THE 4>B—DURHMM, N.'c. C AROL I.N„A^ SAklRDAY,' Dr. Mailial lUngiind^dHm to Be Aind'Siiurdiy a{ue of “The, release it as a. mni fi(m “ CI|^AG6—llie vajufr of “The 1964 Prlfe Awards” TV dncumentmy (b^lng shown for the flrrt Wme toj American aiili- ences December _ 12’on ABC TV) was praised fiy William G. Carr, pxec^t^e i«ereUir,y of the Nslioii- al E^itffwtion AkS^n., for its "edu- catio^lil pqtetjtial for school chil dren, and, i)Iso, tor adults." Dr. C)irr, in a .lellcr to I.. C. Triieidell, presidqnf of Z!nith Sales Corporation, stated that thf documsnlary - “.shouhi serve to stress the fact thiit sitiolarship »pd( research are dependent upon international cooperation aid ttieir fruits have international signi ficance,” He added that the pl.»n to wake the program available to educa tional television stations and to painful C0R( MlAZiNG LiQUID mimspAtNAs _ IT DISSOLVES CORNS AWAY Now nttiwvft cuffM the fa»i, easy w*t r’lf_ ^**iwne®. Liquid re- iMiii iflstooiiy. work> ^(ow rhe lint tw dtsKilvc cotnt ia juit Gtt frtttOM .ft all 4fu* counten. release it >s a. trtffi fi}m “will greatly enhance" iii* educational usefulness.’*' A .spccial- intierest feature of the show will be'the presentation nf taped i_nt^fvi»s bef^recn Alii stair Cooke, writer and narrator of the program, and award win ners at hdme anil >t work. Dr: Konrad Bioch, reci^ent of aq award for mediciM, will be met at the HarvMd. School of Bio- Chtmistfy. Dr. Feodbr LjrJien, also | a winner of the prize for medit cine, will be interviewed at the M:ix-Hlank Institute' in Munich, Germany. After August Schou, director of the .Nobel f’rizi Institute, an nounces Dr. Martin Luther King as the 15MJ4 Peace Prize winner. Dr. King will b^^seen In an inter view- whicii was taj^, in bis home in .\tlanta, Georgiy. CMHer inter views by Cfflike is^de.one withi Madame Nobet-Ole'iiiikoff, oldest| living member of. the Nobel fam-1 ily. Jean-Paui Siirt^, who declined! Ilie awards for Mterature, also will appear in an .interview. King (lustav Ad(iif of S*'eden will-present the-Nobel Prizes in a for|}^. tVentpljy ijj S|pp}^lm. flij Def^wb.eif lOt t)»f ^i>nlver.s|iry of the death of Alfred Nobel. An intane.^ipg ^i^igjit is j^ci that t^e can|era- men must wear wHite tie and tails. The Peai^. Pr#ie wilj be awarded sii)iulf;i^i4qu,s!,v in Oslo, Norway. liie program also will include a Pf^esentation of the history of Al fred Noliel, Swedish chemist, en- ginaec and inventor,'at^j|iis,rea sons for designating SO millioR in bis, will to be di.stributed annuallv (pr tbp >iwnrtjs. The he ^t^pulated, i.s. to be gi^e/i' jM^^e '.«ho have "conferred, thatcreate.st bi;n^t 01) mankind” in chemistry, (pe()ieine, phv.sics ^n/i- T'ace. and lo a person" who sh.ill h'lve pro- ^ci^ ii) tb? fit'ld, of _l't**ralure t.be- "lost dlstlnsulshed^work of an idealirstic tendency.” The purpo.ee of the pri’H i de^nbed b»t by a comment once made by Nobel. He said, 'i would i)ot leave aaything to a man of Vtion, as he would be tempted to giye up work. On the other hand„ I would like to help dreamers, as they find it difficult to get on II) life." The TV special will be pre.sent- to U. S. audiences just 48 hours i|T»r fTie' acluaT ' cererno^iesr U ^Ul. be broadcast to Canadians over the Network on Decem ber 13 ai)d will bt I’istributed to Ijie Armed I-'orces TV’ Ne“j^ork for broadcast to serviceme'.i through out the world shortly after the natiphal telecast. Seven ff wv; L 1/ Former Miss. (mv. Heads State Improvement' ITTA BENA, Mississippi—An at- terppt lo Improve this state’s ijnaae in the eyes of the nation h.'s |pd lo the raising of over $13.- OOO in order to send an all Negro i (^oll**“e band to the Rose Bo'jvI Parade. Former Governor Hu°h White, who actejj^jis chairman of the fu^d raising drive to Send the Missis sippi Valley State College band to Pa.sadena said, “How can any one say that Mississippi doesn’t take cere of its citizens both black a«d white.” Wkite, who a few weeks earlier ^ad advocated the raising of one and a half million dollars to en able a State official to go on na- tkmwide television to “correct" tbe imase of Missisappi said. “a» f*f BS' I know, organitatioBs such as CQFO and the NAACP had made do contributions.” It is widely known that the state has suffered economically as a result of the racial violence :vJich grew out of th» M's«'«?ippj Sujiimer Project and it is believed tfiit White undertook the job as fund raisin? chairman as one method of ’“helping" the image of the state. In Jackson the Coiinfll of Fede rated Or«anizations (COFO) charg ed that the money could be better improving the educational and teaching facilities at the jchool and its band to promote the state of Mississippi. .’A worker for the Student Non- v(ol«At Coordinating Committee (SNCC) said here, “I won’t be ^prised if the entire 110 piece bind asks for asylum in California rather than return to Mississippi.” Megross Win f 3fffl f fetion’ HOUSING MEET PRINCIPALS— J. S, Sf«W!rt, Uft. pr«.sid«nt of the Durham, MuiUAi »n4 l.94n Association, vuilh M..Pt. Brooks, contar, Rdtlghr dirtetor pf research of tije Npi;th Carpliny Fund, and B. W. Harriv astUj.anf director, A. and T. College Divis- ion of Extendsd Services, during the (ourlii annual A. and T. Col lar > Housing and Urban Renewal Clinic hold last week In Greens boro. Brooks spoke at a luncheon stsslon. Preston Cobb Saved After Staying On Deatli Row for Tliree Years lueiM-ftiSTiuiis coMPm».i r c 8iin,iu w«ism».ec mw awiii Sfniii MUSICAL CONCERT iCpBEPRSENTED AT FAIR PROMISE FAYETTEVILLE — The E. E. Siriitb Senior High School Mixed Chsnis of Fayetteville, under the direction of Hubert E. Walters, Conductor, will present a Coi^ert at fair ,Promise A. M. dlMrcti On Wall Street on Sil^ay, Decefiber 13 at 4:00 P.M. Tlit Ac companist is Juan Hall. The program U being tp«nMr«4l bv the Conferer,»e and Home Mis sion workers of the Church, Rev J. A. Arnold is pastor. Walters is the director of choral mu.sic at the E. E. Smith Senior High School In Fayetteville. Qe is a native of Greenville, where be attended public school and stud ied nusic with Arthur L. NokoU, organist at the Sycantore HiU Bap tist Church. It was while Ive at- ‘ended North Carolina College, from which he graduated with t BA. degree in music, be served M %ccomptnist for the college choir for four years and s^iji^ pr^^tely with Samuel W. Hill, coi^ductor of the North Carolina Collei!e Choir at Durham. While in the Armed Forces, Walters was organist and choir conductor of the Choral Society at the Post Chapel at Fort Meade, Maryland. He has studied at Vir* ipini* 8^te lo PeterstiUFg, V|., and attender the Peter J. Wll- iPMky Vwfw In qior«l Conducting. Currently he ii work- NEW ORLEANS — Three years of unremitting effort on the part of NAACP attorneys to save the Jife of Preston Cobb, a 19-year-old; Georgia youth, finally paid of? tWs "^ecE" when the U. S. Court of Appeals here overturned his conviction by a Ja.sper County, Ga. all-white jury. Young Cobb, who was only 15, at the time of his conviction in 1961, was found guilty of the mur der of an aged white man, Frank Coleman Dumas. In setting aside the conviction U.S. Government Grants Mijs. St,500,000 ATLANTA, Georgia — The Stu- lent Nonviolent Coordinating Com. Tiittee (SNCC) .said here that the ’^e(*''ral Government has granted or loaned Mis^issippi over one mil- lio” dollar-' in recent weeks. The largest grant was given by the Public Health Service of the U. S rtept. of Health, Education and Welfare totaling $1,181,800 for the construction of medical and educational facilities in Mis- sis'-^ppi. The city of G untown. Mississippi W1S granted a loan of $W9.000 for the construction of a municipal '"ater distribution system by the '’ommunity Facilities Administra tion of the Housing and Home Fin ance Agency. The loan was. an nounced in a telegram from Rep resentative Thomas Abernathy to the Mayor of Guntown. A loan of S^GOO f Houaug Ad n*iistrroon ’ ha's TTOn|' ffraiWd to the city of Aberdeen, Mississippi which will ^able^the city to begin preliminai'y ^lan^ng on its prosram for 25 la#-rent housing units. The preliminary loan will allow Aberdeen to pre pare a development program which will probably serve as the basis for an annual contributior^ between the Federal Public Hous ing Administration ^nd the City Housing Authority. Aberdeen Mayor Howell testi fied last February 14th before the state legislature that federal funds for urban renewal could be used to maintain segregation. Ho well said, “if we tear down those slums and provide nice housing for Negroes -ve can prevent them irom moving Into our white nelght i^orh^ods." He went on to add, "M freakish as it may sound, we art WSing url>an renewal to maintaii| segregation." Ing toward the Master of Musif degree at East Carolina College if Greenville. He is at present th* Vice-President of the North Cai^ olina State Music Teachers Assq- citaion, a division of the Nort^i Caroliny Tfaclnrs Association. E. E. Miller is the principal of the K. E. Smith Senior Hig^ School in Fayetteville. the Court of Appeals concurred witht eh NAACP which has consis tently maintained that the boy’s ’onstitiitional rights had bpen liision of Negroes on the grand ■iirv that indicted him and the -i-'l jury that convicted him. In its appeal the NAACP point- “d out that there have been no Vr^^roes on any Jasper County juries for the past 30 years. The Court stated that “Cobb is >'ibiecl to reindictment and may be retried, but he is entitled to h" rnt-ied within a reasonable npriod '• The State of Oeor?'a had oppo.s- ^d the NAACP petition on the rounds that Cobb’s coiirt-appoint- "•d original attorney, before the Association entered the ca.se. had "ot challenged the composition of the jury. The higher court held, however, that “there was no e.xpress 'Aaiver by Cobb either of his right to chal 1en?e the grand jury indictment or the trial iury ”. The NAACP entered the .case at ♦he request of Cobb’s mother after the Jasner Countv iurv had found the boy pu'ltv following only 4."i minutes of delibsration and madr no recommendation for mercy, de spite his youth. Donald Hollowell. an .Mlanta iittornev, was retained by the NAACP to defend tho bov and the case was carried through hte Georgia courts and ultimately ap- nealed to the U.S. Supreme Court hy Hollowell and NAACP General Counsel Robert L. Carter. In January of 1363 the U. S Supreme Court refused to review the ca.se. Shortly thereafter, how ever. Cobb told Hollowell that the •tonfession on which he had been -jnnvicted haB been secured under (duress and a motion '.vas filed for a new trial. Young Cpbb accussed the son of the murfler victim with commit ting the fatal crime. The victim’s son was killed in an automobile accident after Cobb’s conviction. At the time of his convicUon, Georeia law permitted execution of children as young as 10 years old. Because of his youth, Cobh’s death sentence aroused world-wide concern. Niwerous petitions were circulated a.sking for clemency and a Dutch delegation came to this country (o plead with the envernor of Georgia on Cobb’s behalf. Early in 1963 Georgia revi.sed the law on execution and the minimum age was set at 16. JACKSON, Mis.sissippi — Th United Statts Department of Agri- cultuie has told liie Student Non violent Coordinating ('ommittee (SN’CC) complaints charging di.s- M-imin.'ition ilfUl intimidation in county A,v;ricultiiral Stabilization Cl mmittec eUH tuins in Mississippi will be invi'StiKalid. • Joseph M. Ucibertson, .\ssi.stant Secretary fur Administration of th'> Pnrir-tPK.nt of A"riculture, told SN’CC Chairman John Lewis I in a teU'-'’rim Di c'ember 4 ‘all com- nlawits r('“:iriling improprieties in the cordiict of these flections ’'ill h" investigated by this depart ment" Tioberhion said the A^ricuHure Deoartmnt has made “streniio'.is rf'i'rts to a.'si.’re fa'r and cq\iitable .XSr Community elections in Mis- sis'jinni.’’ S\rC workers and workers from th" Coimcil of Federati'ci Organi zations (f'OFOl helned Nei;ro farm, efs in twrlve Mississipv’i counties ersar'ze to elect some Negroes lo the .\SC Cdmmiinity Comniittees, d^f'sion and policy m.-iking bodies which f’ivp extra cotton and other cren allotments to farmc'rs. In Henton. Holivnr. Clav Iss.n- ouena. I afayi'tte. Monroe. Nesho ba anil W:irren CoMnlies, farmers vdt' "I b>- n'ai!. In Holmes, Mar shall. M-'di.'-on and Pnnola Toun- tirs elect inns were held in special polling placcs, A.'^r rommimitv Committees rep- ri'sent •communities," or sm:iH divis’ons of the farmers in a .given eouptv Kach farming eotmty usually l';;s from 3 to 11 commii- nit'"s. cymnosed of one.chairman, a vice-chairnian. a member and two altevnntes, ,\t lea.'-t five \e"roes won ASC CommiinUV posts in the Derem- b''r 4 elections. In Camdon fMadi- .■son f’oimty). Ne','ro farmer Luth er IhmcysMckcr was ciccted com- niiin ty chciirman and another Madison Countv Negro farmer was elected an alternate. In .-\cona Community in Holmes roiu'ty, Lanier Smith, a Negro farmer, '.von as chairman while Uyo_j)thcm: e'Jrofs. Howard Taft Ba'ley and Eugene Montgomery were electcd fir.st and second al ternates, SXCC Chairman Lewis had wi-cd Agriculture Secretary Or ville Fre'^man neceniber 3 after rigllt civil riphts workers were arresled in Holly Springs and Can ton, T.ewis told Fre''man in his teU'Eram “the present administra tion's pronu‘:cs to the Nei^ro peo ple remain only words as long as conditi(ms like tliese are alla'Aied to txist," Mrs. 51ae Mallory Jailed Ui New YqfU During- Protest NEW YORK—Mao Mallory '.vas arrested'last vs'eck by New York City' police at a pcaeefvil demon stration, and was charged '*ith fo^niou.s a.ssault. She is being held in prison under the exorbitant bail of .$3500. The picket line, in front of the U. S, Mi.s.sion to the United Na- tions. had been called by a group tnres -of the incident, which-show thsrtlip PpHcp ijnmfldi?(fly gab bed Mrs, Mallorj bv. bpth arms, making ,i) ipj)o.ssi)jle (or b?r have “a.ssaulted” anyone. Another young demonstrator, while beii)E brld by 6 or 7 cops, -was beaten with a blackjack and knocked tempora.rily unconscious. He was a)so, charged with assault. Mpe Mallory has becqme inter- natiqnally know.n through her 3- year siruggl? ‘Aiith the racist authorities of Npr,th Carolina m he Mqnroe “kidoapping” ca.se. The severe .sentenpe of 16-20 years imRQsed upqn her in that case has m.asJe her the QQun.try’s forerpo.st victim of Spu.thern racist courts, •ijnd a symbol of militant struggle WomemPast21 WITH ftlADOH IMITATION Suffff«r 'Many Ti«i*bles Af^ 21, common Kidney or Uladiler IrrhttioM aAccl twice as many wuiiien ■t men knd may make you leitsc and Dcrvouf from loo fie^ueju, biuoiu^ ijt Aching urination both day and nijlii. SecoDdafily, yoii mty lote »lecp and Miflcr from Hekdacnes, Backnclie and faci old, tired, depteaaed. In luch irti- Ulion, CYsTEX usually brings fast, nlsxing coiufort by curbing irriiatiiig ■erm* In ilrong, acid urine and by unal- ■•ik pain rttitf. Ott CYiTtX at drug- gim. 8m haw it «ui k«lp test U, S.-Belgian intervention in the Con;!o and the forthcoming visit of Moise Tshombe to the United Nations. The demonstra tors carried sign saying “Down with Tshnmbe and the white kill ers too," Between 75 and 100 per sons participated in the line. Three persons besides Mrs, Mal lory were also arrested, but were given less serious charges and lever bail. Observers to the arrests, includ ing several UN correspondents, re ported that a plainclothesman fin- g red out Mrs. Mallory for arrest, (ilthouffhi* she was doing nothing blit directing the pickets to keep moving. Fortunately, several pho tographers were able to get pic- xLl.^Jim;Afticaa, .stmlent_ii3L,-Ba>- Jat oftpressed _ people everjmiiere. ^e is well,known to the r*'i''t oppressors too, because pf her as sociation with Robert F. Williams and the principle of arfned self- defen.se against racist terror. She has been speaking across the country to many colleges find com- munlity groups, on tl»e que^tjon of self-defense in the last 2 moijths. She has also been involved in a number of civil rights ,dfinioi)f!tra tions in the South, The method of her arrest la.st week in New York made U ob vious to everyone present ^hat she was bfing pointed out of the large (lemonstiation in an attempt to .^ilepce her eff^;tti.ve voice againrt racist oppression at hume aiid abroad, "^$^ca$on*s Greetings f When good friends drop in, Coke belongs with the Holiday festivities BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Kentucky Straight Poutbon *2.50 «395 Jttmpm f|a^4/5QT. wmnt- MEMMWU ^ CLUB ^ BOURBON ) KEIMTUCKV STiR/^dSNir (BI)>(LIIRiBOf^ WMnSOiirr: SSL10M » OOMMUfT OlSTtllUTIO tv NATIONAL OltTILLlMt MOOUCTt 00 „ Mum NV. • MNTUCRY tttlAMHTfMMMI WHIMCr *