Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 4, 1965, edition 1 / Page 9
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m mi ■£> M Z/ j I^eT> ■ j||i t F 1 " y*J^B *N \'^ SHINE IN "RAISIN IN THE SUN"—Among those handling (taller, roles in the drama "Raisin in the Sun," produced last week at A. and T. College 1 L ,w' - S v-« •■• • *,: .;; ; tf&j\ JHBflk ißt , ■ 4&L*4 Mi ' *%& '' - v 4* ALL CONFERENCE CANDI DATE—AIfred Tyler, above, It Livingston*'! prime candidate for All-CIAA honori. The team will b* chosen by the football coaches of the conference. ' /■ \ Suit Insurance: J&F Two-Trouser Beefeater a* J 3 jfl ' aS I I L lT . |H m£±. ■ m ■m I m Accidents happen. We can't guarantee your pants will be untearable. Nobody can. But, what we do is even better. We offer the famous long-wearing J&F Beefeater suit with two pair of trousers. (Both with a locked-in permanent crease.) And, this is Insurance you can use at once. Sitting in the office all day... driving. Wouldn't it be nice to have • pressed pair of pants in reserve for the evening out. So, pro tect your next suit purchase. Buy a Beefeater with an extra pair of pants. You pay a very tow premium. $69.50 BEAUTIFUL JAF SUITS AT BOTH STORES DOWNTOWN « NORTHGATE by the Richard B. Harrison Players were from left to right: Daye of Greensboro, as "Ruth Younger;" Thelma Wal- Tyler, a 6-2, 195-pound jun ior. hat completed 69 of 119 patset for 982 yards and 12 touchdowns. Tyler has been a mainstay in the Bears offen sive attack this season. ker, also of Greensboro, as "Le na Younger" the mother, and Roland Hayes, Charlottee, as "Walter Lee Younger," a son. ADL Editor Publishes New Book on CR NEW YORK—The "mobiliza tion of federal authority" on behalf of civil rights has been the major event of the past two decades, according to a new book by Lynne lanniello, editor of the ADL Bulletin, na tional publication of the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. The book, "Milestones Along the March," published this week by Praeger, chronicles the pattern of American ad vancement along the road to full democracy through twelve historic civil rights documents between the years 1941 to 1965. The story of a movement "whose time had come," the book traces civil rights pro gress from a threatened march on Washington by 10,000 Ne croes in 1941 to the march on Montgomery, Alabama in 1963 by 25,000 religious leaders, stu dents, organization representa tives and "citizens who had The first event resulted in the establishment of the Fair Em ployment Practices Committee by President Franklin D. Roo sevelt in 1941; the second pre faced President Lyndon B. Johnson's "We Shall Over come' 'address before Congress this year calling for a voting rights bill. Editor Lynne lanniello places the twelve documents, ranking among the most pivotal and far reaching of our time, with in the context of the events of their day and assesses their impact on the course of hu man rights. John P. Roche, chairman of the Department of Politics at B'andeis University, in an introduction to the book, outlines the history of civil rights in the United States from Reconstruction to World War B. The papers chosen as "mile stones" include executive ord ers. U. S. Supreme Court de cisions, federal legislation and speeches. They are: • President Roosevelt's ord er establishing the FEPC in 1941. • President Harry S. Tru man's 1947 order establishing the President's Committee on Civil Rights. • The 1954 Supreme Court decision on restrictive coven ants in housing. • Hubert H. Humphrey's 1948 address calling for a strong civil rights plank in the platform of that year's Demo cratic convention. • The 1948 Presidential ord er to integrate the armed forces. • The desegregation of Washington. D. C. in 1953. • The 1954 Supreme Court decision on desegragting public schools. • The Civil Rights Act of 1957. • Martin Luther King's 1963 "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." • President John F. Ken nedy's 1963 address on the moral issues in the civil rights conflict. • The Civil Rights Act of 1964. • President Johnson's 1968 demand for a law eliminating illegal barriers to the right to vote. TYPE CASTING W«yne Boozer makes his mo tion debut with a small role in Universale "Madame X," starring Lana Turner, John Forsythe and Ricardo Montal han. Boorer appears in a Mexi can bar as—you guessed it—a drunk. First Negro Big League Umpire Named Party Tpe Brand Mgr. NEW YORK Emmett Ash ford, the first Negro umpire in major league baseball history, who begins his duties with the American League this season, has been named brand manag er of Party Tyme Products, Inc., New York, which makes a line of nonalcoholic cocktail mixes. Ashford, 47, is being brought up from the Pacific Coast League wher? he has been an umpire for the past twelve years and umpire-in-chief for thtf past three He was also the first Negro to umpire in this league During the past season he was assistant to the League's president Dewey Sori ano An all-around athlete in high school in his native Los Ange les and at Chapman College there where he played second base and center field. Ashford played semi-pro ball but never made it in organized baseba'l as a player. Following his . graduation from College in 1942 as a jour nalism major, Ashford went to work as a postal clerk in Los Angeles working in the payroll and finance department. He served in the Navy from 1944 to 1946. By the time he left the postal service in 1952 to become an umpire in the Ari zona-Texas League, he had the responsibility of making up the payroll for 10,000 post of fice employees in Los Angeles. Later that year he was nam ed an umpire in the Southwest International League, moving the next year to the Western International. He joined the Pacific Coast League's umpir ing staff in 1954. Ashford's life has been a series of "first." He was the first Negro to serve as the CONGRESSMAN DIGGS NAMED TO SUBCOMM. ON AFRICAN AFFAIRS WASHINGTON, D. C— Rep. Charles C. Diggs, Jr. (D.-Mich.) of the Subcommittee on Africa, announced that he has been appointed by the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Af fairs to head a study mission to Africa. Representatives Ben jamin S. .Rosenthal (D.-N.Y.), E. Ross Adair (R.-Ind.), and Edward J. Derkinski (R.-fll.) are members of the group. The mission expects to visit Tunisia, Ethioplia, Kenya, Uganda, Congo (Leopoldville), Ivory Coast and Senegal. This is the first official mis sion to Africa to be conducted v, i . I I MR. DYNAMITB Pictured above It Jamot "Mr. Dynamite" Brown who will appear In tho Durham Civic Center Wednes day night. Doc. I with hl> •how. Tho show will got under way at I o'clock. Included on this (how In ad dition to Brown will bo Jamot Crawford, Baby Lloyd, Bobby president of Jefferson High School in Los Angeles and ihe first to edit a high school pa per in that city. He was also the first of his race to be a cashier in a neighborhood su permarket, and when he start el out as an umpire, he was the first Negro to hold that job in baseball. ' Mis American League ap pointment has been hailed by players and managers alike, and the authoritative "Sporting News" declared in an editorial: Ashford is well equipped for his job—he's long on both skill and crowd appeal . . . Emmett's flamboyant style and distinctive motions for calling balls and strikes should prove crowd pleasers in the majors as they have in the minors. And the American League is not getting a green horn who'll be- easily ruffled. Ashford knows the score." Emmett and his wife Marga ret, who is a reservation clerk for American Air Lines, live in Los Angeles. by Members of the Committee on Foreign Affairs since 1960. Since that time several new na tions have emerged and play an important role in United Nations and world affairs. The group hopes to gain first-hand information relating to the economic progress in the coun tries to be visited, and also to observe United States AID programs, United States In formation Service and Peace Corps operations as well as activities of private United States organizations in those countries. Byrd, The Jewels, Elsie TV Mama, the Famous Flames, and the dancing gjrls, the Parket tas. Brown will ting hit latest re lease, "I Got You" along with such other hits as "Papa Got A Brand New Bag" and "Out of Sight." Brown's 18-place or chestra will supply the music. SATCKMO AND HOST—Louii "Satchmo" Armitrong brings hit iwingin' horn and gr»v»ly Gov. Moore Delivers Shaw Univ. Founder's Day Message RALEIGH—"I can think of no more appropriate place to meet the challenge of raising the quality of human beings to a higher level mentally, physi cally and morally than the Christian college," Governor Dan K. Moore told a capacity audience at Shaw University's Cent ennial observance of Founder's Day here. Ed Rankin, one of the gov ernor's aides and director of the Department of Administra tion, delivered the address for Moore because of the special legislative assembly on the Speaker ban law In his speech, Moore empha sized the importance of church related institutions, such a s Shaw, in relieving the State of a tremendous burden in edu cating its youth. "Our-tax-sup ported facilities are already straining under the demands being placed upon them," he said. "We are going to meet the need only because of the contribution church-related col leges are making." church-related universities and "Today, approximately 40 colleges are educating approxi mately 42 per cent of the near ly 105,000 students enrolled in institutions of higher learning in the State of North Carolina," Champion Bourbon b lschenlei| YEARS lEll '" nr OLD $4.05 jr£i«l«i| 4/5 "QT. 'Champion N^ourbon U *~jkia. u *, n MMM L fr " kit!*, v 8 YEAR OLD SOUR MASH STRAIGHT BOURBON, 86 PROOF, 'i 1962 SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CO.. N Y C . SATURDAY, DEC. 4, 1965 THE CAROLINA TIMES- vole* to "The Dean Martin Show" Thursday. December 9 (10-11 p.m. EST and PST; 9-10 Moore said The Governor lauded Shatf University for having educated more than half of the Negro principals in the State's Pub lic Schools. He pointed out also that the 100-year old institu tion ranks third among all col leges in the State in the num ber of its graduates serving as teachers in North Carolina public schools. "Along with you," the Gov ernor said, "I have confidence in the future of Shaw Univer sity and believe that the con tributions of Shaw in the years ahead will exceed those it has made in the past." Moore lauded the University for the "spirit of determination and courage which lifted Shaw from desperate financial cir cumstances only a few short months ago." GONE FISSION Julie Andrews, playing a nuclear physicist in Universale "Torn Curtain" co-starring Paul Newman, showed her great sense of humor the first day of shooting. When she left her (fressing room, she put a sign on her door reading, "Gone fission." 3B p.m. CST) on the National Tele vision Network. 1,794 NEGROES ADDED TO VOTE LISTS IN S.C. CO. MANNING, S C. A CORE Freedom Itally climaxed the second week of voter registra tion with federal registrars in Clerandon County, South Caro -lin a. 1,784 newly registered Negroes have been added to the voting lists in the past two weeks. Addressing the rally were Associate National Director of CORE, Dr George A. Wiley and Michigan Congressman John Conyers. More than 1,000 persons attended the rally which marked the increase in registered Negroes from 523 one year ago to the present total of 3,536. In a county where Negroes comprise 68.3% of the voting age population, Claren don County may well be the first county in South Carolina history which has more regis tered Negroes than whites. COKE Kield Secretaries Frank Robinson and Emerson Brown, along with CORE'S South Car lina Project Director James McCain have been concentrat ing their attention upon Clar endon and Dorchester counties, since both have received fed eral registrars earlier this month. In the two week period 2,503 additional Negroes have been registered in the two counties
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Dec. 4, 1965, edition 1
9
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