other coastal waters. By late April, bluefish show up in inlets and surf, along with sea mullet, croaker, perch, flonhder, spots and other species. Offshere fishing for billfish and 3 othw species begins in early Mayi' The first blue marlin were boated oH Hatteras by mid-May in 19^, aii4 seven months later the 162nd blue marlirt boated off the Dftre County Coast that year was taken. >(!hrui» ers ior Gulf Stream fishing'may be chartered at Oregon Inlet. teras, Morehead City, Wri^t^ville and Carolina Beaches, and Other coastal fishing centers. ., ' . NorUi Carolina’s new oce»5^ ing piers are at Kitjty Hawic, lbit teras Island, Emerald Isle;"‘'^urf City and Holden Beach. ■ Mountain trout fishermeg iwill Ham Shows Siated - Thirteen ham shovirgr' aiin^d at ■improving swine Bf^iJitetion in Piedmont N. C.. will eotidUct^ throughout tiiC see t4on duBing April. t. R. Johnson, district agent with the A&T College Extension ScrvJee, said more than 1,000 top quality country hams will be ex- Wibited and many of them sold, during the month long campaign. The shows will climax a pork Doris Audrey and Stan '6rady Win M Typing Ct(amiNo#i| Winners in three Jivision of typ ing contest sponsored l.y the North Carolina Teachers Associa tion were apnpqijffd at North Carolina Cqit^e to4ay by John V. ^urner, chairman of the program Ijeld at NCC last weplt. Doris Audre.* of West Charlotte 1 - - t(igh School, Charlotte, i^eccived Dunn, C. F. Pope High Schdol, Bui^ • camera for first place in the! S®'”- first semester division, | U wuiihingtott •Second semester -..1 cramcra, an^ Ida -Ourham. «on Institute, llendmoii e’eelHe- cloek. Rtinner-up and third plact (it» in the two semoslef divisix4 were Patricia Geer of Stevens Lee High School, Asheville, and fiobbte High Scliqoi, Itcidsville, reociyod ti-ansislqr radio as, second plaoc linishci ip the throe “.emostii: class. Thij'd place priw of a wris^ wa'ch went Eureka Durham (jjf Henderson Institute. 0 i winner was Itanley Gricy of Carver High jchool, Mt Olive, who received an executive desk lamp. Bonnie C. Harris of II. B. SuKg High School, t^'armvillc, was tops ^ong three semester compelitorj, ^e was awarded a typewriter. . Other first sertiestei' winners llfere Mildred Jo^vner, B. T. Wash i^gton High .School, Rocky Mount, 'Strving the Community for Good Health” We Have Filled Over ^ Million Rhorlesia pro;Iuced alwui 1B|( million pounds of flue-CureU t*^ hacfO in 1959. (trosiss training prosram bagun lait faH, in which mor» than j 803 farm families participated. Jehnton estimalec; that nearly 3^00 hams are to be Involved In earlier screening and elimina tions. bounty agi'icultural agents, vo cational agriculture IcacherR and other agricultural agencies cooperatin|g in the movement. find the waters of 1,610-acre Nan- tahi^a Laiie ingrq easily acrtssibiy thun ever before with cqmpletion of a new fishing access area — one of 4fi maiotflin by the North Caro lina Wildlife Resources Commis- Sion for free public use — on the •senlc Wayah Bald Road near Franklin. Boats can be launched here, and at the other access areas Wd municipal and prlcately owned f|icllities throughout the State. l)Iantahala, largest of the North Carolina lakes designated as trout wafers, yield basa, bream and blue; is well as rainbow trout b grow big in this lake al- %ililt -i^OOO feet above sea level. HOUSE FOR SALE One four room house on Crest Street NEWLY RENOVATED Close to church and school and conveniently located near Duke and VA hospitals. Price cut for quick sale. rRAZIER REALTY COMPANY 1114 Glenn Sfreet Call 2-1306 I Durham, N. C. PRESCRIPTIONS Boone Drijg Company TH£ pRtlSCRIPTION PHARMACY Whew QiiltUty Counts — Phone 4911 Cor. I*%tri8h & Orange Sts. Dqrham> N. C. Sursfjcal Appliances & Elastic Hosiery For d soc2al||(e weekend ^ SERVE PEPSI tqke a case! A CARTON POR SOc Botllfd Undir Appointment from PikptiCola Company York, N. Y. Bottled By Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Durham, Jfft5-308 South St. Durham. N. C If Yon Really Want To See So)moflring new FISK LOOK at the PREMIER New Quiet Coinfortl You'll experience a new kind of riding luxury . .. quieter and smoother thgn you've ever felt before. , , New Emergency Refponae! "V You'll notice o quicker, more positive respond to every touch of the steering wlieel, broke pedal ond occeterotor thon , you've ever felt before. Ne\f Preciaion Control! You'll find the "track" ypy steer on stroij^towoys turns and curves with less effort ond more ossuronce thoh you've ever felt before. ryW: Pr«Mur« Cof|«d HI-P«rfformanc» Nytoa W. I. COOK, Manager lOSLAKEWTOPAVe. PHONE Sl^l ... W«dn«i4*y» *t 1 R.M. iUwmrt Rifabe* j. q. « lust How COUID YOUR WIFE KEEP YOUR FAMIIY TOGHHER! If your wife should suddenly find surance program is adequate, your herself head of your family, how well family may have to change its way would she manage? Unless your in- of living considerably. FOR THE PROTECTION Y0I)R FAMILY NEEDS TODAY PLUS RETIREMENT BENEFITS ASK YOUR NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL AGENT ABOUT THE ^THEIFTMASTER” pOLlfcY. ‘^THRIFTMASTER” OFFERS THE MOST PROTECT- ' AT THE LOWEST COST. North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company 6O6V2 Fayetteville Street