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Traveling High, Wide And Pretty %. Xh4 jfl m fl Kl a II wl a w « %^r? 1 JtV V, ■fiv Whether you're part of the oler, you owe it to yourself tc It's all too easy to forget bea cious vacation time trying to track them down through un familiar streets and stores. Even the shortest trip de mands a check-list of beauty essentials. Spend a little time planning them before every thing's packed up and you re member you've forgotten your hairbrush or your loveliest lip stick. It's a good idea to try nnd tote most of these beauty items in your handbag, except for heavy lotions and the like which we all know by now should be poured into plastic containers and popped into the suitcase. If you're traveling by plane, how ever, remember to seal lids tightly (especially the tops of perfume bottles) with tape—be cause the air pressure can make these pretties go pop-all over your best dress. THE DASHING DOT Micro-miniature circuits\vitli components scarcely larger than the dot over this letter "i" are carrying a giant load in today's earthbound and outer space electronic systems. Low in cost and high in performance and reliability, these nearly microscopic inte grated circuits are revolutioniz ing electronic switching sys tems, transistor radios, tele phone sets, TV and computers. For example, almost a mil lion electrical components can be packed into a silicon wafer the size of a postage stamp and not much thicker. A wafer is divided into hundreds of squares, each containing 672 transistors and resistors and each so tiny that it is visfble through a postage stamp perfo ration. A spokesman for Bell Tele phone \i6or"B?tb7ie(t7 a'leading' developer of the circuits, says that their extraordinary mini aturization makes them parti cularly adaptable to uses where weight and bulk are factors—in everything, that is, from space vehicles to hearing aids. One familiar instrument which in corporates an integrated circuit is Bell's compact, all-in-one Trimline® telephone, whose push-button dialing mechanism , TELL ME ' WOW OIDIO IW| 6&ME - |i» DO ALL TREES HAVE ~ R^Nies? U IHfIIHHHPP^ TOrIILRK In RNCIgNT GRttCZ . | SHQW NO ANNUAL QgCVTIH RIN^S! SSijSSBII^ mae&ssitmm ffffijM^SSS THE FIZZLE FAMILY by H. T. ELMO I LJJTIS T SS2« ( !? R VNFTH * CUT * W ITWIM MT OWCT HPJ> HI PUCGY AMEHICA'3 MOST LOVEABLE LADDIE by Horace Elmo TEACHER ASKED USI ( AW! J ITRINKIWG IS WHENH K... AND VDUR MEAD N WMAT THINKING WAS S EASY 1 YOUR MOUTH STAYS KEEPS TALKING TO BUT I DIDN'T KNCW ' I^^SMUT^. iet set or just a week-end trav travel high, wide and pretty, lty essentials, then spend pre- One of the handiest aids for the traveler or any busy-girl on-the-go is Dorothy Gray's E.ves-on-the-Go Collection. The compact-sized and shaped con tainer holds your choice of eye make-up ammunition: black or brown liner, green or blue eye shadow, a liner brush, a pan each of brown and white for highlighting and contouring, a double-ended foam applicator and a small tube of Under Eye Cover Cream for banishing dark circles or highlighting eye lids. With this complete kit of eye make-up, you'll be set for all sorts of new travel and social experiences beautifully. Even if you plan to be the only woman on a desert island full of men! AM Close-up of a single micromini ature beam-lead circuit. is cradled between the hand set's receiver and mouthpiece The spokeman says that inte grated circuits will be use even more widely in the elec tronic telephones of the future •A' typical integrated circuit sutfh -*s one-uMfk m the Bel System's Picturepnone® set, i about l/25th of an inch squari and contains 12 transistors, 13 resistors and one diode. Bell's integrated circuit bears little resemblance to indi vidual electronic components linked by a maze of wires. One technique for making inte grated circuits involves building up a "sandwich" of thin layers of conducting or insulating Hopes Fade In Search Fotfßb# GATUNBURG,' Tenn. Hopes'begui to fade Sunday that lfttwTDennii 'Martin would ha found alive (n the dense wilderness df the Great Smoky MtomtaiS National Park. More than 1,000 aearchers, tnHmttng specially trained Green Beret troops and Nation al Guardsmen, inched through a 56-square mile area where the curly-haired seVen-year-old bar disappeared eight days ago while on a ««mpi«g trip. " There #efe no smilas op the feces of the sevchers Sunday and for the first timtf since the aeareh Megan, an' air d pessimism seemed to prevail although officials publicly ex pressed the hope that the youth would be found. Dennis, son of William Martin, 32, a Knoxvillt. Tenn., architect, wandered away from his father, older brother and grandfather June 14 while on a hiking trip near the Appala chian trail on the North Carolina-Tennessee border. "There's always hope at this stage of the game," said Chief Park Ranger Lee Sneddon. "There have been many instances recorded of survival beyond this date. Naturally the hope becomes dimmer each day, but we haven't given up by any means." Sneddon said that t rocki formations which overhang the 1 steep gorges and cliffs form numerous shelters in the search area. "Many cracks and crevices are there that any man or animal could fall into," te said. "And another thing, due to the rain he would naturally have gravitated to some sort of shelter. This is why we instructed all our crews not to go around the bushes and go around the rocks, but to go through the bushes and behind the rocks and under the rocks. There are all sorts of holes and crevices in the rocks." Weapons For Germ Warfare WASHINGTON jL M dis armament adviser hasfftif sen ators the United States ing a chamber of honMts with instant-kill chemical and biolog- film to form rejsistors, capaci tors and interconnections. Most film layers are 1,000 times thinner than a human hair. Integrated circuits are al most indestructibly rugged. In centrifugal test«pth»sr survive acceleration of 20,000 g's—or roughly the acceleration of a well-hit golf ball at the instant of tee-off. Looking to the future, the Bell spokesman predicts: "The spread of integrated circuits through the Bell Sys tem certainly will be marked by communications systems with capabilities far bityond those of systems known today." Who Lost the Most In Tax Bill Fight? At approximately 1:38 p.m. purwfay June u. 77 Republicans voted with a Eastern Democrats in the General Assembly to set off a whirlwind of political activity which ma; stfiTbe S the 1970 elections. The 59-55 vote sent Gbv. Bob Scott's $95.5 million tax package including a nickel a pack cigarette tax back to the Houae Finance Committee. The bill, now facing the Senate, includes a cigarette tax, but it is only two cents. II also has a soft drink tax designed to raise S3O million. M the present package is enacted as expected, observers will spend the next few months determining not who won this exhaustive battle, but who lost the most Nobody is happy with it, but the Democrats knocked heads last week until they could come up with a compromise to the cigarette tax. The "two and one" measure won 70 votes and the battle appeared over. Crown Tax Unliked This much can be said: Practically no one in the General Assembly likes the crown tax on soft drinks. It can also be said that Scott's five-cent cigarette tax could have passed. What has happened in the past week and a half has left the legislators exhausted and bitter. Scott was angry June 12 when his package was sent back to committee. He and his staff had worked six months planning a battle against the Eastern legislators, the toughest faction in the General Assembly. When a motion to delete the cigarette tax from th* ical agents which are ridiculous weapons wilh little real militar) value.. This assessment of the na tion's chemical and biological warfare preparations came from Dr. Matthew S. Meselson, Harvard biology professor and consultant to the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. MeselSon told the Senate For eign Relations Committee in se cret session April 30 that the United States should move to ratify the Geneva protocol of 1925, an agreement on no first use of gas and should agree to a prohibition against use of tear gas against an enemy. The United States signed the 44-year-old Geneva agreement but never has ratified it. The committee released Sun day a censored version of Me selson's testimony. While Meselson said nerve gasses and disease-producing viruses have a "very great po tential for mass killing," he in sisted they are unreliable, would invite savage retaliation and would not serve a second- Suike puipose after a nuclear attack. Committee Chairman J. W. Fuibright, u-Ark., pressed tne witness for an opinion on wheth er germ and chemical warfare would supply insurance that the Russians would not destroy U.S. retaliatory capacity with a first strike. Fuibright said Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird is contending that Russian devel opments are aimed at wiping out all land-based American missiles. "I myself do not see any sense for the United States in stockpiling biological weapons," Meselson replied. "I think we do ourselves far more harm than good by stimulating interest in these weapons, by breaking down the bamers against them. I think we are adequately safe guarded, insofar as deterrence is functional at all, by nuclear weapons which are reliable. "There are a lot of scary things one can say about biolog ical weapons. package failed on the Houae floor, everyone knew Scott's nickel a pack measure could pass the lower chamber. The battle seemed won, but the administrates was caught off guard by the motion to recommit the bill to committee. The Easterners expected a move to reconsider the vote on tha recommitment motion. They were prepared to let the motion appear and then top it with a motion to kill. Scott Chese Scott choae not to do this. The governor blasted Repub licans severely for blocking his measure and announced plans to go on television and fly around the state with direct appeals to the public. The legislators returned to" Raleigh Monday night and plans changed rapidly. They were not nappy and Scott knew it. The Democratic Party, long an institution, was in serious trouble in the East and the rest of the state, for that matter. Scott knew he could ram his nickel tax through the House, but he didn't want Republicans being responsible. Tuesday, Scott threw the ball to Democratic members of the Finance Committee. "Find the money," he told them. He said he still wanted his package, but he would accept an alternative. This move unified the Democratic legislators and pleased Rep. Perry Martin, D-Northampton, author of the "two and one" measure. Martin had slipped out of the state house around noon Tuesday to talk to the governor. He got Scott to take the heat off and let the Democrats work out a compromise. Nixons Return To White House WASHINGTON A hel icopter brought President and Mrs. Nixon back to the White House Sunday after a weekend spent attending a wedding and i observing the 29th anniversary jof their own. The Nixons were guests at the Saturday wedding of Vice Presi dent Spiro T. Agnew's daughter Pamela and Robert E. De- Haven, in Towson, Md. Then they went on to Camp David, the presidential retreat in the Catoctin Mountains of Mary ls)d, for an oyernight stay. With them were their daugh ters Tricia and Julie, David Ei senhower, Julie's husband. feA~AMWD///-^*\ I \\\ Save 10 on one can of any Raid Bug \y To the D«al«ri For each coupon you accept as our authorized agent, we will m, )/ pay you face value plus It handling charges, provided you and your customer I T have complied-with the te*ns of this offer; any other application constitutes fraud. f/y ' ■rj Invoices showing your purchase of sufficient stock to cover all coupons redeemed I j must be shown upon request. Your customer must pay any sales tax. Cash value 1/20 61 Void where prohibited by law. Redeem by mail to S. C. Johnson & W ' w/|y 1 Sauß 10t and stop uihafs bugging you. Now you can save 101 on Raid the nation's Raid Flying Insect Killer. number one bug stopper. Raid kills bugs dead... 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Nixon Will Visit Canada For Seaway Ceremonies NEW YORK - They called it| tha continent's fourth sea coast when President Eisenhower and Queen Elizabeth, on June M, 1959, formally dedicated the 1 great new waterway leading to the fast-growing mid-continent area. Today the St. Lawrence Staway is well into its 11th season, and its first 10 years of successful operation is being celebrated this month. The ceremonies will reach a high point on Friday with President Nixon, and Prime Minister IMPORTED RARE SCOTCH A Jmyem [House] I ©JUKI IHLAH® I "RAKE \SCOtCHWHIsm INK REIKI UHtl mn BtITT ffllf Wttiu 11 will itiu ittMun. HI, rut lAOTHDAY, JURE M, tm «■ GUHUU ll* Trodeau of Canada officiating. It will be Ntaua'a first visitte Canada as president. At Maaaena, NY, rededka tion services are acbeduled for 1 p.m. at the Elaeohover and Scell locks the major con tribution of this country to the waterway which opened up the heartland of the nation to ocean going ships. Later the same afternoon Nix on and Trudeau will participate in the second ceremony, this time at the First of the seaway facilities, St. Lambert Lock, just above the Jacques Cartier Bridge at Montreal. Related Celebration These observances follow a related celebration on Thursday at Sault Ste, Marie, Mich., at which the great new IJOO-foot Poe Lock built by the Army Corps of Engineers will be dedicated by Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe. The Poe lock is not a part of the St. Lawrence System, except to the extent that all of the Great Lakes are. It will permit lake vessels a thousand feet long to bypass the swift 21-foot des cent of upper lakes water poured from Lake Superior into Lake Huron. Together the facilities mean that bluewater ships, stepping up a ladder of locks, can move Zbetter^AFTN \fHAN SORRYV PROVIDE PROTECTION WITH AUTO INSURANCE Have you compared your rates and bene- R3r~~ fits on auto insurance with other companies? ' Before you renew or start a new policy, check with us. Com pare our low rates. CONSULT US ABOUT OUR INSTALLMENT PAYMEN'i PLAN Union Insurance & Realty Co. •14 PAYETTIVIU.I ST. PHONI MUM 2J200 mile* inland from Ik* Atlantic Ocean and «03 feet above ma level. The St Lawrence Seaway and the concomitant power in stallation now at the foot of man-made Lake St. Lawrence cost Canada and the United States >1 billion. The power dam and in stallation serosa the rhrer front Masaena and the locks of the St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation coat the nower authority of the state of New York and the hydro-electric power commission of Ontario around MOO million. /" '« PORTABLE TlßVnai LUGGAGE WHIST WATCHES STEREOS RECORD PLAYERS DIAMOND RINGS Sam's Pawn Shop 122 X Main St Pk. 68M9TJS Durham, N. C 5B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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June 28, 1969, edition 1
14
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