Fayetteville Dentist Added To Teachers College Trustee Brard THE CAROtlNA TIMES j SATURDAY, AUOUST 1«, 1W2 - DURHAM, M. C.—PAG! $4 James Klash of Philadelphia Radio Station WDAS pint on U. S. Senator Hugh Scott (R.-Pa.) a black ribbon "to mourn the loM of civil rights in Albany, Georgia." The radio station ha* been conducting a city-wida campaign. Senator Scott is one of the leaders of the bipartisan effort in the U. S. Senate to help the Rev, Martin Luther King, Jr. and other freedom fighters lo Albany. Judge Orders Plush New Orleans Restaurant and Bar to Open NEW YORK ^ Federal Di- j facllitie* 'In a Wilmil^on park- strict Judge Herbert W. Christ- ing lot which waa ieased to a ehberry tihis week ordered the j similar private firiii,’ iluxury restuarant and bar atj Judge Christenberty added the Moisaht Airport in Now! that oven if-only a few Negroes Orleans, La. to desegregate ils | uscj tjje lu^tury facilities, all i facilities. j Negroes are entitled to its’use ^ The decision was the result. essence of the con of a suit brought by the! stitiitional right is that. it is a NAACP Legal Defense Fund in; Personal one.” ' King Compared To Great Moral Leaders of Past NEW YORK — Dr. Martin Luther King’s “valiant fight • against injustice” was hailed this week by Rabbi Joachim Prin*, president of the Amer ican Jewish Congress, as boing I “in the great tradition of I he religious leaders of past cen turies.’’ I Irt a telegram to the Negro minister currently serving a' jail sentence in Albany; Ga., Rabbi Prinz declared: “The Biblical injunction, ‘Proclaim liberty throughout the land and to all the inhabitant.; thereof’ must lie more tharr a mere inscription on the Liberty alter serving as a public Bell. It is given life and mean- SL-nxjol teacher for three years, Ing by those who refuse to ac- returned to the Howard Uni versity Dental School where in 1955 he was graduated with the D. D. S degree in Dentistry Dr. Butler is active in tlw yt)u and your coleagues in the' community of Fayetteville, He FAYETTEVILLE — Dr. ( George L, Butler, practicing I aentist in the city of Fayette-' Viii« since li»55 and a grad'u-i a^e of the Fay4.tevllJ)e Soaie Teachers College in the class 1 ot ItfiO, was recently tapped by j iMorth Carolina’s Governor i Terry Sanford for membership i j on the College Board of Tru® I I tees. 1 Other local members of the Bouxd include Victor Dawson, I owntT of a local radio station; I UI-. vir. p Devane, dentist; Gur-! i‘cy E. Edlgerton, Chairman, i^ junty Board of Elections; ana ' Ai.tOrney John H. Cook, long lime Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Dr. Butler comes of Fayette ville soil. He attended the pu blic schools of ihe city, the E. E. Smith high .school, and was awaa'ued the B. S. degree at the Fayetteville State Teachers College in the Class of 1940. m cept the continiid existence of oppression. “The members of the Amer ican Jewish Congress salute Albany movement and promise their support for your ultimate victory." May, 1960. The snack bar and coffee shop at the irew munici pal airpoi^t had been desegre gated voluntarily. Judge. Christenberry ruled that tbpugh the luxury restu arant and bar are leased to a private agency. Interstate Hosts, the lessee is subject to the “equal protection” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. He based his decision on a 1961 Delaware ruling which invali date ' ^grei^ted restuarant The case was argued April 11, 1962, by attorneys A. P. Tureaud of New Orlews and Michael Melt&ner of N6W York. Other NAAC^ Legal DWense Fund attorneys for the Negro plaintiffs were Jack Greeftberg and Jame$ M. Nabrit, III, of New York City. Byrd Jazz Trio Plesses College Neet holds membership in the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the Old North State Dental Society and in the National Denital Asso ciation. He also holds member ship on the Mayor’s Bi-racial Committee, is a member of the Board of Trustees of the First Baptist Church, of the Sea- brook Road Advisory Council, and Vice Chairman of ithe local Fuller School for Except ional Children. HISTORY COMES ALIVE in the Ticl«water Virginia area for par* lieipants in Hamp'ton Initltute'i Pre-Collega summer senien. The 141 ttudonfs and chaperones, In- GREENSBORO—The Charles! Iic ls married and the fsther „ . _ . , , of two children, Dr. Butler Byrd Trio last week drew warm j served for four years in applause from an audience at In the- South. 20,634.. facterles are manufacturing lumber,, paper and othet forest products.: ■ Tyearqld Kentucky Bourbon $^9S $050 ■ PINT iumwnm old mmi A. and T. College. The group, composed of Byrd one of the nation’s outstanding guitarists who plays without a pick; Keter Betts on the bass, and Bertell Knox, drummer, pleased the audience in its con cert here on Tuesday, July 31. The trio opened the program with an original composition by Byrd, “Blues For Felix”, and kept the attention of the crowd for the entire evening. Among thte ihlmBefs mdfe ap pealing to the listeners were: “One Note Samba.” a Brazilian composition; “How Long Has This Been Going On?’’ by Ger shwin, and “Things Ain’t What They Used to Be,” by Duke Ellington. years in the army during. Wgrld War IL Durham Piano Studio Lists Honor Students tMf 4 ■lid ' FoUowii|g is 4 list of atudfi: who eamW places on the latesi honor roll at the Chambe'rli; (piarroi) studio of Durham; FIRST HONOR HOLL Dorothy Amey, Montee Brown, Casimir Brown, Patrice Dunn. Sheila Gunn, Diane Hart. Suzette 'TwarrajTr numbers by ElHng- j Howell, Denise LtttlH;'jEinretfer ton, “Blue Indigo” and Satin Doll,” drew warmest applause in the second part of the one and half hour program. Byrd played l^iree-solis, ito open the program, following intermission. These included: “Prelude in Gavott,” by Bach; "Spanish Dance,” by Gradados, and "Bolero,, by Montaya." For an encore, the Trio played, “Play Fiddle Play.” The program was the final feature of the A. and T. sum mer lyceum series. Love, Lana McClary, Reatha Page, Phyllis Scarborough Cheryl Strayhorne, Kitty Weston and Betty Jeaii WiUtemsdn. SECOND HONOR ROLL Elaine Artis, India Cooke, Floy a Cotten,' Goldie Ednetta ElIls. Ernelle Eaton, Carolyn Elliott, Claudette Far rington, Carletta Jemison, Gayle McLaughlin, Rosebud Page, Cathy Turner, and Harriet Van Hook. The Chamberlin studio is di rected by Mrs. A. M. Shearin. State Trades Teachers Meet Aug.15atA&T GREENSBORO — The an nual North Carolina Trade and Industrial Education Teachers Conference, to be held here at A. and T. College, August 15- 17, will draw more th:in 60- tiaachers from throughout the State. The meet, to be conducted on the theme, “Patterns For Pro gress” will feature presenta tions by prominent officials in trade and industrial education. Included in the group of lectur ers are; C. D. Bates, State super visor, Trade and Industrial Edu cation; D. M. Hanson, professor of education North Carolina Sitete College; A. J. Bevacqua, director. MJ«teri^s Laboratory and K. S. Herman, specialist in training aids^ both of the N. C •^tate Department of Public In struction, and 0. L. Bedilingfield, director, Division of Apprentice ship ’Training, N. C. Department of Labor, all of Raleigh, N. C Other speakers scheduled to ap pear include: Dean L, C. Dowdy acting president, S. C. Smith deah~oI iRF Tech meal TnstltUtc and Dr. C. W. Pinclcney. chair man. Department of Industrial Education, all of ,A, gnd, T-.Col lege. The three-day meet is being .conducted under the .supcrvisior Evans, j Taylor, assistant State supervisor , Trade and Indust rial Education, with headquarters at A. and T. College. D. S, llartf field, Winston-Salem, N. C., it conference expeditor. The conference opens on Wed- cluding (I. to r.) preelleg»rt, Wendell Wells, Greensboro; Joe Johnson, Newport Newt, Va.; Carolyn Cooley, Lawreneeville, Va.; Jacquelyn Randolph, Rich mond, Va.; William Reid, Kan napolis; and Social Science In stitute astlttants, Mike Burling ame, Washington, D. 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