6B
-THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1871
Shaw University Announces '7l Finals Events
RALEIGH - Plans have
been finalized t>r the week
end of events which will cul
minate in Shaw University's
106 th Commencement Con
vocation on Sunday afternoon,
May 9th at 3:00 P. M. in Hie
Raleigh Memorial Auditorium.
On Friday evening, May
7th at 8:30 P.M. Class Night,
exercises for the graduating
feMOn TelevlftionflflflHH
Thursday Highlights
U: 30 a m. FOLK GUI
TAR Scale building, mu
sic notation, rhythm and the
C scale are included in
today's lesson. Laura s
guest is Flamenco guitarist
Norman Delgado. WUNC
4JO p m TWILIGHT
ZONE - Cliff Robertson and
Miranda Jones star in this
story of a cowboy who dis
covers civilization in the
desert, where it should not
be WRAL
7 p a - GOLDEN VOY
AGE "Riverboat on tha
Thames" Today's pro
gram takes a boat ride on
the river that runs through
the heart of London. WFMY
7 30 p.m. - FLIP WIL
SON Flip's guests on his
comedy show are Bill Cosby,
snnser John Sebastian and
Gina Lollobrigida. WTVD
730 pm. CIOMPI
WITHERS DUO Violinist
Giorgio Ciompi and pianist
Loren Withers, of the Duke
University Department of
Music, perform one of Bee
thoven's best-known works
for violin and piano, "Spring
Sonata." WUNC
8 pm. - JIM NABORS
HOUR Engelbert
Humperdinck joins Jim Na
bors and Frank Sutton for an
hour of songs and sketches.
WFMY
R3O p m NORTH
CAROLINA PEOPLE - Wil
11am C. Friday, preaident of
Friday Highlights
10 p.m. GALLOPING
GOURMET - "Hangop" is
today's recipe by the suave
comedien of the cuisine
Graham Kerr. WTVD
10 p.m - DINAH SHORE
Dinah' guest today is
Carl Reiner. WRDU
11:30 pm. - BOOK BEAT
"Bury My Heart at
Wnunded Knee" by Dee
Brown is today's book. His
torian Brown discusses his
sympathetic portrait of the
American Indians. His epic
book records broken treaties
and battle massacres that
document the white man's
exploitation. WUNC
6:45 p.m. DUKE RE
PORT An aspect of the
University is examined by a
student host on this edition
of Duke Report. WRDU
7 pm. - GLEN CAMP
BELL Glen's guests to
nisht are Walter Brennan,
Larry Storch and Thelma
Houston. WTVD
f p m MOVIE "Hie
Disorderly Orderly" More
chaotic than an earthquake,
more deadly than a virus,
and funny Jerry Lewis
becomes an orderly in a hos
pital and puts it on the criti
cal list. Susan Oliver and
Glenda Farrell also star.
WTVD, WFMY
Saturday H
9 *> pm. - 77 SUNSET
STRIP Efrem Zimbalist
Jr., Roger Smith and
"Kookie" Byrnes itar in this
private-ey« drama. WRDU
1 pra. F-TROOP
Forrest Tucker and Bob
Steele star in the adventures
of the most inept group of
soldiers in the west. WRDU
1:30 p.m. SPORTS -
"The Putt-Putt Parade of
Champions" presents top
putt-putt play by the best in
the business. WTVD
1 p.m. BASEBALL—The
St Louis Cardinals meet the
Mets at New York in major
league baaeball •eti on.
WTVD
I p.m. - BASKETBALL—
Action is presented in the
, American Basketball
Association Playoff Game.
WFMY
t : 10 p.m.
MOVIE-' 'Passage to
Marseilles" Humphrey
Bogart, Sydney Greenatreet,
Peter Lorre and Claude
Rain* atar in this IM4
drama. WRDU
class will be held in Green
leaf Auditorium. Alumni Day
activities will start on Satur
day monring (May Bth) at
9:30 A. M. when alumni re
gistration will take place in the
University Union building. The
annual meeting of the National
Alumni Association will be
held at 10:00 A. M. in the
University Union Ballroom.
the Consolidated University
of North Carolina, inter
views the Rev. W. W. Fin
lator, pastor of Pullen Me
morial Baptist Church in
Raleigh. WUNC
9 p.m. - MOVIE - "The
Battle of the Villa Fiorita"
Maureen O'Hara, Rossano
Brazzi, Olivia Hussey and
Richard Todd star in this
story about a clandestine
love affair. The subjects are
a diplomat's wife and a cool,
L ati n-1 ov • r-composer.
WRDU
» p.m. - MOVIE - "The
Reluctant Astronaut" Don
Knotts stars in this comedy.
Joan Freeman and Leslie
Nielsen also star. WFMY
10 p.m. - DEAN MARTIN
Dean's guests tonight are
Zero Mostel, singers Gloria
Loring and Tony Bennett
and Jackie Vernon. WTVD
10 p.m. SOUL "A 1
Brown Jazz Show" Joe
Newman and the All Star
Blues Band wail: Jimmy
Witherspoon sings the blues;
Betty Carter sings jazz.
A 1 Brown also interviews
poet Victor Hernandez Cruz
and Queen Mother Moore.
WUNC
11 pm. - MOVIE -
"Johnny Angel" George
Raft and Claire Trevor star
in this mystery drama about
■ dead ihip. WRDU
10 p.m. - STRANGE RE
PORT "Kidnap Whose
Pretty Girl Are You?" A
beautiful girl may have been
an accomplice in her own
kidnaping but it is up to
Strange to find her. even if
she doesn't want to be found.
Anthony Quayle, Sally Gee
son and Richard O'Sullivan
star on this private-eye
show. WRDU
11 p.m. - MOVIE -
"Passage to Marseille"
Humphrey Bogart is at his
best in this World War II
drama about several men
with questionable pasts and
more than questionable
intentions. All-stars Claude
Rains, Sydney Greenstreet
and Peter Lorre are the sup
porting cast. WRDU
11:30 p.m. - MOVIE—"The
Victors" —World War II is
recreated in this epic film
about the life ami times of an
infantry group at war with
the Nazis. George Peppard
and Eli Wallach are the stars.
WRAL
11:30 p.m.-MOVIK—DOU
BLE FEATURE - "Phifft"
Judy Holloday, Jack Lcm
mon and Kim Novak star in
this comedy about the
domestic problems of a hus
band and wile. "Hot Blood"
Jane Russell stars as a
girl purchased to be the wife
of a gypsy leader's brother.
Corndl Wilde also stars.
WFMY
4 p.m. - MOVlE—"Prim
rose Path" stars Ginger
Rogers. WRDU
4 p.m. - SPORTS -
Roller Derby time again.
WFMY
530 p.m. THE
FISHING HOLE - Films
show highlights as sports
men try out a new lake.
Fishing tips are also fea
tured. WRDU
*
7:30 p.m.—SPOßTS—Cham
pionship wrestling is pre
sented from Florida. WRDU
8 p.m. MOVIE—"Guns
for San Sebastian" An
thony Quinn and Anjanette
Comer star. A Mexican
army deserter dons the
robes and identity of a mur
dered priest in order to save
a town from destruction.
WTVD
%
11 p.m. - THE WEB -
"House on Haunted Hill"
atari Vincent Price in one of
the most thrilling of the
Saturday matinee-type hor
ror shows. WRDU
11:30 p.m.
MOVIE—"My Six Convicts."
WFMY
Alfred Newkirk, Shaw
Alumni Relations Director
said class reunions for all "1"
classes will be held this year
(from 1911 to 1961). He said
the class of 1946 will also
hold their Silver Anniversary
reunion this year.
The University banquet
honoring the 1971 graduating
class and their parents, friends
and alumni will take place at
7:30 P. M. in the University
Union Ballroom.
Worship services for grad
uating seniors will be held on
Sunday morning (May 9th]
at 11:00 A.M. in the Univer
sity Church. Immediately
following the Convocation for
the conferring of Degrees, at
which Dr. J. Archie Hargraves,
President-elect, will be Com
mencement speaker, the Presi
dent's Reception will take
place honoring the graduating
class, alumni and friends of the
University in the University
Union's main ballroom.
White House Aide
Backs Uneducated
White Candidate
John D. Ehrlichman, Assis
tant to the President, allegedly
supports Jay leanse for the
Director of Minority Business
Enterprise. The White House
backed candidate has no prior
association with the Black or
Brown movement nor with the
Black or Brown business com
munity. His only credentials
are that he is a close friend
and former classmate to the
White House aide John
Ehrlichman. Ehrlichman has
not denied his support for
Leanse for the position, Direc
tor of the Office of Minority
Business Enterprise. Stans,
being the good Republican he
is, will not buck the White
House voices.
Celancse Consumer Information Dirtctor
Ironing Out the Wrinkles
NEW YORK (ED)—You all
know the game of Get-the-Wrinkle.
You play it when you're faced with
a special ironing job—say your
husband's favorite shirt or your ,
child's party dress. You're all fin
ished with the ironing job when
you discover a few wrinkles. So you
iron out the offenders, only to find
you've caused new ones in another
spot. The game can go on with in
finite variations until either you
or the iron quit.
Today we find many garments
which are labeled as permanent
press or "needs no ironing". How
ever, we don't always find this to
be the case.
To put an end to such games,
follow a few basic ground rules.
First, it's essential that you be
Johnny-on-the-Spot when the wash
is finished in the dryer. Remove all
the items immediately. This is es
pecially important with permanent
press articles. Place the items di
rectly on hangers or fold them as
you remove them from the dryer.
Allow them to cool before putting
them away.
If it is still necessary to get the
iron out, remember that fiber com
panies often recommepd certain
temperatures for fabrics containing
their fibers. Celanese, for example,
recommends the acetate, acrylics,
modacrylics and polyester fabrics
be ironed at the lowest settings;
nylon at a slightly higher setting;
triacetate slightly higher still. If
you have any doubt, test the tem
perature by pressing an inside seam.
Usually, steam pressing is all
that is required to restore fabrics
containing man-made fibers to their
original appearance. Permanent
press items may require touch-up
ironing if they're not dried in a
dryer. If there is danger of shining
or glazing a fabric, press it on the
wrong side, or use a pressing cloth
or a special nylon cover on the bot
tom of the iron.
Ironing is far from being the
housewife's favorite chore; but if
you follow these tips, you'll find
less garments to iron and when
necessary, you'll be able to iron and
get it out of the way—without any
wrinkles in the clothes or on your
forehead.
Wise Shoppers Cut
Clothing Costs
With the cost of living rising,
everything's becoming increas
ingly expensive-including cloth
ing. The wise shopper, however,
can cut clothing costs simply by
knowing what she's buying.
Knowing fabrics, too, can help
reduce dry cleaning time and
costs. By choosing clothes for
your husband, your children and
yourself in is man-made fiber like
Arnel triacetate you can machine
wash entire wardrobes. More
over, fabrics of man-made fibers
don't stain or soil easily, so the
washing load is not usually
heavy.
Check the information on the
hangtags that are on most gar
ments you buy.
ply invaluable information when
it comes to laundering, dry clean
ing and pressing. If the garment
you like doesn't have a hangtag,
you may bo taking chances on it.
Remember, you Know nothing
about the product or how to care
for it.
.
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Pr jffl m J M I
Bm B 1 K.
A 9 Br w Hi i
FORMAL DRESS KEGELlNG— Cleveland Ma
yor Oarl Stokes prepares to roll off in an
impromptu game with Motown President Ber
ry Gordy on the bowling lane at Gordy Man
or during the second annual Sterling Ball,
Raleigh Women Organize New Social Club
RALEIGH A group of
local professional women have
joined together to organize the
Raleigh chapter of "The
Join the Walk for Development
jOmJgi |HnI : J|H3|P^Kh|[H
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R I
IL B H
On May 8 and 9, more than one million young men and
women will walk some as many as 30 miles to raise
money to help those in underdeveloped areas both in this
country and abroad. *
Their hike is called the
International Walk for Devel
opment. Their goal: to raise
$5 million.
It works this way. In each
of the 350 communities
where walks are scheduled
this year, each walker enlists
a sponsor who agrees to pay a
certain sum s.lO a mile,
S2O a mile for each mile
walked.
The money is then contrib
uted to local or international
development projects chosen
by the communities them
selves.
Fifteen percent of the
funds raised go to educational
programs of the American
Freedom from Hunger
Foundation, which coordi
nates the walks through its
Young World Development
arm.
UISSB
Hal Morrow
Midnight-6 A.M.
WSSB is the only Durham Radio
Station that stays on 24-hours a day
7 days a week, 365 days a yean
1490
Radio No. 1 Durham
while former Michigan Governor G. Mennei'
"Soapy" Williams (center) and Sterling Bali
Committeewoman Fays Janet Hale offer thr
mayor encouragement.
Drifters." According to Mrs.
Martha Bridgeforth, president
elect, the organization has a
members of more than 1500
Of the rest, 42'/i percent
goes to a local development
project nutrition education
in North Dakota, a day care
center in Kansas and 42Vi
percent to an international
project - CARE, perhaps, or
scholarships for agricultural
study in South Korea.
The walks dramatize the
underlying goals of develop
ment alleviating the despair
and suffering caused by star
vation, poverty and over
population, reversing the de
gradation of the environment
and reducing military spend
ing.
To find out more about
starting or joining a walk,
write to the American Free
dom from Hunger Founda
tion, 1717 H Street,
Northwest, Washington, D. C.
or call (202)382-6727.
women throughout the United
States providing an opportuni
ty for the development of
friendship and good fellow
ship between women with
similar backgrounds, interests
and desires.
The Raleigh Chapter has
been accepted by the national
body and installation cere
monies will take place on Sat.,
May 1, 1971 in Raleigh
amidst a host of social activi
ties for the new members,
their husbands, escorts arid
visiting Drifter chapter mem
bers.
There were seven charter
members of the local group
consisting of: Mrs. Martha
Bridgeforth, Miss Marion
Hayes, Mrs. Mercedes Winters
Johnson, Miss Phyllis Mann,
Mrs. Joan Martin, Mrs. Gloria
K. Smith, Mrs. Marguerite
Jordan.
The group has since added:
Mrs. Vera Belk, Mis. Geral
dine Burroughs, Mrs. Patricia
Caple.
Ladies assuming office for
the Raleigh chapter after in
stallation ceremonies are:
Mrs. Bridgeforth, President;
Mrs. Jordan, Vice President;
Mis. Smith, Secretary; Miss
Hayes, Treasurer; Mrs. John
son and Mrs. Burroughs, co-
Business Managers.
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Prentiss Institute Players' Guild
Captures SIC Championship
By HARRISON EDWARD LEE, Reporter
On Saturday, April the
24th, the Prentiss Institute
Players' Guild of Prentiss,
Mississippi took four of eight
trophies in winning the SIC
Players Championship. Other
participating schools were:
Mary Holmes JUnior College,
West Point, Mississippi, Utica
Junior College, Utica,
Mississippi, and Coahoma
Junior College of Clarksdale,
Mississippi.
Bernice Turner of Waynes
boro, Mississippi and a stu
LAUNDEKERB * CLEANIIt
Phone IM-I4NI "
REFRIGERATED FUR STORAGE AND
BOX STORAGE
Advtrtlumtnt)
Other thon a candidate for I
Ward 4 City Councilman
BILLY GRIFFIN?
A minister and a family mon, age 33; Regional
representative of the Presbyterian Ministers' Fund
Life Insurance Co.; Member of executive boards of
Durham Council on Human Relations and Housing
Opportunities Made Equal, Inc.; 8-year resident in
North Carolina; member of the Durhom United
Church of Christ (Congregationol Christian).
WHAT MAKES BILLY RUN?
Consolidation of City and Enforcement of Housing
County Government Codes
Quality Education Expanded Recreation
Drug ftehobllitation Program
Strict Word System of
Voting
"It's The Issues That Count"
Paid Political Ad by Citizens for Billy Griffin
dent of Prentiss Institute won
the trophy for best supporting
actress, Bobby Mclnnit of
Hattiesburg, Mississippi and of
Prentiss Institute won the tro
phy for the best supporting
actor and also the trophy for
the best monolague.
First place for the over all
play went to Mary Holmes
Junior College and second
place went to Prentiss Insti
tute while third place went to
Coahoma Junior College.