The Fraiiklln Times : CO/ 1 Puhli?h?H Pueru Tuotrlau A Thurc/Jau i ^ r- *" "" " ? Published Every Tuesday & Thursday \ Servmg All Of Franklin County Tel. GY6-3283 Ten Cents Louisburg. X. C.. Thursday. November 14. 1968 (Ten Pages Today) 99th Year-Number 78 Courthouse Project Nears Completion Workmen are shown above rushing to conclusion the cleanup and renovations to the county courthouse Wednesday. Unofficial estimates say the structure will be ready for occupancy by county departments by December 15. The new District Court, slated to take over on December 3, may find itself conducting business in the Louisburg Armory until the court rooms are readied in the courthouse. Ceilings and floors are apparently the only uncompleted portions of the $200,000 renovation project. . , Staff photo by Clint Fuller. Commissioners Endorse Moss, Benson Two Mentioned For Highway Appointment ii may oe laie next spring neiore an appointment is made, but interest is already running high over the selection of a Fifth Division Highway Commis sioner by Governor-Elect Bob Scott. Two names are being mentioned in connection with the appointment, thus far. Clifton L,. Benson, Kaleigli building supply executive and a former Com missioner under Governor Terry San ford. is believed to have the inside track. Some reports say the appoint ment is Benson's for the asking. Some even hint that he may get the Chair man's job. The second name has come to light in recent days. Tom W. Ellis. Hender son automobile dealer and Chairman of the Vance County Board of Com missioners. is being mentioned as a possible candidate for the post. Benson was active in the recent campaigns of the Lt. Governor and Ellis managed the four-county area of Power Interruption Both Carolina Power and Light Co. officials and officials of Wake Electric Membership Corporation announced today that due to the weather condi tions last Sunday. November 10. the power interruption scheduled for the area . wai postponed until Sunday. November 17. Weather permitting, the power will be interrupted this Sunday from 5 to 7 A.M. in the Louisburg. Moulton. Ingle side. Gold Sand, Centerville and Mapleville areas. The interruption is necessary, according to the announce ments. to make emergency main tenance repairs. If weather prevents the accomplishment of such work this Sunday, the next proposed date is Sunday, November 24. Vance, rranklin. Warren and Granville in the primary and also worked for Scott in the general election. A report out of Henderson says that Ellis is thus far not an active candidate, but that friends plan to urge his appointment by the incoming Governor. It is also reported that "If Ellis is pressed for the highway post, he is expected to have support of political leaders in counties in the Vance County area". The report does not spell out which areas or which leaders. In the neighboring Fourth Division, consisting of Halifax. Nash. Edge combe and others. Enfield business man C. D. Moss is being mentioned as a possible appointment. Some mention has also been made that Franklin might be moved from the Fifth to the Fourth Division. Franklin is now in the division with Wake and Durham, two of the largest counties in the state. Many Franklin leaders have expressed dissatisfaction with Franklin road allo cations in past years and blamed some of the problem on the fact that Wake and Durham have been getting the bulk of. allotments for the entire seven ?county! division. In a\special meeting here Wednes day afternoon, the Franklin County Board of Commissioners endorsed both Benson and Moss for appoint ments to the Highway Commission. The Board noted that Moss was not from the Fifth Division counties, but that he was a friend to Franklin County. Benson's endorsement is for the Division post which includes Franklin. The present Fifth Division Commis sioner is J. B. Brame. a Durham paper firm executive, who was appointed by Governor Moore in 1965 and has served since that time. Brame has been a popular Commissioner in the Divi sion and Franklin County has received more road funds under the Moore administration than any other. Before Brame, Benson was in charge of the Fifth Division, under the Sanford administration, having been appointed on June 8. 1961 when J. Lee White of Concord resigned. Stanley S. Betts of Henderson was on the Commission briefly under Gover nor Hodges, having been named on August 4, 1960. In 1957, Governor Hodges re vamped the Commission, changing its policies for one of individual Commis sioner rule to an overall full Commis sion authority. Prior to 1957, each Commissioner was responsible for his division. After the Hodges shake-up, the full Commission has had to ap prove all highway projects. Prior to Betts. the division was represented by two Commission chair men. William T. Joyner of Raleigh was named head of the Commission by Governor Hodges. Later. Hodges named J. Melville Broughton. Jr. chair man. During the Umstead-Hodges ad ministration. Donnie A. Sorrell of Dur ham was Fifth Division Commissioner. Except for the brief stint by Vance County's Betts, the area has been represented by either Wake or Durham politicians at least since 1953 and perhaps longer. A small county has not placed a representative on the Com mission in this Division in recent his tory. Should Ellis and his Vance sup porters succeed in their efforts, it would be a first in modern politics. Edward Best To Get New Cafeteria The Board of Education has re ceived information that the State Board has approved a project to build a new cafeteria at Edward Best High School. Meeting here in special session Wednesday night, the Board directed Supt. Warren Smith to proceed with plans to erect the new structure as soon as possible. No cost estimate was given awaiting plans from the archi tect. The building is to be financed from State Bond funds. The Board also viewed plans for the new Methods and Material Center to be built behind the present Education office. Work on this federally-financed structure is expected to begin shortly. Smith was authorized to go before the State Review panel later this month to seek approval on a Science and Home Economics building at the Bunn High School. The Board gave Smith authority to take appropriate measures to get ade quate fi?t Inside ?ettain buildings being used at present for purposes other than normal. At Edward Best, the Board was told, students are being served lunch in the gymnasium at present and the heat is said to be inadequate on cold days. The Board also passed a motion authorizing the purchase of additional bleachers for the gymnasiums at Bunn and Youngsville and struck out a bill for some over $600 owed the Board by the Louisburg High School for bleachers installed there two years ago. A lengthy discussion was held on the National School Lunch Program. Recently additional funds have been made available to North Carolina from the federal agency due to scarcity of surplus commodities. Local school authorities have been asked to draw up criteria under which certain children could obtain reduced price lunches, using these funds. A number of ques tions arose in the discussion and the matter was tabled until answers could be found. Supt. Smith was instructed to confer with officials in Raleigh before the next meeting of the Board. Soil Sample Week Slated Members of the Franklin County Agricultural Workers at their monthly meeting in October designated that from November 18 through 22, 1968, as Soil Sample Week in Franklin Coun ty. A special effort will be made during this week to encourage pro ducers to take soil samples of their cropland to determine liming needs. A special meeting will be held on Mon day afternoon November 18. 1968. at the Agriculture building n Louisburg. N. C. beginning at 4:00 p.m. to discuss soil testing and benefits from the use of lime. Interested persons including ACP Vendors, Agricultural workers, and farmers are encouraged to attend the a meeting. Soil testing boxes and other material may be obtained at the Coun ty Extension Service located in the Agriculture building in Louisburg. N. C. Samples may be returned to the Agriculture building or mailed or car ried directly to the Soil Testing Divi sion in Raleigh. Producers who wish to apply lime on their farmland should apply it as soon as possible since it will take from 3 to 6 months for the lime to be effective. Funds are available through he ASCS Office to help producers pay the cost involved in applying lime on their farmland. Producers who receive gov ernment assistance to carry out this practice must have the land seeded in an eligible grass or legume by the end of 1969. Fescue is most commonly used to satisfy this requirement. N L R B Panel Affirms Trial Examiner Ruling In Sportswear Appeal A three-member panel of the National' Labor Relations Board has affirmed the June 27. 1968 findings of Trial Examiner Harry R. Hinkes in the case involving the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union of America and the Louisburg Sportswear Plant. The Decision and Order, released today over the signatures of Frank W. McCulloch. Chairman. Gerald A. Brown and Howard Jenkins. Jr.. members of the panel, states. "The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions, cross-exceptions, and briefs, and the entire record in these cases, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner with modifications noted....". The three-member panel noted two modifications in^ its ruling. First it said that "In view of the numerous other vinlatinnr U7~ f. ..J U ? luiauuua nc iiiiu 11 uiiiicvcsaaiy iu consider whether.. ..the showing of the film "Women Must Weep" constituted an independent violation.. ..and there fore do not adopt the Trial Examiner's finding in that respect". The second modification, the panel agreed that Sports wear's refusal to bargain with the I n ion was a violation and orders the Louisburg firm to bargain "upon request" with the If, 'II I. It alstt found that the I nion "represented a majority of the employees" and says this is true without regard to certain dis puted union cards. The \LKIi further says that " the I nion at times material herein was the duly designated representative of a majority of the employees in the appropriate suit '-V Following the Hinkes decision on June 27, attorneys for the Sportswear firm issued a brief statement in which it was said that they "have studied the decision and consider it erroneous. On that basis the company has instructed their attorneys to appeal the deci sion". While there has been no state ment from company officials today, it is expected that the case will now be taken to the United States Appelate Open House Announced The School of Agriculture and Life Sciences and School of Forest Re sources at North Carolina State Uni versity will hold Open House Satur day, November 16, according to C. T. Dean. Jr., County Extension Chair man. The program will begin with registration at the Coliseum at 9:00 a.m. and last until 12:00 Noon. Ar rangements have been made for he group to see the Florida State Univer sity-N.C. State University football game at Carter Stadium, beginning at 1:30 p.m. Dean said the Open House is held specifically to help make serious minded high school juniors and seniors more aware of career opportunities in the fascinating fields of forestry, agri culture and the biological sciences. Parents of the students, along with their teachers and counselors, are in vited to attend. Dean said anyone desiring addi tional information on the event should contact his office in the agriculture building. Court. It could eventually end up in the U. S. Supreme Court. One com pany spokesman said in June that it would probably be two years before final disposition of the matter is seen. The \malgamatcd (.' lothin g II orkers of \merica. \l l. CIO brought a multitude of charges against the local /dual in the aftermath of efforts to unionize the plant employees in October. 1 967. The H.'li 1 sent organiz ers into Louisburg tm July l(K 19 67. There followed a number of meetings, both public and private, as a drive uas staged .to obtain signatures on unum curds. The claim by the I nion that 101 Sporlsweur employee^ signed curds granting the U.'ll I the right to bargain for them, uas upheld bv llinkes. In the October 12 election, 121 employees voted against unionization of the plant and only 39 voted in favor. The fact that Union support dwindled has been attributed to what the ruling calls coercion by plant officials and local people prior to the election. The Hinkes' ruling listed 16 steps to be taken by the company and ordered Sportswear to "cease and desist" from refusing to bargain collectively. ..with the ACWA; discouraging membership in and activity on behalf of ACWA; and surveilance of union meetings and activities. It also ordered the company to stop Bunn Water Session Set Ken Schubart. Director of the Franklin County Industrial Develop ment Commission, announces a meet ing scheduled for Wednesday evening. November 20th, at 7:30 p.m. in the Bunn High School Cafeteria. The meeting has been called to discuss the Bunn Municipal water pro ject in detail. It will give the residents of Bunn an opportunity to ask ques tions relative to the plan before the municipal bond election. This election will be held in early January. Present at the meeting will be the representatives of both Pierson and Whitman Engineers and the Commerce and Industry Division of the North Carolina Department of Conservation and Development. "The importance of this meeting can not be stressed too much; so make plans now to attend." Schubart said. promising or. granting financial bene fits to discourage unionization; inter rogating employees concerning uniofi activities and changing its grievance procedures to discourage unionization. Tin1, order prohibits I lie com fMinv from threatening strikes, job hiss, riolenee and /tro/terly damage or serums harm us the See SPORTSWEAR Page 4 Nease To Lecture On Moon Probe DR. FELTON NEASE L)r. Kelton Nease, Chairman of the Biology Department of Louisburg Col lege. will give an illustrated lecture on the "Proposed 1969 Manned Moon Mission," Monday, November 18, at 8 p.m. in the College Auditorium. The public is invited. As a member of the American Association for Advancement of Science, and the North Carolina Academy of Science, Nease has been active in both research and lecturing on topics in geology, marine life, vasuclar plants, ecology, and paleon tology. He headed the Botannical sec tion of the Ecological Survey for the Oak Hidge Nuclear Plant, and reported on the "Fission Product Contamina tion and its Effect on Vegetation." Nease. a native of Oklahoma, re ceived his Ph.D at Duke University in 1953, having previously taught in high school, and served in the Medical Corps of the Air Force. He is married to the former Pauline Ligon of Dur ham. Wind Damage Heavy winds in the Louisburg area Wednesday afternoon ripped the metal awning off the laundromat on South Main Street. Damage is shown above. No other reports of damage have been received. Staff photo by Clint Fuller.