HHHHHHIHHHHHHiHHHHHHHHHHIIHHHHBHKt--fir .... r |H ■M. _ iTTjB ■ :•'■•- ;• fj ■1 ■ Ap 4 P^ a^aM VISITORS to the office of the Carolina Times this week were 3rd and 4th grade pupils of the Fayettevflle Street School. Ac companyiox the young people DBC to Participate in MDTA Washington Washington, D.C. has been selected to participate in a pilot project under the Manpower Deve lopment and Training Act involving direct individual referrals to private business, trade and technical schools being administered by the United Business Schools Association (ÜBSA) under contract with the U.S. Office of Education, it was an nounced today by ÜBSA Ex ecutive Director Richard A. Fulton. The project involves the occupational training and re training of approximately 480 persons from eight study states: Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and west Virginia. The train ing may also be carried out in adjoining states.- - - - a copperative ven ture between the Department SHOP, SWAP'N SAVE m DEALER USED CAR SALE xbuvs on every one in stock. Check this list for values! @ CHEVROLET Caprice 2-Door Hardtop. UU V-8, automatic transmission, power steer ing, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, white with black vinyl roof tp/UUvU /*/* FORD Galaxie 500 4-Door Hardtop. V-8, UU automatic transmission, power steering, Select-Air air conditioning, radio, heater, white wall tires, green finish /»/» FORD Galaxie 500 2-Door Hardtop. V-8, UU automatic transmission, power steering. Select-Air air conditioning, radio, heater, white wall tires, white finish yAVTV /»/* FORD Fairlane 500 2-Door Hardtop. 6 UU cylinder, standard transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, new car CQQQC warranty, red finish /»/» PLYMOUTH Fury 111 2-Door Hardtop. OO V-8, automatic transmission, power steer ing, radio, heater, whitewall tires, QOOQC blue finish /»/» FORD Galaxie 500 2-Door Hardtop. V-8, OO automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, €9l white finish /»/» MUSTANG 2-Door Sedan. 6 cylinder, OO standard transmission, radio, heater, white tires, green finish, OQC new car warranty vlOwtl /»(■ BUICK Wildcat Convertible. Automatic Uv transmission, power steering, power brakes, power windows, radio, QIQQR heater, whitewall tires, brown . . |rlvvv N. C. Dealer's License No. 1856 ♦ ~ - ; *' I *• was Mrs. Martha G. Dalton, member of the faculty. Many of the youngsters registered great interest when they ob served a linotype and other of Health, Education and Welfare (USOE) and the Labor Department. The Labor Department is respon sible too determining the jobs needs in the local communi ties and arranging for the local employment offices to select trainees to prepare for these jobs in the private schools. ÜBSA is providing the the local employment ser vices with lists of schools eligible to carry out training under the MDTA projectt The local employment officer will use these lists to place the trainee in a suitable school. Sixty trainees will be se lected from each of the eight study states. In addition to schools of the ÜBSA membership, mem ber institutions' in-tlre—Nat- ofi and Technical Schools will printing material in action. In the above picture the pupils are being shown a page nega tive, by Bernard Williams, used in the off-set method of print Pilot Program participate in the MDTA project through an agreement with ÜBSA. ÜBSA, a Washington, D.C.- based association, is acting an agent of the U.S. Office of Education in making fa cilities available and in paying the trainees' tuition with the $300,000 earmarked by HEW for this purpose. The program, scheduled to run for a year, will provide direct referrals to private schools from rural and urban areas, reduce the time gap between the selection of the trainee and Jiis entry into training and test the.ability of private schools to serve the disadvantaged. Capt. Eugene W. Davis (USN-Ret.) is administering the project for ÜBSA from the Washingtooi, D,C. offices at J,LQliSeventeertJx 5t.,.. N. W. t.".?. Mg to Hii 'i . FORD Custom 500 4-Door Sedan. V-8, "V automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, CI 9AC black finish v IT FORD Galaxie, 500 4-Door Sedan. V-8, UtF standard transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, Cil COff black finish t^XDvV fttZ PLYMOUTH Fury II 2-Door Sedan. V-8, Ut# automatic transmission, air conditioning, radio, heater, whitewall tires, 61QQC brown finish ylut/v /Jff CHEVY II 2-Door Sedan. 6 cylinder, au- Uw tomatic .transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, Q4 AQP green finish f>M FORD Galaxie 500 Fastback. V-8, VI standard transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tire*, fi»-| QQff dark blue finish yldvU /* A FORD Galaxie 500 Fastback. 390 V-8 U * engine, 4-speed transmission, radio, heater, power steering, whitewall C 1! QQC tires, white finish ylvv V /* A FORD Fairlane 4-Door Sedan. 6 cylinder, O JL automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, blue and 6QQC white finish e/ «/ /*0 FORD Galaxie 4-Door Sedan. V-8, auto- OO matic transmission, heater, whitewall tires, black finish I V V ing now employed by the Car olina Times. (Photo by Pur#foy) Teacher jobs in New York WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. -The Teacher Recruitment Com mittee of the Urban League of Wetchester is now referring teachers for September, 1937 opsnings. The committee has in its files 350 openings in 47 school districts in Westchester County ranging from kindergarten through 12th grade in all sub jects. Teachsrs must have New York State certification to qual ify. The Teacher Recruitment Committee has been in oper ation for ten years. During this time it has plac«d 150 colored teachers in Westchester County schools with sahries ranging from SSOO to $14,950. ANCIENT ASPIRIN Aspirin was not introduced into medicine until 1899, al though it comes from a family of herbal remedies that were used in the Stone Age, the Catholic Digest points out. N. J. Lass to Reign Over BC May Activities Greensboro—Miss Janet Jen kins, senior home economics major, of Camden, N.J., has been chosen queen to reign over May Day festivities at Bennett College on May 6, according to campus-wide election returns just tabu lated. President of the Student Senate for 1967-68 will be Miss Cynthia Frierson, of Florence, S.C., a rising senior foods and nutrition major. Serving in her cabi net will be: Misses Jo Anne Coble of Wilson, N.C., vice president; Angelene Johnson, of Reidsville, secretary; Vera Fowler, of Albany, Ga., treasurer, and Dorothy Childs of Pittsburgh, Pa., parlia mentarian. Miss Sandra McFadden, of Philadelphia, Ra., rising senior, special education major, was elected president of the David D. Jones Stu dent Union. Other Union officers are Misses Patricia Kersl*, of Chicago, 111., vice president; Gwendolyn Morse, of Ninety-Six, S.C., secretary; Patricia Herring, of Greensboro, treasurer, and Wanda Dula, of Lenoir, pianist. Named student representa tive to the Central strative Committee was Miss Beverly Roberts, of Newark, N.J., rising junior English major. Miss Cassandra Feas ter, of Greensboro, a rising junior sociology major, was elected Bennett's "Miss UNCF" and Miss D'jaris Ragland, of Birmingham, Ala., a rising junibr biology major, was named coordinator for the National Student Association. Otherelection results follow: RECREATIONAL COUNCIL —Chairman, Hedy Hunt, of Henderson; vice chairman, Constance Clarke, of Akron Ohio; secretary-treasurer,Bon nie Warren, of Glen Raven, N.C.; assistant, Peggy Rich mond, of Charlotte, and publicity chairman, Patricia Galloway, of Winston-Salem. INTER-DORMITORY COUN- ClL—President, Juanita White, of Mt. Pleasant, S.C.; vice president, Pau lette Coble/of Wilson, N.C.; secretary, Narda Stukes, of Columbia, S.C., and assis tant, Paulette Young, of Pittsburgh, Pa. PRE-ALUMIN ASSOCIAT ION—President", Carolyn Peace, of Norfolk, Va.; vice president, Patricia Farrish, of Reidsville, and secre tary, Vera Bussey, of Lex ington, N.C. Greensboro, N.C.—Dr. Paul O. Elmquist, of Arlington, Va., will be on the Bennett College campus, April 3-7 to give a series of lectures and to conduct seminars around the theme: "Present Day China in Perspective." He will be appearing un der the sponsorship of the Non-Western Studies Pro gram, directed by Dr. Shang- Ling Fu. f-la tI&J By Mary Whitman To a stamp collector, May 14, 1918, is a famous date. It marked introduction of the first United States air mail stamp and the appearance of one of America's most valu able rarities in stamps the 24-cent airmail invert. One hundred of these stamps were printed with an inverted center showing the plane fly ing upside down, explains Ervin J. Felix, stamp editor at Whitman Publishing Com pany, Racine, Wis. If you were lucky enough to have a perfect specimen of this stamp today, it would be worth around {30,000 at auction price. All 100 were originally pur chased by W. T. Robey, a Wash ington, D.C. collector, continues Felix, whose Arm manufac tures stamp albums and other philatelic supplies. In his own account of the event, Robey says he was alert to the possibility of a printing error, and happened to be in the right Washington post office at the right time. When he asked for the new stamps on May 14, the day of issue, the clerk reached under his coun ter and pullef out a sheet of inverts! V No others were "sold. The Government reportedly destroyed three additional In verted sheets still N et the Bureau of Engraving, once word got out. All first-day sheets were called back, and safeguards were taken against repetition of the error. "The 24-cent airmail invert ranks as the classic UJ9. postal error," comments Felix, "and while (he average collector will never own a rarity of this value, the possibility sparks Interest in stamp collecting." w \\mM u lj\JA ■ HI w Btr^gll HAMMTT COUNTY'S INTHU SI AM FOR MAY HAMMOCKS CELEBRATION HIGH —Left to right: W. E. Collins, Hammocks Expansion Director is present ing tickets for the May 20, cele- Check Your Tax Return Before Mailing it IRS Greensboro, N.C.—Here's a word of advice from the Internal Revenue Service: After you prepare your 1966 Federal income tax return, it is a good idea to set it aside for a day or so and then give it a thorough re view before you mail it. District Director of Internal Revenue J.E. Wall said that North Carolina taxpayers who heed this advice often find omitted income de ductions, or errors in arith metic. A review of the return may disclose that the tax payer failed to provide his name, address, and zip code, omitted his social security number Or listed it incorrect ly, did not attach all copies of Form W-2, or forgot to sign the return. This review will be time well spent as it may prevent delays in processing the return and will speed up any refund due, Mr. Wall said. ASC SOPH NAMED TO CENTRAL MICH. TEAM Albany, Ga. Mt. Pleasant, I Mich.-Four underclassmen were selected toCentral Mich igan University's all-opponent basketball team as chosen by the Chip players for the 1966- 67 season. Heading the list were Wil bert Jones, Albany State's (Ga.) 6-7 sophomore forward, and Elvin Ivory, a 6-6 fresh man from Southwestern Lou isiana. Both were unanimous picks along with Jerry Mc Greal of Illinois State. Jones, a real solid con tender, along with Ivory, for the NAIA all-tournament team, dropped in 24 points against the Chippewas in the opening round 71-70 loss to Central Michigan and grabbed 11 re bounds. His brother, Melvin Jones, a 6-B'/j junior center for Albany State, was picked on the Chips second team. BOURBON flll *4 50 DELUXEJBjfcPiMT J tm THE BOURBON DE LUXE DISTILLERY COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY, 86 PROOF. CONTAINS 49% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1987 THE CAROLINA TOOB— bration at Hammocks Beach, to C. C. Ray, Sr., Harnett County Unit president, NCTA; Miss L. L. Culbreth, president, Harnett County Classroom Teachers; F. D. McNeill, NCTA Field Repre New Helper For Ironing Day I TI I :& Ironing will never be fun, but il can be easier. The latest devel opment to lighten the workload is an ironing board cover impreg nated with nickel stainless steel. Acp?rding to the devslaper, Rockland Industries, Brooklandville, Md.. the reversible "Cloth of Steel" cover is scorch-free and odorless, even after two hours under a 450 iron. Because stainless steel reflects heat, delicate fabrics can be pressed at lower temperatures, and less time is required for the ironing job. Iron drag is reduced, thanks to the cover's smooth surface. Available nationwide in houseware stores. HUMAN HAIR WIGS jm DIAL 688 8109 $49.9 5 Come In For FREE Fitting • NO DOWN PAYMENT • SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS THE WIG WAM 113 EAST MAIN ST. DURHAM, N. C. sentative; J. A. Brown, board member, Southeastern District, and Harnett County; H. M. Evans, principal, Harnett Coun ty Schools. 3A