mm rnmrnfff^m Vs Durham and Orange l';ann Film LaboratoriiiJ 7^0 Cl-»7tham Rd. - Winston-aalem, N. C. 7/20/Comp ALL-OUT DHVE ★ ★ Interest Mounts As Holy Land Contest VOLUME 41 — No. 9 DURHAM, N. C., 27702, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29, RETURN REQUESTED 1964 PRICE: IS Cents TOR;. GOVERNOR Publisher To Seek GOP Nbmin^tion GASTONIA — In a surprise announcc'inent. made late Satur day afternoon ai Shelby, E. F. • B u d ’ Gallagher, “prominent Gastonia publisher, said he would ■seek the Republican notnination for Governor. Gallagher’s .announceniont, made at the 10th Congressional District Republican convention was greeted with excitement and enthusiasm. Apparently no one at the corrvention, .-liclcl at the Cleveland County Court House, knew of his plans or expected such an announcement. Vigorous ly active in politics before his anna^cemenl, Gallagher usually workfd behind the scenes and habitually shunned publicity.. Gallaghcrr a Catholic, found ed and heads up Good Will Pub lishers, Inc.. which today is e iiiill i nrili.i n dollar business com plox operating in all fifty states and six foreign countries. Us di- i Evers Says Press Distorted Speech i^ade in Tenn. JACKSON, Miia. — Remarks attributed to him in an acldreii.s before the Nashville brunch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People misrepresented the meaning of what he said, Charles Evers, NAACP, field secretary for Miss issippi, asserted here this week. A was quoted by newspapers as having advocated violence in the Nashville address on Feb. IG. Evers disavowed any advocacy Dr. W. A. CItlmnd and Dt.^ dis*jlbutwl to alt «hildz*n, ritcry CommlH««. 1 22, {Torn 10 a. m. to 4 p. an. I Will London get' a first hand | prior to th« Durham Orange The goal of the campaign is la'calls for ea'.ing a cube of sugai opinion from Dr. Samuel P. Mas- ' County Polio Vaccine Program. | immunize every person in ihe wilh two drops of vaccinc on it. sie. President of North Carolina | D^ London is chairman of the ■ two county area. The first feed- Painless! Quick! And it tastes College, regarding the Poli' program. Dr. CUland and Dr. | ihg date, scheduled for every I just like candy. Vaccine leaflet which will be i Massie are members of the Ad- ‘ elemntary school, will be Marc; I , MAflERRY Date Set For Attack ori Acute Human Crippler NCC Professor Gets Doctorate From U. of Penn. Thoma.s J. Maybc-rry, Jr., as sistant professor of education- at Nrrtli Carolina College, recent ly was awarded the Doctor of Education degree by the Univor- sKy Pcnmsylvania. His dissertation was entitled, “The Educator (if Negro Pupils In the Alabama Public Schools 186,‘5-19l>4.” A native of Montgomery, Alabama, Mayberry joined the NCC faculty in 1O01. Holder of the A. B. degree from Alabjima State College and the M. S. de gree from tlie University of PcnnSylvan'ia, he taught at Ala bama State College from 1935 to 1961, serving as a teacher o English, director of correspop- dence'study, and principal of the campus laboratory school. He was also director of second ary student teaching at Alabama State College and dean of the institution’s College of Secondary Education and College of Arts and Sciences for the period 1955-l!»til. Polio will be dead for good; the drive’s advisory board, if Durham and Orange County The Durham pediatrician intro- physician-s have their way. duced Duke University football A plan to s^reep’the Ddrhini'^’coach Bill Murray and his Uni- Orange County area clean of any versity of North Carolina coach-1 danger of a recurrence of the ing colleague, Jim Hickey, as in-; crippling ditease was laid out formation chairmen for the Tuesday night the kickoff meet- event. ing of a two county campaign 1 to get the new oral polio vac i ^also introduced | cine to residents of the entire! Chapel Hill co-chairman Dr, region. ! Robert J. Senior and steering’ Dr. Will L. London, chairman |members. Dr. David of thg Durham Orange County |Baidey Webb and Dr., Mcdkal Foundation sponsored Wjiatley, Jr. drive, outlined a program that will turn the elementary schools of the area into feeding stations for the newly perfected two dose TrJvalent vaccine on' separate Sundays in March and May. Speaking at the kickoff din ner at Schrafft’s Country Inn, Dr. LoPdon explained that the local drive is part of a state-wide effort to give all citizens six weeks ami older an opportunity to get thi(3 new and improved protection against the danger ol polio. He described how physician members of the Foundation will man feeding stations irf elemen tary schools all over the two county area to administer the n«w vaccine, which is simply eaten on a sugar cube. Dr. London pomted out that the vaccin’e is strongly recom mended even for tbos6 who may have had previous injections of the Salk vaccine'! since it pro vides intestinal immunity as w'ell as bloodstream protection against three different polio vir uses. “ Our success ih getting this valuable protection to the popu lation depends ont your coopera tion,’’ he told members of the news media and of represenrta- tive health, school, professional opd governmeirtal organixatlons who were present ak members cl Serving on the advisory board are Dr. O. L. Ader and Dr. O. David Garvin', health directors of Durham and Orange counties respecUvely, Mayors R. Wense Grabarek of Durham, Sandy Mc- Clamroch, Jr. of Chapel Hill, Fred Clayton of Hillsboro and C. T. Ellington, of Carrboro; Dr. Reece Berryhill, dean of the School of Medicine, UNC; Dr. Barnes Woodhall, dean of Ihe School of Medicine, Duke Uni versity. Also, Dr. Douglas M. Knight president. Duk» University: Dr. Wnlliam C. Friday, president, See POLIO bn I visions, subsidiaries and affiliat- I (.>1 Jcmpanies make Good Will I one of Ihe world’s leading pub lishing and distributing organi- zations. Mr. Gallagher’s organi zation produces non sectetarian publications and beautifully il lustrated family Bibles irt both Catholic and Protestant editions. In addition to being an extra ordinarily successful business man, with extensive holdings out side of the publishing field, Gal lagher is also a rospected author- and historian. Working with the late historian and biographer N. B. Keyes, Gallagher won nation al acclaim for thp writing of "Hope of The Nation — Our Americanr Heriitage". Excerpts from this award winning work will soon be published in paper back forrtl.'i' By Irts lettdership in cTiaritable and civic affairs, Mr. (jallagher has put into practice the convic tions and principles so forceful ly expressed itn his book. He helped organize the first Opti mist Club in Gastonia and serv ed for two years as District Gov ernor of Optimist International. A big, friendly mart, 6'6', 200 lbs!T he cons'ianWy givpn ol kis time and talents to activities such as thp Gaston Heart Asso ciation. He serves on the board of several educational and charit able institutiorts and also is a board memt)er of the American Textbook Piililisher Institute, taking an activp part in upgrad- i-ng American textbooks and re ference materials. Born March 4. 1.91.3 in Char lotte, Edward Felix Gallagher See NOMINATION 6A DR. EDtNS SPEAKER — Dr. Hillis Edens, of violence. Executive Director, Mary Rey- What he said in that addre.ss. ■ nolds Babcock Fou.nd ition, Win aceording to^ —elarifyitttf—stOTvSj+em; vvill tpeak at ShaW ! statemcnl, was as follows; ‘‘There are whitg extremists who do not under.stand the non violent movement. And they will shoot into your home if you are See SPEI'XII CA University on Fridav, Tebruary ■28, at 12:00 noon in Greenleif Auditorium. He was President o' Puke U. from 1949. to iV60. Many Ministers May Thf For Big Grand Prize Interest ia the Cwoltea Xknes third annual Ministers Vacation Popularity Contest was fairly continued to pour into the Times Oiifice from over the state’and locally. The big ^and i^rize is a free airplaAe round trip to the Holy Land tiiat includes such well known Bible piacas as Jeru- Salem, Athens, Rome, Bethlehani and others. The second prKM/ is a free airplane round trip to Bermuda and the third prize a free airplane tri^ to New York. With the nomination Islank ap pearing in the Carolina Time; for the first time this week all indications point t* a large number of ministers being no mijiated by press Hme next week when the nanns ot all no minees will appear in the paper. Each nominee will receive 5,001 points as soon a4 th^ nomination blank appesting on page two o( this week’s 'issue of (he Time* is filled in .with the aame and address of a minister »nd mailed or brought to the office of th« Carolina Times, 436 E. Pettigrew Voting in the cantest mil b^- gin with the March 14 issu^ vt the Carolina Times when tfie I vote coupon will appaar in the See JVNIBTERS 6A ^ Charlotte Branch MFB To Hold Anniversciry FBI Reported Investigating Deputy Siicriff's Brutal Attack on N^ro PRINCIPALS in the reception and open hou«e held February 25 by Ihe Stanford L. Warren Library, during the celebration of the library'* 50 years of lervlee to the citiient of Durham •nd vicinity. Th* eriHreis for iht occition was delivered by Dr. Horace Mann Bond, chairman of the Department of Education, Atlanta Univeriity. Thote In the picture from left to right are: Mrs. Ray Nicholt Moore, iibrt- lianj Dr. Mr?. I y*» Mer rick, chairman of the library board of trutteet and E. R. Mer rick, huibtnd of Mrs. Merrick and director of N, C. Mutual Life Insurance ./tompany, Rhoto by Purc^oy, Tlnet Stiff Rioports being circulated DJrham and vjcinity this week arj to the tffdct that the Fed eral Bureau ot Investigallorr iiasj entered the case of the brutal beating of a Negro at Bahama j on January 2,5 by two Durham | deputy sheriffs as reported il ^ the Carolit\a Times Uit week. | Although the source of th rumor is of a reliable nature the Carolina Times office was ur. able by press time to coiitac a representative of the Durban FBI office for a statement. Edward Evans whose arm wa reported to have beerr Urokei when he was struck with a night stick during the beating by Dc puty Sherilff I. E. Jacobs, aftei being taken to thg home of tti officer by Jacobs and Deput.s Sheriff Bill Jones, was inter viewed by a eon'unittee of loca citizens of Durham this week. Evans is also reported to hav: been questioned by representii tives of the FBI this week bi he would make no verifiealin of the fact to representatives 1 the Carolina Times when que? tioncd on the matter. He state hbwever, that hg had been ad vised by his.attorney to make n further statements to the pres for publication other than th;- already made last week. According to F. B. McKissick, attorney employed by Evan«, m developments of importan'ci have occured in the matter sinc( it was revealed in last week’s i: of the Times. Heart News Increases CHAPEL HILL — The North Carolina Heart New Bureau re ports a 175 per cent increase ol news and feature stories on heart disease and heart disease control programs in the state’s 209 new.' papers during 1963 over the pre vious year. Broadcaster logs ii'n- dicate a similar ixtcrease in pu blic service time allocated to heart disease control by 181 radio and television stations ii vhj i'latc aurui;; thu f-.-' Community Bapt. I To Observe 22nd i Anniversary I The 22ml anniversary of the I Community Baptist Church will I be observed by the pastor, the Rev E T. Thompson and mem bers during (h,. entire montTi of March it was annourteed this I week Music will be furnished by I the church choir. I The opening program, Sunday I morning, March 1, at eleven ' o'clock, will feature as speaker ' Chaplain Harold G. Elsam Chaplain Klsam was born of ; BrUish missionary parents in India, has served the Veterans Administration for l!i years and was on active duty with the ' Arm.v for 7 years prior to this. He is widely traveled and serv ed in all three major Theatres of War in World War 11. He is an ordained minister of the Christian Church (Disciples.) with degrees from Bethany Col lege arrd Butler University. He jBtered the ChRnlaii"s’ Service I'D .*•6 6a CHARLOTTE — An art ex hibit featuring the work of th« Charlotte Mecklenburg elemeit- tary sdxo^ (AiMren and an open iNcMrit^ jwitb will i^tlirti oftbej^cond anniversary if th^ Mechanics and Fa4mcrs Branch &atk her* on Sunday March 1’from 4 to 7 p. m. l^ooated^, ai. 101 Beatties Ford Road, t|le j?!»w branch has “ex- ceeded-jOui^ ^iginal anticipation 0^ 2 fnillion dollars in deposits for the 2 years of dpcration.” Ac cording to John H. Whec-Jer, pre sident of the parent Durham bank. “The board of directors arrd the mjnagen(ient arc highly elat ed at the rate of growth of »ur bank,” Wheder said. Indi'caliM of the bank’s pro- gress.^ring 1963 was seen in a spectacular gain of 60 places jn rank since one year ago, accord ing to thpe Anrtcrican Banker’s Year End Roll Call of the na tion's 2700 largest banks. Mech anics and Farmers now stands in 26I2tti position, accordini; to Upton E. Liptrott, president of American BaRkers daily news paper. Wheeler paid special tribute to th^ “attthusiasm and zeal of our dynamic Charlotte Mecklen burg man|BK«ment and staff.” Total ass«ts for the Raleigh, Durham and Charlotte offiees have climlred frem some $10 and a half million in 1962 to mors than $13 anKl a half million at the close of business in 1963, * I Bank officials rev««lqd that for I the second tikne in two years, I Mechanics and Farmers Bank ! had temped all other predomin- : antly Negro operated banks. In i runner-up spot for 1963 was Clti I zcns Trust of Atlanta with as^t's ' of $12,574,»00. Washington, t>. , C.’s IndustrUl Bank was in third place with asset* of $12,573,000. Miss Myrna J^ane an ele- ment^t^ ^ ^arlotte City- Sch90t^A9r8tem, will dirvct the exhibit.' Work* will be bn display at Hhe bank from March 1 throu|(h Mii^h 8. This marks the second aanual art exhibit to be held in. the baak’t lobby. Mra. .fijther Pafc'HUi w«« in charge^ of th« IMS'iexhibK. Mr. Spdtrn will co#rdtPiU •e«h»W-Mry ae* w«« ' m

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