-THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, NOV. 19, 1966 2B , JF' k gpj / DEBUTANTE QUEENS—Joyce Hand, right. was last week named Debutante Queen at the annual Debutant* Ball to be held in Greensboro, on Satur day, November 19. The affair w% - 1 mpm , ra DEBUTANTES PRACTICE FIG URE —Shown above are ww« of J I ' J . M y B I V PATRICIA COBB, a senior at tha Ban L. Smith Sanior High School, GreenAoro. u*ad as har talent numbar at tha Six OLD STAGG KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY $ 055 fill s lO5 WM PINT % QT OLD STAGG KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY rr re« rwoervt* a***" ©STAGG DISTILLING CO., FRANKFORT, KY. • 86 PROOF is being sponsored by the local chapters of Hie Zeta Phi Beta Sorority. She is presented a gift by Betty Daniels, a senior at A. tho Debe practicing tho figure. 1 Mn. Lillian D. Harris, teacher taanth Annual Debutante Ball, | j an original Ballat, using tha 1 tuna oftha song "The Day* of | Wine and Roses." j i and T. College, end vice preei i dent of the undergraduate ! chapter, as Nancy Younst first rurtnerup, looks on from ceo . ter. at ttH J. C. Prica School and Chairman of tho Danca Com- mittaa, demonstrate* how tha 1966 Queen will be the central part of a wheel, holding the ribbons while Hie debutante! waltz gracefully around in a circular formation. jjr TW B«st Way T« eixprw Syaprifcy «• tv*ry A W>l pl««n h ■*■■«« «M I un. A« • Mr Imi •M UmM. ««d ■■•«*• 7 —4 M* k« ■ W u>e« o i*■'■!»*» X w. u a *•» «*• i I Longr's Florist k ■ Ml u: I MUM QurtMM. M. C 29 Young Women to Make Debut to Society In Gate City GREENSBORO nine young ladies of the 1 area will make their debut to so ciety at the 16th annual De-1 butante Ball to held at the j Moore Gymnasium, A. and T. | College, Greensboro, on No I vember 19, 8:00 p.m., accord- j ing to the announcement by Mrs. Alphonso Gore, President j The Debutante Ball, sponsor ed by the Zeta Alpha and Beta Nu Zeta Chapters of the Zeta Phi Beta Soroiity, Inc., is held i to enhance the social and cul tural standards of young peo j pit and also supplements funds j for the chapter's educational projects. A total of S9OO has been awarded in scholarships j this year Debutantes, selected on the j ' basis of scholastic achievement, ' oharacter, service, and other j ' j outstanding qualities of "finer; ' womanhood," have enjoyed many activities sponsored by j the sorority. Highlights of the activities include: Get acquaint ; ed party; lawn party; charm school for debs and escorts, with emphasis on poise, and ! social decorum; attended the Barn Dinner Theater with es- j corts to see the famous Broad [ way production "Gigi" starring j Althea Rose; Fashion Show, Garden Room Meyer's Depart j ment Store, October 22, and Tea, in honor of debutante's, escorts and parents of each, at Red Carpet Room, Howard Johnson Restaurant, Oct. 30. IMBBBOIii & > *tsHF&* : yBSy ~ »ffs«PiWßß^'^^WSy ■' y ' '**'gy^B H I Ijj '^■LT afc^TO Bte ft^F. I j ■ Vfl V^ jV. ■ + I ! r f ■" *' Presenting the frosty taste of Fresca. It's a blizzard. Fresca is the new cold drink with the frosty, cold taste. And ol course, It's sugar-free. Just how refreshing is Fresca? This refreshing: A mftm l°y. biting, bold, cold, frosty, wintry, breezy, shivering, shimmering, Hjj, J|M| shuddering, stinging, springy, sparkling, splashing, nipping, ■' CMHU chilling, lively, light, bright, brisk, bouncing, bubbling, piercing, nearly freezing, and almost shocking. M. There's never been a taste so refreshing. - I i j *9 ■■ 0 DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 0 Rehearsals with debs and es corts have been held weekly leading up to the presentation date. * Presentation of the queens and other debutantes at the Ball will climax the calendar of social events for the 1966 debs Study Shows Grim Job Scene In City Slums WASHINGTON —The unem- j ployment rate of Negroes liv-1 ing in big-city slums was 1.5 times higher than that of white residents of the same areas last March i For Negroes living in urban j poverty areas, the jobless rate j at that time was 9 4 percent, I compared with a 6.0 percent i rate for white slum residents All told, the jobless rate for j all workers living in these areas at 7.5 pel cent was about double that for the en I tire U. S. work force last . March These disparities are brought) to light in an article, "Poverty j Areas of Our Major Cities," j appearing in the October issue I of the Labor Department's Monthly Labor Review. 1 DEBUTANTE PRACTICE THEIR SONG—Standing left to right: Joyce Hands and Nancy Young, seniors at Ben Smith High School; Christine Davis a junior at Dudley High School; The survery on which the article is based points to a ! bleak job situation for all workers living in big-c it y slums—with N'egioes more dis advantaged fian whites. But the study reveals that the 6 0 percent rate of jobless ! ness among whites in urban poverty areas is even less than the rate of Negro workers in non-poverty areas (7.2 percent). Other findings: • 42 percent of the 12.1 mil lion persons 14 and over liv ing in these areas are Negroes, Continued on page 5B Phyllis Booker • junior of Page Senior High School; seated from left to right: Miss Elaine Harrington, teacher at J. C. Price School, and chairman of the ball; Patricia Cobb, senior | Ben L. Smith High School;! kiJLj Beverly Bradahaw, a junior «l Dudley High School; Gwendo lyn Bell, a junior at North East High School; and Gwin dolyn Miller and Carolyn Pierce a senior and a junior of Dudley High School.