6B —THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, SEPT. IS, IMB "Shame of the City" EDITOR'S NOTE Dirt, filth, diseases, aban doned automobiles and houses unfit for human habi tation may be found in 80 percent of the area known •a the "Philadelphia Ghetto." Thousands and thou sands of Negroes live in these sections which have become "The Shame of the City" because police, poli ticians and disinterested private citizens have per mitted them to become stamping grounds of killers, _ F - «*; ifw'P"* ■hT?yyT^'^ _•.."! ATTENTION, MAYOR TATE—This Is a scene which makes the 1200 block of Cambria an "eyesore" as well as a potential "death trap" for children, and where rapists and muggers can lie in wait for de fenseless women and aged men. Hence, when the "War on Dirt" army reaches this sector, "soldiers" will not have far to look for the "enemy." As you can Hope Enjoys Altitude As King of TV Mountain HOLLYWOOD - You wouldn't know it to look at him, but Bob Hope is the terror of the networks. Any regular series or special will be juggled around like a primed hand grenade when a Hope spectacular is in the offing. Hope wipes out the opposition in the ratings. ABC-TV side-stepped a confrontation with the comedian by delaying the debut of two of its new series this fall, "The Survivors" and "Love, American Style." Both were to have been beamed Sept. 22. Now they will be shown Sept. 29 when comedian Hope is nowhere to Be seen unless horros one of his old movies should crop up that evening. Much aS Rapid Robert gives the appearance of fun and games, he is all business underneath the gags. He wants to top the ratings as much as anybody in the television rat race. High ratings mean more money, of which Bob has plenty already, but it also makes him king of the mountain and he enjoys the altitude. His first show of the new video season is loaded with talent. Among tfce guests are Bill Cosby, Jonnny Carson, Sid Caesar, Steve Allen, Flip Wilson, Jack Carter and Jimmy Durante. In all, Hope has 18 comedians lined up for the •bow. "I love working with comedians," Hope said over bacon and eggs just before a golf game at the club which is • long five-iron from his bouse. "When you work with real talent it brings you up to your best. It was like working with Jackie Gleason in our oicture. Bine gave me the same feeling when we did those road pictures together. You know what to feed the other guv and &know bow to attack for .. "It works because I can 'plij straight man for tbem, or turn around and Vet tbem play straight for me." Whatevre, it isn't playing straight with ABC or CBS. Bob Hope, plus II very famy comedians, is absolutely ruinous to the opposition. Bob lijmi Bil« and grins with 'l'm revolting against NBC on this Aow. Hope said. I §£i m Bob Hope "The Smothers Brothers will be guests along with the others. "It doesn't take guts to have this many comics appearing with me on the show just sharp editing." Again, Hope is kidding on the square. By the time the show is edited none of the performers will look awkward, least of all Bob Hope. CANADA DRY ' Where the Unexpected is Expected Unexpectedly, you're a favorite magician among children! Fill a tumbler with water up to the brim, cover with a small sheet of paper, invert the tumbler—and the water will stay in the glass! Practice a bit, and you can learn—though steel is heavier than water—to make a needle float unex pectedly (don't let your fingers touch the water when you drop the needle horizontally). Everyone knew that Englishman Harry Brearly was a flop. For years he toiled to And a new metal for gun barrels, but all he ever came up with was a shiny metal that wu too hard to machine to be good for gun barrels. hoodlums, dope peddlers and Ramblers who wouldn t dare trv to operate in Germantown, Mount Airy, West Oak Lane and the Greater Northeast. But, if Ihe city government did its job, if the courts cracked down hard enough and if the police were as vigilant in "The Ghetto" as they are in Chestnut Hill, we might not have such disgraceful conditions in our city as the picture below reveals in graphic detail. see, Mister Mayor, this is a vertabl# "automobile graveyard." Close by, are other "graveyards," some as bad, others worse. And should your "army" have any difficulty locating them, citizens forced to live around them will gladly serve as "scouts" to point them out.—Staff Photo by Charles D. Barnes, 3rd. 4&f,i2o(£M 4/ """""' BY TMOVSOK You can make hearty Chef's Salad in minutes that will "stick to the ribs" for hours. This makes a fine main dish for luncheon or supper, and with a scrumptious hot dessert, adds up to a really fancy meal fit for last-minute guests who drop in. 1. Wash and crisp one large head of iceberg lettuce, and shred well. Add one cup of juli enne-cut cooked chicken, one cup of julienne-cut cooked ton gue (ready-cooked meats in cans are a convenience for this), one cup of julienne-cut Swiss cheese, and one tablespoon of capers. Pour one-half cup of French dressing over the salad, and toss lightly to mix well. Serves six. 2. Now you can serve your fa- vorite drinks fast with cocktails that come in chill-and-serve cans. There are nine varieties martinis, whiskey sours, daiqui ries, margaritas, vodka gimlets, and martinis, mai tais, manhat tans and screwdrivers. Each 8- ounce can of Club Cocktails contain three drinks which, when chilled, are ready to serve. No need to add ice. 3. Here's how to make the dessert, a Hot Lemon Souffle, everyone's favorite: Beat Biz egg yolks until thick. Add l'/£ cups of sugar, slowly, beating constantly. Add three table spoons of lemon juice; and grind the rind of one lemon and add it to the mixture, and one-half tea spoon of salt. Beat the egg white until stiff, and fold into the first mixture. Pile into a buttered souffle dish, and set the dish in hot water and bake 20 minutes in a 370° oven. Serve at once. While the dessert is baking open a can of rolls and pop them into the oven to bake also. There's nothing more appetiz ing with a salad than hot rolls. PAINFUL CORNS?jf§ AMAZING LIQUID RELIEVES PAIN AS m&r IT DISSOLVES CORNS AWAY Now remove (ocas «hc fax. easy *«T wiih Fimoart. Liquid Ftwxone re lievo pain intundy, worlu below die •kin line to diuolve cotni away in full dart. Get Fi«iooe...atall dni« coumen. SHALLOTTE - Kinston Neal Smith, 26, of Rt. 1, Ashe, was killed Friday afternoon when his car collided with a car driven by James Arthur Randolph of Bolivia on a rural paved road seven miles north of here. Randolph was charged with manslaughter and reckless driving, said trooper W. C. Fulghum. * Hk fjt SKII dSL ; || wßj§& \ I -is ?|f „• f I P^ISISW|JB I I I %ft (m WMM -. mm §&*, . H ■■ ■ W EflF H J2I ||Y| \j JH Hi B!p w SMife WHAT A HAPPY WAY TO DRESS from Junior One, bright anemone# splashed on » printed challia of "Orion" acrylic. The snugly-fitted mini will keep its shape and. won't ait-out because "Orion," the fiber with a memory, has excellent shap« retention qualities. Junior One, style No. 117 in ■teas 8-18} red, bluej Lonsdale challis, of 100 pe cent "Orion." Clever, Jones Yanked From Reading List In California SAN FRANCISCO - They have not started burning booki by N«* groes In California, aa yet, but they have atarted removing them from high achool reading litta in thia city. "Soul on Ice," by Eldridge Qea ver and "The Dutchman," by Le- Roi Jones were both plucked from the outside reading list of a special "black authors" elective course for high school seniors. "Obscenity and profanity" were the reasona stated by Dr. Max Rafferty, superintendent of public instruction in California, for re questing the removal of the two* well-known books, which was fi nally done by the San Francisco School Board. Rafferty, also well-known for hia untra-conservative politics, said that the state education code re* quired teachers to teach children to avoid obscenity and profanity. SOCIAL COMMENT "You can't very well do that by reading Leßoi Jones and Eldridgo Cleaver in th« classroom," he said. While admitting that the book* "make some social comment which la probably worth study," Rafferty said this couldn't be done as long aa the social com ment "i« couched in terms of un bridled obscenity and pornogra phy." The issue came to a head via a complaint from the community and a threat by Rafferty to re move the teacher's teaching cre dentials should the teacher go ahead and assign "obscene and pornographic" reading. Slowdown In Inflation Is Predicted Archie Davis, chairman of the board of Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. of Winston-Salem, predicted here Friday that the recently announced cutbacks in federal spending would be a major factor in helping to slow inflation. Davis noted that the federal government, in what he called a major change of policy, is planning to go from a huge deficit to a $3 billion surplus in one year. . Davis, speaking to the Raleigh Kiwanis Club, said the recent increases in the wholesale price index are a more serious indication of continuing inflation than the past increases in the consumer price index. He said the nation was still on the minus side in the international monetary market. Not only is gold continuing to flow outside the nation, byt the trade balance is still unfavorable, he said. Davis, in a review of the nation's economic health, briefly outlined the steps taken by the Federal Reserve Board to limit the available capital. Ifl Tm > £mt H k ■ ■ a 4 ■ ■ %■ H; : : ■ Y 1 1 W^jM wL ji i • l 1» #i* ' "*""" Sr r« ~ .uhH Pat On The Cheek For Old Classmate Astronaut Neil Armstrong receives a pat on the cheek from an uniden tified former high school classmate Hometowns Give Welcomes To Crewmen Of Apollo 11 America's two moonmen were given boisterous welcomes back to their hometowns Saturday while their Apollo 11 teammate was joyously received at his adopted hometown. Neil A. Armstrong, the first man on the moon, returned to his birthplace, Wapakoneta, in the rolling farm land of western Ohio, and made a plea for his countrymen to make this planet "a better place for all man kind." Fellow moonwalker Col. Ed win E. "Buzz" Aklrin Jr., went back to Montclair, N.J., a com fortable suburb IS miles from New York City, and told his greeters the earth viewed from the moon has a "beauty of its own we have yet to see any where else in the universe." Col. Michael Collins, who stayed in moon orbit with the Apollo command ship told crowds in his adopted hometown of New Orleans, "I feel like I belong." "Do you remember me?" Doris Weber asked Armstrong at a class o! '47 high school re union. "Punky," he said, "I'll never forget you." Mrs. Weber's hus band, Kenneth, started taking flying lessons with Armstrong in Wapakoneta in 1946. Back from the moon, back from the tumult and ticker tape of official welcomes in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, it was a day for the neighbors to honor the hometown boys. Armstrong, the 39-year-old as tronaut who stepped into History when he set foot on the moon at 10:56 p.m. EDT, July 20 came home to a town of only 7,500 that was once the principal vil lage and council house of the Shawnees. "I find it difficult to believe," Armstrong told newsmen, "any one could see the sights I was privileged to see and the views I was shown on my travel and not be most aware of the power of the Supreme Being and His art work." Then Armstrong spoke to more than 2,000 cheering teen agers, and told them that a con stellation named Aquarius—the name of a song popular with the young people—was used in the lunar flight navigation. "Some of you have a fan song that has become a fan song of mine," he said. C&SSAVE THE CAN HJ M AND KEEP Jg/ AMERICA \LM BEAUTIFUL PLANTERS Hanging planters not only are attractive but they help bring a touch of nature in doors. No home should be without one. Materials: One Canada Dry can for hanging planter and two for the plaque planter. 12-inch metal chain. Thin wire and 12 x 12 wire mesh. Hanging Planter: With chisel or rip type can opener, open seam across back of can. Fig. 1. With other can opener, cut lids half-way around as shown fold back as shown in Fig. 2. Use shears to cut each side into '/i in. strips. Curl back each strip with long nose pliers or curling tool. Curl up center strip of each lid to attach to chain for hanging. Plaque Planter: Cut tops off both cans. Punch holes on each side of seam of each can as in Fig. 3. Punch holes in sides of cans and join together with wire as shown in Fig. 4. With wire looped through holes that were made alongside seams, attach cans off center, to lower left portion of 12 x 12 piece of wire mesh. Use half-inch or one-inch mesh> during homecoming festivities at Wapakoneta, Ohio. Down from Ohio, at the other end of the great American riv er, Mike Collins, suntanned and beaming, walked along an air port fence shaking hands with some of the hundreds who turned out. "I don't feel like I'm really adopted," he said. "I feel like I belong in New Orleans." Collins was born in Europe, but his father, the late Maj. Gen. James Lawton Collins, was a native of New Orleans and the astronaut received his appoint ment to the Military Academy through a Louisiana congress man. A hugh bedsheet draped on the fence read: "Welcome home. We're real proud of our own (that's you) Mike Collins." "It's .great to be here," he told them, "and it's a great day." Back East, Buzz Aldrin came home to the one- and two-family' homes of the quiet Newark sub urb of Montclair, where he was given a hero's welcome in 1966 after a Gemini spaceflight. Mayor Mat Carter described Saturday's homecoming as "the greatest day we've ever had." Aldrin a star athlete voted "most likely to succeed" at Montclair High School in 1947, said his father was the one man who did the most to make him able to fly the Apollo 11 mission. "I can only express hope," he continued, "that the apparent unifying effect that this flight has had for mankhid will be re flected as we carry good will around the world on the tour." "We look at the moon from the earth, we look at it from a very secure vantage point, one that is rather confortable ... When we looked at the moon from the space module ... it was a panorama of beauty being unfolded to us." At Armstrong's gathering of his Wapakoneta high school classmates, Mrs. Weber re called that she used to sit across a desk from the astronaut. "When I needed him on the mathematics," she said, "he was always there." Comedian Bob Hope and Gov. James A. Rhodes headed a pa rade for Armstrong as thou sands of visitors 8 and 10 deep lined much of the 2^4-mile route despite heavy humidity. Be distinctive... be the man in the Bianchi Obviously continental, this striking hat reflects the fine Italian hand that created it. Sport it in casual circles, or let it top dress wear... it adds distinction to any outfit. From an exclusive collection. 110.95 PEOPLES 211 N. MANGUM STREET PHONE 688-3921 LAY AWAY OR USE ANY CREDIT CARD (OIL COMPANIES ALSO). IMPORTED SCOTCH JL Wxvm IHouse 1 7 (EERmra TIM® I HAW • Xscora/m/sKrl ft VgauMD ins iiiiiti sci TCI nun ocinr nw nrillil II mil IIIU BISIHUB. til.. NU