Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 29, 1966, edition 1 / Page 1
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ANNUAL | p er Copy |» c SUBSCRIPTION ' IN NORTH CAROLINA $5.15 ELSEWHERE $5.00 VOLUME 43 No. 42 Atlanta Businessmen Get Blunt Warning From SCLC Pres. ★ ★★ ★ * + + + + + + i Dr. V. Henderson To Deliver NCC Founder's Day Address Noted Euucator Slated for NCC Convocation November 3 Dr. Vivian W. Henderson, president of Clark College, At lanta, Ga., will deliver the principal address at North Car olina College's 19th annual Founder's Day Convocation Thursday, November 3. The convocation, to be held in the college's B. N. Duke Au ditorium beginning at 11 a.m., honors the memory of the late Dr. James Edward Shepard, who founded the institution in 1910 and was its president un til his death in 1947. Henderson, a native of Bris tol. Tennessee, is a graduate of t'le Slater High School. Bris tol. Holder of the B.S.C. degree from North Carolina College, with a major in business ad ministration and economics, he i earned the M.A. and Ph.D. de grees at the State University | of lowa in economics, recciv- j ing the doctorate in 1952. His experiences include posi- j tions as a teacher of economics j at Prarire View A. and M. Col i lege. North Carolina College, and Fisk University, where he •\as professor and chairman of. the Department of Economics i King Tells Business Leaders They Must Help Meet Need ATLANTA, Ga. Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr., last Thurs day told more than 400 white people from Atlanta's business Horld—men who have money and control money that the American Negro desperately needs money, too. The Southern Christian Lead ership Conference president warned that American business leaders must help meet this need. He called for them to use their great power and in fluence to obtain a national guarantee of at least $4,000 a year in income for every poor family. Looking into a sea of white faces at a packed downtown hotel banquet room, Dr. King |l Jjfl j Dp I™\ S V&* j GEORGIA DEMOCRATIC CON VENTION—(Macon, Ga.>—Geor gia Democrats give a standing ovation to tha itata'* Demo cratic gubernatorial candidate, Pres. Johnson Names Negro To Top Post In World Bank WASHINGTON, D. C.—Presi dent Lyndon B. Johnson made history again last week in nam. ing Dr. Emmett J. Rice, 46, of the Treasury Department to the post of U. S. Alternate-Execu tive Director of the World Bank. The appointment was an nounced Monday at the White House. Dr. Rice who has a Ph.D. from the University of Califor nia and is a native of Florence, South Carolina, is the third Negro to be named by Presi dent Johnson to a financial Hp !■ Hp DR. HENDERSON and Business Administration from 1952 to 1965. He was a visiting professor at North Car olina State College, Raleigh, from 1962-64. In 1965. he ac cepted the presidency of Clark College. At Fisk, Dr. Henderson served as director of the sum mer session from 1958 to 1963, See HENDERSON 3A i revealed "two different Ameri cas" to his- well-fed, well-dress ed, prosperous audience. He told members and guests of the Atlanta Junior Chamber of Commerce that they live "in i one America. This America is I invested with enrapturing beau ty. It is an America flowing vit'i the milk of prosperity and the honey of opportunity." ANOTHER AMERICA "But there is another Ameri ca," Dr. King said. "This other America has a daily ugliness about it that makes for endless despair. This America is in habited by the defeated, the bruised, the battered and the scared. It is an America in- See KING 2A segregationist Latter Maddox. Abitaining from tha applauia it one Negro delegate at left. Dur ing tha Georgia Democratic post of national and interna tional importance. Earlier the President appointed Hobart Taylor, Jr. as Director of the Export-Import Bank and last year named Andrew F. Brim mer, Governor of the Federal Reserve Board. President Johnson upon the recommendation of Secretary of Treasury Henry Fowler made the new appointment on the eve of his departure to the Far East. Since June 1964 Dr. Rice has been serving as Acting Di rector, Office of Developing Olk'.tlvip; Rd , m, F. C>. _ 7 /~'Q /Cotnp. Che Carols Cim* s fawlWrwlliiriTfr-J Fayetteville To Host General Baptist Convention Oct. 30 6BSC Consists Of More Than 330,000 Strong FAYETTEVILLE All roads lead to Fayetteville for the pas tors and messengers of the General Baptist State Conven tion of North Carolina, Inc. The Annual Session of the GBSC and the Laymen's League will meet I at the First Baptist Church, | Fayetteville, C. R. Edwards, ! host pastor. October 31 through j November 3. The general theme of the | Convention will be: "The : Church's Ministry in a Ner# j Dimension." Sermons and ad- I dresses in keeping with the j theme will be delivered. There will be reports from ] the General Board, the Execu -1 t ; ve Committee and other of-1 ficials. Addresses will be given con cerning the Convention's four | objectives: The Central Orphan ! age, State Missions, Foreign : Missions and Shaw^University. On Wednesday evening No i vember 2, the featured sei'mon J will be given by Raymond Har • vey, pastor of Greenwood Bap j tist Church, Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama. Music will f be furnished by the Shaw Uni- I versity Chorale Society, under I the direction of Hubert Wal j ters. Thursday's featured ad dress will be given by Dr. Sam- I uel Proctor of the U. S. Insti j tute for Service to Educators, | Washington, D. C. The GBSC of North Carolina ]is composed of more than I three hundred and thirty thous- I and Baptists. J W White, Ashe [ ville, is the President of the Convention. O. L. Sherrill, Ra leigh, is the Executive. convention delegates named Maddox at Heed of tha state Democratic Party. (UPI Talaphoto) Nations, in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Interna tional Affairs in the Treasury Department. Dr. Rice brings to his new post great experience in fiscal matters at home and abroad. From 1962 to 1964, he worked as research adviser to the Cen tral Bank of Nigeria where he supervised 36 members and advised the Governors of the Bank on matters of monetary and financial policy. From 1960 to 1962, Dr. Rice served as an See NAMES 2A DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 19M Khl v * *_^Km -}' * MISS QUEEN ELIZABETH McLEAN Red Springs Girl to be Crowned "Miss N. C. College" Nov. 11 Miss Queen Elizabeth Mc | Lean, a native of Red Springs, will be crowned Miss North Carolina College on Friday, November 11. Samuel Thomas, president of the Student Government Asso ciation, and Floyd W. Hayes, 111, vice-president, will be in augurated at the same time. A reception for Miss McLean is also part of the program. The ceremonies, scheduled for the college's R. L. McDou gald Gymnasium, begin at 7:15 p.m. Miss McLean, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James J. McLean of 213 Baldwin Avenue, Red Springs, is a senior sociology major with a minor in English. She plans to be a high school English teacher or a social worker after graduation. The campus queen is a mem ber of Alpha Kappa Alpha So rority, the English Club, and her dormitory's social com- j Joint Baptist Meet to be Held In Chapel Hill CHAPEL HILL—A joint meet ing of three Baptist Associa tions will be held on Novem ber 3, at 7:00, p.m. in the University Baptist Church of Chapel Hill. Sponsored by the East Cedar Grove, New Hope and Yates Baptist Associations the conference will focus on the theme. "A Church's Mis sion and the Problems of Pov-1 erty." The program will include two major addresses by Dr. Samuel D. Proctor and Claude U. Broach. Dr. Proctor is the for mer President of A. and T. College in Greensboro and has been associated with the Peace Corps and the Office of Eco nomic Opportunity. He is pres ertfly with the Institute to Serv ices for Education in Washing ton. Dr. Broach has been the Senior Minister of the St. John's Baptist Church of Charlotte, since 1944. He is a member of the Mayor's Committee on Hu man Relations in Charlotte. In addition to the two ad dresses there will be a series of small group discussions for the conference participants on the theme. The group discus- See CONFERENCE 2A mittee at NCC. Among other titles she has won during her college career are Miss Junior, Miss Ivy and Miss Scroller. As a student at Peterson High School, she was a member of the Glee Club, the Honor Society, Future Teachers of America, Future Homemakers of America and the band. She was salutatorian of her senior class. Thomas, of Brooklyn, N.Y., is a history major with a minor in political science. He was a win ner of a New York State Re gents Scholarship in high school. At NCC, the new president has been an associate justice of the Student Court and a delegate to the State Student Legislature. He has written for the campus newspaper and scored the highest mark made at NCC on the Graduate Record See MISS NCC 2A El '•* - V'- ei Hfl KENNEDY Mt. Vernon Baptist Church Men's Day To Be Observed The Annual Men's Day ob-1 servance of Mount Vernon Bap- j tist Church will be held on Sunday, October 30, beginning J with the Sunday School hour, i W J. Kennedy, Jr., will make j his Annual appearance at the | Sunday School hour, teaching all of the men of the church the Sunday School lesson. Ken nedy, a noted business, civic and religious leader, is the re tired president and chairman of the Board of Directors of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co. He is teacher of the Moore Bible Class of White Group Stages Fund Drive to Aid Brooke A group of North Carolini ans, headed by Alexander Barnes, veteran newspaperman, launched a fund raising cam paign here this week to aid Edward W. Brooke, Attorney- General for the State of Mass., to *in a seat in the United States Senate. Should Brooke be elected he will be the first Negro to serve in the top law making body since the turn of the century. Brooke has made an out standing record as a statesman. He is running for the seat va cated by Leverette Salstonstall. The committee is known -as "North Carolinians for the Election of Edward W. Brooke to the U. S. Senate." Other members of the com mittee include A. E. Harrison, Cicero Green. Linwood Thar rington and Mrs. Lucinda Har ris of Durham; A. J. Turner and A. E Brown, Raleigh; Rev. R. C. Sharpe and Walter Hoover, High Point; Sam John ston, Greensboro; Attorney J. L. Lassiter, Winston-Salem; Jo-i seph Pittman, Rocky Mount; ! Rev. C. M, Felton, Elizabeth City; Rev. F. L. Tyson, Nor wood; Prof. Isaac H. Miller, Sr., Salisbury and Pete Woods, Ba-! din. Persons desirous of making | a contribution are asked to | make the check to the N. C. Ed Brooke Committee and send I same to Cicero Green, P. O. i Box 165, Durham, N. C. 27702. j All monies collected will be! sent to the Ed Brooke Commit-1 tee, Boston, Mass. Believe in your goods and your customers will believe in them. To ; pretend that you don't I care is fallacious if you are j less than a hundred years old j and of the female sex. i MRS. HARGROVE Rock Baptist Church and Chair man of the Greater White Rock Development Committee, " Delivering the Men's Day Ad dress at the 11:00 a.m. service *ill be Fitz Turner of Law renceville, Virginia. Turner, a graduate of Virginia State Col lege with the B.S. and M.S. Degrees, is Principal of James Solomon Russell High School, Lawrenceville, Virginia. Widely known in educational circles of Virginia he has been elected President of the Virginia Teach ers' Association and will assume the duties of the office during SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29 Your Last Opportunity to - Register tor The November 8 Election } ■: a;. , « MR;/ '' f^K IMS' Jft 1 4 -*Hfl 4^ ' ~ ~ ~*rah. —. APPEARING FOR THE FIRST TIME (Brookline. Mass.) on the same program, Republican and Democratic candidal* for the U. S. Senate, Atty. Gen. Edward 38th Anniversary Mount Zion Pastor Set for Oct. 30-Nov. 4 The 38th Anniversary of the pastor of the Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Dr. William H. Fuller, will be observed here. October 30-November 4 and 6. i| DR. FULLER €>A TURNER the current school year A religious and civic worker he is a member of First Bap tist Church of Lawrenceville and a member of the Board of Trustees. He will be introduced by S. O. Paschall, teacher at Shep ard Junior High School. Pre siding over the service will be R. W. Dalton, President of the Layman's League, Lott Carey Foreign Missionary Convention and Retiring President, Lay man's League of the Church. Closing the day's festivities See MT. VERNON 2A PRICE: 15c ( Brooke, speaks and Endicott Peabody, (R) detent. They ap peared at the American Jewish J Congress at Longwood Tower* •in Brookline. (UPI Telephoto^ The opening sermon of the anniverary program will be preached Sunday, October 30, at 3:00 p.m. by Dr. J. R. Man ley, pastor. First Baptist Church of Chapel Hill. Dr. Man ley will be accompanied by hi? choir, officers, ushers nad mem bers. Rev. Leroy R. Reid, Jr.. will preside. At the 7:00 p.m worship hour, Rev. W. T Bige low, pastor of Greater St. Paul Baptist Church, accompanied by his choir, officers, ushers and members, will deliver the sermon. On Friday, November 4. 7:30 See ANNIVERSARY 2A Free SSO Cash For Churches Or Auxiliaries Save Purchases Slips From Carolina Times Advertisers RECEIVE SSO EACH MONTH FOR YOUR CHURCH OR CHURCH AUXILIARY The Carolina Times will do nate each month SSO in cash to the Church or church auxiliary in Durham saving from its members and friends the high est number in dollars and cents of cash register receipts or Appliance & TV cash purchase slips from ad vertisers in The Carolina Times listed below: A&P Stores Alexander Ford Eckerd Drug Stores Johnson Motor Company Long's Florist Model Laundry Mutual Savings 4 Loan Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. Mcßrooms Rentals Mechanics 4t Farmers Bank North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company New Method Laundry One Hour Martinizing O'Briant's Motor Providence Loan Co. Rigsbee Tire Sales Roscoe Griffin Shoe Co. Sam's Pawn Show Sanitary Laundry Union Ins. & Realty Co. Winn-Dixie Weavers Cleaners Baldwin's Coca-Cola Bot. Co. Roses
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1966, edition 1
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