r K E c A £ c L : r: 2-»_DUI»HAM, N C. S/>TUPDAY, JUNt U. '*H* j0m^9L\KEK, A& MiluJUUt! PU WEE, ynu KNOW THAT nouKTAiN Pen VOUTRAPCD «0«, MV TUSTLBf U t^etu like a fruit tree- MY &RL SAVS IV\ A PEACH ANO MOyv 9AVS i'm the APPLE OF HER. EYE... CERTAINLY IT m THAT I SHOULD AT L4ST MBST RUOyA/fO SC/Pl/AfG' TOWN HEAVEN BE PRAISeO — ARS you SURE THIS 5TORV IS OR/GINAL? V»AjAZ'>*£ ii'/. IT»y AMAZING! vrKcn Of flOOWT’ BOMF vgHO ».B IBWW. UHWNKieHt: t> fn SSSHM^ OCarr.ONE OF THE 1 MOST NflOOOS OF ANIMAIS IS FBEoyeMTuy T^med and I tower\CPntD,'M«N WCN VOONO’. SOUTH AMERICAN INDIANS OFTeN USE THEM • AS PETSW OlH* cow/, iM ft Hew 0^ \ ZO, WftS IN rfS STftui- WHW LlfiHtftlHQ ^ ' fttfiHH M PoyW.PDI-ftMO. itf I IV «Km oui'RiGH'Cl Viik -m gvcN'WMeeRtp oowis / WfRf UNHMtM^D! Do*s And Don’ts m Negro Named Assistant Manager Of Woolworth Store in Chicago CHICAGO — Leroy Hughes,| other at 15th and Broadway. only 20 years old, is the second assistant manager of the large F. W. Woolworth Company Store in the busy shopping plaza of Lake Meadows, the famed lake Imnl iugk-xise^-iuban—te^ newal development on Chicago ; I south side. Coordinator Fallace periodi cally visited Hughes on the job and recalls observing the youngster develop beginnings ol self-confidence and poise in tli' Lawyers to Hold Seminar on Aid To So. CR Groups NEW YORK — One hundred lawyers from all over the country havp volunteered to eo South this Slimmer to protect the rights n( defendants in criminal and civil orocpedin“s arlsin? out of voter reffiftration drives and protests 8“ainst racial discrimination there. These attorneys, heedin? the call of the Lawyers Con.stitu- tional Defense Committee, Inc., attended a training institute that ■»as held under itii auspices on Saturday and Sunday. .lune B and 7, at Columbia Law School, 116th Street and Broadway, New York City. A smie stixwRM cocoo^ n^gw/swes FROM 500 to ^ OF SILK FILflMBNTlUl in ^ W\tps OF -fljff, ItteiK npf. soMf iftie^s -inirf coNsflwcf ■Ktf ROOfS MSIWe fwrs WrfI ^ curto of 1H«|R |NEM(tt 'taefess 0FT»)E OO^MO^i MftR'KlE PfllflUr r^-BcxTeo 'WTrtEMOUTWoF-wE MM.e f’fvmr OuRtWG TrtiS'^foe'rtEEtS reROO of IMCuBflflOH TrtC t^AVE P^REKTT does not EPiT prngranr r “To succeed in this program," explained, “a s*ud©nt must have The confidence and poise TTe | strong desire and the right men CLOWNING IN PUBLIC, CAN BE OFFENSIVE UNO Cardiologist New President- Elect of State Heart Association CHAPEL HJLL — Dr. Dani- treasurer Dr. Herbert O. Slek- el T. Young, associate profes sor of medicine at UNC School of Medicine, has been named vice-president and president elect of the North Carolina Heart Association. The Chapel Hill cardiologist is director of Adult Cardiac Cathf Hbrtn Can^HWW and cnfffnfian OT^rtP'fWftts eoi mittee of the UNC School of Medicine. He has been a mem ber of the state heart group s ' research committee since 1957. , Other new officers of the state heart group, elected at a I recent membership meeting in Gjiarlotte, are Hubert L,eonard. I Thoiriasville, as secretary, and I James F. Lane, Chapel Hill, as -Statesville Continued from page IB measured support, undivided loy alty, and who hive worked untir ingly that men might be free with dignity. Thank you! Thank you- Hiese words are inadequate, be- because they do not express the dpth of our feeling of gratitude to you for your kindness >and sup port. May God bless and keep you. I have no ill feeling toward anyone, but all of us should be concerned for the future. The easy way is not always the best way, nor the right way, and often those who geek the easy way. subject themselves and others to a great price to pay in the future. Wilson W. Lee t?r, of Duke University Medical Center, Durham, is the new president of the North Carolina Heart Association, succeeding Dr. Ralph S. Morgan, of Sylva Electcd to membership to the North Carolina Heart Associ atj|oti’8 boar^fjo^ ^eC|p»4'a^e ‘ Dr. •dhrl'i^ W.'^- chalk, and Dr. Herbert S. Har- ned, Jr., all of Chapel Hill; Dr. W. A. Cleland, Dr. Herbert O. Sieker, and Dr. Madison S. Spach, all of Durham; Hubert M. Leonard, of Thomasville; Mrs. H- H. Strandberg. Jr., of Rocky Mount; Dr. J. Maxwell Little, of Winston-Salem; Dr. Roy Freeman, of Jefferson; and Dr. George D. Lumb, of Wllm- ingtoh. demonstrates on the job are tTtt result of experience he has gam ed in the company's manage ment training program. He has just pa.ssed the half-way mark in the four-year program that will lead him, if he completes it successfully, to full manager ship of a Woolworth store. He and his wife, Constance, whom he married only last Jan uary, arc expecting their first baby next fall. They live in a comfortably furnished apart ment at 5130 Kenwood Street A promising future is well 'started for this young executive trainee and his happy bride. But four years ago, Leroy Huges, then a junior at Emer son High School in Gary, Ind., wak, in his own words, “heading nowhere.* He was the fourth of nin* children of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hughes, of 1605 Penn. Ave., Gary. His older brother was in college and Leroy brother as in college and I.«roy knew there wasn’t enough mo ney on a steel worker’s salary to send another away to school and still feed nine mouths at home. He recalls he felt trapp ed. with no objective, ambition or incentive The difference between the Leroy Hughes of four years ago and today is the Distributive Education program. His success if typlcri of the oppriunt- tllft'’ 'iftd berfefits* provided by this unique high school voca tional cooperative program. Distributive Education is the tal attitude, he must feel ttie dignity of work and responsibi lity”. Leroy’s program was clear cut because he had these ba.sic 8**ributes and the program ot fered him the opportunity to di’ velop them.” Leroy recalls that the morn ing classes “set you on the right track. But the job at WooU worth’s in the afternoons was the greatest — just like a labo ratory to put those le.s,son.s to work.” ..That year opened my eye? to opportunities available in the business world — and to tiie possibility of a career I had never dreamed of before.” Leroy was graduated in June 1961, and expanded his part- time D-E job at Woolworth’s in to a full-time job. That was the summer he met his bride-to-be when she, too, became a Wool- worth employee upon gradua tion from Gary Roosevelt high school. Constance’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Gardner, still live at 2414 W. 10th Place in Gary, In March, 1962, the young D- E graduate took his second paint step toward a business career. He was .selected by E. J. Renow- den, Woolworth’s North Central region personnel director, for assignment to the company’s management training program PAINPUL CoififtiH vmmx PAMAS _ ITMISOLVESGOIMS £ •...Mill Continuing members of the board are William L. Ivey, James F. I.,ane, Carl T. Durham, Dr. Floyd W.* Denny, Dr. T. Young, all of Chapel Hill; Dr. Morton D. Bogdonoff and Dr. Walter L. Floyd, both of Dur ham; Edwin B. Abbott, of Ral eigh; Dr. William B. Young, of Wilson; Hargrove Bowles, Jr. and Dr. John R. Bumgarner, both of Greensboro; Dr. A. Ro bert Cordell and Dr. Henry 8. Miller, both pf Winton Salem; Ty Boyd and W. Faison Bames, both of Charlotte; Richard D. Meisky and Mrs. Robert D. Mc Call, both of High Point; Fred W. Klein and Dr. N. W. Sacrin- ty, both of Leaksville; Dr. Ralph S. Morgan, of Sylva; Mrs. G. Ralph Strickland, ot Middlesex; Dr. Simeon H. Adams, of Gas’ tonia; Rev. Roy E. Bell, of Con cord; and Dr. L. M. Massey, ol Zebulon. WiUiam L. lv«y. Chape} )IUV and |Hargrove Bowaes, Jr, QrMOfboro, are chairman o tb« board. •Booklet Continued from page 3B name of the program; while Oiatributive Education Clubs'since Its formation in January, oi America (DBCA) is the name of the organization whose mem- iMrs art’participants in the pro gram. DECA office In Wash- Imtoi^ D. C. it the coordinating agehvy tor state chapters fttroughout the nation. As the name Implies, the Pit- tributiv* Education program M designed to 'introduce high' school students to the impor tance .of distidbution ot goods and services In the overall U. 8- Economy and to alert them to career possibilities in this fiald. It is an intensive one-year pro- gra«a offared to seniors who de vote thair mornings to class room studies on distribution and their afternoons to applying those studies on a job. Leroy Hughes wanted a crack at D-E, so he went to sum mer school in 1960 to complete a course in maiiteting funda mentals that was pre-requisite. With a beginning of ttiis senior y«ar th^ September, he was en* lulled In the |p«(ram. In the momtogi, Lwroy stndv •d the Diatributive Education cvurae under James Fallace, D- 9 oooNlnator aad teacher at Oary Emerson. Then in the •ftacnoonf, ha Kocked in the •tockroMn of one of two Wool- worth (torea in downtown Gra]^ ona .at ttb and Broadway, ttMl -The-- Institute—?avf tnstnjctioi in the law applicatble to civil riehts activities and the legal pro cedures in the states in which the attorneys will be working. Studies will be made of the con stitutional and statutory principle.s applicable to various forms of demonstrations. Special emphasif will bp placed on procedures for removing cases from the state courts to the federal courts. The lawyers 'ivill also consider way? of bringing suit to enjoin interfer ence by police or other .state au thorities with lawful demon.stra- tions or with the right to vote. The Committee plans to send volunteer lawyers into Mississippi. Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Florida, with a team of attorneys continuously in each state. The volunteer attorneys will cooperate with local lawyers, under the su pervision of civil rights experts. Each volunteer will serve at least two weeks bet'^'een June 15 and September 30. The Committee will defray transportation and living costs for the volunteer la',vyers, all of whom have agreed to serve wilthout pay. However, expendi tures for legal briefs and appeals are expected to be high. The project will concentrate on the legal defen.se of persons seek- ing to establish the right to vote or to combat other types of dis crimination. The primary goal of the Committee will be to protect the basic rights to equality and freedom of expression as guar anteed by the United States Con stitution. rr NEVER FAILS MAMlEi 1 (VI SO 6I.A0 'iOU . COUU) CO(V^E» MERRV CHRlSTMftS.'^,^ in 'yOUR SlSTER-IN- LftW CfKME TO SPEND ThE HGLIOWVS WITH MOU LftST CHClSTrirtAS —Ai'tD SHE*e still HeR£l IT LOOKS AS THOUGrt VOU'LL HfsVE TO 8URN The house „ CJOWM TO 6eT HER OUT ocz*w#a- eot\ % Businessmen Raise $30 M illion for College Fund 1957, through the Birmingham demonstrations of last summer and the great March On Wash ington on August 28, 1963. For the first time also, THE SCLC STORY contains a full page, autographed photo of Dr. King, the only portrait for which he has ever agreed to poae. It also contains more than 200 other photographs, depict ing work of the organization, as well as its officials, staff mem bers, executive and field work ers across the South. Besides these, there are rare photos of Dr. King playing ping- pong and softball in moment; of relaxtion, the eomplate text of his memorable speech, “I Have A Dream,” and an excerpt from his now classic “Letter From A Birmingiutm jail,” Readers will find THE SCLC STORY a handy, accurate sour ce of information, and can ob tain a copy by sending one dol lar plus 25 cents postage and handling charge.^ to SCLC at 334 Auburn Avenue, N, F. At lanta, Georgia. New! Gillette som rom 1 to for «x wttk Sapar Adjustable Razor fKOlW** WR BEEF^GiN Si* MfonaniiMtiMjMir NEW YORK —"In raising «30 million in a United Negro College Fund Development Campaign, businessmen have demonstrated their sense of responsibility for improving education for Negro youth, to help qualify more oi them for the higher-level positions opening up in our increasingly sophisticated societs.” Charles G. Mortimer, chairman, General Foods Corporation, made this statement at a luncheon given in his honor fty the United Negro College Fund at the Harvard Club recently. John D. Kockefeller 3rd, chairman of the Fund’s national council, presided. Mortimer spoke in accepting a scroll presented by Dr. Albirt W. Dent, vice chjiicman of the Fund’s board of directors and president of Dillard University, New Or leans, La, The,scroll was signed by presidents of the 32 colleges and universities affiliated with the Fund. Mortimer was chairtnan of the Fund’s Emancipation Centennial Development Campaign initiated by President ■ John F. Kennedy September 12, 1963. Together with 35 other prominent citizens, pri marily businessmen, Mortimer raised $30 millidnl,ini cash and pledges in six months. Speaking on ^ “The Quickening Conscience oi' Hikhef- Education,” Dr. James E. ,Pjerkins, president of Cornell University, said the universities have j recently discov- •Ted an intimate connection be tween inadequate preparation for college and podr Jiving conditions, “We might make the ultimate dis covery—that the poor district is caused by the white man’s view of his relationship to the Negfo as a man,” he said. “The reasons for the small number of Negroes in our freshmai^ classes may be found in our owti hearts and at titudes.’’ ‘ ^ '■ I Other speakers were William T, Qoss^tt, Chajrnna^ of the Funili'i board of'directors, and Dr. Fr^- erick-»;i^g||[ap v3^ho fpumW ^ t|tf Fund in tMI and ia currinMlyT its chief executive officer. ProtnlneBt buiineaamen, clyic loaders and out.standing alumni i of the Fund’s member colleges at-1 tended the luncheon to honor j Mortimer. First di.stribution of moneyi '.aised by the Emancipation ('en-1 tennial Devpl,7pment Campaign Ird by Mortimer was made last week. A total of $7 million was srnt to the M member colleges and universities in 11 Southern slates. RFC. WILLIAM WILSON VISITS PARENTS Pfc. William Wilson, .son of Mr. and Ml'S. William J. Wilson of ROl S. Roxboro St. is visiting his par ents whili! on a month's leave. A graduate of Hillside High Schonl and a former NCC student, Wilson received his basic training at I't. Gordon, Ga. I’ft. Wilson anticipates over seas duty upon his return to camp. Impo’ited MacNAUGHTON CANADIAN WHISKY 4/6 QT. IMPORTED Vanadian MacMUGHTON CANADIAN WHISKT A BUKND aged six full years a raOOUCT or CANADA wA ou • IM nNor • eutwur iHnri w. LT. It wuaAum

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