Statewide Meet Set for Drug Abuse Prevention By RUSSELL CLAY A coordinated asaault on the drug abuse problem In North Carolina communities will be mapped at a statewide meeting Feb. 3 at Duke Uni versity. Several hundred persons from across the state are ex pected for a workshop to be held by the newly formed Community Organization for Drug Abuse Prevention (CODAP), Centered in Dur ham, CODAP is a, project of United Health Services, a group supported by the 71 United Fund communities in North Carolina. "Our goal is the coordina FTODAY'S FARE! Thursday Highlights 9 a m —MIKE DOUGLAS—Mike's guests today are Truman Capote, Rex Reed, actress Sylvia Miles, singers Eloise Laws and Kay Thompson, and Air Force Flight-safety expert Kenneth Albrecht. WRAL 5 p.m.—BIG VALLEY—Jarrod tries to get a convicted mur derer to return to jail yvhile he tries to prove the man's in nocence. Norman |Alden guest stars. WTVD 6 p.m.—MOVlE—"Checkpoint." i English. 1957) A man steals plans for a new racing car. killing the engineer who drew them up Anthony Steel, Odile Versois and Stanley Baker star. WRDU 8:30 pm—IRONSIDE—"The Target" stars Earl Holliman as an ex-con demolitions expert whose son is kidnaped by revolutionaries. Their goal is to force the boy's father to hand over supplies of dynamite. Raymond Burr and Don Mitchell star. WTVD 9 p m —MOVlE—"Return to Peyton Place" 1961 > takes up right where "Peyton Place" left off. The publication of Allison MacKcnzie's first novel creates a furor in Peyton Place: it is a thinly disguised account of her neighbors, some of whose lives arc seriously affected by it. Mary Astor. Carol Lynley. Jeff Chandler and Robert Sterling star. WRDU 9 p.m.—MOVIE—"The Bramble Bush." (I960) A yotlng doc tor. returning to his New England home town to care for a dying boyhood friend, becomes involved with the mah's wife. Richard Burton, Barbara Rush and Jack Carson star. WFMY 9:30 p.m.—DAN AUGUST—"Dead Witness to a Killing" stars Monte Markham as an assistant DA suspected of killing his wife. August's investigation begins to collapse when a sniper murders his only eyewitness. Burt Reynolds and Norman Fell star. WRAL 10 p m —DEAN MARTlN—Dean's guests tonight are Bob New hart and a flock of celebrity offspring Frank Sinatra Jr.; Deana, Gail and Dino Martin: Lucie Arnaz and Desi Arnaz Jr.; Maureen Reagan; land Meredith Macrae. WTVD 10 p.m —sOUL— Featured tonight are singer-composer Leon Thomas, singer Vivian Reed, poet Don L. Lee and Louise Meri wether, who reads a selection from her book "Daddy Was a Number Runner." WUNC 11 p.m.—MOVIE—"Sea Wolf." (1941) Jack London's tale of a voyage on board a ship piloted by an inhuman skipper stars John Garfield and Edward G. Robinson. WRDU 11:30 p.m.—MO.VlE—"Free For All." (1949) When a young inventor goes to Washington to get a patent, he becomes en tangled in quantities of red tape. Bob Cummings, Ann Blyth and Percy Kilbride star. WRAL "•« ■ v» -m •- ■~k — • V :f : :ir± r'A Friday Hig 5 p.m. BIG VALLEY At a desert mission. Victoria and a buffalo hunter try to protect three Y?«n' a trio of murderous scalp hunters. Barbara Stanwyck and James Gregory star WTV'D j ;] 5 p.m. CHEYENNE The rancher who signed him on i thinks Cheyenne is a hired gun, brought in by his wife to kill ; him. Clint Walker, Alan Hale and Whitney Blake star. WRDU fi p.m. MOVIE "Underground" (1941). A band of anti- Nazi Germans set up a secret short-wave radio in an attempt to aid the Allies. Jeffrey Lynn, Karen Verne and Philip Dorn Star WRDU fi p.m. WHAT'S NEW Six youngsters from Jerusalem 'embark on an archaeological expedition in Judea's wilderness. WUNC R 3ff p.m. - NAME OF THE GAME - "The Man Who Killed a Ghost" stars Robert Wagner as reporter Dave Corey. His probe into the restaurant franchise business centers on actor Will Cheyenne's Drive-Thru Barbecue chain. Cheyenne's Holly wood imace is the chain's big draw, but Cheyenne just died and his image is! crumbling under the weight of Dave's in vestigation. Janet Leigh, Kim Stanley and Alfred Ryder also Star. WRDU 9p m. MOVIE "The Rounders" are a pair of itinerant, ; middle-aged horsemen portrayed by Glenn Ford and Henry Fodn Sparking the action are an unbroKcn roan, which the boys attempt to trade in for corn liquor, and a hard-to-keep decision to sive up carousing. Sue Ane Langdon, Chill Wills and Edgar Buchanan also star. WTVD, WFMY 9 pm. - 'NET PLAYHOUSE - "A Memory of Two Mondays" is Arthur Miller's play set in the shipping room of a large Manhattan auto-parts warehouse, much like the one Miller worked in during the early Thirties. The emphasis is on mood and characterization as.the playwright draws on his own - experiences to picture what the Depression was like for workers to whom a job any job was everything. Estelle Parsons, Kristoffer Tabori and George Grizzard star. WUNC 11 p.m. MOVIE "San Quentin" (1937). A prison official of the old school resents his replacement by a more liberal man. Pat O'Brien and Humphrey Bogart star. WRDU 11:30 p.m. MOVIE "Sunrise at Campobello" 1960>. The ! story of FDR's determined fight to overcome polio is taken from the Broadway play by Dore Schary. Ralph Bellamy and Greer Garson star as the President and his wife. WRAL Saturday •i 7:30 a.m. MOVIE "Creatures of Destruction" stars Bill i Williams. WRAL Noon LAREDO "A Very Small Assignment" stars Peter Brown and Neville Brand in the comic adventures of the Texas Rangers. WRDU 1:30 pm. BASKETBALL Georgia Tech meets Southern Illinois. WRAL 2 p.m. BASKETBALL The Maryland Terrapins meet the Tar Heels at ChapeJ Hill WTVD, WFMY 2 30 p.m. DOUBLE FEATURE "San Quentin" stars Humphrey Bogart and Pat O'Brien in a story of an old prison warden being replaced by a new one; "Undergrand" stars warden being replaced by a new one; "Underground" stars WRDU 5:30 p.m. SPECIAL "Kids 53 Things to Know Abqyt '■ Health, Sex and Growing Up" Young people are allowed to inquire about their concerns and find out what they want to know about everything frem sex and drugs to physical health and appearance. WTVD i 8:30 p.m. MOVIE "Operation Crossbow" stars Sophia taren and George Peppard in the story of the Allies' efforts to locate and destroy the production site of Germany's V-I and V-2 rockets and missiles during World War 11. WTVD 11:30 p.m. MOVIE "Taggart" stars Tony Young and Dan Duryea. WFMY 11:30 p.m. MOVIE "Siracco" stars Humphrey Bogart. WRAL tlon of all that is taking place in the prevention of drug abuse in order to make the total effort more effective," CODAP Chairman Dr. Clark R. Cahow said in announcihg plans for the workshop. Ca how, Duke University regis trar, has been a prime mover In, planning efforts which re mitted in creation of CODAP BY United Health Services early this month. The program employes a unique interdisciplinary ap proach drawing on the interest add talent of many persons tat the community level. "Solu tions are going to be found on the local level, not in Raleigh or Durham or Washington," Cahow said. "We can provide technical information and ex pert guidance but pitting the program together must be done on the scene, where it can be fitted to specific Characteristics and needs." The workshop, Cahow said, "will be an information reference point for groups within the State of North Carolina which wish to initiate of further develop" drug abuse prevention programs in their own communities. "While I there are many separate pro grams in operation in the state, a voluntary effort should be made toward coordinated action on a statewide basis." No single program can eli minate a problem as complex and controversial as drug abuse, Cahow said. "Any meaningful approach must in clude these elements; coopera tive action by all disciplines in the area of drug abuse at the local level; a statewide clear inghouse for the dissemination to the local community of information on drug abuse; and the availability of con sultation to communities de veloping their own programs." The workshop will open at 9:30 a.m. in Duke's Page Auditorium with a keynote ad dress by Terry Sanford, presi dent of Duke and a former governor of North Carolina. Sanford's address will be followed by a panel discus sion by leaders of community drug action programs in Greensboro, Chapel Hill, Dur ham, Charlotte, Sheville, Fayetteville and Wilmington. Acting Makes Her World Go Round! yp wwm feii' v .^^B i jfß Jj?Jj^ What happens when an actress plays a part over and over again? Eileen Fulton, known as Lisa in the television serial As THE WORLD TURNS, has found out that more likely than not, people will mistake the actress for the character. For more than ten years, Eileen has portrayed amnesia victim Lisa. Recently she was recognized by a well-dressed couple, and during: the ensuing conversation, the wife cau tioned her husband not to ask too personal a question because "she's suffering from akinesia and it might cause a mental setback." Eileen has also made her mark in the night club and theatrical worlds — L at one time she was simultaneously appearing on the TV serial in the afternoon, in the off-Broad way play "The Fantasticks" nightly, and in matinee per formances of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" on Broadway. Lately she has entered the realm of literature with her best-selling autobiography, Hoiv Mi/ World Turns. Eileen's own life is very much like a TV drama. Reared as a min ister's daughter, she struggled to be free to be herself. Her action-packed and amusing story tells how she' earned her hard-won freedom and fame as an actress. Eileen's candid story of how she succeeded is Banking '^ffjSemce VETERANS \\ jl W® are welcoming back these days \| V many returning servicemen, old friends WJ and former customers of this bank. V Many of them are anxious to get back into the old ways again. Some are mak ing new plans for the future. They all need banking service, counsel, cooper ation. We are glad to place our time and facilities at their command. If YOU have financial problems which we might help you to solve, we extend a cordial invitation to you, to come in for a confidential talk. yjiTTMechanics & Farmers » BANK N I 114 WLLT PARKIIM IT. DURHAM, N. C. M K 1 s JF BR p^ DARRYL SMITH. 3. Jackson. Miss., has plenty to smile about as Dr. Nell J. Ryan examines him. Darryl was born with hydrocephalus (water on the brain), a condition which can lead to mental retarda tion. blindness —even to death. Thanks to a shunt operation to drain oil excess fluid. Darryl can look forward to leading a normal life. But just to be on the safe side, he still receives regular medical care through the March of Dimes Birth Defects Center at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. The March of Dimes supports a network of more than 100 such centers across the country. NOTED EUROPEAN PIANIST TO APPEAR AT ST. AUGUSTINE'S RALEIGH Georgi Riabi- at the age of four, and studied koff, pianist, will be presented at Saint Augustine's College on Thursday, January 28, at 8:00 p.m. in the Amphitheater of the New Classroom Build ing. Riabikoff, young European pianist, who has won inter national acclaim, comes from a musical family related to Tchaikovsky and Acchmani noff. He gave his first concert Ufa * • flB H | j. .::. JB I something every woman can j identify with especially the ] dreams of a young girl who I wanted fame and glamour. The world really has been a I stage for Eileen Fulton, and I Hail' Mi/ Worhl Turns discus- S ses the anecdotes of the the- I atrical world everything j from the. problems of being an i actress to the choice of costumes "i to special acting techniques. For Eileen, acting always ) ivill make her world go round. in European conservatories and with the great composer and pianist, Sergei Prokofieff. During the war and the terrible years of Nazi occupa tion he helped persecuted people and Jewish Families to hide and escape death. Trapped by the Gestapo he refused to reveal their hiding places. The Nazis, knowing he was a fine boy pianist, swore he should never play again and drove hot spikes through his palms, broke his arm and crushed his fingers. In spite of all tortures, he did not be tray these people. He was rescued by British and U. S. troops. Through faith, detefmination and long agonizing practice, he regained the use of his hands and be gan to play again. He was a concert pianist in the American Special Service and gave many concerts for the U. S. and British Armies. This is one of the lyceum series at Saint Augustine's College. The piblic is invited without charge. CONSULT US ABOUT OUR INSTALLMENT PAYMENT PLAN Union Insurance & Realty Co. •14 FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE 611-1193 A »!s!i »!s! »!s! »5I« »!5!«»!?!« »!5!w!5!« >-*. i m.i »I5IuI5I« »!•!« »!•!« »!s!i r!?!w!5!> r!3!»!!!i »!5!« »!8!wI5I«»S« »5I« »!5!o!5!« »!•!«»!?« »!S!o!5!» »Ti W fi [mm] people who HAVE EM GET MORE PLACES j | H mHII than people who dont ;** jjSkHercules Polarpreme "70" V*- 'SLj & I BAD WEATHER TIRES U (j ffjfNEW Polyester Cord and Dual I Herbert Finch $5 lip tP I Winter tire companion to our famous Hercules 198 Lakewood Ave. M l\f true "TO" series design with a wider R igs boe Tire Sales Of- U \ EMrJErJBrJBm tread and wide belt stability. Special traction ✓ , vaii *l l- * Ks >JK I\V \ .7iHHeflEfl6Mr trac" tread gives positive traction; yet runs Jg 0 the ,; t,nest & »V%. smooth and quiet whether roads are wet or okkv lLt on all items dry Belted construction delivers up to dou- sold, the best PRICES •I"S blc the mileage compared to non-belted tires. possible and flexible >]£ We can also equip these great tires with car- TERMS. (We handle *#: y mKMrnHB boloid studs t0 give you traction even on ice our own financing) or Were you ready during the last snow ' Don't use vour favorite bank I rigsbee tire sales 2 z°z 3 S >ltj 108 Lakewood Avenue—272o Hillsborough Road. H >IK Open Daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.—Friday 8 to 8 "Home of Champagne Service" ; w • '.t.' »»>>.' '•■"■•■">:' »>.">.« Rep. Miller Co- Signer of Lower Voting Age Bill Kepresentative George W. Miller, D-Durham, was a co signer of the bill introduced in the 1971 General Assembly on the opening day of the session providing for an election on a constitutional amendment to lower the voting age to eigh teen years. Miller stated that this bill provides that the people of the state shall have the right to vote to amend the State Con stitution if they so choose. Miller stated that it would take a constitutional amend ment approved by a vote of the people in order to lower the voting age. This bill, said Miller, merely provides that the people of the state shall have a right to say if the vot ing age should be lowered. By way of explaining the bill Miller stated that, if ap proved, this amendment would bring North Carolina in line with the law now in effect lowering the voting age to eighteen in national elections and pointed out that Governor Scott had favored lowering the voting age in his State of the State Message to the General Assembly. The amendment would also provide that no person who has not attained the age of twenty-one years shall be eli gible to hold any office in the state. , X DRUMSETS /|S RECORD PLAYERS | £ 8 TRACK STEREO TAPE § •i" PLAYERS CAMERAS f § 1 g TYPEWRITERS $ 5 PORTABLE ELECTRIC & •V j.j, •ijiOFFICE SIZE jiji LUGGAGE 6 1 I" I i;j:Sam s Pawn Shopg jS 122 E. Main St I'h. 682-2573|j : :5 Durham, N. C. iji! SATURDAY, JAN. 30, 1971 THE CAROLINA TIKES' Minks Kith Big Fashion Flair I .# 4 Ms#-' ■ Vv I HH I ' ■ft. liir; FASHION FI.AIK begins With pared down minks, lhr side clasped vest (iilmrr) —in Jasmine Kmba natural white mink—is the kind of small fur that makes a hie statement. .And the sportive look turns surprisingly formal when the vest is worn over an after-dark dress. For mink that coos everywhere you do—in style —best buy is a longer jarket (ht»hm), worked in the round, below a turned-up collar, in Autumn Haze Kmba natural brown. It's the leneth that's worth watchinc —a> pretty over a longer skirt as it is with pants. Watch for more fuller backs like this, too. While no one can deny that Luxury— with a capital "L" — is never more so than in a fur that doesn't stop until it reaches the floor, not everyone can afford full-length chill- chasers. Besides, how often can you wear a niaxi mink? That kind of "drop dead" pow is okay for movie queens. But for real women, fur has cot to fit a real way of life. That means practicality, along with good looks. T e com bination is never hetl than in this year's go-everywhere Emba minks . . . small furs, in the prettiest pales, that live the way you do. They're the "every wear" furs —best buys for women who want to combine fashion, comfort and plain com mon sense. UISSB 9r r?i K Im. T Hal Morrow Midnight - 6 A. M. WSSB is the only Durham Radio Station that stays on 24 hour a day 7 days week, 365 days a year. 1490 Radio No. 1 Durham « 3B

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