Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Nov. 24, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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Stanford L t/airen Public Library Fcyotteville St New Car To Be Given At Shrine East-West Game ¥ ^ ^ ★ ★ Sll MLLED IN WIHS ^ ^ t ^ V0LU4iE 39 — No. 47 DURHAM, N. C.. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1962 RETURN Requested PRICE; 15 Cent* WINNER AND PRIZE — Miss N«tli> White, Durham secretary, I* shown here with Don Jenkins, Alexinder Ford sales supervisor, and J. Elwood Carter, Carolina Times advertislng-premotlon di* rector, in front of new Ford Fajcon which she will receive at the East-West . Shrine High school all*ster giwne In Durham on Dec. i. >Viss White won the car in the Carolina Times sub> scription contest early t 'i I s month. Miss White Will Get '63 Falcon At Half Time of December 8 Tilt GEORGE ~R> S> Geofye^— Prominent Local Man Succumbs Funeral services were held Sunday, November 18, for Richard Simon George of Pekoe St.f at White Rock Baptist Church. Rev. Miles Mark Fish er officiated. Burial followed in Beechwood Cemetery. Mr. Georg^ was born in Whiteville August 31, 1913 to the late Mr. and Mrs. Simon George, and died November 16 at Lincoln Hospital. He wag a graduate of Columbus County Training School in Whiteville. He was co owner of Home Modernization and Supply Com pany in Durham. His late affilia tion was with the Goodwill Club, Inc. In 1938 he mlarried Willie B. Sherrod and to this union one daughter was born, Muriel Christine. His fraterrral connections in cluded Doric Lodge No. 28, the Durham Consistory No. 218 and See GEORGE, 6-A Plans are being prepared to present Miss ;Hattie White, win ner of the Cat;oli|ia Times recent ly concluded’ subscription ^con- test, with 'a '^ew Ford Falcon at the hslftirnX '^ the East'West High School Shrine Bowel game | here on Dec. 8. Miss White-iitroii^he aew auto mobile finfi^ng itrst ia the ti^^wpnaiii, sMOnd' tnd. Mrs, Maudle, ..I}k;k«rion , Mftr- (erettesville merchanf, placed tJiird. Mrs. Devine will get a color television set, and Mrs. Dicker son will be given $300 in cash. ~L. IT TaretniT'pnsiiiiieinH^the TIMES, announced this week the plan to award the first prize to Miss White at the East-West high school all star game. He said i>relinAinary n^gotia- tions with the game officials had already been completed. The game is an annual promo tion of North Carolina Shrlners to provide funds for its many i philanthropic activities. It was | fdenton Leader Is Released ing 11 more days of a 30 day sentence for contempt of court. He had previously served 11 days of the sentence in Septem ber, before bond was set by the NortR CarbTiha Supreme Court; Meredith To Quit Ole Miss?” 50 ARE ARRESTED IN SIT-IN CORE ffead Asks More Sit-ins lii Greensboro GREENSBORO — Jam**! Farmer, National Director of the Congress of Racial Equality, urged Negroes here Sunday to continue demonstrations despite whole sale arrests . by police Farmer described as “most re grettable” the arrest on Satur day of 50 CORE members who staged a demonstratioir at S and W and Mayfair cafeterias. *1 feel confident CORE wUI ■ - - r continue to fight fot rights^ here, has again been released ntgi»t'» in«M meting. i fcom jail. on bond, after, serv- ■ TKe 50 who were arrested Saturday were not required to post l>ond and were released for appearance in muncipal court on Nov. 27. Most were faculty See CORi. 6-A , and when this court refused to reverse his conviction in early November, he went bacfc to jSil. 1 I Bond was reset whert' At- tbrnei' G. E. Tillett appealed tiie ckse' to the U. S Supreme Court Widespread protest had poured into North Carolina over the re-jailing of Frinks. The contempt of court charge held in Durham when the game * against Frinks resulted from a was first organized several j mlisunderstanding in court in years ago, but had been played ; September. Frinks has been one in Greensboro for the past two years. The game pitting the best players from the East and West in an all star game, will be staged at Covinty Stadium Sat urday afternoon Dec. 8. SUCCUMBS —^ Pictured here it Mr*. Artelia Tennettee, who died last week at the home oi her daughter Mrs. R. KellT Bryant, Jr., In Durham, Mrs. Teimessee was a former public school teacher in North Car olina and lived for many years in the tidewater area of Vir* ginia. Complete details appear on page 3-B. CORE Readies Task Force For Action in Tenn. CORE'S newly • established Freedom Task Force will go in to action December 1st in North Carolina and Tennessee following a final 2 day training r»eriod here in Durham. The Task Force will be com posed of long term volunteers, many of whom are college stu dents This was announced on Nov ensft>er 15 by CORE Program Director Gordon Carey, who will lead the training session and coordinate the program. “CORE has long felt the need for developing a corps of skill ed volunteer* to work in trou ble spot* and on special pro jects in the south,’ Carey ex plained. ‘‘Last sunwner, we recruited approximately 25 volunteers for Freedom Highways, a pro ject aimed at desegregating re staurants and motela along ma jor auto route*. The success of this venture showed the feasi bility of expanding this type of program.’ The Task Force will begin with about 12 field workers and probably will be limited to about 40 during the first year of operation. In the convnunities See TAIK |iO«CI, n-4 | of the leaders in the growing movement to end segregation in Edenton. Meantime, four persons ar rested for picketing in violation of Edenton’s new ordinance limiting picketing were sen tenced on November 14 by Recorders Judge W. S Privott to 10 days in jail, with a pro vision that the sentence be See RELEASED, 6-A Sit-Ins Useful No Longer, Says South Carolina Attorney CHARLtiTfEj’'— A prominent civil rights attorney of South Carolina said here Sunday that the “sit-in” movement has lost its usefulness. He was Atty. Matthew J Perry, of Columbia, who was addressing an Omega Psl Phi Achievement Week program at Johnson C. Srifiith University. Perry one of the attorneys who is representing Harvey Gantt in his attempt to inte grate Clemson College. Perry told the student audi ence here Sunday that the sit-in movement ha* “run its course” and urges students to spend less tlnve demnnstratlng for their See SIT-INS, 6-A DWELL WMi' M OUT — Within • I a han, 35 COHIT were arrested for •Utrlet m Hi tM Hot Tft- To PRESIDE OVER AMZ SECOirt) DISTRICT — The Rt. Rev. Sherman Qreene, ol Atlanta', Ga., is *hown here ad dreeeing the western Worth Carolina Conference of the AiricaQ Methodist Episcopal dhurch Sunday. The confer' enc«j held in Oreensboro ureh. ref«* member* partieipaling in a dwell-oui at a Wilmington, California home which a Negro couple had been denied $he right to buy. The dwall-oul ended after the Ne gro couple obtained a court order restraining Sun-Ray Estate* from selling the home to anyone el*e pending a hear ing on their request for a permanent injunction. The Auto Wreck of Roxboro Teeners Is the Bloodiest Six persons were killed in four 1 piuati' aiiloniubile accidcmtf tluoiuihoiil ihe state over the pa5t wi-cl^-cnd. In of the bloodiest of the four crashes, CiVo youths died and four olhiTs were injured in an ac'cldiMit iivar lloxboro. All were li'cn-iiuers except one. Tiie deud were Cordell Graves, V 1 IH. ii'iil William (ienry Garnclte, ' |2I, both of Koxboro. They were iiiiied when the auto nuibilo in whicii they were driv- iiiR went oul of control and ran into a ditch on N. C. highway 19 near Koxboro. injured in the wreck were Gor- I iriide (iraves, 19, si.ster to the (lead Kiri; Ida l.ec Cunningham, I 17; Linda Kaye Newman, 14; and I (X^jar Carver, 1!), all of Kt. 2, . Koxboro. ! Funeral .services for Garnctte I were .scheduled for Tuesday, and I tile girl, Mis.s (iravns, '.vtts to be I buried on Thursday. I Two Weldon men died late Sat I nrdny in a wn-ek near Greenville and an Oxiord man was liiiU’d in ! Vance County. I David Gforge Winbush, 25 year j oid re.sidrnt of Ht. 1, Oxford, died wlien his speeding anto overturned I on a rural paywl road eight miles I mirth of Henderson, j The bodies o( llurave Cole I'ur nell, 35^ and Grant Park, 36. both of Weldon, wtre discovered curly Sunday rooeninu by h work crcw «uW»moliilc which had {!tah; out of Prtntrol, jumped a crexk atid plowed into a bank 45 feet away The accident, which apparently took place late Saturday night was iK)t difieoveted until around 7 a.m. Sunday morninR 'ivhen a work CORE-sponsored protest action started as a dwell in but be came a dwell out after Ihe Initial arrests and the pad locking of the home. Continued Pressure at MississippifrVj School Weighs Heavily on Negro Score of Adults, Youths, Cited at Pot Luck Event I JACKSON, Miss. — Reports' were being circulated last week^ that James Mereditt^, first Negro I to enter the University of Miss] issippi, was entertaining thoughts i about quitting the school. I A syndicated Memphis, Tenn, . DawHon, Jr. Ex-Durhamite Reaches Post In East Africa KAMPALA, Uganda — Dr. I iiuuui (juiiiinK me icnooi. ' > I . ^ . Horace G. Duwson, Jr., former « ory rom prof^.^^gr at North Curoliira Col f M 1 lege in Durham. N. C , U S A , many of the nation s daily new.,^,^^ ^ul papers quoted the young Air, Affairs Officer of the »» .... I Force veteran as saymg that the ,, , ^More than a score of adults the Ole Miss campus I,, and youngster, received awards' ^ jo study' and citations at the annual Dur permit normally and irrdlcated of three arrived here in early Nov han. Division Boy Scout _ Pot I :;min:e unlesi som^ Luck Dinner Thursday night at the Durham Civic Center. An estimated 1,060 persons from 10 Scout uniU in the Di vision looked on as their col leagues received acclaim for special achievements or out- *tanding performances during the past year. J • W. McClinton presided over the affair.. NIew officers for the District were sworn in at the dinner by David Drexel, Commissioaer of the Occoneechee Council. The officeti were introduced by J. E. Carter They are W A. Clement, chairman, R. Kelly Bryant, Jr., W. C. Young and R- R Halt, vice chairman; Lewis Owen*, Commissioner and Henry W. Gillis, district execu tive. The first of the evening's nmny awards were veteran awards which went to four adulta who have compiled server al years in scout* work. The awards were presented by N, B White, scout mastor. of Troop 59. They were given as follows; Ten Years, Spencer A. Wynne neighborhood conmiiaaioner; 20 Years, J. M. Schooler, Inctitu- tional Representative for Whit- ted School Poat 69; 29 year*. H. W. GillU, District Executive See nrio, S-A I as an attache tu the U crt # went tn wiw uraw »a tlie bank. The accident occured on U. S. IH, at (irinie Creek, seven miles north of Greenville. Investigating patrolmen estimated from skid mark.s on the hiehway the speed of the car at Hboiit 90 to 100 miles per hour shortly before the crash. A neariiy resident said he heard a noise al>out 11 p.m. and checkcd iloMU tlie road bui did not find the cur. In Wilson, a 40 year old man, Andrew liukur, of Stanlonsburc, wa.s killed when he was struck by a car while walkinij along U. S. UOI north of Wilson. His mangled body was struck immediately by a second car, driven by a honeymooning couple, Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson, of Wilmington, Del. But officers said the Wilson car could not avoid hitting the man. Police weiSe still searching early this weex for the driver See WRECK. 6-A MIRIDITH, 6-A EX-OURHA.VtlTE, U A m rORMER DURHAMITES EN ROUTE TO AFRICA — Dr. Horace O. Dawson, Jr., iorm er Merth Carolina Cellaf* pre feaaor, Is plctiitad hara with his family at the Coloeium ia Rema, anroute to his new peat with the V. •. Emhwy la Uganda, Bast Africa. Mr*. Dawaon ta hoMittB their > eat eon. Oik«ory, Hocae^ III afwda
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Nov. 24, 1962, edition 1
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