+ WEATHER +
VOLUME 3
KE SAYS WAR NOT AROUND CORNER
-...in... ■ , »—— ■■■-
3’ DRUMMERS POUND IT OUT—Drummers to' Dalrympie, freshman; and Benny Wood, eighth
Dmm’a High School hand take time rat tor a grader. Bobhy Dixon, Junior, was not preeent
"poending rat" Shown, 0. to r.) are, qjtarfca when toe picture waa taken. (Daily Record Photo.
Maynard, aenior; J. L. Jaekaon, Junior; Johnny
Little River Baptists
To Convene Next Week
. ■' - - . i -
, -
f • ma» .
Lust Minute
day broke up wUh club* an angry
doaaraatration by toO Slorene ton
daaki rtamsrtag tor Trieote to re
■mu a UHwwy.
JfWICAN CITY Beltane
fftaoent against toe Roman Cato-
F/j church. ... '
KANSAS CITY jj UP Pod &1 tlwiti Ic t> 1
U. B. Marshal Willam Tatman
After Whole Month,,
Lana Happily Wed
AMESTERDAM, The Nether-
hi j -'tup
Holly Springs Baptist Church
near Broadway will be host to toe
78th session of toe Little River
Baptist Association on Tuesday,
gSS ft*
.Rev. C.E.Kttfftaii pastor oi- toe
ftfiit;ehurch which ajN*r>a«o in
October completed one of the most
various, fields of church work will
share the responsibility of outlining
challenging goals tor the year
ahead and evaluating toe record
of toe past year. .
The dp wotag devotional wH! be
led by Rev. Lester T. Marsh. Paster
(URUnuM on pHw two)
How ever, inter today Tabus re
laxed his order to permit newsmen
into .the administrative section of
the jail but still denying entrance
into the section holding the kid
napers to ail but official personnel.
Tatman last night recruited Hx
men from the North Kansas City
police force to strengthen the guard
(Continued <* page two)
Y * > r -A' ‘t' •
f -< « "
|»3-3,
r
, nil Vey ,a’Em ivaifaX at 1 tdiitmuw, yi/njsshft 1
Anti-Red Grow
I Fo ctA T
Attend Lectins
PANMUNJOM, Korea CUP)
Heavlly-rrmc d ’lndian
gukrfejoreed tmti-R^d^Chi
tend the first Communist
lectures today but the -pris
oners rejected repatriation
in overwhelming numbers.
* tV *uaJli? WS
told
dian guards would use force if ne-
The Indians, carrying rises and
swinging nightsicks, herded the
American engineers on*an
I AH but fivewf the first 300 Chi
{ The first nine'men who refused
|to go home came out of the in-
I terview huts and planted toe Chin
leee Nationalist flag in their com-
I . Lt. Gen. K. S. Thlmayya, Indian
j-j . '.V. ’’'
1 rs cfyfHj#fY Postef
I Has Encounter ?
GOP Leaders
Blame Benson
FnrWkrniKin
WASHINGTON UP Ev
ery Republican alarm Bell in
the country was bonging to
day thirty six hours aftfit
shaken administration poli
ticians got the bad news
from Wisconsin’s Ninth Dis
trict special congressional e
lection.
Democratic victory in that dis
trict. which long ha§ been nom
inally Republican, was being frank
ly accepted by organisation Repub
licans as a serious and significant
reverse. The OOP lost by an 8-1
margin some precincts which they
bad carried easily in 1853 and pre
viously. ' . 1
From one seasoned Republican
political worker in Wisconsin came
the word: “They don’t like Ike.”
If true, that would be disastrous
for toe Republican Party in next
year’s congressional elections.
President Elsenhower’* personal
popularity Is the basis of inu£h
confidence that Republicans can
retain and consolidate control of
toe Rouse and Senate next year.
Belief that Wisconsin returns in
dicated the voters no longer "Uke
Dee” was tated on toe fact the de
feated Republican candidate in
Wisconsin made support of the
PresUtaHt his big Issue and main
* WONT 1 ACCEPT I*
T? nm lhHnn hiAAinirl art
itepuoncan neaaquarters nere
would net accept that interpreta
tion 3ut * headquarters conceded
that fern unrest and
other f^S
Tire national committal will psjOl
so**steorfg Tgalnst the^administra
to*get t^* t stori
across. Some more talent will be
hired by toe committee for work
here and to the field. . ftTil
The aklee are cloudy for Mr.Ei
(Oraita—d 4n page twe) / | ;
WASHINGTON S<4.' Christ
mas remiader: The Defense D«j»-’
fjftrtlMßt akva iMWtala - far mAiw
bers as toe armed forces ovkr- -
■ be ' jOßsdled betweiesi ■
today and Nor. 15.
+ Record Roundup +
CITT COUNCIL - Dunn’S City
Council will meet tonight at t:*o
to discuss several items which have
! been hanginv in toe air tor several
| months. T fl, ' llw> *d in the business
1 ! will be a discussion of toe sign ortu
nance,,toe tag ordinance, and the
widening of Bdgerton Street.
POME A pack house and aeveral
thousand dollars worth Os tobacco
l SIA^ B accordyo°How-
II . 1. ji.. : , i-
•I
<\MJ ‘ \M M '# w C?
.w, j ■ .. y -
V IjW Cl l m {
*t l • \
*- ptpu&t la Duait v» i . i■ ui
Churchill Wins Coveted
Nobel Literature Prize
STOCKHOLM, Sweden UP
—The coveted Nobel s Prise
for Literature was awarded
today to British Prime Min
ister Winston Churehill who
is credited with “mdbolizing
the English during World
War II
It was an. open secret that the
TB-year-old Churchill, who has ded
icated his remaining years to the
cause of world peace, would have
preferred the Ntoel Peace pride.
But he was- genuinely moved,
friends said, when Inf rained of his
Selection for the world’s highest lit
erary distinction.
ChurchUl's choice oy toe Swedish
Academy of Literature, over such
contenders as America’s Ernest
Hemingway, is worth $33,840 in
nrize money.
The designation was made a
month earlier than usual to enable
Churchill to come to Stockholm in
person to receive toe prim from
King Gustav Adolf on Dec. 10.
Churchill, the first active states
man to he chosen tor the award,
received the prise for his war mem
oirs, “The Second World War” whose
five volumes bear sufch eloquent ti
tles as “The Gathering Storm” Vol
ume Ir "Their Finest Hour” Volume
II; “The Grand Allislhce” Volume
HI; "The Binge of Fate” Volume
IV and “Triumph and Tragedy,”
Volume V. ;
Churchill’s fame In stateocraft
tended to Obscure his remarkable
writing talents put he was, even be
fore the , turn of the century, ‘ton
highest paid war correspondent Os
hfc time ctod author of several brtt,
Uant books Ml military campaigns.
”«r Arthur Conan Day* create*
of .Sherlock Hoto**, was one oi his
■iliiilfnjik ■Tail innstaiirn GhurchiHs
resonant prose among the most ex
prtsshw of a .
Churchill’s wartteS spnechte rank
among toe greatest English writ-
erf
Inwall, Churchills name appears
w’ltetttar niutoe:'#vkr of 33 Pel.
mm op «Mhk>Btanra
mlhtaryautobiography and
Churchill's friends delighted in,
and We. enemies, fcarea and res
gtad. hla;tum of (trenchant
'His very tost address to the
Housp after he wtokppointed Prime
Minister ln IMO was regarded as
(CraiOnued e»,p»to,twe) ’ ’
tobacco to Sion H.
‘Bto&to.-A M*v Tew*
FIVE CENTS PER COPY
SHTWINSTCay tmJRCFgLL
Trustees Discuss
Campbell Problems
: President LesUe H. Campbell of Campbell College gave
the school’s Board of Trustees some “$64 questions” to
answer Tuesday evening of this week at their quarterly
RMfeting'at file Carolina Hotel ih Raleigh.
AS aepart es his recotnmenda
tions to the Board, presided over
by Earl.McD. Westbrook or.ipunn
qs. .chairman. President Campbell
also declared that “the ten year
expansion - program inaugurated
expansion program uutugurairu
some, years ago, proyiding for the
expenditure of «lAOB,W. seemed to
many fantastic, but already that
sum wems inadequate in many
respects to provide minimum re
quirements. I remind you that fu
ture security requires that we have
a plant sufficiently adequate in
quality and sise to insure readi
ness for meeting greater oppor
tunities and for entering wider
doors of opportunity that tnay con
fcoijt tfi tomorrow."
In posing the "*«* questions” to
the trn*tees, Pre»ident Campbell
asked among other things:
FARM DISCUSSION
I.' What steps should be taken
now with, respect to flht Campbell
be sold or leased: .that It could be
expanded and strengthened as a
atocTmight be utilted L a tea^J
f®* 1 agriculture,, tramiy Tor terminal
Iktuden . * v
-1 accommodate 100 students, to be
. made ready, for the opehing in
September 1964. Expansion of the
I farm program, also was approved
1 in spirit, with instructions given
» for implementation of the proposal.
He Had The Cash ,
Stayed In Jail
~v ... m
One of Judge H. Paul Stric
land’s customers In Recorders Court
this morning brought a blank
check sealed in an envelope to pay
ids fine, but he didn’t get to go
home. The Judge ordered Jack Mc-
Neill. Negro held overnight to sober
up.
Jack came into court to face
• *
Uvljpi , ”
Ammons is being honored for hi*}
outstanding wbrk for the P*st l7|
ss&^r&ssq
bacco production ip the am **•’
around. «0 pounds, :>er acr*, % and
around 1,280 pounds
A Vurim- yewi ift a*BSettH
The Record.
' a
Gets Results
-n-t
NO. *2O
President On
Speaking Tour
In Farm Belt
By MERRIMAN SMITH ;
UP White House Writer
ABOARD EISENHOWER
TRAIN (UP) President
Eisenhower opened his tour j
of the Middle Western* farm
belt today with advice to
the nation not to be “fear- j
ful that war is just around 1
the comer.”
Later at Defiance, 0., laying toe
cornerstone for a new library at
the Defiance College, the President
said there could be “no validity"
of international agreements unless
they were based on “knowledge of 1
the people.”
At Defiance, the President paid
particular tribute to the late Sen.
Robert A. Taft (R-O.) Sitting on
the platform behind the President
were Sen. John W. Bricker (R-O)
and Ohio’s Democratic governor,
Frank J. Lausche.
The President in an oblique
fashion proposed a secondary sys
tem of education on the local level
and extended beyond toe high
school level. He did not spell out
his plan, but he seemed to be .re
ferring to some system of Junior
colleges. He did not suggest how
such an educational gap between
high school and formal college be
financed.
The President, after ah overnight
train run from Washington, made
his first appearance of toe day at
Willard, 0., where a crowd of about
3,000 persons turned out to greet
him at a service step for the nipe
car White House special.
“There are many kinds of prob
lems that beset us in this world
them is overshadowed by- Can we
have a world of decency. Justice
and peace, or must we be always
tearful that war is just around
toe corner?
SAYS PEACE POSSIBLE
"I believe that American can
bring about a situation in which
we can have peace. That is what
we are working tor.” -
The first formal speech on Eis
enhower’s schedule was set tor De
fiance, O , today. From* Defiance he
will go to Kansas CRv. Mo., to
deliyer a major farm policy spst'ik
to toe Future Farmers of Alteri
ca convention.
The President left Washington
by train Wednesday night.
He wIH speak in Kansas City’s
I Municipal Auditorium at # p. m.-
Mr. Eisenhower Invaded the
(Continued so pack *wa) ■.*
“After* hesring too testimony <|
the officers from toe Police Depart*
in jail, suspended or mot.