Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 4, 1965, edition 1 / Page 12
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:—THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, DEC. 4, 1965 6B mam I iwb I i H |||§ BfiH . jfl I *7 lUr (J # jL- TT~ - .jWftima *Vj I ■ ..- wtlHHuj VU» DIPLOMATS VISIT MOVIE { STUDIO— (Left to right) Dr. Robt. Ajavon ambassador from Toso; producer-director Alfred Hitchcock; Senora Clotildc de Diplomats Visit Universal City Movie Studio UNIVERSAL CITY, Califor-, nia—Ambassadors and other | top ranking diplomates from 26 t foreign nations were recent ! guests of Universal City Stu-1 dios at a luncheon in the studio i commissary which also was at tended by studio executives and stars. Jules C. Stein, MCA board DBC Host to NAACP Youth Leaders Nov. 20 Durham Business College played host to the executive committee of the NAACP Youth and College Division in its first executive session No vember 20. Members attending were President, Kelly Alexan der Jr., Charlotte; Vice Presi dent, Miss Joyce Thomas. Dur ham Business College; Miss Patricia Gains, Durham Busi ness College, Charles James, N. C. College; Miss Vina Nor ris, Secretary; Miss La Anna Evans, and J W. Hill, Youth Advisor, all of Durham Busi WHEN YOU CONSULT US ABOUT REAL ESTATE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INSURANCE MATTERS, OUR MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, AUTO, FIRE AND ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE PROTECTION AS SURES YOU OF THE VERY BEST. Consult Us Before You Build, Sell Rent or Renovate Union Insurance & Realty Co. 814 FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE 682-1133 Samovar VODKA MOO n 5 255 4/5 Quart /. \ Pint ■ 100 PROOF DISTILLED FROM GRAIN BOAKA KOMPANIVA. SCHENLEY. PA. AND FRESNO, CALIFORNIA MADE FROM GRAIN. PRODUCT OF THE U .S.A. 100 PROOF Colmont. counsellor from Hon duras and Jules Stein, board airman of MCA, Inc.. engage in lively discussion during a re chairman, officially welcomed the dignitaries- to the addition to Stein, a studio ex ecutives attending included Ed ward Muhl and Alfred Hitch cock. Following the luncheon the entire party toured the studio on specially decorated trams. Nations represented include ness College. President Alexander present- i ed the group with his proposed I ; year's program which was bas-' led on the resolutions passed - by the state body during the | state NAACP Conference in j October. The following' pro- j gram was adopted on the state level for NAACP Youth and College chapters: 1. To add 3,000 new Youth members to the membership roster. To accomplish this goal the president appointed Miss Joyce Thomas and Miss Vina cent luncheon held for diplo mats from Africa. Asia and Britain at Universal City Stu dios. j Honduras, Togo, Uganda, Bel -1 sium, .Syria, France, United Arab Republic, Ceylon. India, Kuwait, South Africa, Uruguay, ! Iraqu, Tunisia, Guatemala, j Colombia, Argentina, Ireland, j Laos. Ghana. Lebanon, United Kingdom, Brazil, Spain, Sweden and the Ivory Coast. N'orris as co-chairman of the membership drive. 2. To observe a youth Fellow ship Day where all NAACP youth and College leaders will come together for endoctrina- tion and orientation of conven tion policies and procedure. The president, Kelly Alexand er. Jr., is to chair this commit tee. The president indicate the date of February 5, which co incides •with the annual State Branch, Youth and College Chapter Officers meeting at Charlotte. 3. To raise SI,OOO for the Mother's Day Rally through the sale of NAACP Holiday seals. All of the members of the executive committee were charged with this responsi ■ bility. 4. To establish and develop i a Youth Freedom Day at ' which time the crowning of Miss NAACP Youth Council : will take place. This project until later since the culmina . tion of it would take place in j late spring. For immediate at ! tention was the need to raise I working capital for the youth ] office. George K. Butterfield of |N. C. College and J. W. Hill, i State Youth advisor were as- signed the responsibility of de vising -way to raise immediate funds. The next executive meet ing is scheduled for early Jan uary at Charlotte. They Can Have It MEXICO CITY Movie star Gloria Swan son, who made her first film in says if she had the chance to lie 20 year* old loday. she'd refuse it. "I love beauty rather than usli ness." she said. "I'd rather dance to Viennese waltzes than the Frus or Jerk or whatever they call it." She is the 1955 "Silver Queen'' at Taxco's an nual silver festival. SANTA'S PACKING HIS BAG I Jjoln our /te-V,; / CL ?-->■. \ J- Toys for the children— transistors for the teen ' agers—and a short note, (a gentle reminder) for the adults that, if they'll join Christmas Club now, JB I it will be a big, BIG help w* K ne i(f year. You wouldn't ignore a note from Santa ; would you? Join our 1966 Christmas Club now. ] \ I * jgf 114 WIIT PARRItM IT. DURHAM, N. C. Mrs. Jesse L. Pearson Named Social Service Coordinator The appointment of Mrs. Jesse L. Pearson to the posi tion of Social Service Coordi nator with the Redevelopment Commission was announced by A. S Blackwell, Director for Relocation and Property Man agement. Blackwell stated it is not merely the aim to uproot tha many families within the Urban Renewal Area, thinking only of the brick, mortar or demoli tion aspects of the overall pro gram but along with these aspects go the myriad problems of many indigent families. The appointment of a Social Serv ice Coordinator will serve as necessary adjunct to much needed service of the various social service disciplines with in the City of Durham for these families with problems which could, in some way. be effica ciously attacted by referral to a particular social agency. Mrs. Perason will coordinate the referrals of families to the various agencies, as these fam ily problems are recognized by the relocation staff. Mrs. Pearson brings to this asencv many years of experi ence in the field of social serv ices. She is a graduate of NCC, and the Atlanta University School of Social Work and New York University. For the past 9 years she has been working as Field Director of the Pines of Carolina Girl Scout Council. Prior to Girl Scouting, she held Miss. Movie Integrates After Violence Flares CARTHAGE, Miss. After suffering two Sundays of beat ings, Negroes and CORE work ers successfully integrated the Fox movie theater in Carthage, Mississippi, on November 21. The group of 60 integrationists saw "Joy in the Morning" com pletely alone as all the other patrons left shorly after the group, including five white civil rights workers, entered the theater. FBI agents and units of the Mississippi Highway Patrol were on hand as a beefed-up city police force safely ushered the Negroes as they marched to and from the Fox, and while they watched the film. The group was led by CORE work ers Sears Buckley a Mississippi native; and Walter Gilbert from LflS ' Angeles, and local leader A. J. Lewis, adult ad visor to the Jordan Student Union which sponsored the project. Carthage is located in Leake County, about 45 miles northeast of Jackson. On previous attempts to in tegrate the theater the stu dents and CORE workers were driven away and" beaten by white men. The first attempt was on Sunday, Nov. 7, when 2 whites and 7 Negroes pur chased tickets and went in the theater. Shortly after they en tered, the film was stopped and violence erupted in the dark. They were chased out of the theater, being hit and kick ed by white men, one of whom sprayed them with a fire ex tinguisher. The beatings con tinued outside until the group reached the Negro section of Carthage. the position of Case Worker with the Orange- County De partmgnt of Public Welfare; the Travelers Aid Society in Spartanburg. S. C.; New York, X. Y.; and Fayetteville. She was a Case Worker, with the Department of Public Welfare, >n Raleigh: the Northampton County Department of Public Welfare and the Durham Coun ty Department of Public Wel fare. She is a member of the As sociation of Girl Scout Profes sional Workers: Jack and Jill if America. Inc.: Delta Sigma Theta Sorority: St. Joseph's Church: the Harriet Tubman YWCA Community Planning Council. Blackwell stated it is his «oal to see that as many fam ilies within the Urgan Renewal Area as possible will be af forded the opportunity of much needed aid by being made cog nizant of those social services available to them. MRS. PEARSON N. Carolinians Health to be Aired at Meet Health interests of North Carolinians will be considered at the Annual Meeting of the N. C. Health Council in Dur ham on December 7. Represen tatives from 61 State-wide or ganizations and agencies with health related interests are ex pected to attend the meeting. C. Scott Venable, Raleigh, is president of the Council. The effects of the Medicare program on institutions and in dividuals will be the focus of the one-day meeting. This An nual Session,' to be held at the Jack Tar Hotel, will be pre ceded the afternoon before by a special Seminar on Recruit ment. Program Chairman E. M. Herndon, Durham, has an nounced the roster of speakers and subjects for the day. Registration begins at nine o'clock and the formal program at ten. James W. Murray, Atlanta, Regional Director of the Social Security Administration, will be the lead-off speaker as he outlines provisions of Public Law 89-97, popularly referred to as Medicare. He will be in troduced by J. R. Norton, M.D., Raleigh, State Health Director. Other subjects and speakers for the morning session include "What Medicare Means to Hos oitals" by Marion J. Foster, Raleigh, Executive Secretary, N. C. Hospital Association; "What Medicare Means to the Practice of Medicine" by Edgar T. Beddingfield, M.D., Stantons burg; and "What Medicare Means to Nursing Homes" by Travis Tomlinson, Raleigh, As sociation of Nursing Homes, Inc. | GO to Rigsbee Tire Sales WM WINTER RETREADS H 4 ]pjr | Our retreads have the latest in tread de- V sign to double the wear of your tires, fl fep/ |j performance with the least possible *s Member of the Tir« Retreading Institute. Our re- We Uie The Finest Material* treading methodt certified and approved annually by PREMIUM f f\(\o/ COLD Easy Term * * A " Work U.S. Testing Co., Inc. QUALITY lUU/fl RUBBER Guaranteed • One Par Stewart Rl»bee Serviea . . J. D. Brother* RIGSBEE TIRE SALES ™ W -i. I II ■t" ~ 4f sM l_^l mi 4 REPRESENTS GOVERNOR — f Ed Rankin, an aide to Governor Dan K. Moore, is flanked here by J. Melville Broughton (left) and President James E. Cheek (right) at the Centennial Foun Thurman to Visit Livingstone Continued from IB Dr. Thurman, an interna tionally known preacher and lecturer, is a native of Daytona Beach, Fla., and a graduate of Morehouse College in Atlanta, Ga., and the Colgate-Rochester Theological Seminary, Rochest er, N. Y. He was a special- stu dent of the late and great Quaker scholar, Dr. Rufus M. Jones, at Haverford College in Pennsylvania. With honorary degrees from more than a dozen American schools and holding member ship in numerous professional, religious and scholarly organi zations, he has been minister of a Baptist church in Oberlin, BUY _ From Your Favorite Become A Mail Subscriber V ( ) 2 Years $10.00( ) 1 Year $5 ( ) 6 Mos. $3.50 FOREIGN AND CANADIAN $1 EXTRA NAM! ADDRESS CITY ZONE STATE FILL IN AND MAIL TO. Chf Carqfla Ciroig PUBLISHED BY UNITED PUBLISHERS. INC. 436 EAST PETTIGREW ST. - PHONES: 68 1-8512 AND 682-2913 - DURHAM. N. C. "THE LEADING WEEKLY OF THE CAROLINAS" der't Day observance at Shaw University recently. Rankin ( director of the De partment of Administration for the State of North Carolina, read the Governor's speech Ohio; director of religious life and professor of religion, More house College; Dean at Ran kins Chapel and theology pro fessor at Howard University, Washington, D. C.; organizer LAUN DE^^^^MERS Phone 596-8202 • 2505 Angler Ave. • Wellona Village • So. Roxboro St. at Lakewood Ave. after a special legislative as sembly on the Speaker ban law prevented Moore's appearance. Broughton it vice-chairman of the Univeriity's board of trustees. and minister of the Church for the 1 Fellowship of All Peoples, San Francisco, Calif.; professor of spiritual Resources and Dis ciples, School of Theology, Bos ton University; and is now Dean Emertius, Marsh Chapel, Boston University, Boston, Mas sachusetts.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Dec. 4, 1965, edition 1
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