Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Nov. 5, 1966, edition 1 / Page 3
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1•* J. J, hi*!* >?•«. • P i fLM ■L .iJ^^jmt 1V vfl vtfl #■ HI -=i ■ " a lH Hf ■ ■ _ a MAN RUNS BiRSIRK —(Chica- go) Lant Odum ahouts and flghta with polieaman a* ha it draggad to a paddy wagon h«ra Homecoming at SALISBURY Homecoming will be observed at Livingstone College Nov. 11-13, with a big weekend crammed full of thrills and gala events which promise to make this the most memorable Homecoming in the 86-year history of the college. Highlight of the festive oc casion will be the dedication of the Alumni Stadium on the campus constructed at a cost approximating $75,000 with funds contributed by the Gen eral Alumni Association. Dedi cation ceremonies are sched uled for 1 p.m. immediately preceding the game on Satur day Other activities planned for the 'ole grads •will include an NEW! TRY USI Samtone BOURBON 1111*050 DELUXE PINT Bourkii 11 O if ULgM? Kentucky 111 £» Bourbon U)hiskey II THE BOURBON DE LUXE DISTILLERY COMPANY. LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY. 86 PROOF CONTAINS 49% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS from tha Curtis Candy Company plant whara ha ran baraork and killod ona of hit fallow omploy aat and woundod two mora with Livingstone Set All-College Assembly at 10 a. m. on Friday, an "Old Timers Football Game" at 4:30 p.m. featuring stars of by-gone years, social affairs and an Ath letes Dinner in the Aggrey Union, Homecoming Parade at 11 AM. Saturday amd '* big half-time show during the foot ball game. Livingstone, currently one of the leaders in the powerful CIAA, will host the Pirates of Elizabeth City State College for the game. Alumni and Bear rooters will have the oppor tunity of watching Alfred Ty ler, leading passer in the CIAA and Livingstone's greatest ever, perform on the gridiron. The half-time show will fea gunaheta. Polica aaid that Odvm had baan firod ahortly bafora ha want barsark. (UPI Talaphoto) For Nov. 11-13 ture mass band demonstrations, including the Livingstone Col lege band in its premiere per formance, the crowning of Miss Livingstone and Miss Alumni and the introduction of alumni dignitaries. The football game will be fol lowed by the annual Alumni Dance at which time a 1967 Ford Mustang will be awarded in the Alumni Fund-Raising campaign. Homecoming at Liv ingstone is always a colorful and exciting event to watch and this year it will have added colored due to the calibre of the football team, the new marching band and dedication of the Alumni Stadium. W. M. Gilliam, Durham, executive with N. C. Mutual, is alumni presi dent. Advertising is the art of per suading a buyer that what you have to sell is worth more to him than his money. The younger generation, God bless them, dosen't understand what the word "work" means in most cases. Alexander Protests Moore's Putting N AACP in Klan Category CHARLOTTE—KeIIy M. Alex ander, President of the North Carolina National Association for the Advancement of Color ed People said this week that the North Carolina Conference of NAACP Branches sent a spe cial telegram to Governor Dan K. Moore protesting the refer ence of the NAACP in the same category with the Ku Klux Klan. It '*as reported that Gover nor Moore said in a press con ference in Raleigh, on Tuesday, October 25, 1966, "I don't feel that any of these political ac tions groups have any part in a State Fair," and he classified these groups and named the NAACP and the Ku Klux Klan in the same category. The telegram sent to Gover nor Moore by the NAACP stat ed: "We, the officers and mem bers of the North Carolina State Conference of Branches, National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple protest vigorously the un just and unfair sensitive refer ence and classification of the NAACP in the same category as the Ku Klux Klan because we are very sensitive as to such a classifictaion. ADVANCE USE QUINIDINE PROVES GREAT AID TO HEART SUFFERERS NEW YORK —A drug long used to subdue dangerous heart beat irregularities may also be used effectively in preventing them in the first place, there by helping more patients re cover from heart attacks. The drug, quinidine, a chemi cal relative of malaria-fighting quinine, is currently used to treat heartbeat irregularities after they appear. Animal ex periments reported today at the Scientific Sessions of the a research team from Duke University, point to the possi bility that it might be pre scribed in advance—perhaps at the onset of a "coronary"—as a means of heading off rhythm disturbances. Arrhythmias are a major cause of death in the first hours and days after a heart attack strikes. To explore the possible value of quinidine in preventing ar rythmias, the Duke researchers worked with pigs in '.vhich they induced heart attacks com parable to those which occur in man. The pig was chosen as the experimental animal be cause its coronary circulation is similar to man's. Dr. Victor W. Hurst, spokes man for the Duke team, said that of 17 pigs treated with quinidine, seven (35%) sur Yivived total shut down of the main coronary artery, compared with three of 20 pigs (15%) not given quinidine. The drug also increased survival time Clare Ward to Take Singers To Viet Nam PHILADELPHIA Gospel singer Clara Ward will take her troupe to Viet Nam for a month's tour of the battle front to entertain the soldiers, she announced this week. Perturbed over the fact that few Negro performers have made the journey to the Far East nation here American and Gls of other nations are fight ing on the battlefields, Miss Ward canceled out five weeks of engagements to take up the offer of the United States State Department and the United Service Organization. She will leave from Los Angeles on Nov. 9 and begin the tour of Army, Navy and Air Fare installations on Nov. 14. "Until a few weeks ago I never realized how desperately performers were needed over there to boost the morale of our fighting men," she said. "I feel that the Ward Singers can help give the men a touch of home as our music is religious and our special treatment of their favorite hymns and gospel songs will help uplift their spirits." Starting at the age of 3, Clara Ward first lifted her voice in song at Philadelphia's Ebenezer Baptist Church under the guidance "-of her mother, Mrs. Gertrude Ward. Since then, first with her mother heading the aggregation and headlining the Ward singer* herself, Miss Ward has traveled throughout the world. The warmth and the style of the group has been happily re ceived from such diverse audi ences in Israel, the Newport, Jan Festival and crap shooters in Las Vegas gambling dens. NAACP is an American or ganization with a 57 year rec ord of effective achievements, unmatched by the efforts of and accomplishments of any Civil Rights organization anywhere in the world. NAACP is non partisan. NAACP has always worked within the framework of the U. S. Constitution and it has never utilized or ad vocated violence to achieve its goals. NAACP has never re quested space at the annual State Fair and has no desire to do so. The State Convention of the NAACP met in Raleigh, the same time the fair was in prog ress but the NAACP did not dis grace North Carolina with in flammatory remarks about any ethnic group. NAACP displayed the essence of fairness and jus tice to all. In the future ve hope that the NAACP will not be referred to hy the Governor of our State in the same category as the Ku Klux Klan." The telegram was signed by Kelly M. Alexander, President of the North Carolina State Conference of NAACP Branches and Rev. J. T. McMillan, Chair man, NAACP State Conference Church Committee. among the animals that did not recover In this group, animals treated with quinidine lived an average of 31.3 hours compared with 19 7 hours for non-treated. Associated with Dr. Hurst in the study were Drs. James J. Morris, Jr., Donald B. Hackel and Henry D. Mcintosh. Ambassador's Wife to Visit NCC Campus Lady Sara Lou Carter, the wife of Sir John Carter, ambas sador of the nc*- Republic of Guyana to the United States, will be the visiting lecturer for the North Carolina College De partment of Geography on Fri day, November 11, according to Dr. Theodore R. Speigner, chairman of the department. During the visit, sponsored by the college's Department of ■jM Wmws&sm -«Xv :: :•.: .-.■X'sM-x XvX •••:•: SEE THE ALL NEW | Quality 1967 Ford Line t 1% and Before you move check The Fabulous Mustang SALE AT JtieXfrnderFOßD * CHECK THE STYLE 1 * CHECK THE QUALITY ] I * CHECK THE SALE PRICE | Check The "Original" | Mustang at ; IViiit th« Lot With th« A-l Sign for the * Finest Used Car i wL. ' WSt'-" JjZutt w Mr r«h ' *K* KING AND SHWIVER IN CON-. FERENCE—(AtIanta) 1 S»r- j gent Shriver (R), director of th« I Office of Economic Opportu- j nity ,huddles with Dr. Martin Luther King in a reported at- Geography and the Committee on Visiting Lecturers, she will talk with small groups, visit classes, and deliver a public address. Lady Carter, a native North Carolinian and a former Wil kesboro third grade teacher holds the B.A. degree from Bennett College. She has had wide experience in the fields of fashion and radio. As a fash ion model, she has appeared on more than 26 covers. She has also had eight years experience in broadcasting, the last four as conductor of a daily inter view-type radio program in Gu yana. The' program,' called "Sara Salon," lasted for 1 1/2 hours. She has conducted two children's programs called "Something for the Children" and "Welcome on Earth." Lady Carter is scheduled to give the banquet address for the twentieth annual meeting of the North Carolina Resource- Use Education Conference at 6 p.m., Thursday, November 10, at the Blair House. She will be introducted to the convention at the third general session at 2 p.m. in B. N. Duke Audito rium, said Dr. Speigner, state chairman of the conference. Church-goers do not neces sarily lead model lives, but, on the average, they are our best citizens. SAT., NOVEMBER 3, 1066 THE CAROLINA TIMES tempt to solve . dispute .rising I f||# QEO cut off fund, to »h# out of Mississippi's Poverty ch||(j D(v , |opm(ni Groop oi Program. King wa, an un.n- MllliMippi (Up , T .lephoto) nounced and apperently unex- pected attendant at the confer-] Some people say a lot by not ence, which came about after | talking much It's easy to own a ■ BUICK I from I SPECIAL DELUXE 2-DH SPORT COUPE JOHNSON MOTOR CO. 323 E. MAIN STREET N. C. Deder No. 680 3A
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1966, edition 1
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