WMCites Council Given SB CAllattftfX I Students WSSC Honored...

1
? ' n t f - . A- ? ' « 1 Report on WM Cites Council Given by SB \u25a0 > . 1 BELMA, Ala. thi National Guard fatUttry Was full of 1504 *hite citizens lb their Sunday bed eating barbecue chicl«n «t |l.tO ? perapi. By their looks the audi- ence was made up of middle class bfoslnaw people, professionals and Well W do farmers; with their wl«es and children. It could have be?n 4 Monday night church din- ner anywhere in the United States. But ttifa dinner wasn't just any- where; it was in Seljpa, Ala., and th# people were tltere: id hear Rosa f . "Think God that I am an Southerns*, a Missis sippisft and a charter jmerhber at the Mississippi White Citizens' Coiiheff," yelletj Barnett. The form- er IjjMssippi governor was the malflptraction at the Dallas Coun. ty Unite Citizens' Council annual metiiWrahip dinner and rally. tfitfiCtt told them that, "The accret Jufrpose of our enemies is to diffuse our blood, confuse our miridrf and degrade our character, thai £re may not be able to stand agaiHikt :<thc wiles of the devil." Wiiitf he was speaking an equal nuniwt of Negroes were meeting aer6®t |own in t.vo churches list- ening to j<jhn Lewis, chairman of jhfe Sfedenf Nonviolent Coordinat. jqg QBmmittee (SNCC) and Dr. Martfif Luther King of the South- ern Uhristian Leadership Confer- ehcsjteCLC). King told the crowd ':NytMng..will turn us Jjack npw." Tbt$NCC and §CLC voter re£ Ist iamb Drive had, on ttiat Feb. 282, gfta into its sixth week with ftvefr KOO people seeing the Jails of SlffrM and Marion, in nearby PerrJ County. BaMjett's speech called for the maintiinence of racial purity and the AhfeJo-Saxon Prostestant heri- tage,;^(rid continuing the fight againat the communist conspiracy. He sftemed unaware pf recent hap. penirjgs in the county. Barnett talkecl in generalities. The people r 1 were looking for answers to their I ) problems;, they wanted gpecfli<ft; i t |«rnett talked of "Amerlcanilj*" 3 The former governor did - not once mention Ndgro voter regM- s tration \u25a0* hich wa« In the minds ] of the crowd in ; a county where r Negroes make up 57% of the pop- » ulatlon. Dallas County, population 57,000, . is located in the heart of Black - Belt Alabama. SelrtM is its county 1 scat. It is a county where 174 of r of till Negro families make less than 43,000 and where 67% of l the Negroes have less than a high \u25ba school Education. ' ( It is a county tjnat boasts '{hat ' it has the first, largest and most ? active chapters of Alabama's As- e sociation of Citizens Councils- The announced program of the 1 Dallas County White Citizens' Council is "to maintain states ? rights, segregation and racial tn- -5 tegrity.'' The Council states that it r is "leading the resistance move- , mcnt against race .nixers, and 1 keeping advocates of racial strife out of many communities." It says 1 that, "It is preserving our sbcial i and economic order by acting - quietly and without fanfare j . . f to prevent racial strife." < j The -Council's definition oh "ra- . cial strife" was brought out Jn an ? ad in the Selma TlM^-JOURjNAL, - June 2, 1963. It asked* "Is it Worth I, four dollars (membership) to!. you " to prevent sit-ins, mob mashes and whojesalg Voter jegis- [' TtafibireTrorrrirf setma?" r i In order to "prevent" Negro s activity the Council must maintain V control over the whole community. This means not only Jceeping Ne- ! groes "in line" but also Whites 1 who do not folicv tts program. The white group maintains this t control through two means: or- . ganization and infiltration. It or- i. ganizes the white leadership of the t community to effect its projjfiram, 3 because. .Ml.-order-10.. he.. ef(gctive #Poiftlc«l Adv.) VOTE , . W '? -tA . . : . I . I i I PUB I I -a- I * I I I \u25a0fjfl 9 r _____ crabarek YOUR ; ' ? \u25a0"\u25a0\u25a0? *;.<vv ?\u25a0'' . . 1 MAYOR ? ' ' For Cohtlriuod Prof rost I .!>? in mi mm II I' \u25a0 be Council must eliminate all dis- tent ffom whites. ,|Kost whites in the community ?r« members, hut not all by choice. "Ultra is great social and eco- nomic pressure to join. Not U> Join w6uld be socially loworinj anti economically, damaging," a lo- cal White woman said. The Council has many means to pressure those who do iot join. In May, '1959, the Dallas Council dealt with uncooperative whites by publishing a list of all business and professional people who were not menibers. With the whites organized, the Council "infiltrates" the com munity, or as Robert Patterson, Executive Secretary of the Citi- zens' Councils of Mississippi puts it: "The Citizens' Councils think and plan as a group and then are able to act as individuals within their various churches, schools or any other organization to which they may belong. This has already proved effective in many, many instances." The Council most effectively works through individual members who qre in important business and government positions. It uses these people to put its program into practice. Thus the Council's power lies not l in the organization but through its individual members .wbo-widd..an enormous amount of personal pt/.ver by virtue of their positions in the community. The Dallas County Council is a prime example of the group's power; its leadership reads like a who's who of the community. The president of the Dallas Council is Ifpirmor mayor Chris Heinz. Heinz is Anember of the hoard of directors of the Cham- ber of Commerce and a leading ' insurance ahd\ real estate man. He is also a £ood friend of Col. Richard ,Ault. t commandant of Cjaig Air Foree Base, one of the major ''industries" of Selma. Ault hai, on numerous occasions, refus ed requests by SNCC to declare Selma eff limlta to air force per- sonnel. .It was Heinz who introduced Barnett »«t thp. rally. He told the Jroup, enn no longer afford thq juxury of the attitude of 'Let it.' "We have arrived at a point when all whiW people must stand up and be counted," the former mayor said. "We must lay aside personal and stand united a* orte unbreakable unit." The Council has its legislative leader in State Senator Walter Givhan of the 30th uistrlct Which includes Dallas and adjoin- 'ing Lowndes County. The senator U. pint president of the A'abam-' Ass9Ciatl6n, o&'CJtizenr rQuneil" and a member at the executive rift'mmitteo of'the Dallas Council. YOU CAM GET ~v HEiieflkoM HEADACHE PAIN STAN&ACK gives you FAST relief from pains Of hs«<(ache, neuralgia, neuritis, and minor oains of arthritis, rheumatism. Because STANBACK Contains several medically-approved and prescribed ingredients for fast relief, you can take STANBACK with confidence. Satisfaction guaranteed! STATTSACK JSMMJNPV-RRA against »ny VoT^TTfTiTI pr«par»tlon 10« 25* tt( 98# CITY COUNCIL Mealed Civic and Religious Leader Vole May 15th S __ "fIT; «\u25a0-. «... * .... . ' : \ f ' , - -* - . i . !.'* *1 ' .?? fjjpil II YOUNG PIONEERS Mrs. Dorit Allison, past president of the Jack- j ; son, Miss., NAACP Branch poses with ten of the 39 children who aro now enrolled in previously all-fthite cchools. JACKSON STATE FETES ATHLETES BAND MEMBERS JACKSON?Athletes and their guests, coaches, members of the Jackson State College Band and others who were present at the an- nual All-Sports?Marching Band Banquet held recently at the Col- lege, heard Hylon Adams, Head football Coach at Temple High School. Vicksfiurg, Miss., and a fo-mer JSC football great, say: "The athlete's part in the 'Great Society' is not a Dassing phrase: it is here to rtav. It is a living real- ity, a realization that must be felt by every athlete: his part, his sacrifice, hils duty and his life. First of all, let us get a working knowledge of society. To me soc- iety is an essential part of a com- munity bound together by com- mon aims, by common interests and by common standards of liv- ing. Now let us take another defi- nition for society?let us say that it is a voluntary association of persons working for common ends or goals by which individual lives are shaped. An athlete plays his oart when he snreads integrity, honest and - vhotesome living; he I is plavine his wt when he has re- | snprt for his fHlowman: when he shakes im onponent's hand after be'ni? defeated. He en nlav lii«= hv bein® a law-abiding c'ti- 'en. who resnerts the rod" of the i?>w ind f nr what it He is ntovtpo !«s nnrt ivhon he hilstles nn»'t (V|p yerv onH ip m-ofy corp. pnnfTf «Un* nntA»«s ori'v r>n Hyp pfhilt »n tbo his part-^vHrn? jie'fttlpji* his db<i- "ntinns ? UtncJ not anly to himself, but to his.commu- rtitv setting oxsmplcs iti moral and splriflilil'V'alu'eV ' 4 ' *" ! . Others appearing on procram in- cluded Dean VV. A. Hiigins who gave the Invocation: Mr. Marcel- !us Watkins, gu,c«tsoloist from the Music Department, who was ac- companied by Mr. Raymond l THE CAllattftfX TIMES r """ B SATURDAY, MAY 15. I*6S DURHAM, W. C.? Top Students at WSSC Honored On Awards Day WINSTON S \LEM Top stu- dents at Winsjon-Salem State Col- lege were honored last Wednes day during Awards Day Cere- monies held in the College gym- nasium. Honorees,, students, faculty and friends beard Col- Clarence M. Davenport. West Pnint graduate with thp Defense Denartment in tbe PoT'tagon" fell students that "only you can tell how well you are mwy'rin" un to your potential and abilitv. You can do much to deWmine your own future " ( Students were honored for I a-b-pv'rg pvoMlence >n seholne. shin, citizenship, nursing. student [ tevhing, art. musio life. I afhMlcs and leadershin in the Student National Education Asso ciat ; on. .Donald L. Benson of W'nston- Salem h°aded the list of honorees 'iv receiving awards as tbe ton senior in sehnlirsbin and tbe lend- er in *'u''pnt tpaching during the Ift ß 4 '65 school year. Miss Clara Prvpß of T 'tt'etoh ?von tbree awards?Senior Hall H- ? \u2666hf» St>"'ent National Education Association. Miss M"> r tlii Smi'b of # r'arkton snd frvin SnpaVo of Rpidsv>"<> won tb-> ton p: ii-" , "<'hi o a'l'arf's fo»- Ml neti\''<- ap' l r* : t :, "*nsh'n "c At'cs Si!*'on of vi-cton «">s r-ime'l to K:>n"" AT* 1 an hr'nof cr*^lnfv( a«d given the bi«!o«- n'nss shin n'var''' and M'ss M"" - " Wood- arH of Oxf"»"l won njti-'pnshln waff's for Atl< ; ns Hall and the , sonbomor A c'a=s. Honors for leadershin in sebol- snship a1«o wen* to Miss .Tean Greenwood of Winston-S al6 m . innior: Mrs. Androa Garner of Winston-Salem. ?ssoohomo'-p: and Miss Marion Alston of Enfield, a frechman. . The Collpge bmd and choir fur- , nished the music for the , Hean T afavptte Parker prpsidpd. , Honored students ngrtieinatinl on j nro«»-am ineloderi Miss C'trolvri C. ' Miss WipstonS'il'-m St*>te ?\u25a0ending tVi« snrir>(if-o: M'°« Tlolols Sh"v of Roel"- Mount, tonhw? "lliss of T ra''e"t> ! n-" a"f' Tobn Hn"-"- of Roel-v Afniint fres'f'ont of thp ot'iftort b"dv. of s*u. d«nt »nv»'"'nent owa'-'l medita- tion- ProTirient K R Wi" !, <ms in- | troduced the sneaker and Clarence I fael-«nn at the niann: Messrs. T. R E'lis, J I. Redd*\ John A Por-njes, Ph-j'pric'f ATdis H B. Wi | l n, ~n p*ttl fifty- Allen F S'ni*h. Hoh<«rt \u2666l'll WllUnm W Davis »nd Es- Vc nj^Mrs, f «' ad- ministrntive stsff and facullv: and | "lhaw. fyewis Tcrikins. .Tames Ren- fon, J. L. Rarnes, Robert Earl Messrs. Otjs Young. Bonnie Cren- and Herbert Bishop. ath-| letic team captains, who made t. remarks. E. Gaines of the faculty assisted Dean Parker in presenting tbe awards. CHAMBERLIN PUNP; fflrmo HONOR ROLLS The following nßraes : were rej- leased hv Mrs. Margaret S. Shearift for the Chambprlln Studio Honor Rolls. Thev nr® as follows: First Honor Roll?Hop« Rrown. Joseph iCamAhell, .Tovcp Clement. Kathv Thal'a Eaton. Patricia Farrington. Sheila Oiinn, Reverlv MoT.*nt»hlin, T.ana McClarv. r.->vle Mrf.au<»h!in, Sandra Neal. Lillian Mo'wooA- Ea»«. Robert Pn"<i and rinhnrih Ro-it" Sefonfl Honor Roll: T ena r*p*vc"- TTf- tlo, P.arhara JVfoPov ?T*>*-nW Af-v Cnv r.w v lo r, "-<ttv Rip'". .Ti'd.ith r'i Stanback and Gail Tur- re«it|nc. r AROr.TV \ rrtT"'-n» !>? TI'F (STTprpiOß tvitrt /e 0 AP *o rvbo*** Ts **espnt s rv ft JEi \u2666 j-f *o*ori'v \u2666*hn fln-T(Ifei "nort \ set f| -**- 1 - of Poo»*t >rr Pry'n. t»* fl-*«f T oflntj Tbomnspr titn of sa'd Ccntv. is d'"®*' without h#v».n«* made and published any iwt WILL AVn and if arf>n"» r ;no, C.nl'i« K r>->v P ! s ""titl"d to tb» Admini«trati«n r>f tbo fefijto of v-pjr) ,I»Tin*d >l4 bavin" niialified as Administratrix acordin" to Taw: Now. tljese ire th»»ri»forp to pm- nffvpr the said Administratrix to enter in and all singular eoiHa aiul chattels, 1 rights and p-edits o' the deceased. and the snm<! to take into nossession whn- to b" found. and a|l tbe iust dfbts of the said deceased tn pav and satisfy and the rpsidnp of Mid estate to distribute according to Inw. Witness my hand and the seal of said Court, this the 10th day of May, 19fif>. Annie Belie Lowe Assistant Clerk Superior Court REMOVE WARTS! Amaiting Compound Dissolves Common Warta Away Without Cutting or Burning Doctors warn picking or scratch- ing at wnrta may cause bleeding, spreadujK- Kow amazing Com- p«>una \V*~penelrrtt.eß into warta, dentroya tliair cells, actually melts >t>arU away without cutlina or burning. Paiuleas, colorless Co'mptjund W, used as directed, roniovt'H common warta safely, effectively, leaves no ugly scars. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co ! f - 4 Jack Margolis Hill Bldg?6Sl-497S HE9h\ 4tL;uc PilliUrtJkC 1 MNTUCKY .? CINCtNNMI'. sj»j| >OiW*n *\u25a0 . ij Ts: s?tT.ra K I'JX OTHUB? OC'9.W t t©I»«SYtUE, KgtiyCKY. WKftMMSQM WW MB/TMISPfffll 59 Educators of Higher Learning Sign No-Discrimination Pledge 1 WASHINGTON, D. C.?J. Fran- cis Paschal of Durham, Chairman of the North Carolina Advisory Committee to the U. S. Commis- sion on Civil Rights, this week that as of April 27, 1965, fifty-nine institutions of higher learning in North Carolina have signed nondiscrimination pledges with the Federal Govern- ment as required by Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VI is the section of the lftßl>ja*r that bars racial discrimi- nttb&fe tbi funds.. "that' nlHHhese institutions were either receiving or applying for Federal aid. In 1964, more than $54,544,000 was paid by the Federal Government to colleges and universities in North Carolina. After signing an assurance form, a college is immediately committed not to discriminate because of race, cMor or national origin in the admission and treatment of students. This assurance extends to the entire institution and to *ll of its facilities. Mire than 1,900 institutions of hicher learning throughout the country have signed the as- surances in order to continue re- pn'v'ng assistance under an exist- in* Federal program or to be eFg'ble for-aid under a proposed p-oiect. Included under the re- ' n-iirements of Title VI are student Han progrdms. dormitory and fieillty construction, and research and development proloctsl. As a i --"sidt of multiple Federal pro- collies have signed "sinrances with more than one F'Heral agency. The requirements anplv to all phases of student admission and treatment. They prohibit admission quotas discriminatory recruit- ing activities; require the same treatment of all students in all academic programs as well as \u25a0soe'al. recreational and other ex- tracurricular activities; and estab- lish the right of equal access to college dormitories, cafeterias and other facilities. Colleges signing Title VI as- surances must implement the re- quirements immediately. If a col- lege violates its assurance, any- one may make a complaint to the anproDriate Federal agency which .? ill then direct a prompt investi- U. S. SECRET SERVICE SEEKS i SPECIAL AGENTS WASHINGTON, D C. The United States Secret Service will 6cnd a recruiting team to college and universities of North Carolina during the month of Ma yseeking male candidates for a career posi- I tion as Special Agent, i The principal duties of the Secret Service include suppressing I and altering of U. S. Currency and 1 ath.er Government obligations and forgin? of U.S. Gave/fiment checks md bon is, and protection of the | President, Vice President, etc. 1 The starting salary is from $5- .000 to $6,050 depending on train- ing and experience. If the agent starts at the lower salary he goes : to $6,050 at the end of six months. [ After a year the salary then in- ! creases to $7,220 and to $8,650 in I the following 12 to 24 months. I Promotions to positions above this ] level are made as vacancies occur and these positions pay from $10,250 to $21,445. Those, interested in applying for such employment are invited to attend. For information as to tinle and place, contact the Place- ''merit Offic# at »chool gation. If informal actions fail to correct a violation, administrative or judicial action may be taken to terminate the assistance or to enforce the assurance. Administrative criteria or meth- ods of administration which in- directly result in discrimination are prohibited by the law. The U. S. Commission on Civil Rights, established in 1957, is an independent factfinding agency. John A. Hannah, President of Michigan State University is Chair- man and William L. Taylor was recently nominated by President Johnson to be Staff Director of the agency. The 51 state advisory commit- tees to t he U. S. Commission on Civil Rights are composed of citi- zens of standing in each State, serving without compensation, who provide the Federal agency with concerning civil rights issuei. N'OtHHi CAH<M,J;;A DURHAM HOUNTY [ NOTICE OF SAI F. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the libber of sa'e contained in a cprtnjn Deed of Trust executed bv ST'.AS A. JAMES and wife. HELEN W JAMES, dated Mareh t, 1(160. and recorded in Book 642. Nt Pa n e 344, in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Durham Countv. North Carolina, default having h"en made in the navment of the indebtedness thereby se- cured and said Deed of Trust be- ing by the terms thertof subject (o foreclosure, thft undersignrd Tritstfce 'till offer for sale at pub- lic auction to the bidder fori cfcsft Dt.Jtlje pmirjljouse Door ! n Durham County. North Carolina *t NOON on the 22nd day of May, 1965, the property conveyed in sa ! d Deed of Trujt the same lvine and being in the County of Dur ham, in Durham Township, and State of North Carolina which is more particularly described as follows: (1) BEGINNING at a stake in the line of Lots 1, 2 and 3, in the line of Lot No. 2 on the Map of the Green Barbee Estate, and running thence along the line of Favetteville Street. North 23 deg 58' East to a stake in Lot No. 4 thence along the Eastern line of i Lot No. 4, 99.2 feet to a stake in a 16 foot Alley; thence along thi said 16 foot Aljey, 20 feet South; 11 deg. 28' West to a stake in line of Lot No. 2 and G. P. Holloway; thence in a western direction along the line of Lot No. 2, 94.8 feet South 86 deg. 06' East to the point or place of Beginning, the same being Lot No. 3 of the Green Bar., bee Estate recorded in Plat Book 7, at Page 113, in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Durham County, further reference is here- by made to deed from Hosea Bar- bee et al to C. C. Spaulding re- corded in Book of Deeds 49, Page 150. See deed from C. C. Spauldinc et ux to L. W. Wilhoite, Book 84, Page 574, in the Oflice of the Register of Deeds for Durham County. (2) BEGINNING at a stake on the North side of Proctor Street at the corner of a branch cross- ing Proctor Street; thence North 58 deg. 36' West 40 feet along and with the northern edge of Proc- tor Street to a stake: thence North 27 deg. 39' East 81 feet to a stake; thence bouth oa' u eg. Sast 46 feet to a branch; thence ?A'ith the branch in a southerly and southwesterly direction as it meanders to a stake on the North side of Proctor Street, the point and place of Beginning and being a part of the land conveyed to Sldttfty T. James, ."r., by deed re- corded in Deed Book 72, at Page il, Durham County Registry, and npivn as 309 Proctor Street. THIS PROPERTY will be sold subjfect to all prior encumbrances atW all prior and 19(15 Ad Valo- rem Taxes. THIS SALE will remain open for ten (10) days to receive in- creased bids as required by law. TIIIS 21st day of April, 1965. J. J. Henderson, Trustee William A. Marsh, Jr., , ? - Attorney Am il 24; May j r i; 1-B

Transcript of WMCites Council Given SB CAllattftfX I Students WSSC Honored...

Page 1: WMCites Council Given SB CAllattftfX I Students WSSC Honored …newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1965-05-15/ed-1/... · 2013. 12. 6. · Report on WMCites Council Given by

? ' n t f - .

A- ? ' « 1

Report on WM Cites Council Given by SB\u25a0 > . 1

BELMA, Ala. thi NationalGuard fatUttry Was full of 1504*hite citizens lb their Sunday bedeating barbecue chicl«n «t |l.tO? perapi. By their looks the audi-ence was made up of middle classbfoslnaw people, professionals andWell W do farmers; with theirwl«es and children. It could havebe?n 4 Monday night church din-ner anywhere in the United States.But ttifa dinner wasn't just any-where; it was in Seljpa, Ala., andth# people were tltere: id hearRosa f .

"Think God that I am anSoutherns*, a Missis

sippisft and a charter jmerhber atthe Mississippi White Citizens'Coiiheff," yelletj Barnett. The form-er IjjMssippi governor was themalflptraction at the Dallas Coun.ty Unite Citizens' Council annualmetiiWrahip dinner and rally.

tfitfiCtt told them that, "The

accret Jufrpose of our enemies isto diffuse our blood, confuse ourmiridrf and degrade our character,thai £re may not be able to standagaiHikt :<thc wiles of the devil."

Wiiitf he was speaking an equal

nuniwt of Negroes were meeting

aer6®t |own in t.vo churches list-ening to j<jhn Lewis, chairman ofjhfe Sfedenf Nonviolent Coordinat.jqg QBmmittee (SNCC) and Dr.MartfifLuther King of the South-ern Uhristian Leadership Confer-

ehcsjteCLC). King told the crowd':NytMng..will turn us Jjack npw."

Tbt$NCC and §CLC voter re£Ist iamb Drive had, on ttiat Feb.282, gfta into its sixth week withftvefr KOO people seeing the Jailsof SlffrM and Marion, in nearby

PerrJ County.BaMjett's speech called for the

maintiinence of racial purity andthe AhfeJo-Saxon Prostestant heri-tage,;^(rid continuing the fightagainat the communist conspiracy.He sftemed unaware pf recent hap.penirjgs in the county. Barnett

talkecl in generalities. The people

r1 were looking for answers to their I) problems;, they wanted gpecfli<ft; it |«rnett talked of "Amerlcanilj*"

3 The former governor did - notonce mention Ndgro voter regM-

s tration \u25a0* hich wa« In the minds] of the crowd in

;a county where

r Negroes make up 57% of the pop-» ulatlon.

Dallas County, population 57,000,. is located in the heart of Black- Belt Alabama. SelrtM is its county

1 scat. It is a county where 174 of

r of till Negro families make lessthan 43,000 and where 67% of

l the Negroes have less than a high

\u25ba school Education. '

( It is a county tjnat boasts '{hat' it has the first, largest and most? active chapters of Alabama's As-e sociation of Citizens Councils-

The announced program of the1 Dallas County White Citizens'

Council is "to maintain states? rights, segregation and racial tn-

-5 tegrity.'' The Council states that it

r is "leading the resistance move-, mcnt against race .nixers, and

1 keeping advocates of racial strifeout of many communities." It says

1 that, "It is preserving our sbciali and economic order by acting- quietly and without fanfare j . .

f to prevent racial strife." < jThe -Council's definition oh "ra-

. cial strife" was brought out Jn an? ad in the Selma TlM^-JOURjNAL,- June 2, 1963. It asked* "Is it WorthI, four dollars (membership) to!. you"

to prevent sit-ins, mob mashesand whojesalg Voter jegis-

[' TtafibireTrorrrirf setma?" ri In order to "prevent" Negros activity the Council must maintainV control over the whole community.

This means not only Jceeping Ne-! groes "in line" but also Whites1 who do not folicv tts program.

The white group maintains thist control through two means: or-. ganization and infiltration. It or-i. ganizes the white leadership of thet community to effect its projjfiram,3 because. .Ml.-order-10.. he.. ef(gctive

#Poiftlc«l Adv.)

VOTE, . W '? -tA

. . : .

I .I iI PUB I

I-a- I *I I

I \u25a0fjfl 9

r_____

crabarek

YOUR; ' ? \u25a0"\u25a0\u25a0? *;.<vv ?\u25a0'' . . 1

MAYOR? ' '

For Cohtlriuod Prof rost

I .!>? in mi mm II I' \u25a0

be Council must eliminate all dis-tent ffom whites.

,|Kost whites in the community?r« members, hut not all by choice."Ultra is great social and eco-nomic pressure to join. Not U>

Join w6uld be socially loworinjanti economically, damaging," a lo-cal White woman said.

The Council has many meansto pressure those who do iotjoin. In May, '1959, the DallasCouncil dealt with uncooperative

whites by publishing a list of allbusiness and professional peoplewho were not menibers.

With the whites organized, theCouncil "infiltrates" the community, or as Robert Patterson,Executive Secretary of the Citi-zens' Councils of Mississippi putsit:

"The Citizens' Councils thinkand plan as a group and then areable to act as individuals withintheir various churches, schools orany other organization to whichthey may belong. This has alreadyproved effective in many, manyinstances."

The Council most effectivelyworks through individual memberswho qre in important business andgovernment positions. It usesthese people to put its programinto practice.

Thus the Council's power liesnot lin the organization butthrough its individual members

.wbo-widd..an enormous amount of

personal pt/.ver by virtue of theirpositions in the community.

The Dallas County Council is aprime example of the group'spower; its leadership reads like a

who's who of the community.

The president of the Dallas

Council is Ifpirmor mayor Chris

Heinz. Heinz is Anember of the

hoard of directors of the Cham-

ber of Commerce and a leading' insurance ahd\ real estate man.

He is also a £ood friend of Col.

Richard ,Ault.t commandant of

Cjaig Air Foree Base, one of themajor ''industries" of Selma. Aulthai, on numerous occasions, refus

ed requests by SNCC to declare

Selma eff limlta to air force per-

sonnel.

.It was Heinz who introducedBarnett »«t thp. rally. He told the

Jroup, enn no longer afford

thq juxury of the attitude of 'Letit.'

"We have arrived at a point

when all whiW people must standup and be counted," the formermayor said. "We must lay asidepersonal and standunited a* orte unbreakable unit."

The Council has itslegislative leader in State SenatorWalter Givhan of the 30th uistrlctWhich includes Dallas and adjoin-'ing Lowndes County. The senatorU. pint president of the A'abam-'Ass9Ciatl6n, o&'CJtizenr rQuneil"and a member at the executive

rift'mmitteo of'the Dallas Council.

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CITY COUNCILMealed Civic and Religious Leader

Vole May 15thS

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fjjpil II

YOUNG PIONEERS Mrs. DoritAllison, past president of the Jack- j

; son, Miss., NAACP Branch poses

with ten of the 39 children whoaro now enrolled in previouslyall-fthite cchools.

JACKSON STATEFETES ATHLETESBAND MEMBERS

JACKSON?Athletes and theirguests, coaches, members of theJackson State College Band andothers who were present at the an-nual All-Sports?Marching BandBanquet held recently at the Col-lege, heard Hylon Adams,Head football Coach at TempleHigh School. Vicksfiurg, Miss., anda fo-mer JSC football great, say:"The athlete's part in the 'GreatSociety' is not a Dassing phrase: itis here to rtav. It is a living real-ity, a realization that must be feltby every athlete: his part, hissacrifice, hils duty and his life.First of all, let us get a workingknowledge of society. To me soc-iety is an essential part of a com-munity bound together by com-mon aims, by common interestsand by common standards of liv-ing. Now let us take another defi-nition for society?let us say thatit is a voluntary association ofpersons working for common endsor goals by which individual livesare shaped. An athlete plays hisoart when he snreads integrity,honest and - vhotesome living; he

I is plavine his wt when he has re-| snprt for his fHlowman: when heshakes im onponent's hand afterbe'ni? defeated. He en nlav lii«=

hv bein® a law-abiding c'ti-'en. who resnerts the rod" of thei?>w ind fnr what it He isntovtpo !«s nnrt ivhon he hilstlesnn»'t (V|p yerv onH ip m-ofy corp.

pnnfTf «Un* V» nntA»«s

ori'v r>n Hyp pfhilt

»n tbohis part-^vHrn? jie'fttlpji*his db<i-"ntinns ? UtncJ notanly to himself, but to his.commu-rtitv setting oxsmplcs iti moraland splriflilil'V'alu'eV ' 4 ' *" !.

Others appearing on procram in-cluded Dean VV. A. Hiigins whogave the Invocation: Mr. Marcel-!us Watkins, gu,c«tsoloist from theMusic Department, who was ac-

companied by Mr. Raymond l

THE CAllattftfX TIMES r """B

SATURDAY, MAY 15. I*6S DURHAM, W. C.?

Top Students atWSSC HonoredOn Awards Day

WINSTON S \LEM Top stu-dents at Winsjon-Salem State Col-lege were honored last Wednesday during Awards Day Cere-monies held in the College gym-nasium.

Honorees,, students, faculty andfriends beard Col- Clarence M.Davenport. West Pnint graduate

with thp Defense Denartment intbe PoT'tagon" fell students that"only you can tell how well youare mwy'rin" un to your potential

and abilitv. You can do much todeWmine your own future "

( Students were honored for

I a-b-pv'rg pvoMlence >n seholne.shin, citizenship, nursing. student

[ tevhing, art. musio life.

I afhMlcs and leadershin in theStudent National Education Associat ;on.

.Donald L. Benson of W'nston-Salem h°aded the list of honorees'iv receiving awards as tbe tonsenior in sehnlirsbin and tbe lend-er in *'u''pnt tpaching during theIftß4 '65 school year.

Miss Clara Prvpß of T 'tt'etoh

?von tbree awards?Senior Hall H-?

\u2666hf» St>"'ent National EducationAssociation.

Miss M">rtlii Smi'b of#

r'arktonsnd frvin SnpaVo of Rpidsv>"<> won

tb-> ton p:ii-", "<'hi o a'l'arf's fo»- Mlneti\''<- ap' l r* : t :,"*nsh'n"c At'cs

Si!*'on of vi-cton «">s r-ime'l toK:>n"" AT * 1 an hr'nof cr*^lnfv(

a«d given the bi«!o«- n'nssshin n'var''' and M'ss M""-" Wood-arH of Oxf"»"l won njti-'pnshln

waff's for Atl< ; ns Hall and the, sonbomor A c'a=s.

Honors for leadershin in sebol-snship a1«o wen* to Miss .TeanGreenwood of Winston-S al6 m

. innior: Mrs. Androa Garner ofWinston-Salem. ?ssoohomo'-p: andMiss Marion Alston of Enfield, afrechman.

. The Collpge bmd and choir fur-, nished the music for the

, Hean T afavptte Parker prpsidpd., Honored students ngrtieinatinl onjnro«»-am ineloderi Miss C'trolvri C.

' Miss WipstonS'il'-m St*>te?\u25a0ending tVi« snrir>(if-o: M'°« TlololsSh"v of Roel"- Mount, tonhw?"lliss

of T ra''e"t> ! n-" a"f' TobnHn"-"- of Roel-v Afniint fres'f'ontof thp ot'iftort b"dv. of s*u.d«nt »nv»'"'nent owa'-'l medita-tion- ProTirient K R Wi"!,

<ms in-

| troduced the sneaker and Clarence

I fael-«nn at the niann: Messrs. T.R E'lis, J I. Redd*\ John A

Por-njes, Ph-j'pric'f ATdisH B. Wi| l n,~n p*ttl fifty-

Allen F S'ni*h. Hoh<«rt\u2666l'll WllUnm W Davis »nd Es-

Vc nj^Mrs, f«' ad-ministrntive stsff and facullv: and

| "lhaw. fyewis Tcrikins. .Tames Ren-fon, J. L. Rarnes, Robert EarlMessrs. Otjs Young. Bonnie Cren-

and Herbert Bishop. ath-|letic team captains, who made

t. remarks.

E. Gaines of the faculty assistedDean Parker in presenting tbeawards.

CHAMBERLINPUNP; fflrmoHONOR ROLLS

The following nßraes : were rej-

leased hv Mrs. Margaret S. Sheariftfor the Chambprlln Studio HonorRolls. Thev nr® as follows: FirstHonor Roll?Hop« Rrown. JosephiCamAhell, .Tovcp Clement. Kathv

Thal'a Eaton. PatriciaFarrington. Sheila Oiinn, ReverlvMoT.*nt»hlin, T.ana McClarv. r.->vleMrf.au<»h!in, Sandra Neal. LillianMo'wooA- Ea»«. RobertPn"<i and rinhnrih Ro-it"

Sefonfl Honor Roll:T ena r*p*vc"- TTf-

tlo, P.arhara JVfoPov ?T*>*-nW Af-vCnv r.wvlo r,"-<ttv w«

Rip'". .Ti'd.ithr'i Stanback and Gail Tur-

re«it|nc.

r AROr.TV \rrtT"'-n»

!>? TI'F (STTprpiOß tvitrt/e 0 AP *o rvbo*** Ts **espnt s

rvft JEi \u2666 j-f*o*ori'v

\u2666*hn fln-T(Ifei "nort \ set f| -**- 1- ofPoo»*t >rr Pry'n.

t»* fl-*«f T oflntj Tbomnspr titnof sa'd Ccntv. is d'"®*' withouth#v».n«* made and published anyiwt WILL AVn andif arf>n"» r;no, C.nl'i« K r>->v P! s ""titl"d to tb» Admini«trati«nr>f tbo fefijto of v-pjr) ,I»Tin*d >l4bavin" niialified as Administratrixacordin" to Taw:

Now. tljese ire th»»ri»forp to pm-

nffvpr the said Administratrix toenter in and all singular

eoiHa aiul chattels, 1 rights andp-edits o' the deceased. and thesnm<! to take into nossession whn-

to b" found. and a|l tbeiust dfbts of the said deceased tnpav and satisfy and the rpsidnp ofMid estate to distribute accordingto Inw.

Witness my hand and the sealof said Court, this the 10th dayof May, 19fif>.

Annie Belie LoweAssistant ClerkSuperior Court

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59 Educators of Higher LearningSign No-Discrimination Pledge

1 WASHINGTON, D. C.?J. Fran-cis Paschal of Durham, Chairmanof the North Carolina Advisory

Committee to the U. S. Commis-sion on Civil Rights, this week

that as of April 27,

1965, fifty-nine institutions ofhigher learning in North Carolinahave signed nondiscriminationpledges with the Federal Govern-ment as required by Title VI ofthe Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Title VI is the section of thelftßl>ja*r that bars racial discrimi-

nttb&fe tbi funds.."that' nlHHhese

institutions were either receivingor applying for Federal aid. In1964, more than $54,544,000 waspaid by the Federal Governmentto colleges and universities inNorth Carolina.

After signing an assurance form,

a college is immediately committednot to discriminate because ofrace, cMor or national origin in

the admission and treatment of

students. This assurance extendsto the entire institution and to*ll of its facilities.

Mire than 1,900 institutions of

hicher learning throughout thecountry have signed the as-surances in order to continue re-

pn'v'ng assistance under an exist-in* Federal program or to beeFg'ble for-aid under a proposedp-oiect. Included under the re-

' n-iirements of Title VI are studentHan progrdms. dormitory andfieillty construction, and researchand development proloctsl. As a

i --"sidt of multiple Federal pro-collies have signed

"sinrances with more than oneF'Heral agency.

The requirements anplv to allphases of student admission and

treatment. They prohibit admissionquotas discriminatory recruit-ing activities; require the sametreatment of all students in allacademic programs as well as

\u25a0soe'al. recreational and other ex-tracurricular activities; and estab-lish the right of equal access tocollege dormitories, cafeterias andother facilities.

Colleges signing Title VI as-

surances must implement the re-quirements immediately. If a col-lege violates its assurance, any-one may make a complaint to theanproDriate Federal agency which

.? ill then direct a prompt investi-

U. S. SECRETSERVICE SEEKS

i SPECIAL AGENTSWASHINGTON, D C. The

United States Secret Service will6cnd a recruiting team to collegeand universities of North Carolinaduring the month of Ma yseekingmale candidates for a career posi-

I tion as Special Agent,

i The principal duties of theSecret Service include suppressing

I and altering of U. S. Currency and1 ath.er Government obligations andforgin? of U.S. Gave/fiment checksmd bon is, and protection of the

| President, Vice President, etc.1 The starting salary is from $5-

.000 to $6,050 depending on train-ing and experience. If the agentstarts at the lower salary he goes

: to $6,050 at the end of six months.

[ After a year the salary then in-! creases to $7,220 and to $8,650 inI the following 12 to 24 months.

I Promotions to positions above this] level are made as vacancies occurand these positions pay from$10,250 to $21,445.

Those, interested in applying forsuch employment are invited toattend. For information as totinle and place, contact the Place-

''merit Offic# at »chool

gation. If informal actions fail tocorrect a violation, administrativeor judicial action may be takento terminate the assistance or toenforce the assurance.

Administrative criteria or meth-ods of administration which in-

directly result in discriminationare prohibited by the law.

The U. S. Commission on CivilRights, established in 1957, is an

independent factfinding agency.John A. Hannah, President of

Michigan State University is Chair-man and William L. Taylor wasrecently nominated by PresidentJohnson to be Staff Director of

the agency.The 51 state advisory commit-

tees to t he U. S. Commission onCivil Rights are composed of citi-zens of standing in each State,serving without compensation, whoprovide the Federal agency with

concerning civil rightsissuei.

N'OtHHi CAH<M,J;;ADURHAM HOUNTY

[ NOTICE OF SAI F.UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of

the libber of sa'e contained in a

cprtnjn Deed of Trust executedbv ST'.AS A. JAMES and wife.HELEN W JAMES, dated Mareht, 1(160. and recorded in Book 642.Nt Pa ne 344, in the Office of theRegister of Deeds of DurhamCountv. North Carolina, defaulthaving h"en made in the navmentof the indebtedness thereby se-cured and said Deed of Trust be-ing by the terms thertof subject(o foreclosure, thft undersignrdTritstfce 'till offer for sale at pub-lic auction to the bidderfori cfcsft Dt.Jtlje pmirjljouse Door! n Durham County. North Carolina*t NOON on the 22nd day of May,1965, the property conveyed insa ! d Deed of Trujt the same lvineand being in the County of Durham, in Durham Township, andState of North Carolina which ismore particularly described asfollows:

(1) BEGINNING at a stake inthe line of Lots 1, 2 and 3, inthe line of Lot No. 2 on the Mapof the Green Barbee Estate, andrunning thence along the line ofFavetteville Street. North 23 deg58' East to a stake in Lot No. 4thence along the Eastern line of iLot No. 4, 99.2 feet to a stake ina 16 foot Alley; thence along thisaid 16 foot Aljey, 20 feet South;11 deg. 28' West to a stake in line

of Lot No. 2 and G. P. Holloway;thence in a western direction alongthe line of Lot No. 2, 94.8 feetSouth 86 deg. 06' East to the pointor place of Beginning, the samebeing Lot No. 3 of the Green Bar.,bee Estate recorded in Plat Book7, at Page 113, in the Office of theRegister of Deeds of DurhamCounty, further reference is here-by made to deed from Hosea Bar-bee et al to C. C. Spaulding re-corded in Book of Deeds 49, Page150. See deed from C. C. Spauldincet ux to L. W. Wilhoite, Book84, Page 574, in the Oflice of theRegister of Deeds for DurhamCounty.

(2) BEGINNING at a stake onthe North side of Proctor Streetat the corner of a branch cross-ing Proctor Street; thence North58 deg. 36' West 40 feet along andwith the northern edge of Proc-tor Street to a stake: thence North27 deg. 39' East 81 feet to astake; thence bouth oa' u eg.

Sast 46 feet to a branch; thence?A'ith the branch in a southerly andsouthwesterly direction as itmeanders to a stake on the Northside of Proctor Street, the pointand place of Beginning and beinga part of the land conveyed toSldttfty T. James, ."r., by deed re-corded in Deed Book 72, at Page

il, Durham County Registry, andnpivn as 309 Proctor Street.THIS PROPERTY will be sold

subjfect to all prior encumbrancesatW all prior and 19(15 Ad Valo-rem Taxes.

THIS SALE will remain openfor ten (10) days to receive in-creased bids as required by law.

TIIIS 21st day of April, 1965.J. J. Henderson, TrusteeWilliam A. Marsh, Jr.,

, ? - AttorneyAmil 24; May j r i;

1-B