Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 8, 1972, edition 1 / Page 14
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
6B -THE CAROLINA TIMES Saturday, July 8, 1972 U « J /what will happen) you don*t\ r i'm /they're startingtcTN /HOWS VOUR REPORTTLOUSY A V HOW? _ X 6CCM TOO ) I NOT/ t SHOW RERUNS NOW// v w KING FEATURES SYNDICATE *#, i i i I Buz Sawyer ® By Roy Crana I WHftTS UP, SKIPPER? Jl OH...7HEM THAT Y hND THE MISSILE EXPERTS. OUR LISTENING DEVICES HAVE 111 ( WOULD YOU \ j ■ "o%? COULD THOSE\ WHAT EISEf DETECTED A PROWLING SUB | .... I BELIEVE IT? J... JP fT^f' YANKEES BE \ MADRE DE AROUND THE JARUCO BANKS. ) ! . V fT —"' PLANNING A DIOSi WAIT YOU'RE TO FIND OUT WHAT / | ■ SNEAK ATTACK / TILL THE BIG '' " 0N : '^' A? T " l^' I*riRIALI3T YANKEES/ It «YmPWHUE/ri wSII- A WARMONGERS/....ANOUTRAGE.' L wmuh\RIPKUUNIS.' ■ JEUMTKYmakeske ITS mw POLARIS- V THENERVE OF THEM/ I WSTALLCTOW,] WREOUjT ± I TYPE MISSILE JW7 TL ~' li ' \ »R? /AUKS/ THIS IS '•" ATTEMPT SO SURE. HIDDEN ONLY j V THAT THE ?^ L !SS J 7/ - two miles / jflE ( vLAdm, i 7/1 vankees arepiamhw6 /f // | y/ WARMONGERING YANKEES.' TO ▼ NO...YET WHO BUT AMERICA WOULD HAVE | THE SOVIETS HAVE BEEN WARNED THAT WE HIDIN6 NUCLEAR MISSILES IN W BELIEVE THAT \ REASON TO PLANT MISSILES IN CUBAN J j WILL NOT THE TERRITORIAL^WATERS 1 TO HE NATIONS v ARE GREATLY AGITATED. „„., i I till A /rEAH/...19N'T~" N ) C(M, I DONT KNOW...*) /'tuTnEWS DOESN'TN ( NEW COLOR ) lIT SOMETHING ?/v y f LOOK ANY BETTER TO V. \TV SET/ 7 A^y—- ' ME^N 55 &2{tf2)ff fao*! THAT SOUNDS) /IT 19/ WAIT 'TIL THEY) N LSVu O n I LIKE A GOOO __Z/ ( FINISH THE J -Miss N.C: Continued from front page the Pageant was the Young School of Dance and Miss Yvette Walker, Soprano of Charlotte. Pepsi-Co la Bottlers of Charlotte helped to sponsor the Pageant. Mrs. Adelaide H. Hunt and Mrs. Jacqueline B. Hairston were the Chairman and Co- Chair man with Miss Delores Thomas as Charm and Poise. Consultant for this event. -Coeds Continued from front are preparing for education professions and are involved in their campuses in programs to reform teacher education, to insure student rights and in volvement in the practical pro cess, and to increase human relation skills in potential teachers. •Adenga Continued from front page tate brokers, to make sure that they offer federally- as sisted housing to everyone, without discrimination"; pro hibition of "racial discrimina tion in home financing, par ticularly underwriting prac tices that have a discriminatory impact on minorities"; and re refusal to permit location of new federally-assisted con struction in communities that do not "enforce fair housing policies." Further, Dr. Morsell called for reform of law enforcement agencies, the prison system and the courts; he called for es tablishment of a unified federally-administered and financed welfare program based solely upon need; and finally, he called for reform of Congressional procedures "to create a system more re sponsive to the needs of the nation's poor and minorities." -Journalists Continued from front L. Stanley, chairman of the NNPA's Scholarship Founda tion and publisher of the "Louisville Defender," who worked with Reynolds in for mulating the scholarship pro gram. He said the Reynolds Industries grant ii the largest the publishers' Scholarship Foundation has received. The first five Reynolds Journalism scholarship reci pients will enter accredited schools of journalism this fall. Their names will be announced soon, according to Stan ley. The students are selected by the NNPA Scholarship Foundation, working with the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students. Beginning this year, and continuing for the next three years, five Reynolds journa lism scholarship winners will be announced each year until a total of twenty have been selected to receive the four year scholarships. The total cost of the seven-year pro gram will exceed $50,000. In presenting the check, Bass said he hoped the Rey nolds program "will make a significant contribution to the needs of Black journalism and Up strengthen the dlready influential Black media of this country." Reynolds Industries is the parent company of R. J. Rey nolds Tobacco Company, which produces the popular Winston, Salem, Camel, Doral and Vantage cigarettes, and other subsidiaries, including Sea-Land Service, Inc., in con tainerized shipping; RJR Foods, Inc., convenience foods and beverages; RJR Archer, Inc., aluminum products and packaging; and American In dependent Oil Company. -Fonm Continued From Page 4B have been my favorite people. However, I became more deep ly impressed after reading and much soul-searching upon the words found in the 33rd chap ter and verse 5 in the book of Genesis, "Children are a gift of God." Therefore, I reached the conclusion that children are very special people. And there is one thing I am sure of, name ly, all children can be reached through Love and Understand ing. I prayerfully hope I will be remembered by the children that I have come in contact with, as a friend and someone who cares for and about them." "I see," was an automatic response and you're pleased that Mrs. Daniels accepted the reply as one offered by one who understands and is willing to give support to her crusade. hgve a basic Philo sophy* of life that you use caily?" Mrs. Daniels smiled, but she made no immediate reply. You are about to conclude that her thoughts have drifted with the breezy-brfteze of the late June evening and the interview was when she began speaking in a mellifluous tone: "I have a prescription for happiness." "'Good!" "In Life, take time to laugh. Sprinkle everything with under standing. Keep God in the center of your life. And finally, I ask, quite often, that God grant me the strength to change what I can, and give me the courage to face the disappoint ment of not being able to change what I can't change." -love Continued From Page 5B Bishop to use the truck." "Effie Jefferies!" "No need to panic now. It is all over now. I took a pill before I left from uptown. I knew what was wrong." "That was dangerous. Why hadn't you taken your pills?" "Skip it. I gave out and just didn't have my prescrip tion refilled." "I don't want to hear tell of you doing a thing like that—." "Pshaw! I get tired of taking old, bitter pills. I can't swallow the things too well." "Poor excuse, lady—." "I know. Don't fuss me out —sugarbabe. I can't make love when I know you're angry with me." "Has the store called about the truck?" "I don't know. Does it matter? Kiss me, loverbird, you're losing your steam." "I can take the truck back." "And leave me with a head ache? You're a fool, honey." "No. My job is involved. I could call in from home and tell 'em I am sick or tell some other soul-lie. But, I'd be in a pickle if Bishop returned the truck 'n told somebody-any body—that I'm shacking up with my girl friend for the day." "But it's too icy out there for my loverbird. Tell 'em to go to hell. I have anything you need." "Everything!" "You don't have to worry about anything. I have enough for both of us." "Effie, I 'm in an awful jam— anything you can say at the moment only complicates mat ters-." "Pshaws! I want to be loved." Effie pouted. Continued—. Blackspot Blackspot, a troublesome rose disease, is caused by a fungus that lives from year to year in dead, fallen leaves and stems. Control measure for this disease should include a good program of sanitation, including the raking and burning of fallen leaves and proper pruning of stems. Efficient control of blackspot requires repeated applications of an effective fungicide every seven days throughout the growing season. 188 An Affair You Will Remember! Kg/- Wk Embrace the taste of DILLARD'S BAR-B-Q plttcwdrS iftjt,// , and you wi " want t0 remem^er> S?A c rdkf DILLARD'S BAR jnfasr"-M A B-Q SAUCE Viva the Paper Towel! The paper towel—it's a bacteria check-mate, and bac teria, which thrives in the kitchen, is one of the leading causes of food poisoning. So if you're concerned for the health of your family, consider expanding your existing uses for paper towels. You might start by exchanging your sponge for paper towels. Sponges, unless they're boiled regularly to keep them sanitary, are potential germ spreaders. A sturdy, absorbent towel such as Viva can do most of the jobs that a sponge can. Use towels for your scouring, for cleaning such critical surfaces as the refrigerator and all its trappings, the chopping board and countertop. Use towels for wiping up spills, wiping down grease splattered walls and stove, wiping off cans before they're opened. And to further improve your kitchen hygiene, extend your use of paper towels for drying. There's hand drying... and remember hands must be washed before you work with fqpd and again after; drying meat and poultry once it's been washed off; drying your flatware, glassware, crys tal...and here the absorbency of a good paper towel speeds up the job and gives a super sparkle. OPERA STAR IN NEW ROLE —g ||| s | i iiiriiili Famed tenor Richard Tucker accompanies his grandchildren as they play and learn with new Playskool toys by Milton Bradley. Girl at left amuses herself with Take Apart Work bench intended for children from 3 to 6 years of age. Youngster learns threading, placement of screws, nuts and bolts, nails, and the handling of "tools" such as claw hammer, ruler, wrench and screwdriver. Child at right learns to walk with droll giraffe Walker Chair which encourages coordination. Toy is intended for boys and girls one to three years old. AN IMPRESSIONABLE ASSET! « g°od ha^s^ ] 6C^aniC9 j^^j^ rS "4 WEST PAfHMSH «T. ' DURHAM, H. C.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 8, 1972, edition 1
14
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75