6B -THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, SEPT. It, 1M» Civil Service Exams S WASHINGTON, D. C.-Two of the Federal Government's most popular examinations - for Clerks and Secretaries In the Washington, D. C. "urea have been opened for a short time, the Civil Service Com mission announced today. TELL MEx hovj much wea-r rnd Li3fW*f , how ott? ice weer eueRGV ooes -rwe sum > -ittß-r our nowv^rn • fcv£ gv - olocipl RearT 4,000,000n second t "IH6 euw SIMU.BR it) F) WU6S mOMIC PURViRCg, iw MftWV PURC^S.eW^RPL ggsiewme rfegLF? -mouewp piftr pge?! Vm&rT WR6 IWE ~ RRfc CIOUD* PRRT Of -THE EfißlVl ' 7 BViD REVOWe Of PRRK -ft CRWltf RWO SPIN ftROUUP WrfH if I*s DOSS TO URW epsep. Vims eucw ps iroh mvmch BMP ÜBBP INHDOOIP RUP WRj CU3UD6 fIQRT ? THE FIZZLE FAMILY BY H. T ELMO IT ' 6 TEW-TMIKTV! H I VOUWS LADV'. NOU I SWE JUST WALTZEDIN! SHOULD HP NE BEEN ) 1? HAPPENED ?J O THE FIZZLE FAMILY ' ■yH.T.Hmo' BOSS!TM HERE THREE I KNOW.I'VE DECIDEDTO| Y ARE VOU REALLV \| ROR JUST SAVINGTHPTT VEARS AND NEVER SOT W LEAVE THIS OUTFIT/ QUITTING, FIZZLE ? J TO BRIGHTEN UP MV / PUGGY ' BY Horace Elmo X HAVE VOUR DOS BIT MV LEGL |OLD VOU PUT > F\*ES A IT HE LIKED IT JUST JA= COMPLAINT )USIT ?) "W» MORNING AS I , AMVTH I" V \AS IT WAS/ JS/&- R!?XH . VJSZ _\Y DELIVERED "THE &PER«, ITI FUGGY? / — \L RS-R \WL T1 N 7 (HEBR THAT! MMMH FC/ ' lb**# M| fc&ja? w Jl._j 2 is:; I fgyy Mjk PUGGY by Horace. Elmo WHAT ARE VOU READINSj [AREN'T VOU TOO MOUNSI [THCN,EXPLAIN YWILL.tfI KAND WHEN NT)U TRVTO" PU66Y ? T?.ktJ2fs£T W4O ™ E S TWE DIFFERENCE LEMC GET IT BACK, IT'S LABOR'. —_>7ATTOUT OMTOL BETWEEN CAPTTBC)MONCV. -W ■—- U I AND LRBOR \ JJfjfl [W /IUNO€RSTAND AND LABOR! JT ITS A^ BU / 6HT ''' Mmm. nnuH B'awk \J i h | 11&w vc, r 1 n unt-ii.*ri UPMk. J I I I I U I I I I hhhkphj ' V I I ' ' ' ' no hwhoeok mM WryrMMTn^B:'*-!''!Mrju-nn wnw&jt«jn mm; T tf I^JU>-ukm iff'- B'i"i|WlFlr;iCKii fcjMWOfl V| ■> ' i-jpna(»; Diohj^ P g WHB|P :i M,-liid y W fill li I m 1 >' Applicants for Clerk, GS-2 (4231 per year) and GS-3 (4600 per year) may obtain Announcement No. WAO-814, which contains complete in formation, from anyone of the 65 Interagency Boards of Civil Service Examiners or from any major Poet Office. Applications musj be filed before midnight November 8. Students who expect to graduate within nine months may take the written test and If found eligible, will be consi dered for appointment after graduation. Candidates for Secretary- Stenographer or Secntuy-Ty pist, GS-5 ($6782 per year) should ask for Announcement No. WAO-812 at the same sources. This announcement is aimed toward experienced Secretaries who have held res ponsible positions. Applica tions must be filed before mid night November 1. Applicants for stenographer positions may present a certi ficate of proficiency in typing or stenography or both, based on a test given within the past year, and thus avoid the practi cal test otherwise required. All applications should be addressed to the Interagency Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, 1900 E. Street, N. Washington, D. C. 20415. Young Aide LILLINGTON - Robert Morgan, Democratic candidate for State . ttorney General, has announced that H. H. ("Nick") Weaver, a native of Greenville, will serve as coordinator of Morgan's fall campaign. In making the announcement, Morgan made a pitch for greater involvement of young people in political activities. Weaver is 22 years old. Ins. Finns Invest $7 Million In. Slums Project NEW YORK - The special life insurance prognun to Invest one billion dollars to help im prove living conditions in blighted urban areas has reach ed 70 per cent of Its goal, it was announced here today. Loans and commitments by life insurance companies under the program amounted to $701.9 million as of Septem ber 13, Orvllle E. Beal, chair- man of the Life Insurance Committee on Urban Problems reported. Projects H *lnvolving $128.5 million more aye bring reviewed, he added. The pro gram was launched on Septem ber 13 a year ago. The Investments are being made to provide housing, jobs and service facilities for people in city cora„fress. To date pro jects are being financed in 220 cities, Beal said. Beal gave this breakdown of the allocations of funds in the first 12 months of the program: .Housing - $535.2 million. This is providing 48,608 hous ing units for low and moderate Income families. The units in clude one-to-four family hous es and rental apartment build ings. .Job-creating enterprises and community service facilities - $166.7 million. This is pro viding 19,482 permanent jobs, in addition to the jobs created by the construction work it self. Projects include industrial plants, commercial and retail ventures, hospitals, clinics, warehouses, neighborhood ser vice centers and educational SEHSATIONAUMOKOmR! Introduce your whole family to the men who made America great! THE AMERjS^HERITAGE 12-VOI IIMI. SET OF PRESIDENTS AND FAMOUS AMERICANS Outstanding feature* of thl« remarkable 12-volume set: •AH thirty-six Presidents plus over two hundred other famous •An information roundup for every President providing Americans. quick, easy reference to the key facts and important events • More than 1,000 illustrations including glorious full-color of his life and administration. pictures of authentic Americana and a magnificent full- • Foreword to Volume Iby famed historian and Pulitzer page portrait of each President. Prize-winner Bruce Catton. • pages of Special Picture Portfolios illustrating • Newly created by the editors of American Heritage and each President's personal and public life. published by Dell. Complete indej in Volume 12. Start Your buyajbook aweek i Sef Today 49^99k tIJH fcTwMi* And SOVG! Volume lon Sale i .' }P . 4 >i r f, ->| . '* s v. ■ gk ,: y^--; v - : i; /'§ Hk J M V tir I facilities. The objective of the pro gram is to divert $1 billion from regular life insurance company Investments to make available capital to finance pro jects that have been unable to obtain private funding because of type, location or risk. There are now 163 com panies participating in the pro gram. These companies, repre senting more than 90 per cent of the assets of the life insur ance business in the U. S., are members of the American Life Convention and the Life In surance Association of Ameri ca. To be eligible for financing under the urban investment program, a project must be de signed to benefit people living in city core areas where con dition of blight or near exist. A project may be in a blighted area itself or in anoth UNC Features Four Writers In Residence CHAPEL HILL - Four of the) nation's major literary figures will serve interval periods as writers-in-residence at the 1 University of North Carolina here, beginning immediately, program chairman Max Steele announced. The visiting authors include novelist and short story writer Herbert Gold, poet Galway Kinnell, playwright Robert Anderson, and novelist Elizabeth Spencer. The writers will have no formal classroom duties but will er area If it helps to move people out of a deteriorating neighborhood into a more de sirable environment. The program is currently financing projects in 4 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. ' MILES COLLEGE GETS GIFT —(Birmingham, Ala.) Dr. L. Pitts, left, president of Miles College, Birmingham, Ala., ac cepts a check for SI,OOO from M. E. Kelley, Southeast region al sales manager for the Na tional Biscuit Company. Rev. Calvin Woods of Birmingham, Ala., center, is looking on. The SI,OOO check represents a por tion of Nabisco's annual giving to institutions of higher learn ing. meet informally with any classes and students interested in writing and contemporary American culture. Each will have one formal address open to the public. Author Herbert Gold will be the first writer-in-residence here, Sept. 23 - Oct. 25. HIDE GRAY HAIR! :Sfe^S»LI£K«IACK; \; > PUP. D»• U i is

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view