(OsaihsA Generally fair and cool again To night. Tuesday partly cloudy along the coast, otherwise generally fair and warm DUNN STORES OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAYS #MLUME 14 telephone sm • in’ — *n - nit DUNN, N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 7, 1964 FIVE CENTS PER COPT NO. US AT GOLDWATER Enrollment Of Over 12,000 Expected Schools To Reopen Tomorrow Five Negroes To Integrate Dunn Schools School bells will ring again to morrow in Harnett as classes are resumed in the county’s ten school districts. Harnett Supt Glenn Proffit said today that everything is in read iness and predicted a total enroll ment of between 12 and 13,000 stu dents. This is about the same as last year. For the first time in history. Ne groes will integrate Dunn’s white schools. None applied for admission in any other district of the county. Three will be admitted to Dunn High School, two in the 11th grade and one in the 12th grade, Princi pal A. B. Johnson said today. One will be admitted to the second grade at Magnolia Avenue School and one will enter the sixth grade at Wayrie Avenue School. Indian enrollment at Dunn schools will also be increased from about 30 to 60, resulting from clo sure of the Maple Grove Indian school here due to lack of suffici ent students to keep it operating. Indians have attended local schools for the past three "years. No incident* or disorder of any kind is expected at either of the three Dunn schools to be integraed. It was disclosed today that three FBI agens were in Dujjn on Fri day when the five Negro children registered for classes. They were summoned by the Rev B. B. Felder, head of the Harnett NAACP and father of three of the children to be admit ted. The minister told the FBI he had received a telephone threat And feared there would be trou ble. Questioned by the FBI agents sent here, however, he admitted the phone call was received two or three weeks ago, about the time the case was being aired in Fed eral Court, and that he had re ceived no other indication of trou ble. Registration of the five Negro children went practically unno ticed, and officials expressed both ;j hope and confidence there would | be no difficulty when classes be I gin. (Students will report at 8:20 Tuesday morning for four hours, to receive books, classroom assign ments. etc. The first full day of school will be on Wednesday. BUCK BAKER WINS PARLINGTON. S. C. — Buck Baker, driving a Dodge, won the Southern 500 stock car race this afternoon. At the half, Richard Petty was leading, with Jim Pardue second and Baker was third. The winner is the father of Junior Baker, another famed driver. PRAYER SERVICE On Tuesday morning at 10:00 L. L. Coats, deacon and layleader of the First Baptist Church, will address the business men’s prav er service in the conference room of Home Savings & Loan. As us ual, it is open to the public. THE BEATLES AGAIN — The ageless battle of the sexes continued in San Francisco as some 10 young men encountered a superior force of 150 young women. The boys represented the “Official Beatle Haters Assn;” the girls the ‘‘Bring Back the Beatles Committee” Tomatoes (see arrow) were the in struments of war. (NBA Telephoto) ' * Rioting Occurs At Three Beaches "An Army Of Hoodlums" HAMPTON BEACH, N. H. (UPI) — A swiftly mobilized force of se veral hundred police and National Guardsmen routed ‘‘an army of hoodlums” from this seaside re sort early today after a night of rioting and destruction The ‘‘hoodlums,” estimated var iously at 7,000 to 10,000 ravaged the oceanfront in a frenzied reign of terror that left dozens Injured, untold property damage and more than 100 rioters under arrest. The rioting started Sunday night. It ended In the early morning hours after law enforcement offi cers bashed heads and fired tear gas. Under the personal supervision of Gov. John W. King, who arrived At Least 20 In N. C. 416 Road Deaths The nation’s death toll for the long Labor Day holiday weekend passed 400 today and the National Safety Council warned the worst hours were still to come. A United Press International count at 12:30 p.m. (EDT) showed at least 416 persons dead in traffic since the holiday started at 6 p.m. local time Friday. The breakdown: Traffic 416 Drowning 49 Planes 12 Miscellaneous 48 Total 525 Worth Carolina entered the final day of the Labor Day weekend with at least 20 accidental deaths — in. (Continued on Page Six) Has Sworn Against Castro Action Miller Claims LBJ In Secret Deal SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) — President Johnson’s administration “has sworn in an agreement with the Soviet Union that it shall never take action against Castro", Wil liam E. Miller OOP vice presiden tial nominee, charged Monday in a Labor Day address prepared for delivery here. Miller said that President John son is thinking in terms of accom mcdation with the Communists In stead of trying to win the cold war. Apparently seeking a allay De mocratic allegations that Sen. Bar ry M Goldwater is "trigger happy,’’ Miller said: "No man in America hates war more than Barry Goldwater.’’ "He detests the very thought of being a wartime president,” Miller (Continued on Page 8ix) Described As "Giant And Dangerous" Dora Heads Toward U.S. I MIAMI (UPI) — Giant and dan gerous Hurricane Dora moved men acingly toward the U. S. mainland with ISO mile an hour winds to 1 V' r The Weather Bureau warned re idents of the Georgia and Caro ina coasts to ke«P posted on its movements. “The predicted movement of the hurricane would put the center within less han 300 miles of the south Atlantic coast by late Tues day with the possibility of gales reaching some sections of the coast between the Carolina* and Florida by Tuesday night,” a midday ad visory said. Meanwhile, tropical storm Ethel grew to hurricane strength with top winds of 80 m.p.h. Forecast ers said earlier predictions that Ethel, trailing in Dora’s wake, (Continued on Page 6; shortly before midnight still dress ed in the tuxedo he was wearing at a Manchester dinner party, po lice and guardsmen flushed the rioters out of parked cars, back yards and the beach and literal ly ran them out of town. Chased Across Line The officers, more than 400 strong at the end, chased the youths down Route 1A leading into Massachusetts clubbing laggards on the backside and arresting any who offered resistance. None was allowed to drive away Those in cars were forced to aban don their vehicles and trot out of town on foot with the others. Massachusetts state police await ed the routed rioters at the state line. Some Reported Shot An official at Exter Hospital in (Continued on Page Six) Opens Campaign At Big Labor Rally In Detroit DETROIT (UPI) — President Johnson opened his campaign a gainst Sen. Barry M. Goldwater to day by insisting "there is no such thing as a conventional nuclear ■weapon.” The GOP candidate had suggested tactical atomic arms be considered conventional. Johnson sounded the campaign keyhote of “prosperity, justice and pce.te” in a speech prepared for a Labor Day rally in Detroit’s Ken nedy Square, traditional launching ground for Democratic election rac e» The President hit directly at Goldwater’s proposal for the su preme allied commander in Europe to be given authority to order bat tlefield use of tactical nuclear wea pons in case of Soviet attack. Only the President now has this authority. Without naming his opponent, Johnson sard "make no mistake. ; There is no such thing as a conven- , tional nuclear weapon. “For 18 peril-filled years no na tion has used the atom bomb a gah»st another. To do so now is a political decision of the highest or der. It would lead us down an un (Continued on Page Six) Weekend Fires Destroy Cars Two cars were destroyed by firs over the weekend, according to ! Howard M. Lee, secretary of the 1 Dunn fire department. The frist fire occurred at 7:25 ' Saturday night when a 1957 Buick was stalled on the ACL Railroad j tracks north of Dunn where Cle-1 veland Street crosses the tracks, j Lee sai dthe carburetor exployed and set the car afire. Clarence McLean, an employee of John A. McKay Mfg. Co. is owner of the vehicle. Insurance covered the loss. Twenty men answered the alarm. DODGE BURNS The brakes on a 1961 Dodge caused the fire which destroyed the vehicle on 1-95 Sunday about 12:30 p.m. Dr. Theordore G. Bo ghanis of Brideport, Conn., is the owner of the car. The car was valued &t $1100. Lee said five men answered the car while eight remained at the station. News Roundup DALLAS