Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Nov. 16, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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m m Mrs. Mrs. Wiley Takes 2d; Mrs. Edwards Seats ^s for 3d Mann Film.Laboratories "jhO Chatham Rd. miner mtford Falcon in flMES^ Mrs. Srmilifr Dar«, w «J I luMwn b«auti«iaB ^0S3 A OHrnell St., wm dccUrcd grand J yrte* winn«r in the CatoUds Tbnc* circulation promotion eniteft thia wMk. An official audit of the con- twtanta' r«porta mad* by an In- tfapandeot auditlnf committee MofimMd the firrt three. prize winner*. Mrs. ^th«r Wiley, jjrominent taahioo/mn^tant a^ model, liBiahM second, ICn. Kffle Ed- itardi, a late attrter, came in tMrd. ICrg. Day^ receire • 1964 l\>rd Falcon a* first prize. Mrs. WUey will get a minlc stole u ■tcond prize, and Mrs. Edwards will recelva7i portable televi- ■Ina for thiri,^ace. All three prizes will be award- 94 at the ^>*lftlme on the Shrin- tin East West hi^ school all star football game «t Durham Cpunty StAdium on 0«e. 7. This year’s was the second cdntett in the series sponsored b]t the miES. Miss 'Hattie l^ite ot Durluun woq the grand last year. Mrs. Daye who hiid led all loutestants throu^out (he six «fMks 0 the race, turnad In a gigantic report in the final week to all but insure her victory. infte had been sertoualy chal- iMged in the late weeks of the contest by Mts. Wildy. However, ■ri. Wiley got off to a late irtd could Mver^qult« Ov«rtake Mm front nianing. Mr*. Daye. itn. WVey did sMoage, how- fVKr, to prevent Mra, Daye from leaking a virtual run->way of the contest. Mrs. Edwards, who was ^lick deep in the lower standings early la the cqntest, a aurpris- lag late showing, to overtake Mtrl Artis for third flsce. Artii finished fourth, JSfth, Mrs. Ifartha Rowland; ^th, Mrs. iMh^r Btand; seventh, Mrs. Car- iUa Long; eighth, Mrs. Ethel (nawsoir, ninth, Mrs. WiUier KcXeiUiaa «ad tenth I. A. Man- MRS. DAYg ★ ★★★ ★★★ ★★ ★ GOV'T AIDS HOUSINC JIM CROW MRS. WILEY Achievement Weel( Planned The Durham chipt'T of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, «vill obsorve its Annual National Achievement Weelt from November 10-17. The theme for this year i.s “In dividual Responsibility and tliF American Revolution for JtiRhts.” According to Marion D. Thorpe, Chairman of the Achirvement Weelc Committee, the schedule of events , includes: a symposium on the theme, which will be present ed Saturday afternoon, November 19, 1B63, over a local radio station, addresses, tbrouchout ‘he week »t See-ACHIEVEMENT, 6-A WORKSHOPS TO OPEN IN EAST Vote Drive in N. C. Starts iOtNS TIMElt MTXhr — Wil liam J. Treat. Jr., aaihra Korlh Carolinaian, baa rsriaasil his 4mhM «s diractor of Halted lUgra CoUaffa te Mcept 4 M aa pswasi—I d^taolai f^r magasina. |»a #lplls, page M. Eistland Accused Of Stealing SCEF Records From La. BIRMINGHAM. JfOa. The A^rd of the Soutbgm Cpnfer- ^Me Xducatiomil Fiffid accused tentor James O. naUaiid of illBsiaaippi of stcaUof SCBF’s nqords after they w«r« Miaed in rgtitr tB N«w OrtaBia^ At theif s^mi-annal jneetlng bare, the diwtor> caUsd upon tha U. S. Senttor to censure VkBtland for his jtetion* "Juat as ^•(ator Joseph MvCiurthy was caAsured.” mie Rev. Fred L. fthutUes* ^rth, SCEF niatidffa^ asked friends throughout tlig fiaUoD to Se$ KASTUM^ t-A An intensive drive to register more Negroes in North Carolina will get underway late this month in the eastern part of the Ftate. The first stage. of thg drive will consist of a voter-registra- tion workshop scheduled for Rocky Mount on Nov. 22, 23 and 24. It will be conducted by the NAACP. Some of the organization’s most experienced personnel in vote-registration techniques will take part in the three day work shop. It will be designed to train a cadre of workers to help con duct a massive drive for more Neggro voters. The campaign is the result of action at the NAACP state con vention last'month which unani mously approved a registration campaign. The full weigiit of the organization will be thrown in to the drive. Observers see the campaign as possible one of the most signi fcant actions by civil rights or ganizations in the state in re cent years. It waa pointed out that the result of such a drive could have a telling effect on See WORKSHC'h 3-A Over 500 Expected at AME Annual Meet High Ranking Clergy, Governor To Address Meet More than 500 membc-.'s of tlie AME church, includmg some -ot ts highest ranking clerKymi-n the Governor of North Carolir.Ji and two college presidents w!'l take part in the annual mertini' of the Western North Carolina Conference of the church in Dur ham next week. St. Joseph’s A. M. E. Church, on Fayetteville St., will be th>- scene of the confersncc, to open here on Wednesday, Nov, 20 and continue through Sunday, Nov, 24 The Rev, Mnlvin Chester Swann minister of St. Jcneph’s, will b* host pastor. This year’s meeting of the an nual conference is ^pecter* lo be the most important In the past three years. It is the final annual conference before the quadren- nia. ,>3eral conference of the churcn wi le held *'> Cincinnati, Bishop Sherman L, Greene, Presiding Bishop of the Sccond Episcopal District, Senior Bishop ot the Denomination, •■viil formally open the Conference on Wednes day. Nov, 20. at 9:4!i A,M. The Annual Sermon will be preached by Rev. P.' Bernard Wal Iter;—Bettrel,—Greensboro, after which Holy Communion will b» administered. Music will be fur nished by the DeShazor Chorus, At 8:00 P.M., the Welcome Ban quet, honoring Bishop and Mm, Greene, pastors, and delegates, will be held in the dining room of North Carolina College. The guest speaker will l^e Tbe Honorable Terry Sanford, dover nor of North Carolina. 'The Banquet prOtwm is in cnnl memoration of the Centennial Anniversary of the Rmancipa(ioi Proclamation. Attorney William A, Marsh, Jr,, Junior Stewarr* o' St. Joseph’s Church, and Lay U«le gate to the 1964 General Con fit ence will preside. At the beginning of each mnrr ing session, a Bible Hour will b conducted by the Rev, I>r, W, i Hildebrand, Business Sessions wi be conducted each day, w'ti Bishop Greene presiding, ini.'r spersed by sermons and aairi:»5 es by promirtent ministers and lay men. On Thursday, noon, there will be an address by Dr. Samuel V Massie, President of North Caro lina College. At the evening ses sion, The Rev. C. C. Scott, St (James, Asheville. '*ill deliver th' Missionary Sermon, The Friday program will be de voted to Christian Eklucat^on, fea turing the youth of the Confer ence area. Dr, Phillip R, Cousin, I President of Kittreil Junior Col- llege will preside at the Anniver I sary of Christian Education Pro I gram. Kittreil College Choir wil ising and Rev. L. G, Horton will 'give the Ekiucation Report, On Friday afternoon, the Mis isionary Hour will be conducted by T. P, Duhart. Conference Mis sionary President, followed by •* ■Tea, sponsored by the Carolina I Barnes Missionary Socicty. Mrs |Trumilla Smith. President will b hostess. I Honorees for this occaii on are Mrs. Sherman L. Oreene, Mission ary Supervisor for the Second Episcopal D i s trict, miaisters' See CONPbiIENCE, 6-A es VOLUME 40 — No. 46 Edmonds Is Named St. Paul’s Trustee Dr. Helen G. Edmonds, chair man of the Department of His tory and Social Science at North Carolina College, was annong six persons elected to the board of trustees of Saint Paul's College, L4iwrenceville, Va., on October 35. A native of LawrenceviTIe and an alumna of Saint Paul’s, where she completad her high school and junior college educa tion, she is the board’s first fe male member. Thi3 Is the second honor be stowed on Dr. Edmonds hy In stitutions from which she was graduated. Morgan State College which awarded her the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1933, conferred upon her the honorary degree Doctor of Laws inr 1958 for dts Unguished Wbrk in InternatiQO- aTrelaTlbna. DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1«, 1963 RETURN REQUESTfcD PRICE: IS Cents Mich. Grad Is Nam^ Assistant !p Ag.Chief WASHINGTON, D. C. — For the first thne in history a Ne gro, Alfred L. Edwards, 43, hai tieen named Deputy Assistant Eiecretary of Agriculture and an other Negro, Robert Kitchen, 50, has been appointed Director of the International Traitiling Dlvl sion of the Agency for Interna tion Development, it was an houBced in Washington thU week. Alfred L. Edwards comes tn government from the faculty , of Michigan State University Where tie has been teaching in the Da partment of Economics. Robert Kitchen has served in several overseas posts for the U. S. For eign Service since coming t o government in 1952. The Deputy Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Ed wards was born in Key West. Florida, and is a graduate of Livingstone College. He obtain ed his Masters Degree from the University of Michigan and hit Ph. D. from the State University of Iowa. He has held teaching posts at Southern University and State University of Iowa. From 1960 to 1962, Edwards wa« economic advisor of the Univer sity of Nigeria in West Africa. He is married and has two child ren. Kitchen, the Director of the International Training Divv sion of AID, is a native of Bruns wick, 3m. He is a graduate of Morehouae College and obtained h i s Maatar of Science degree froln Columbia' University where See ASSISTANT. 6^A yy-' 60V. SANPOltO Federal Policy In Housing is Blamed for Bias ■USINESS QUEEN—Ml(s Shar- ren Miller, Montclair, N. J., won the Htl* of "Miss B. and P. Wom an of th* YHf," at roctnt moat- ^fl of tha Natlanal Auaclstien NagM tftftinaw Pnl**- UmI M «toak> Ingloii, 0. C. During caramoniot at tha Slatrar-HiMtm -Hotal, thh young lady Is ctownad by Ikiv nit graal Althaa Othar partkli^ts In 4ata«tipsqr ffani and P. W. 2nd vico pTesident, Newark, N. J., Most H. Kencirix, Jr., Atlanta, Ga., and the Rssocid- tion's retiring president, Mrs. Florence Allen Holme^Massa- pa|ua, N. Y. l08 ANOtiL )ntrd B, Ijgtiflitil chair Rian of w66li|i '^en or the west coast w'.t|t%'pnt Week in a series of-spaaWng 'engage menta for COR^, #a|:i Tiiesday h>' was barred from sneaking at the University "of -^uthern .Califor nia. * - , ' W6H0T 9RIINI t MV. SWANN ROSS riMES Editor Resigns to Take Post with USIA Clathan M. Ross, Managing Editor of the Carolina Times, has resigned his duties with the newspaper to accept an appoint ment to the United State* In formation Agency. Ross, will begin his assign ment with the Agencv on Nov. 18. In his new post, Ross will eventually be assigtied to work with a trSIA staff overseas. It is expected that the assignment will be somewhere in the Mid die East. Ross will Initially join the USIA training division in Wash ington where he will undergo a period of preparation for n 1 s new duties. He is expected to leave the country for his over seas post early in January. He will be accompanied by his wife,. tha former Miss Oenie 0. Moore, of Nashville, Tenn. — Thft.SWlNi* Tii«4 jrewamAir is the third Durhamite to re ceive an appointment with USIA. Robart Svans, son of for mer DuriMm niayor E. J. Evans, is an aasiataot to USIA director Edward iR. Murrow. Dr. Horace G. Dawson, Jr., formerly asso ciate professor of English and director of tl^ North Carolina RISION, S-A issick is Barred Speech at (JSC l,*^Attorney the issue, r McKitsick’s speech at the US'" campus was to have been tk>' eigrfth In a series of addresses on ths we.st coast in the pa.st #eek Since Ttjesday,- Nov, = he ha spoken at the fpllowir.. places. McKisslck, who had delivereo six speeches on the coast sinc' •Tuesday, Nov, 5—ihelnding five a ■west coast collegCa—was schedulet to speak ta University' of South em California stu-J'int.^ on Mon day, Nov, 11. However, he said he was not per mtted to speak on me USC cam pus. Instead, he and CORE direc tor Jim Farmer spoke at a church across the street from ihe USC campus. Reasons for M'-'fissick’s rcu.sai of a forum at tne University of SCuthern California were no clear. University jfficiais could not be reached for comment on San Kianci.sco '’'t-rna .i m. Union, University of Orefion, Cali fornia State College lit San Fran cisco, University of California a' Berkeley, East Los Angelos Col lege and Alemcda College, Oak land Methodist Chu’-oh. Victor} Baptist Church and Sa.i Bernadi no. An aitLir.t;. n /•: ham. N, C, McKissick is bf t r'u.jwn for hi' crusading effor..j in the civii rights movement. GREENSBORO — The Federal government was last week char ged at A. and T, College with he responeibility'of bringing to halt a process of integratioa merican housing. The speaker was Q, T. Wil liamson, Atlanta, Ga., president of the National . Association of Real Estate Brokers, He was de livering the main address at a luncheon, on Friday noon, at thg annual Housing and Urban Re newal Clinic held at the cellege, November 7-8. He told the group that dese gregated housing in this country would have k>een far ahead had not public housing stepped in t« build units expressly for Negro es and for whites, often remov ing Negroes from sections is whiqj^ they had lived side by side with whites for years. He said, "Then came the FHA which required that loans be made on the basis of homogcne oixs neighborhoods.” He continu ed, “Now the ' Federal govern ment is hard at work trying to undo its errors of the past,” He told the group that the an swer to many national problems would bj solved by tlw desagre. gation of housing supply through out the nation, and “I am hop ing that we will gat an exten sion of the desegregation order which would require the desa- gregation of public housing for those units built prior to Nov- emt>er, 1962,” A prominent government hous ing oUhiai cartier ia tiM day r» ' ferred, also, to tlie executive order issued last year which pro vides that all governmentaliy owned and federally assisted pro perties will be made available without Mgard to ^race, crcfd or color, Oliver W, Hilf, Washlngtoa, D, C,, assistant to the Contmis- sioner. Federal Housing Adm|n isttntion, said, '"niere ar^ mare tHili 31,000 homes, FHA owntd, in this country, about 2 2 0-in North Carolina which c a n be bought by persons regardless of race.” He said these available homes are listed regularly, each month, and the information Is available for the askinrg at iMal FHA of fices. ^ Kermit Bailer, Washin^on, D, C,, assistant administrator. Hous ing and Home Finance Ageacy, who-delivered the keynote ad dress on Thursday, told the group that th» “Workable Pro- See HOUSING, 6-A Chain Appoints Nominating Unit, OK's Self Study The Durham B\Mtness and Pro fessional Chain this week ap pointed a nominating committee to recommend a slate of r^w of ficers for next year. The organization also recom mended the launching of a self study progriun aimed at re-eva- lauation of the Chain’s alms and methods: These actions- were taken at the regular meeting of the Chain’s, bpard oit,directors Wed- negdjy afternoon at the Biltmore hotel lounge. Appointed to the nominating conunittee ’ wars J.' J. Hender son, E. C. Tumfer,- N. p. Wiiite, Mrs. Mary Horton,. R. K. BryanI and T. R. Speight. They are to recomnjend a list o Officers to be chosen to direct the organization next year. 8«* RISK»NS, ••A ~s CHARGES GOVERNMENT DE LAYED HOUSING INTEGRA TION—Q. V. Wlllitmsan, laft, Atlanta, Ga., protldont of tha National Association of Rtnl Estate Brokets, last weak charg- •d at A. and T. Collage that tha Fadaral gavernmant had ac tually dalfyid hausing intagra> tion In tha cawntry. Ha talks wIWR M. Micbaux, Jr., Durhagivjwyai and rag an al vice erganlta- tloii, and Dr. 'Suanlta O. Tata, A. and T. prafasaar af acanom*, i4«.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Nov. 16, 1963, edition 1
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