f ■'•ZEBULON RECORD VOLUME 36. NUMBER 21. ZEBULON. N. C.. JUNE 29. 1961 POTTER PATTER Consider Children's Welfare By Eloise Potter It is very difficult to be impar tial when a controversial issue such as school consolidation is placed before the public Al though I have long favored the consolidation of Wakelon High School v/ith one or more neighbor ing high schools, I have tried to keep an open mind about whether combining two, three, or four schools would be best for the chil dren involved. Please notice that I said children—not property owners, businessmen, politicians, teachers, or school administrators. When Attorney Foster Finch began publicizing a Wendell-Zeb ulon high school, I thought his plan had much to commend it. Certainly such a possibility must be considered and compared to the four-school consolidation fav ored by the Wake County School Board. Monday night in Raleigh Mr. Finch had an opportunity to present his plan to the board, but he refused to reveal the details because supporters of the four school plan were present. He said that he did not want his plan “picked to pieces” before he could finish stating it. People from Knightdale', Wendell, and Roles ville agreed not to interrupt; but they asked an opportunity to give their views following Mr. Finch’s presentation. Still Mr. Finch re fused to divulge details of his plan. Several times Mr. Finch provoked laughter by calling the Banker Makes Agribusiness Tour Agribusiness advances in Mis sissippi, Texas and Louisiana dramatize the challenge facing the Southeast in efforts to increase per capita income, Robert D. Massey, cashier of PeoplesT3ank and Trust Co., said. Massey was one of 150 cara vaners who saw last week how gains in farm efficiency, in the processing and marketing of farm products and in community, in dustrial and ports development are providing increased income op portunities for people in the Deep South and Southwest. board, chairman “Your Honor.” There was also some restlessness during legal hair-splitting by Mr. Finch and Philip Whitley of Wen dell, but I sincerely believe ev eryone would have listened re spectfully if the spokesmen for the Zebulon-Wendell consolidation had stated their proposal forth rightly. I personally attended the coun ty board meeting Monday night not only to hear what Mr. Finch had to say but also to find out what people from Wendell, Knightdale, and Rolesville had to offer in the way of criticism and other plans. Since county school board meet ings are by law open to the pub lic, 1 am sure proponents of other plans will be present whenever Mr. Finch and Mr. Philip Whitley finally decide to speak their pieces. There has been much gossip in Zebulon about the meeting in Wendell which enabled Wendell, Knightdale, and Rolesville sup porters of the four-school consoli dation to decide on a tentative site for the proposed high school. The meeting was called only after Mr. Finch had indicated in a news story that people in those three towns did not want the four-school consolidation. The purpose of the meeting was to find out whether anyone did really favor the four school plan and to agree on a site deemed worthy of consideration by the county board. During the meeting in Wendell a few suggested that Zebulon be left out of the consolidation, but the majority believed that a Wen dell - Knightdale - Rolesville high school would be no better than a Zebulon-Wendell school. A site too near Knightdale was rejected as being unfair to Zebulon. Roles ville people asked only that the school be placed, if possible, on the road connecting their town with Highway 64. Finally an area on the Billy Weathers’ property jnst a little bit toward Rolesville from Martin’s Center was agreed upon because it is not too far from the geographic1 and population cen ters of the four school districts and is thought to be on the route of the proposed relocation of Hwy. 64. According to my county map, the area is (on existing roads) 3.8 miles from Wendell, 4.3 miles from (Continued on Page 2) Johnston County Native Awarded PhD Degree from Lehigh University The brother of Mrs. John Ihrie, John Furnifold O’Neal, was a warded a Ph. D. degree February 1 from Lehigh University, Beth lehem, Pennsylvania. He is a native of Johnston County, 'being bom in 1926 in the Antioch community in O’Neals Township. He is the son of Mrs. Adolphus O’Neal and the late Mr. O’Neal. After graduating from Glendale High School in 1943, he received a B. S. degree in science from the University of North Car olina in 1960. While at the Uni versity he was initiated into Phi Beta Kappa. ' He taught chemistry and biology John Fumifold O’Neal at the Berryhill High School near Charlotte for two years. In 1952 he received a Master of Education degree from the University. From 1952 to 1954 he was principal of the Efland Elementary School in Orange County, and from 1954 to 1957 he was principal of the Huntersville Junior High School in Mecklenburg County. O’Neal enrolled as a doctoral candidate at Cornell University in 1957. As a graduate assistant in the School of Education, he helped supervise elementary stu dent teachers for one year. In the fall of 1958 he was appointed as a part-time instructor at El mire College, Elmira, N. Y., where he taught educational psychology and supervised elementary stu dent teaching. Beginning in September, 1959, he assumed duties as an assistant professor of education at Lehigh University where he taught courses in school administration and cur riculum. Also at Lehigh he served as assistant to the head of the department of education and director of the summer sessions. He completed all requirements for the Ph. D. degree at Lehigh in September, 1960, but this was too late for a September degree, so the degree was awarded to him in February. He has been married five years and became a father on September 1, 1960. Twenty members of his family i attended his baccalaureate service I and Mrs. Ihrie was one of them. Wendell-Zebulon Consolidation Plan Not Presented at Meeting Tempers flared. Blood red faces addressed the medium. Words flowed like hot white heat. | The air conditioning, however,! purred gently in the ceiling of the! committee room of the Wake Coun ty Schools Building in Raleigh Monday night. Delegations from Wakelon, Wendell, Rolesville and Knight dale school districts were present for a mass meeting to discuss con solidation. Attorney Foster D. Finch, spokesman for the Wendell-Zebu lon group favoring the consolida tion of the two schools, declined to present their side to the Wake Popular Baptist Minister Dies Here on Saturday The Rev. A. D. Parrish died last Saturday morning about nine o’ clock at his home in Zebulon. He was discovered by his wife. Death was attributed to a heart attack. The Rev. Mr. Parrish was re cently released from Wendell Zebulon Hospital and was recup erating at his home. He had walked out into his back yard when he was fatally stricken. He was born December 5, 1900 on a farm in Earpsboro only a few miles south of Zebulon. He was the fourth of 10 children of the late Bryant and Elizabeth (Betty) Green Parrish. In an interview for The Record in April of 1955, he said he felt the call to preach when he was 20 years old. He was licensed to preach in 1929. Feeling the inadequacy of his meager education (he never fin ished high school), he began to take college work at Wake For est College and Duke University. He never received a diploma from either school because he lacked a high school diploma. He accepted his first pastorate in 1931, serving the Union Chapel Dance Saturday Zebulon Recreation Commission is sponsoring a fund raising dance Saturday night from 8:30 to 12 o’clock in the National Guard Armory. Music will be furnished by the Rhythmaires Band for round, square and bop dancing. Doors will open at 7:45. Admis sion will be $1 per person. County School Board. Finch said to Chairman of the County Board C. V. Whitley: “Your honor,” (which got a laugh from the audience) “we didn’t come here to argue but to present our proposal.” Finch described the atmosphere at the meeting as “hostile to our cause and we have a right to pre sent our side without any heck ling or agitation.” Chairman Whitley said: “We still don’t know what location the school will be. It is still in the early stages of consolidation. Our plan is to consolidate the four schools.” Philip Whitley, Wendell attor ney and ex-legislator of Wake Church. Since that time he was minister of 16 churches. From young manhood he was always vitally interested in re ligion. He began his religious work with his community church, Hales Chapel. His first sermon was preached at Hales in August, 1929. More than 2,000 converts pro fessed their religious faith under him during his ministry. And ac cording to his records, he con ducted more marriages and more funerals than any other minister in this vicinity. (Continued on Page 5) Hospital Notes The following were patients at Wendell-Zebulon Hospital Wed nesday morning. White Ine<- Wilson, Cabell Powers, Addie Winstead, C. B. Eddins, Zelma Pearce, Ruth Lewis, Mil ton Strickland, James H. Bunn, Mae Barham, Elaine Currin and Millard Strickland. Colored Pauline Himes and Naomi Mon tague. County, pointed out that the group was not given sufficient notice of the meeting to enable them to get everyone together to speak for their side. It was indicated by the Zebulon Wendell group that prominent ed ucators were contacted to be at the meeting but were unable to be i present. Finch argued there was a va i cancy on the school board not yet i filled which meant they would have to present their plan all over i again to the full board. I H. H. Eddins (Bubber) said: j “Mr. Whitley, are you biased?” I “I certainly am,” replied Whit ! ley. Hardin Hinton, chairman of | Wakelon School board, asked Wake County Superintendent Fred Smith if a meeting held June 1 was not to be a curriculum study meeting but turned out to be a meeting of talk about consolida tion. Hinton told Smith only the local school board was notified to attend the meeting, but when they got to the meeting there were delega tions from the other three schools. Randolph Hendricks, newly ap pointed Wakelon School board member, admitted he attended a mass meeting in Wendell of the schools of Wendell, Rolesville and Knightdale. He would not di vulge, however, who invited him. Mrs. Jack Potter urged that Finch present the alternate plan but it was not heard. The Zebu Ion-Wendell group asked that they be permitted to give their side later in a better atmosphere, preferably on “home ground” with a full board present. Chairman Whitley did not agree to such a suggestion, saying that the proper meeting place was in the Board building. There were heckles from the op ponents and Finch said no plan could be presented in such an at mosphere. Many persons of the Zebulon Wendell group felt they had won the round by postponement. No date was set for the next meeting. Shortly before the end of the meeting the lights went out and because of the tense feeling some persons declared fear that high tempers would break out. Wendell Mayor Elected President Of County Mayors' Association ! Wendell Mayor Ira H. Johnson J has been elected president of Wake County Mayors’ Association. He succeeds Ed Hales, mayor of Zebulon. Other officers for the 1961-62 year are Dr. W. H. Justice, mayor of Cary, vice president; and W. G. Enloe, mayor of Raleigh, sec retary-treasurer. Members of the association, be sides the above mentioned, are: W. R. Rand, mayor of Garner; S. L. Lane, mayor of Fuquay Springs; Ben Aycock, mayor of Wake For est; George T. Rogers, mayor of Apex; E. F. Harper, mayor of Knightdale; Irving M. Gattman, mayor of Holly Springs; H. E. Perry, mayor of Rolesville; and J. H. Robertson, mayor of Morris ville. The Mayors’ Association meets once a month at the Raleigh Y. M. C. A. Opportunities, possibili ties and problems of all the mu nicipal areas of Wake County are discussed in view of a prosperous future and growth of Wake Coun ty, for the welfare of everyone. New Secretary Miss Billy Faye Privette, a June graduate of Wakelon High School, became Dr. Lee Sedwitz’ secre tary June 6. Dr. Sedwitz is sur geon for Wendell-Zebulon Hos pital. Miss Privette, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Privette of Zebu Ion, will only be associated with the surgeon this summer. She plans to enroll in Watts Hospital School of Nursing in September.