The Right IQ^dj^^BL *^j?*:?Wi^'' r jJiAI ■^*^J 1 LjMMr H Hf 1 * '■ 11 | fl| Bk m fl PRESIDENT JOHNSON with his Press Secretary, Bill Moyers. Despite the good intentions and well-meaning words —the black ghettos remain and the economic gap between white and Negro is widening. j WiSM if "***• j! * opportunity to fiy V jgj wish each of you of Christmascs! Pauline's Eat-More Lunch 404 E. PETTIGREW ST. and yours! The sincere wish all your friends at Christian Music and Book Store "MUSIC IS THE LANGUAGE OF THE SOUL" 427 W. MAIN ST. DURHAM, N. C. Soviet Bloc Licked As UN Votes Funds Bv WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. The U.N. Budgetary Committee approved over So viet bloc opposition today a res olution to appropriate $33 9 mil lion to finance the Middle East emergency force through 1966 The General Assembly's 117- nation committee approved the eight-nation draft by a vote of 3814, with 37 abstentions. The United States abstained. U.S. Rep. Peter H. B. Frel inghuysen, R-N.J., told the com mittee he could not support the resolution since Congress decided in 1952 that the United States ahould pay no more than a third of the assessed U.N. ex penses. The resolution, if ap proved by the General Assem bly. would have it pay nearly two-fifths. Frelinghuysen added, how ever, that if approved, the U.S. mission would ask Congress to make an appropriation. He is a member of the U.S. delegation to the General Assembly. The resolution, introduced by Canada, ran into objections from the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. They voiced their usual argument that the Security Council not the assembly was the sole authority to originate and fi nance peacekeeping operations. In an attempt to offset Com munist bloc objections, Ghana proposed inserting a proviso to the appropriations. It said they were made "without prejudice to the positions of principle which might be taken by mem ber states on possible recom mendations of the special com mittee." Couple Held For Murders On Moorland HYDE. England A 27- year-old man and his girl friend were committed today to stand trial charged with Britain's moorlands murders. After an 11-day preliminary hearing, the magistrate in this northern England town ruled there was a prima facie case to answer. Lan Brady and Myra Hindley, 23, were committed to appear at Cardiff. Wales, at the n?xt ses sions opening Jan. 11. The trial venue and date will then be decided. Brady and the girl are jointly charged with murdering Ed ward Evans, 17. and Lesley Ann Downey, 10. Brady also is charged with slaying John Kil bride. 12. and Miss Hindley with harboring Brady after the kill ing. Both pleaded innocent. The two children were found buried in shallow graves in the wild Pennine moorlands earlier this year. Evans' body was dis covered in a house shared by the accused couple. He had been axed to death. The penui.'iila of Gallipoli con trols the Dardanelles Strait, which is the only entrance into the Black Sea. EARNING A BRIGHTER CHRISTMAS—James Costen of Belle Haven, Va., is piecing * out the income from his day laboring job by molding, paint- 1 ing, and selling ceramics dolls, figurines, and novelties for Christmas and year-round market He got started last May U. S. HEALTH SERVICE TO LAUNCH NEW FIGHT ON CERVICAL CANCER WASHINGTON, D C.'—Ac cording to the American Can cer Society, about 44,00 wom en will contract cervical can cer next year. Many will be saved because their cancers were detected early by means of the Pap smear. In order to eliminate deaths from cervical cancer, the U.S. Public Health Service will soon launch a nationwide campaign to provide Pap smears to the 8,000,000 women, 25 years or KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY § 0L D I TAYLOR J 1} J B straight jg BoitWd By TK. otd T.yW D.st'l^y FRANKFORT. K1 LOUISVILLE. KT. OLD TAYLOR 86 PROOF THE OLD TAYLOR DISTJLLERY CO., FRANKFORT & LOUISVILLE, KY. DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY with a war on poverty loan re ceived through the Farmers Home Administration of the U.S. Department of Agricul ture. Not only will his family's Christmas be brighter this year, but th.ir creations will help make it brighter for oth ers, too. —USDA Photo older, admitted to hospitals providing care for the poor and medically indigent. This disadvantaged group rarely gets the kind of private medi cal care that includes the routine Pap test. Although the Pap test was developed more than 20 years ago, only 20 per cent of the nation's 62 million women re ceived it last year, according to a Public Health Service spokesman. U.S. Giving French Offer Some Study \VASHINGT" "J - Stato Department officials said today the United States has expressed interest in a French offer to participate with other countries in a space launching center in French C.uiana in the jungles of Equatorial South America. More talks will be held with French authorities, officials said, but no date has yet been set France is developing the launching range in Guiana, some 30 miles from the capital of Cayenne in preparation for the time when its present space launching site in Algeria will no linger be available. The French Guiana location is expected to be completed by the end of 1966 ■■■ X&lvJ ssa */: OLD-FASHIONED GREETINGS TO OUR MANY FRIENDS FROM THE STAFF AT DILLARD'S SELF SERVICE FAYETTEVILLE ROAD PHONE 554-1105 M* ->T* sk- -'4feS r f ' ' Iter* *a- a. ! -:fk k ■.Ai" '■=./'▼ ax ' _, gift for all mankind! wishing you blessings of the Season... Forest Hill Esso 1317 UNIVERSITY DRIVE PHONE 489-3535 THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT., DEC. 25, 1965—: "OPERATION RECLAIM" MOVES TO AID JOBLESS SOUTHERN TEACHERS NEW YORK—A new project of the New York City school system—Operation Reclaim moves into action today follow ing a grant of $135,000 from the U.S. Office of Education to implement the initial phase of the program—a National De fense Education Act institute for the orientation of Negro teachers displaced by school desegregation in the South. Operation Reclaim was ini tiated in August 1965 under the direction of Dr. John B. King, Executive Deputy Super intendent of Schools, to utilize the talents and resources of displaced Negro teachers who desired to come to New York City to teach in the City school system. The staff of the Institute is composed of faculty members of public and private colleges and universities in the Metro politan area ■which will offer their facilities without charge to" applicants who are accepted for the program. It is expected that approxi mately 50 teachers will start their studies in the Institute in February. The federal grant provides for payment of $75 weekly to each person partici pating in the during the Spring term, plus sls week ly for each dependent. 3B

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