Keep Up Wiih The Times - utlookl VOL. 28, NO. 37 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1969 PRICE 10 CENTS MOTORCYCLE ACCIDENT INJURIES FATAL TO JULIAN S. PLUMMER JULIAN STANLEY PLUMMER Julian Stanley Plumtner, 37, died in the emergency room at Moses Cone Hospital six hours after his arrival there Sunday night following a motorcycle accident in Old Huffine Mill Road some 10 miles north ol Greensboro. Plummer, who arrived at the lospital about 8:30 p. m. Sun lay, died at 2:35 a. m. Monday if severe injuries of the legs ind lower back. Highway Patrolman P. M. Smith said Plummer's motor cycle left the road on a curve, apparently after the guard bar lit the road surface, and threw ?lummer about 35 or 40 feet. The motorcycle traveled on into a creek. The accident, he said, appened at 7:50 p. m. Plummer, who lived at 2211 New Castle St., was a printer and was formerly a history cacher at Madison High School, Madison. He was a veteran of the Korean War. Funeral was held at 4 p. m. at Brown's Funeral Home Chapel on Wednesday, July 9. (Services were conducted by the I Christian Scientist Reader. Mr. Robert L. Hannon, Jr. Died Sunday Morning As A Result Of Injuries Received In Auto Accident JWR. ROBERT L. HANNON, JR. Mr. Robert L. Hannon, Jr., nge 24, died Sunday morning, July 6, as a result o f multiple injuries received from an auto mobile accident three miles v.outh of Lexington, N. C. He lived at 1033 Pearson Street. Funeral service was held Thursday, July 10, 2:00 p. m., United Institutional Baptist Church. Dr. C. W. Anderson, pastor, officiated. Burial fol 'owed in Piedmont Memorial Park. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Marie Hannon, Greens boro; parents, Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hannon, Sr, Greens boro. Brown's Funeral Directors in I charge of arrangements. DEATHS AND FUNERALS MR. TRACEY MEADOWS Mr. Tracey Meadows, age 61, died at a local hospital Friday. July 4, following a brief illness. He lived at 913 Caldwell Street. Funeral service was held Mon day, July 6, 4:00 p. m., Brown's Funeral Home Chapel. Rev. Cecil Bishop, pastor of Trinity A. M. , E. Zion Church, offici ated. Burial followed in Maple wood Cemetery. Survivor? include his widow, Mrs. Florence Meadows of the home; mother, Mrs. Lizzie James Walton, Greensboro; one daughter, Mrs. Mary Gardner, Greensboro; son, Tracey Mea dows, Jr., Baltimore, Md.; one step-son, Charlie Cherry, of Greensboro; twelve grandchil dren. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. MR. EUGENE G. HOUSTON Mr. Eugene Gray Houston age 93, died Wednesday, July 2 following several months of de clining health. He lived at 627 Watson Street. Eastern Star rites were conducted Friday night, July 4, 8:30 p. m. at Brown's Funeral Home Chapel by Magnolia Chapter No. 23. Funeral service was held Sat urday, 3:00 p. m. at St. Mat thews United Methodist Church. Rev. J. B. Bethea, pastor, offi ciated. Burial rites were con ducted by St. John's Masonic Lodge No. 12, Prince Hall af filiation at Maple wood Ceme tery. Survivors include one step sister, Mrs. Clara Gaston, In dianapolis, Ind. Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. First Negro Is Named To City's ABC Board Alexander Parker Alexander Parker, 36, of 1614 Ross Ave., owner of three Greensboro barber shops, will resign from the city Human Relations Commission today to accept appointment to the Greensboro Alcohol Control Board. Parker was named to the board by the City Counci Mon day as the first Negro appointee in the 18-year history of the board. He will succeed Pete Davenport, whose term has ex pired, and he is to serve until July 3, 1972. A Montgomery County na tive, Parker is a graduate in accounting from A&T State University. He is a trustee of Shiloh Baptist Church, a direc tor of the Family Service and Travelers' Aid Association and secretary-treasurer of Commu nity Funeral Service, Inc. Veterans' Corner (Editor's Note: Veterans and their families are asking thou sands of questions concerning the benefits their government provides for them through the Veterans Administration. Below are some representative que~.es. Additional information may be obtained at any VA office.) Q ? I understand that a law was recently passed which in creases the amount of a direct loan which the Veterans Ad ministration can make to a veteran. If so, what is the new amount? A ? Under a law signed by President Nixon on June 6, 1969, the VA may now make direct loans up to a maximum of $21,000. The old limit was $17,600. Q ? My father is permanently and totally disabled due to a service-connected disability in curred in World War XI. I am 19 years old and married. Am I eligible for educational assist ance from the Veterans Admin istration? A ? Yes. Marriage does not affect your eligibility to VA educational assistance if you (Continued oo Page 4> Asks Equal Enforcement EVERS TAKES OVER AS MAYOR, WILL DONATE $75 PAY TO CITY Fayette, Miss. (UPI)? Mayor Charles Evers, starting his first working day in office, launched a clean-up drive Tuesday and instructed his all-black police force to enforce laws firmly but equally. The 46-year-old civil rights leader wasted little time in get ting down to business as Missi sippi's first Negro mayor of a biracial community since the reconstruction era. He presided over a four-hour meeting of the newly elected all-Negro Board of Aldermen, appointed several Negroes and) one white to city posts, and an nounced he would donate his first year's salary as mayor to the town's sagging general fund. Among the first official acts of the board was to repeal a resolution passed in 1957 by the former all-white administration endorsing racial segregation The new board adopted a reso lution promising to enforce law "without distinction or discrim ination due to the color of skin or beliefs of persons.;* The resolution said it would be the board's "affirmative dutv .to foster an atmosphere of tran quility and equal opportunity for persons of all color and be lief." An estimated 5,000 jammed into Fayette Monday for the historic swearing in of the new administration but most of the crowd had gone by Tuesday morning and the streets of the sleepy town wre quiet again The board meeting was held at City Hall in the center of the two-block-long shopping dis trict. The job of mayor is a part time position, paying only $75 a month, and Evers plans to remain as state field director o the National Association for the Advancement of Colore! People (NAACP) in addition to new duties. He took over as NAACP director in 1963, suc ceeding his slain brother Med gar Evers who was killed by an Jssassin in Jackson. Evers said he planned to de vote much of his time to seek ing new industry. He started a clean-up drive which includes laulmg off old abandoned cars, earing down unoccupied shacks . increasing garbage pickups f-om two to three times a week The board also passed an or dnance prohibiting loud juke boxes after Evers said it was a disgrace for people to go to urch on Sunday morning and hear these joints with music plaving." Some local whites feared vers election would cause fur ther exodus of whites from the own, but the new mayor vowed e flid not want an all-black town. He said he would appoint qualified whites as well as blacks to city posts, but nearly all of his initial appointments were Negroes. Evers admitted he had been having trouble finding local whites who were willing to serve in his administration al though former Mayor R. J. Allen and others have offered to assist the new board in an advisory role. Evers selected Andrew Van derson, a 36-year-old Negro school teacher, as chief of the town's four-man all-black po lice force. Evers said he hoped later to name one or two whites to the force. Negroes also were named city clerk, fire chief, and superin ( Continued on Page 0) Local Resident Dies At The Age Of 102 MR. JOHN LOMAX Funeral services were held for Mr. John Lomax of 1411 East Market Street. The funeral was held Sunday, July 6 at 1:00 p.m. at the Temple Chapel Bap tist Church, Charlotte, N. C, where the Rev. F. C. Pinkney officiated. Mr. Lomax died at the age of 102. He was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lomax, and was born November 17, 1867 in Calhoun Falls, S. C. He de-> parted this life Thursday, July 3, 1969 at his Greensboro resi dence. He leaves to mourn: five daughters, Mrs. Annie Turman of the home, Mrs. Carrie Miller, Charlotte, N. C., Mrs. Daisy Lomax and Mrs. Mary Lomax, both of Washington, D. C., Mrs. Viola Lomax, New Yorlj, and Mrs. Emma Lou Henderson. There are two sons, Bishop J. V. Lomax, New York City, and Mr. Rubin Lomax of Hones Path, S. C.; 13 grandchildren, 4 great-grandchildren, 1 great grert-grandchild, and a host of other relatives and friends. Grier Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Inter ment was in York Memorial Cemetery, Charlotte,' N. C.