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Page 1: The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) 1965-12-04 [p 4B]newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1965-12... · -THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, DEC. 4, 1965 ' W^~ 9 9^v JUST RETURNED FROM

-THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, DEC. 4, 1965

' W^~9

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JUST RETURNED FROM TAI.WAN Lt. Col. Herbert O.Parfcor, otisftnt profttaor ofmilitary scionct at A. and T.Collafl*, Mrs. Parkar and daugh-tar, CHrittia Lynn, S. hava juit

racantly ratornad from a thraa-

; yaar *tay in Taiwan.Mri. Parkar hold< ona of

many Taiwanata curiot whichj sha brought back with har and

| wears a chipao. a garmant ofChinasa origin.

'Operation Breakthrough' HoldsAnnual Meet; Elects Officers

The Board of Directors ofOperation Breakthrough, Dur-ham's anti-poverty organization,

held their first annual meetingTuesday night and elected a

new slate of officers and en-

dorsed a variety of new anti-poverty projects for the Dur-ham community

The Rev. Julius Corpening,pastor of Temple BaptistChurch, was named to succeedEverett Hopkins, vice president

of institutional planning at

Duke University, as president

of Operation Breakthrough.

Other new officers include

Dr. Howard Fitts, vice presi-dent; Kenneth Royall, Jr., sec-

retary; and Carlie Sessoms,

treasurer. Dr Fitts is a faculty

member of North Carolina Col-lege Royall. a local furnituredealer, is chairman of the Dur-ham County Board of Educa-

tion. Sessoms is an executiveof the Hospital Care Associa-tion.

Named to the Executive Com-

mitte were retiring PresidentHopkins. Mrs Odessa Parkerof the Lakeview community

(3311 Draper St.) Dr. JamesSemans of the Duke MedicalCenter. Mrs Hugh Thompson

of 304 Pekoe Ave., Dr. CharlesWatts, local surgeon, and Ma-yor R W. Grabarek (in an ex-

officio capacity).

Three new members of theBoard of Directors also wereappointed They are Mrs- Chris-tine Strudwick. of 704 Eliza-

iwvaKvttwm«vtwß

FOR RENT OR SALE? Wheel Chairs

? Hospital Beds

? Walkers

? Sick Room Equipment

McBROOM'S RENTALS

3527 iiillsboro Rd. 286-2247

beth St., representing the EastEnd Neighborhood Council;Mrs E H. Couch of 6-A FewGardens, representing the Fe"WGardens Neighborhood Council;and Dr A H. London, Jr.,representing the Durham Coun-Board of Health.

Operation Breakthrough also

adopted revisions to its by-laws.

The Board of Directors en-dorsed several proposed pro-

jects, the largest of which is a

proposed two million dollarcurriculum improvement pro-gram at the Whitted JuniorHigh School over a period offive years

Another proposed projectthat received the board's en-

dorsement is a fulltime day

care center for the Crest Streetarea behind the Veterans Ad-ministration Hospital.

W. END SECTIONFORMS NAACPYOUTH CHAPTER

The West End Community ofDurham organized "a YouthChapter of the NAACP. The or-ganization grew out of the de-sire of its junior members formore participation in city -widesocial, political and civic de-velopments. The officers elect-ed were: President, Miss JoyceThomas; Vice President, MissMary Grafton; Secretary,

Chritsopher Robinson n; As-sistant Secretary, Miss Lucy

Webb; Treasurer, TheodoreSmith; Assistant Treasurer, Lo-renzo Cozart and Reporter, J.W. Robinson 111.

The newly formed group hashad two official meetings atwhich time they had as theirguest J. W. Hill, NAACP StateYouth Advisor and Reverend,L. H. McDonald of the NorthCarolina Fund.

Colonial Stores Gefs Governor'sRetail Award 2nd Year in Row

RAT.FIGH? Colonial Stores,for the second straight year,has been presented the Gover-nor's Retail Food IndustryAward given annually to thefood chain doing the most topromote North Carolina pro-ducts.

The award was presented byGovernor Dan Moore at a din-ner in Raleigh (Tuesday Night)sponsored by the North Caro-lina Merchants Association. Inan address preceding theaward, Governor Moore said.

foods to the big market placesof the eastern seaboard. I be-lieve we can reach marketsabroad."

"Food production and foodorocessing offer a real future.Our farmers are finding in foodDroduction new sources of in-come to replace the loss byacreage reduction of othercrops."

Governor Moore also pointednut that in the past 25 yearsthe value of food processing

in North Carolina has increasedfrom 69 million to 650 millionHollars per year providng onethousand new jobs for NorthCarolina citizens.

C. M. Tuttle, Colonial StoresDivision Vice President, incommenting on the award said,

"We are extremely happy tobe honored for the secondstraight year for the part thatColonial has played in promot-

ing the North Carolina econo-

my. Our company was found-ed by a North Carolinian andbecause of this, the fact thatwe have more than 3500 em-ployees in the state and that a

third of our individual stock-holders live in North Carolina,we ilways are anxious to doeverything possible to promotenew job opportunities for thepeople of the Tarheel State."

Colonial this year will spendmore than 60 million dollarson North Carolina products andservices. Its payroll alone willtotal nearly 8 million dollars.The company operates morethan 100 snpermarkers in N. C.It has a division headquartersand major distribution centerin Raleigh and a wholesalebakery in Charlotte.

Tuttle pointed out that in

"We have a wide open fieldahead of us," 'the governorsaid.

"I believe our state can be-come the leading supplier of

addition to promoting the saleof North Carolina food pro-ducts in its North Carolinastores, the company is contin-uously promoting productsfrom the Tarheel State in its335 other supermarket whichare located in 9 other south-eastern" andmidwestem states.

LA. SHERIFFLIMITS DEPUTIESTO COL. GRADS -

NEW ORLEANS, La SheriffC. E. Hester of Madison Par-ish (county). La., announcedthat in the future all deputysheriffs must be college gradu-ates. Hester made the an-nouncement on "November 23to a group of 600 Negroes whohad marched, without incident,to the courthouse demandingthe hiring of a Negro deputysheriff. The silent, one milemarch was sponsored by theMadison Parish Voters League

and CORE. Tallulah is locatedacross the Mississippi Riverfrom Vicksburg, Miss., about90 miles west of Jackson.

Zelma C. Wyche, Presidentof the Voters League, an-

nounced at the courthouse thatTallulah Negroes would showtheir displeasure with thesherriff's statement at the polls

when they vote for the- nextsheriff. Tallulah's populationof 9,400 is 70% Negro. It is al-1most certain that more Negroes I

than whites will be registeredto vote by the time of the nextelection.

Wyche also said that the

Voters League is planning aselective buying campaignagainst downtown merchantswho refuse to practice fair

hiring. After Wyche's speech,the group sang freedom song*and marched back to theirstarting point.

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jLBourbon-a- 48 MONTHS

Barclay's OLDBourbon

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STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY? §0 PtOOP ? JAS. BARCLAY 4 CO, LIMITED,PEORIA, ILL

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SHOULD I PRINT ITT NickGalifianakls, Durham »t«terepresentative, jokes with two

unidentified students whilesigning autographs during tha18th Annual Resourco-Use Ed-

ucation Confaranca at NorthCarolina Colleg* recently.

Nearly 2,000 parson* war* In

attendance at tha stata-wldameeting which directed atten-tion to tha theme: "Building

\u2666h # Great Society THrMfkConiarvation of Human MMINatural Resources." Dr. Thee,

dora Speigner, chairman of HMNCC Department of Geography,wai presiding officer.

fll/TUr H Clll COLONIAL'S exciting iviH

Will liflon: SANTA CLAUS GAME V-JWIN UP TO SIOOO IN CASH plus

F' THOUSANDS OF VALUABLE GOLD BOND STAMPS1 51.t00.00 WINNER $500.00 WINNER $300.00 WINNER SIOO.OO WINNER SIOO.OO WINNER

Mn. It*r. Baker Mrs. M. W. Leonard C. H. KIRBY Mr*.Lois B. Fisher OWa WiMllord M. L. BOWDEN I COLONIAL STORESIH>K;HrOALK. N. c. AU.IWTUN Ull FI,O«IDA AVK.K.H. HHtUHTHIftI * MACM.Vc. »o\ 14 Wt IH»:MN I |

fr. I--???JCOMPLETE SATISFACTION ON ALL COLONIAL MEAT PURCHASES OR HAPPY HOLIDAY JL

DOUBLE TOUR MONEY BACK |> >. Q> S|I"TUIL KHigSm| BIGMONEY

or "BABY BEEP*

91 I EMM H BACON» 69c R o ASTS\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 Mm SAUSAGE LB. 49c

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lB- 39c JB3ESL* CLUB * BONELESS RIB ? M"Willi aTEAIi FRANKS lb. 49c i,i,.?owJcn

4. SHOULDER ON MorionRoad

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Hubert T. VoreMcrKoule 7. Boi 215

SAVE 12c 0N... SAVE tfc ON 'Mrv I oretta Cook

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I. ITALIANSTEAK ?£ |S A MAYER SMOKIE LINKS H. BEEF A GRAVY ?XL . Br»MMt Ltak SaMfiI VO» AfTUDIC «. MM El I VMD AfTUMC. 4. IMi l<fl fl" VOO AHIIDEC. 4, |*M K<| I VOID AFTU DEC. 4. tM« I<l VOB ATTD NC 4, IH» U

Cor. University Dr. & C. HillRd. Wellons Village Shopping Center 426 West Main Street, 5 Points908 East Main Street Northgate Shopping Center

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