Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 8, 1966, edition 1 / Page 7
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HH V A 111 ./ V A i Jy f> I I■• Jg* ■ V ■ M ti| A jbh' l *x..•-. 3K 'tfMQßs'lSMfS&dM^^^GflrcSHiH f-v.- &' *n.TOir " ,&* ■■„•. fIIMKSHHHHHHHHHH OK, BUT JUST ONE STEP AT A TIME Dean turni dancer when h • joins the Treniers, Vets Questions and Answers Editor's Note: Below are au thoritative answers by the Vet erans Administration to some of the many current questions from former servicemen and their families. Further infor mation on veterans benefits may be obtained at any VA Office. Q.—l am a veteran of World War II with a disability rating of 80 percent. I have a daugh ter starting her second year in college. Is she eligible-for education assistance from the Veterans Adminstration? A.—No. You would have to be permanently rated 100 per cent disabled due to a service connected disability. However, in a separate program, chil dren under 23 years of age of veterans with more than 50 percent disability who are at tending school are eligible for monthly payments. The rate is S4O monthly if .the veterans disability is rated 100 percent. In your case with 80 percent, the monthly payment would be 80 percent of S4O or $32 a month. See the newest VA re gional office for details. Q. —Are veterans of World War I eligible for GI home loans? A.—No, but they may be eligible for housing benefits under the new Housing Act of 1965 administered by the Fed eral Housing Administration. Q. —May a veteran who has no service - connected illness enter a Veterans Administra tion hospital and pay for his care? A.—No. VA hospital bene fits arc free to veterans with service - connected disabilities and to veterans with nonserv ice connected disabilities who cannot afford hospital care. All other veterans are expect ed to use 'non-VA hospijals. LAUKDERERS-CLEAHERS Phuri* 590-8202 • IIM Ai*W Are. • Wollon* VHUg* A So. KmlwM St. lit Lakewood Ave. GROWS HAIR ON HEADS AS BALD AS BILLIARD BALLS V * * v V jf BEFORE AFTER Why be bald adding years to your appearance? Stop baldness today. We are no longer In the horse and buggy afe. Today's scientific development! brlnf yonr relief from nature. Now medical science has discovered the new relief from baldness FORMULA 1966. Try this formula today on our guarantee that FORMULA 1966 must grow hair to your satisfaction or your money promptly refunded. FREE TRIAL COUPON I NEWARK RESEARCH CO. BOX 101 WIST SB ST. NIW YORK. N Y. Rush FORMULA 1966 to me at onee. I must be completely satisfied In only 1 10 day or you guarantee refund of my money upon my return of FORMULA I 1 1966 and unused portion. Name . * I Address I Cltv Zone State □ Enclosed find *3 send postpaid. . □ Enclosed find 91. I will pay postman 9t plus postal charges. I □ Send triple slse for 97 9t saving) | guests on "The Dean Mertln Show" Thursday, Jenuery 20, FREEDOM DAY OBSERVED The Chatham County Com munity Branch of the Nation al Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People held its seventh annual Freedom Day Service at the Church of God, near Pittsboro, Saturday morning, January 1, beginning at lt:00 A.M. The music was rendered by the Horton High Glee Club and the Community Choir. The guest speaker was Clifton Stone Supply Supervisor, School "bf Pharmacy, University of North Carolina. Mr. Stone is a product of Horton High School, attended the Extension Dept. of Living stone College, completed sev eral Bible Courses and gradu K HK HKZ XKm CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Mrs. Mary Ann Tate acknowledges with grateful appreciation, your cards, telegrams, and beautiful flowers and kind words expressed to us in the illness and death of our be loved mother and grandmoth er who passed December, 1965. Mrs. Marianne Stephens Kearsh 1514 Cloverbell Drive Savannah, Ga. 31401 QK XK HK Hte CARDS OF THANKS The family of the late Mrs. Mary Ann Cade acknowledges with grateful appreciation your cards, telegrams, beautiful flowers and kind words ex pressed to us in the illness and death of our beloved mother and grandmother who passed December 16, 1965 at her home, 1109 Mallard Avenue. The Family XKZI XKCrrrZXK _> i "n color, (10-11 p.m. EST) on | the NBC Television Network. SCHOLARSHIP FUND SET UP AT SYRACUSE U. SYRACUSE, N. Y. The sophomore class at Syracuse University has established a scholarship to be given annual ly to a high school student in a racially-troubled area in the southern United States. Peter Jeffer, class president, and J. L. Swerdlow, chairman of the scholarship fund, said they hope the first recipient will be from a high school in Seima, Alabama. Under present plans, the (Continued on page 2B) ated from Banneker Technical Institute of Durham in 1948 He is an outstanding civic, fraternal and religious leader of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area. Stone is currently serving as the co-chairman of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Human Relations Council. Daylene Page of Apex, special guest and gave remarks. f * ■ IMWW ' |Hkk I I g lw uB Dr. T. Nelson Baker is Specialist With Interests PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—ln the age of specialists, one might be quick to assume that most professionals engaged in the sciences rarely bother to com municate beyond their own realm of career endeavor. No thing could be further from the truth. Specialists are dedi cated to their fields, to be sure, but the genuinnely talented are also conversant with many other aspects of life. A striking example of the all around type is Dr. T. Nelson Baker, 111, a 28-year-old re search chemist in The Atlantic Refining Co.'s Chemical Inter mediates Section at Glenolden, Pa. While attaining his Doctor ate Degree in Organic Chemis try at Cornell University at the early age of 20, Dr. Baker also compiled a remarkable record UNCF to Hold Annual Meet In Cleveland NEW - YORK The National Alumni Council of the United Negro College Fund will hold its 20th annual conference in Cleveland. Ohio, on February 1013, it was announced this week by Moses S Belton, the Council president. More than 1500 alumni and I students .from 33 colleges and universities affiliated with the Fund are expected to attend the meeting. Key speakers will include Dr. Earl J. McGrath, executive officer of the Institute of High er Education, Columbia Univer- j sity and a former U.S. Com- i missioner of Education. Dr. Mc- Grath will present a detailed evaluation of the predominant j ly Negro colleges and univer i lities—and their role in help ing meet the educational prob | lems of disadvantaged Negro | youth A report on current aca- | demic programs designed to increase the effectiveness of | the predominantly** Negro col- j lege will be presented by Dr. j | James A. Colston, President j of Knoxville College (Knox | ville, Tenn.). Dr. Milton K. ; Curry, Jr. ( President of Bishop College (Dallas, Tex ), will cite distinguished alumni for their | contributions to education. Walter Riddick Named Omega Keeper of Records DETROIT Walter H. Rid dick, prominent Norfolk Fun eral Director was re-elected Grand Keeper of Records and Seal for the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity at the 50th Annual Conclave of the 25,000-member organization of college men at the Sheraton Cadillac Hotel this week. Riddick was re-elected for the 14th time. He was an easy winner over Hiram F. Jones of Washington, D. C. Ellis F. Corbett, who work ed for the Journal and Guide for a number of years, now Public Relations Officer for A. and T. College, at Greensboro, was re-elected First Vice- Grand Basileus. Corbett served as Editor of the Oracle, official Organ of the organization, for 17 years. of achievement in other fields. At Haverford College (Pa.), for instance, where he won his Bachelor of Science Degree in Chemistry, the youthful intel lectual extended his interests and talents into many other areas—adn with success in all of them. After leaving Peabody High School in Petersburg, Va., he enrolled at Mount Hermon School, located in the Massa chussets community bearing that name, and graduated in 1954 cum laude. Following his undergraduate work at Haver ford, which he also completed with honors, Dr. Baker enter ed Cornell. Serving as a graduate teach ing assistant at the Ivy League institution, the personable young scholar was awarded a y *«fc. Ifljdp |t - r J MB i ■I Bb> K£jm 9 ■HHHV .. •■.•**« *MIV vl ATA OFFICIALS GATHER— American Tennis Associaion 50th Anniversary . . . planning meeting ii held at Pepsi-Cola Federal Voting Officials Open More Offices WASHINGTON, D. C.—Fed eral voting examiners will open new voter listing offices in Carroll, Newton, Simpson, and Warren Counties, Mississip pi, on Tuesday, January 4, Civil Service Commission Chairman John W. Macy, Jr., announced this week. The offices were re cently designated by the At torney General of the United States for the assignment of examiners under the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Under the Voting Rights Act, the Civil Service Commission is responsible for listing eligible voters regardless of race or color in counties designated by the Attorney General in which tests or devices have been maintained and in which less than half of those eligible to vote were registered or had voted in November 1964. The new locations bring to 36 the number of counties or parishes to which Federal ex aminers have been assigned since President Johnson signed I the Voting Rights Act on Aug R In tho 19. rmintipK whpre share of the DuPont Teaching Prize, given to such outstand ing assistants in the Chemistry Department. Before winning his Ph.D. in September, 1963, Dr. Baker was to establish still other impressive achievements. Born in Yazoo City, Missis sippi in 1937, Dr. Baker moved to Va. State College, Peters burg, when his parents Dr. and the late Mrs. T. Nelson Baker, Jr.—joined the college faculty. The versatile scientist first came to Atlantic as a summer student trainee in 1957. He joined the company as a fulltime employee in the fall of 1962 and is currently en gaged in basic research for preparation of organic chemi cals based on petroleum. Company New York Haadquar tars in preparation for the an nual tournament scheduled for Central State College, Wilber- by Ann Jackson | If you're packing for a trip to Tahiti, forget the frills and the fancy fabrics. You won't need jewelry, big heavy hand bags, gloves, scarves or wool ens when visiting the fabled South Seas island paradise of French Polynesia. According to Jane Kilbourne, Pan Am's travel and fashion consultant, tourists to Tahiti should take their fashion cue from the Polynesian girls, who have learned to combine French chic vith south of the equator climate. The "little uniform" of Ta hiti is a cotton sheath, with cool sandals, no stockings, no gloves and a straw tote bag to act as purse and catch-all. Instead of jewelry, you'll be •ivearing fresh flowers or a string of shells. Only for evening are high heels worn, and not always then. Tahitian roads are better suited to flats and sandals. Some evenings you may need a light-weight pastel cardigan to keep off the sea breezes; usually a sleeveless dress is comfortable for morning to night. offices have been opened Fed eral examiners have listed more than 81,000 persons, in cluding over 79,000 Negroes, as eligible to vote. * BUY _ ■ ffhf BOX 307 to M CJ DURHAM. N C - 27702 M M M M f 1 From Your Favorite I/ Become A Mail Subscriber ( ) 2 Y»ar» SI O.OO ( ) 1 Year $5 ( ) 6 Mos. $3.50 FOREIGN AND CANADIAN $1 EXTRA NAMI ADDUSS CITY ZONE STATE FILL IN AND MAIL TO: Cbf CarSjgg Ciin^g PUBLISHED BY UNITED PUBLISHERS. INC. 430 EAST PETTIOREW ST PHONES: 86 1-8512 AND CB2-2913 - DURHAM. N. C. "THE LEADING WEEKLY OF THE CAROLINAS" SATURDAY, JAN. 8, 1966 THE CAROLINA TIMES—: force Ohio in August of 1966. A.T.A. officials, (center figures- Macao Hill, Assistant Execu tive Secretary and Dr. Hubert MUU-MUWS AND BIKINIS Tahitian women do not wear short-shorts or tight pedal pushers, and visitors shopping in Papeete, the chief city of the island, will feel less con spicuous in cotton shifts of the "muu-muu" type. Slacks are acceptable, especially when paired with a little shift top of the native bright cotton. Satins, silks, laces and feath ers aren't seen in Tahita, even at festival time. For dress-up occasions, it's still a fitted cot ton sheath—cut floor-length, or a modified version of the Chi nese cheongsam, slit way up the sides. December to April in Tahiti is the rainy season, which means it rains a little most days, and a lightweight plastic fold-up slicker comes in handy. May to October is winter time. Ityl 1(11 n Laundry and 1 oUew{l[l^mcJ Dr y Cleaners 3 CASH & CARRY OFFICES 111 Corner Roxboro and Holloway Streets S|I Quick As A Wink—Roxboro Rd. at Avoadale Dr. §| Drive-la, Cor. Broad and Englewood Ave. jMHfM A. Eaton Praaldant, confer with Papal PR man Charlaa Dryden and Chria Connar. which translates to a constant degrees and sunny days for swimming. If it weren't for magazine subscriptions, financial oppor tunities, notices of meetings, requests for contributions to societies for the relief of this or that, we'd consider ourself thte forgotten man, so far as our personal mail is concerned. Pfc' MON. SAT. RADIO DISPATCHED ,• DRIVE IN SERVICE -'cm tm *' V.fc K* SJH| . DIAL , | 682-1566 r WEAVERS L CLEANERS r 1212 FAYETTfcYIU-E DURHAM, 1B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Jan. 8, 1966, edition 1
7
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