Mum Film laboratorleB A Mrs. Nancy fir^(;X^oy Takes Lead In Times Beautician Contest UNITED STATES SUPREM Mrs. LBJ To Visit City VOLUME 41 — No. 39 DURHAM, N. C.—27702 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1964 RETURN REQUESTED IS Cents NAACP Back InAlabama After Eiaht Year Ban Wilkins Hails Termintition as First Lady to Make 15 Minute Durham Stop Some 30 Democratic Party wom en wore in attendance at a meet ing Tiiesclay ntght at the party's Corcoran Street headquarters at Mrs. Johnson mm tm rtahra'AWacl which the oflieial welcoming group for Mrs. Johnson was nam ed. Durhamitcs listed on the wel coming committee arc Miss Ellen Warren, Mr.s. Joe Sponcc, Mrs. Hance Hofler, Mrs. Nick Galifiana- kis, Mrs. Bernice Ingram, Mrs. Marvin Carver, Miss Lou Constan- tinuu, Mrs. Dilliird Griffin, Mrs. Travis Porter, .Mrs George Miller* and Mrs. George Birmingham, Jr. Al.so chosen were the following committee i’o chairmen: Mrs. Ja- p'leno 1!'I'd, entertainment; Mrs. Geoi'ge Eaves, decorations; Mrs. John Daih'.V, transportation,- Mrs. Holidoy Inn Must Accept Negroes In Nashville CINCINNATI—The U. S. Court of Appeals this week ruled that a Nashville motel must accept Ne groes. Thejcase has direct implications for alT urban Renewal programs, l)iiilt before 19ti2, which include Negroes. Attorneys of the NAACP Legal Ilefenso Fund won this action. Tlie Holiday Inn Motel, which nefused Negroes in Nashville, Ten- nes.see, was built on land cleared, in part (two thirds), with federal funds, a.s part of Nashville's ur ban renewal program. Acting under Tennessee laws, the Nash\il!e Housing Authority "condemned or purcha.sed the 72 acres of land needed for the pro ject" (the Capital Hill Redevelop ment Project). Tliey then “relocated 301 fami lies and 196 individuals," the Court of Appeals pointed out. Of the families moved out, 288 refreshments, Wednesday iniirnin". October 7, | were Negroes as were 180 of the and Mrs. Mary Xrent Semans, fin-1 when her "I.ady I’.ird Special' iiuli\ iduals moved. Subsequently anee. pulls into the city for fifteen- ' Holiday Inns of America, In. pur- The citizens of Durham, Chapel j niinut" "v.’hi.stle stop'' at the City i cha.sed its property. Hill and vicinity are expected to, Parking l.ot. i The Court further pointed out t)T—t+re—thou.'tiindn—tfr- Etfttwwnle f>litn>' Iwtng- made—thart- th*^ that the afeh'.t vsw»re h MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON Roycroft, Step Forward NEW YORK—The National As sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, barred by ai\ Alabama court injunction from operating in that state since 1956, will shortly resume activity in the one .state of the Union in which it new has no.,Iocal organuation. Papers regi.stering the A.««ocia- tion as an out-of-state corporation, the first step towards resumption nf activity, were filed with Ala b.ima Secretary~of State and the State Department of Revenue in Mcntgomcry, Wednesday, Sept. 23 ■VAACP General Counsel Robert L. Carter announced this week. Virginia Duncan, publicity; Mrs. tnm—mrt- greet Mrs. Lyndon Johnson • next i See MRS. LBJ page 4A Lillington Resident Is First As Race Tightens Young Raleigh Minister Having Great Success at AME Church RALEIGH—The story of the un- NAACP Executive Director Roy I usual growth and development of Wilkins hailed the successful ter mination of the ca.se and cxpress- c.'I confidence that the Association will soon regain its “position of leadership” in Alabama. a small church into one of the most progressive of the city was revealed here this week when M was brought to light that under the leadership of the Rev. John NEW EDIFICE of fh* New Bethel i th« new building for tlie firct time | the Rev. L. W. Re!d, who is now Bapfist Church, located on Crest Sundry morning at eleven o'clock, rounding out his 19th year as the Street. Services will be held in | The sermon will be preached by I pastor. PERCY Williams To Address NAACP At Greensboro An order from the Circuit Court K. Epps, St. Matthew A. M. E of Montgomery County, handed : Church of Raleigh is experiencing down on Sept. 10, dissolved a per- | an era of progress that is unsur- manent injunction banning NAACP I pa.ssed by any of its size in the activity in the state and cleared entire state. the way for reorgaaization of lo- i Rev. Epps, who is a young min- cal Association units to resume! ister, came to St. Matthew less the NAACP civil rights program j than a year ago 'a hen he' was in Alabama. transferred from Durham where This order, i.ssued in compliance he had pastored the Kmanuel A. GREENSBORO — The 21st An nual Convention of North Carolina State Conference of Branches will pre.sent on Saturday, October 10, Percy H. Williams of the Presi dent’s Committee on Equal Em- • ployment and* who is Special A.s- gistant to the Vice Chairman of the Committee. Williams is the Assistant Execu tive Director for Contract Compli ance of th,e President’s Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity; Midwest Regional Director, Presi dent's Committee on Government on Contracts; Director, Job Op portunities Program, American Friends Committee; Research As- goclate. Mayor’s Committee on Community Welfare, Chicago; Claims Representativf and Special Investigator, James J. Herman Ad justment Company, Chicago; Mem ber of Staff* Industrial Relation Department, International Harvest er Company. Williams will discuss the func tion of the President’s Committee on Ekiual Employment, the pro gress of Equal employment and private employment and the em ployment pattern changes result ing from complaints. He ‘A'ill also discu.ss equal employment in Fed eral Government. The purpose of this discussion tt the convention Is to educate See WILUAMS 4A M. E. Church. When he arrived as the new pastor at St. Matthew he found the treasury empty and the spirit ual side of the church at a low ebb. Today the church not only has taken on new spiritual life REV. EPPS with a United States Supreme Court decree brings to a close one of the landmark cases in consti tutional law. The final verdict in NAACP V. Alabama gave “consti tutional support and protection to organized civil rights activities and thwarted attempts to destroy but there is money in the treas- ■ pa.storate. Add to this the cxten- the NAACP and the civil rights : ury. I sive renovation program now un movement,” Carter pointed out. | In addition to an increa.se in | derway at St. Matthe-A' and you The NAACP, Wilkins said, “will j financial growth, 31 new persons will have some conception as to See ALABAMA, 4A I have been added to the member- j the high spirit that now prevails. ship roll since last Ijcceniuer 1 when Rev. Epps took over tiie DURHAM Man Crushed To Death Under Garbage Truck Prince Edward Willis, a 63-year- Perry attributed the cause of to stop. When the truck stopped Mr«. Nancy P. McKoy of LiUing-1 ‘ ' ton. who finished In fourth place ' last week, let it be kno'.vn l)i.si week that she will have to be j reckoned with in the Carolina | Times fourth annual Beauticians | Popularity (Vntest now eniling its| third week. Mrs. McKoy forged j ahead this week and went on to j nose out Aliss Montez liates for | the top position. i With only two regular ballots | preventing Mrs. McKoy and Mi«s , Bates from tying for first place ^ and with Miss Victoria Moore of Durham and Miss Gloria Hankins i of Southport (miy a fe'A’ points away it is hard to determine who will he the winner of tbs first prize in the race, which is a brand new beautiful mink stole. Second pii/.e, an airplane round trip to Bermuda and the third prize, an airplane round trip to the ew ■^'ork World’s Fair. The contest manager is again urging all active contestants and their friends to mail or bring their ballots to the office of the Caro lina Times, 436 E. Pettigrew St., Durham, N. C. by Wednesday noon of each week. Ballots .sent by mail and bearing a post office stamp up to midnight Wednesday each A'erk of the contest will be credit ed tlie same as if brought to the office. Those received after Wed nesday noon will be ciedited the following week. As is customary during all popularity contests run by the Car- See BEAUTICIANS 4A that the Motel was conceived by I the Capital Hill Redevelopment I Project, “its creation was made I possible by the execution of the project, and its exi.stence' is no"# governed to a great degree by j (he project’s predetermined de- ■ sign and controls.” 1 The judicial order comes as a I eonplement to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which does not ape- jtifically cover housing among its provisions, although it does cover The court waited before decidirv; this case to-.see whether the Mo tel would voluntarily comply after Congre.ss pa.ssed the new rights legislation. The suit was filed by Dr. Vasco A. Smith, Jr. a Negro dentist from Memphis who was refused a room on December 4, 1962. MRS. ALMA H. WADE N. C. Mutual Official Honored by Adv. Ass'n Meeting in Chicago in^lu Mrs. Alma H. Wade, Di of Advertising and Publii tions fojMMb^North Carolina* tual Company has returned, ®ij^hicago where she attended'tfffe 3lst annual meeting of file Life Insurance Advertisers Assd^tion (LAA} on Septembet • r old veteran city employee was killed accidentally Thursday when crushed beneath the wheels of a gs.bage truck on which he was wrrking. The victim, -.vho lived at 21# Powd St.. was backed over by a truck driven by Hubert Wesley Massey. 55, of 1011 Chalk Level Road, in the Handy Pantry park ing lot at Buchanan Boulevard and Guess Road. His head and chest The meeting was held in the j were run over by the truck’s rear Drake Hotel. Richard S.- .Maggman, $uperin- tendeht of Advertising foni^orth- western Mutual Life l£|j^rance wheels. Investigating officers .stated that the death was accidental, and Patrolman E. R. Francis said no Company Is the- or^^jatioo’s charges w’ould be placed against See HONORkO, 4A' Massey, County Coroner, Dr. D. B. death to severe head and chest injuries. Massey was called one of the city’s “best drivers.” Evidence suggested that Willis, who had been with the city 17 years, slipped and fell on'—the ■,vet pavement aftpr he had enr»p- tied a garbage can. A fellow em ployee of Willis, Ervin Bass, of 1407 Union Street, said that Mas- the wheels were on Willis’ body According to Patrolman Francis, Willis was last seen .standing on the pavement after emptying the can and was not seen again by anyone until he was under the truck’s wheels. Willis is survived by his wife, Mrs. Lucy Willis; six daughters, Mrs. Pearl Stevenson, Washington, ,sey was in the process of backing i r>. C.; Mrs. Evelyn Legett and the truck toward the rear of Handy Pantry, while he (Bass) walked toward the front of the building. Massey told the investigating officer that he had backed al>out 23 feet when he felt a “bump” ind fce»rd P»S5 rry out for him Mrs. Alberta Thompson, both of j REV. C. R. MITCHELL, nawly ap- Laurinburg; Mrs. Annie Brown, j pointed pastor of St. Paul Baptist Durham; Mr.s. Gertrude Jones and ' Church of Gastonia. He assunwd Mrs. Willie Mae Brown, both of Newark, N. J.; two sons, James Willis, Durham, and Prifice, Jr., Newark, N! J. his duties Sundny, S*pt*mti«r 20. Before coming to &astenia. Rev. Mitchell pastored the Fir»t Bap- ist 'Church of Hamlet. ttory -n p«3t 2-B, Spaulding Off on Busy Week of Tours, Lectures A. T. Spaulding, president of the North Carolina Mutual Life In surance Company left the City on Sunday, September 27, for a week of debriefing, lectures and con ferences in connection with a Trade Mission Tour to Centr-al America and Panama which he made for the U. S. Dept, of Com merce during mid-summer. Spaulding was scheduled to ap- I pear in Houston, Texas on Mon day, September 28, for debriefing, to be followed by lectures and conferences with businessmen of : the region. On Tuesday, he left Houston for Washington "where he I attended a luncheon given by 1 President Johnson at the White House honoring Manilo Brosio, ' the new secretary general of the I North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion (NATO). On Wednesday, and Thursday, Spaulding appears in Tulsa, Okla- ' homa to report on the business op- ' portunities in Central America and ! Panama to businessmen there. ‘ He is to appear in Durham on ' ^ I Friday to make a similar report lo busine-ssmen in this lection of " ’ the country. “J i A Trade Mission is a selected 5 i group of businessmen—organiz^ ■’41 to talk business—that carries spe- I cific U. S. trade and investment proposals to International mar kets. The mission members repro- sent the entire U. S. business cotn- munity, not themselves or theii companies. During July and August, Spaul ding and seven other businesafnec traveled throughout Central America and Panama and made » one month tour of this region to stimulate greater interest in U.S. industrial products, to focus atten tion on joint-venture profit poten tials, and to bring back new sales opportunities for American Con^ I panlei;. ~