Page 2 Cf t ?j*| ?il Hl^HHB 'W B ft^BBW yfl B| Kin] J* ft^Hf^Haj / fl B fCfBroLi ^BBh^H // ^ 9 ff n lit]I 1|{|Bbb^[I KeS IBAwl-f 4 . H Kfl ^k i > P/WK -*^n^iii iA iw Some students missed preregistral for the Spring Semester was genei m w oi January. Live Today Live today, for tomorrow is but a dream awakening its foreshadows by far; to the invisible horizons unexploited; Life is but a walking shadow in which man seeks to be enveloped by; and all our ^ yesterdays are but landmarks to our tomorrows. Helen L. Whitaker I STORE CLEAR OFFERING CRE.4 IN EVERY D SUITS Sl>ORT< H SHIRTS COATS 8 m AND HALF-SIZt M COATS SI || SMI H wmmmma lion last semester and had to 44h rally slow. Colleges began the s t's Goi Memories Memories, memories, why come to me now? I can clearly remember the image of my father; He was such a religious man, and he loved his family so dear; Why did you have to go? Death is uncertain to each of us; F realize I must go someday, but it is nice to have memories of someone you love. Invited" ^ | winr I A JL JL-^ 1 A ^ LANCE | iT REDUCTIONS 8 EPARTMENT ji "OATS SHOES H JUNIOR. MISSY 1 5 DRESSES AND j| 'O RESWEAR ^ ttCer 4.UBEKty P j The Winston-Salem Chronicle D . , ; 9 H RH* I < P luiii 9999 ,* *" jBj "* B i^^Bwwenww hmw s*~ -. "" urry and wait" as registration ipring semester the first week A mmjrn. ?4HKB ?MIBM? We Wear the Mask You wear the mask that laughs and cries, It hides your dimples and covers your eyes, i < _ 1. inese tnings you pay 10 human society, With torn and bleeding heart you smile, And mouth covered with an evil disguise. Why should it be this way, Have we done some awful wrong that we must pay, No, let us see you in a true way. Take off your mask and confess that you are really okay.. T?l?? OW IUA maetr lilKC UII 111^ nioai\. I- Subscribe to . f The Chronicle i P.O. Box 3154 Win'ston-Salem, N.C. 27102 i ? I [DUD] \ | Beauty Cei il Featured Hairdo I PE I 2500 N. L I Call For An | Phone: ^724^6j UNC-T 20th I The University of North Carolina Television Network will celebrate ftl y???rc nf serving the State on January 8. On January 8, 1955, WUNC-TV signed, on "v' scheduled programs a Wake Forest-UNC game, that was. complete with a traditional brawl. The signing on culminated almost three years work by University President Gordon Gray, Vice President William D. Carmichael, Jr. and others who struggled to meet the July, 1953 FCC deadline for annliratinn for rVionno! A ? * ?v/? VUHIIIIVI ~T 111 Chapel Hill and to raise necessary funds to build the station. In answer to Vice President Carmichael's appeals, North Carolinians contributed S2 million in goods, services and money to build a transmitter *" iii Chatha m County an d studios at the Universitybranches at Chapel Hill, Greensboro and Raleigh. At the January 9, 1955 dedication, President Gray expressed hope that Univer sity Television would "assist in the interpretation of our institutions to the people of North Carolina, to whom they belong." With that charge the station became the 10th educational television station in the country, a distinction which won it a $10,000 prize. A 1957 gift from the Ford Foundation that was matched by eleven North Carolina school systems led to the first experimental in-school programming by University Television. Six commercial stations extended WUNCTV's coverage to the participating school svstems. A gift of $499,776 from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare for color cameras, film chains (which integrate film and slide material into programs) and LEY'S nter & Salon eaturing All Major Lines of Black Cosmetics: * Ultra Sheen Clairol Vigorol . Revlon *and many others ^Magnificent Products RMS 815.95 .iberty Street Appointment J 147 or 724-6851 ] ? J January 11, 1975 V Has lirthday one inch video tape machines will benefit production in 1975; The^ grant matched an original state appropriation of $169,092. "The grant brings us up to .^current industry. ^standard* '!' - TnYake "a"sTghificafit dffteTence " "1 in the quality of programs we will be producing for North Carolinians. Our efforts will . continue to be directed at offering the people of this state a quality alternative to commercial programming an alternative through which they can find enrichment for their personal lives." a No Sign W Continued from Page 1 \ / In a telephone conversation with the city traffic engineer, " Ttoy D. Williams, it was learned that not all major streets in the city have traffic signs. "There are many major streets in residential areas that do not have traffic signs," Williams said. He said a major street is one that "carries a fairly significant volume of traffic." Liberty Street i>-travele i daily by thousands of automobiles. It is considered to be a thoroughfare from the downtown area to north Winston. Williams said, however, that a sign should have been af that intersection. But, for some reason or another there was not one there. "Som/|| times signs get torn down," he suggested. "If we are not informed about it then it is likely that we won't know about it until we go out into the area and discover it for ourselves." Williams theorized that, probably the sign was left off the corner as a result of the urban renewal project that came, nfrough that area in 1967. The sign, he speculated, was simply left out. He said, hbwever, that a traffic signvof some sort should be located on that corner. He said he would look into the matter and welcomed any calls from citizens in reference to street lights, stop signs, and the like. His telephone number is 727-2707. (Problems About Pregnancy? Mtdical Rf^ndl - Ltgil IF YOU HAVE Questions | About Pregnancy CALL M6n.-Ffi. I BIRTH CHOICE m1' _ _ 723-82X8 % t

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