J FOUR LEVETTE AND. EVANS APPOINTED DIRECTORS (Continued from Page 1) He has served as tournament director and commissioner of several state-wide events, such as swimming, marb'.es, table tennis, and softball. In 1930, he was a local playground leader and he began fuUtime work with the department in 1930 as boys' work director. For a number of years he was athletic director at Windsor Center. A Greensboro native, Lcvette has taken special work in arts and crafts and social recreation and holds a recreation certificate from the North Carolina Recreation Society. Ife is also holder o? a certificate from the International City Managers Association. SCHOOL OF MISSIONS AND MASTERS DEGREE (Continued from Page 1) Green Dixon, Granite Falls; Bculah Costner, Stanley; Aurelia Stewart, Mooresville; Carrie E. Williamson, Marion; Agnes B. Jones; Gastonia; Annie Harkness, Marion; Alease Bailey, Wilkesboro. Mesdames A. W. Stowe, Newton: Mary McGill, Gastonia; M. L. Richardson, Cherryville; Mary Morrison, Statesville; Louisa Hood, Shelby; Conr.ie Abernathy, Statesville; B. L. Burge, Newton; Anna Wise, Statesville; Mary L. Gleaves, Shelby; Lillian Gleaves, Shelby; Helen Abernathy, Hickory; Arlette Pearson, Newton; Marion Payne, Thomasville; Connie L. Williams, Marion, and Misses Louise Hood, CKAIUix TV/T _ 1 ; -1 U11C1UJ ( 11UUV XflUC VJTcXUIiCl, Statesville and I. R. Jones, Asheville. WINSTON DISTRICT Mesdames Louise W. King, Winston-Salem; Zula Lovell, Pilot Mountain; Bessie Satterfiled, Mt. Airy; Alma Fitost, v Winston-- Salem;' Cozet Belo, Winston-Salem; Helen G. Cole, High Point; Eleanor C. Mills, Winston-Salem; Macie McCauley, Thomasvilie; J. W. Jones, Asheboro; Ruth Patterson, High Point. Marion Payne, Thomasvilie; L. A. Brown, Greensboro; Elizabeth Dula, Lexington, Bessie Yokley, Winston-Salem; C. A. Barrett, Asheboro; 'L. M. Mayfield, Winston-Salem; A. P. McLeod, High Point, and Misses Annie Jones, High Point; Mary Harrison, Asheboro; Catherine Miller, Winston-Salem, Beatrice Watts, Winston-Salem. COURT RULES SIX JUVENILES DELINQUENT (Continued from Page 1) when a fight started. Three Fighting Bush, Duncan and Crowe were fighting, Bush said. The girl involved in the case pushed Bush into Duncan and it was then that Bush began to run, he (Bush) told the judge. Bush said he turned around and Duncan ran into a knife that the defendant was holding. Bush will not be tried as a 14-years-old. Because of the serii 1 uron t' 1 o ouon fKmtrfVi Vin ie onltr J""-"*"- fa-?w? ""'"fa" "fa- " 1" J ous charge of murder, he must stand trial in Guilford Superior Court. Crowe, because he is 16, also will stand trial as an adult. VINES ONE H( 7 Cleans it be 7 Couldn't be done bet / 828 Ashe Street J 1801 McConnell Rd. . t BR 4-7567 ?v i 118 & i Q:: I Winston-Si ||.r PArk: 4j' TKJ JOSEPH D. HERRING ESCAPES GAS CHAMBER BY MERCY OF 12 JURYMEN (Continued from Page 1) , desk in Foust's service station a.t (' 702 E. Market Street. Foust said he and Clark were in the service station getting ready to close up, and said Masjsey was making out a report at !the desk when Herring came in the door, said "Mr. Massey!" and began shooting. I Foust testified that Herring 'shot six times at a distance of [about two feet from Massey. A stocky man with self-assurance, Foust re-enacted the shooting, 'taking the part of the slain officer. I When he readied that point in his role where the officer was struck by the first bullets, he 'slumped over in the witness' chair in such a realistic swoon [that a white-haired deputy sheriff standing near the courtroom I , VOCATIONAL lAG TEACHERS HOLD CONFERENCE i I (Continued from Page 1) mer Vocational Ag teacher at Lilesville. ?ne conierence, conducted along Ihc theme, "Making Our Teaching More Effective for a Changing Agriculture," featured an outstanding array of prominent educators who made presentations. Among the main speakers were: Dr. Charles F. Carroll, State Superintendent of Public Instruction; Dr. J. Warren Smith, State Director of Vocational Education; A. G. Dullard, State Supervisor of Vocational Agriculture and E. Y. Floyd, Director of the Plant Food Institute, all of Raleigh; Dr. W. A. Blount, Professor of Adult Education; Dr. G. F. Ran kin, Administrative Assistant to I the President; Dr. Warmoth T. ' pibbs, President and Dr( Howard F. Robinson, Acting Dean of the School of Agriculture, all of A&T College. J. L. Faulcon, Ahoskie, was reelected President of the Agricultural Teachers ' Association. Other Officers include: H. Fred Simon, Pantego, Vice President; Turner Battle, Littleton, Secretary-Treasurer and R. D. Smith, Chapel Hill, Parliamentarian. Twenty year service pins were presented to W. T. Johnson, Sr., Greensboro; J. B. Brown, Sanford; M. L. Campbell, Kings Mountain; R. L. Davenport, Clarkton, Faulcon, R. L. Lewis, Oxford and R. K. Wright, Catawba. The meeting was held under the supervision of W. T. Johnson, Sr., and J. W. Warren, both Assistant State Supervisors of Vocational Agriculture with headquarters here at A&T College. QUALITY COAL ?and? FUEL OIL COLONIAL Ice and Coal Co. 401 East Market Street Phone BR 3-6923 )UR CLEANERS tter, quicker ? ,ter in a whole year. / 912 Gorrell St ? 502 Lindsay St l BR 4-4736 / rhird St % ilem, N. C. 4 2-6725 / 2 FUTURE OUTLOC lour rushed forward to assist rim. Before the deputy reached him, oust rose with simulated great Effort from the chair, staggered down in front of the jury and iiit the floor with a thud. Dr. Richard A. Kelly, assistant juilford County medical examiner, said Masscy died from a bulet wound in the heart. Massey vas also wounded in the right houlder, right hand, and the leek, Dr. Kelly said. At one point the lights were urncd out in the courtroom so hat colored slides showing Mas. ey's wounds could be projected. The screen was toward the jury ,nd away from Herring, who got lp and moved so that he could see the slides. Herring appeared to be calm throughout the trial. While ICornegay spoke, the dead officer's cap and uniform, stained rusty brown from dried blood, were hanging f r o m a clothes rack at one end of the jury box and the solicitor frequently called the jurors' attention to those and other exhibits of the state. Defense lawyers Robert S. Cahoon and J. Kenneth Lee, who was appointed by the court to deWanted: t TH Friday evenings and money for Scout, Y. 1 by selling The FUTU1 of his parents to sign \ Saw It The FUTURE OUTLI tisers. Perhaps you hi There is nothing to 1( FUTURE OUTLOOK Mail or call in your ne day noon. For picture office, 505 East Marfc to publish pictures wi ready made. The pape sale each Saturday m< Ne Throughout the week ing places: Ethel's Bi E. Market Street; As Store, 814 Gorrell Sti boro Cash Service, 19 say Street, and Ecclee MONDAY?8 a. i TUESDAY?9 a. WEDNESDAYTHURSDAY?81 FRIDAY?9 a. m SATURDAY?81 /! IK lend Herring, made an appeal to the jury for mercy. Lee argued that while Herring might not be considered insane in the legal sense of -that term that his actions on the night he lulled Massey showed a degree of insanity. Sermon On Mount Cahoon, who spoke last and then briefly, began by reading from Christ's Sermon on the Mount: "Blessed arc the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy." He told the jury that Herring was a man who was very ambitious for his three children and who had provided a good home for them by working at two jobs. "He drove himself until he became exhausted, that his nerves were frayed and his judgment impaired," Cahoon said. "He was at least temporarily deranged." In his charge to the jury, Judge Crissman told them they could bring in one of four verdicts: First degree murder, first degree murder with a recommendation for mercy, second degree mur. i der, and not guilty. Defendant Weeps Herring, a tall, strongly buill i man, was impassive throughout the trial until Cahoon begar Ine Hundred Bo; E FUTURE OUTLI Saturday mornings. An energ H. C. A., and school fees. One JE OUTLOOK. Each boy must i for him; otherwise, he will n '< ' in The FUTURI DOK requests that you read ai ive heard from time to time tl >se when you tell the merchar; II News Item ws to The FUTURE OUTLOOl is and advertisements, call for :et Street, Telephone BRoadw; 11 have to pay an engraving fe r goes on sale at 5:00 p. m. eac >rning. Subscription rates for c wsstand Circulal The FUTURE, OUTLOOK maj ike Shop, 819 E. Market Stre he Street Sundry, 828 S. Ash eet; East End Soda Shop, 9T 09 E. Market Street; Standba i Drug Store, 914 Gorrell Stre< Office Hours u. to 12 noon; 2 p. m. to 5 p. m m. to 12 noon. -8 a. m. to 12 noon; 2 p. m. to I a. m. to 1 p. m . . to 12 noon; 4 p. m. to 6 p. m. l m. to 2 p. m. i SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1959 speaking to the jury. Then he broke down, put his hands over his face and wept quietly. The jury got the ease at 3:17 p. m. and stayed out 50 minutes. Herring had regained his composure long before the jury came in with' the verdict. After he was sentenced, he met briefly in a room beside the courtroom with his wife and their three small children. Then a deputy sheriff came to take him away. While Herring's sentence is for life imprisonment, it does not mean that he will necessarily spend the rest of his life in prison. C-linit? - el uv/iiv.n.wi ivuiiicguj- sdiu unci the trial that on the average a prisoner sentenced to lite imprisonment in North Carolina serves only about 10 years before he is paroled. BENNETT GKAD RECEIVES ! MASTERS' DEGREE Mrs. Betty G. Davidson, of Wilkesboro, N. C., a 195G graduate of Bennett College, was awarded the master of Social l Work degree by Howard Uni versily in Washington, D. C. last i month. /s To Sell )0K etic boy wants to earn can easily help himaplf ; be accompanied by one ot be allowed to sell. : OUTLOOK nd patronize our adverlat it pays to advertise, it, "I SAW IT IN THE ? office before Wednesan appointment at the ly 3-1758. One desiring e unless a cut or mat is h Friday, and is also on me year are $2.00. lion r be found at the followet; Triangle News, 928 e Street; Wynn's Drug J Gorrell Street; Jonesck's Grocery, 516 Lindit. 5 p. m.