6B
THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JAN. 15. 1966
*OUTH CORPS—In Houston,
Texas, visits to cultural and
educational institutions and
leading business and industrial
firms have been a regular part
of the Neighborhood Youth
Corps program. From left, Man
uel Valesquei, Thurmond Dill
ingham, Pedro Reyes and Ray
non Quinones learn something
about an oil-refining process
The Heart You Save May Be Your Husband's
8y DANIEL T. YOUNG, M.D.
President, North Carolina
Heart Association
This article by Dr. paniel T.
Voting, of Chapel Hill, Univer
sity of North Carolina heart
specialist and North Carolina
Heart Association president, is
:he first of a four-part scries on
The Heart You Save," dis
:ributed by the N'crth Carolina
Heart News Bureau. This arti ;
:le. on guarding your husband's
icart, will be followed by arti
cles on guarding your child's
heart, your own heart, and
learts everywhere.
CHAPEL HILI The heart
you save may ' be—your hus
land's.
, Now, even more than in your
.ourting days, you hold the
*ey to his heart, and to the
health of his heart.
This is not meant to put Tar
tfeel wives on the - spot, nor
to saddle them with guilt com
plexes about their responsibil
ity for their husband's well-
Deing But our new and ever
growing knowledge of the cor
relation between certain en
*1 war clay's
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m Bourbon
48 MONTHS
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SJSS $2?5
rRAJGHT BCURBOW WHISKEY- 80 PROOF %MS. BARCLAY & CO.. LIMITED, PEORIA ILL
GOT THAT FEELING AGAIN?
Cheer
You can breexe through tax time with a smile.
Just plan ahead.
Put money aside a set sum regularly.
And when tax time rolls around, you're ready
without scrimping or scraping to pay your
share for running our country, our state,
our community.
i
Open your Savings Account for this purpose
at our bank today.
SjSTMechanics & Farmers
I D '" K *"" "• , ' h
114 WIST PAIMISM ST. DURHAM, H. C.
from Norman D'Oliv*. right, of
HumfcJe Oil and Refining Com
pany. The Youth Corps mem
bers visited Humbert Baytown
Refinery near Houston about
35 at a time until 170 had re
ceived a first-hand view of oil
industry _ refining operations.
Above. D'Olive uses a model of
a refinery pipe still tA show
how crude oil is "fractionated"
vironmental factors and the
likelihood of getting a heart
attack presents us with the op
portunity to control these fac
tors to some extent, and there
by reduce? the risk.
For example, you can't do
very much about the tensions
and pressures your husband
gncnunters in his work environ
ment. But you can make it a
point not to add to them when
he comes home.
And home is where his heart
is about 70 percent of the
time
Then there's the question of
what he eats—for which you
are primarily responsible. The
pundit who said the surest way
to a man's heart is via his
stomach did not have heart
attacks in mind, but you
should."
For evidence is growing
that the diet of the American
people is a major factor con
tributing to the high coronary
into valuable products and raw
materials. The Youth Corps i>
one part of the country's over
all Economic Opportunity Pro
gram. The Houston enrollees
are between the apes of 16 and
21. They work 32 hours each
weefc. The educational visits to
businesses and cultural institu
tions and schools keep them
busy the fifth day.
heart disease death raKe in our
country—chiefly our consump
tion of foods high in saturated
(animal), fats and cholesterol.
And statistics show that Ameri
can men at age 50 have a heart
attack death rate five times as
high as that for women of the
same age. You can help lower
these odds for your husband.
While you're substituting
vegetable oils and other poly
unsaturatd fats for animal fats
in cooking and at the table,
you and your children will
reap long-range benefits: lower
blood levels of cholesterol and
other fats and a lower risk of
developing coronary artheros
elerosis—the disease that clogs
the arteries feeding the heart
muscle and sets the stage for
heart attacks.
Your husband may be risk
ing a heart attack on other
fronts as well. Does he hold
down a swivel chair at a desk
all day, and an arm chair in
front of the TV set all evening?
Does he drive to the corner
store for a pack of cigarettes?
And how many packs a day
does he smoke?
There are at least two high
risk elements in that picture,
and a third if he is smoking
heavily because of tension.
And there may be another
hidden risk or two, not visi
ble to the naked eye: for ex
ample, high blood pressure or
diabetes. Only a medical ex
amination can disclose these
and other significant condi
tions; regular checkups can
catch them early enough to
treat before they do serious
damage.
So, if your husband hasn't
been feeling up to par lately,
or even if he has, wifely sug
gestion might be in order. You
might hint gently that the time
has come for "him to get a
complete medical checkup; or
better yet, take matters into
your own hands and make an
appointment for him. It's good
insurance.
(NEXT: Guarding Your Child's
Heart)
Wm. Dawson to
Conduct Kan.
City Orchestra
RICHMOND, Va. William
L. Dawson, Tuskegee Institute.
Ala., internationally known
composer-conductor, "will con
duct the Kansas City Philhar
monic Orchestra, Saturday eve
ning, January 29, in the third
of this season's Connoisseur
Concerts in Kansas City, Mo.
Dawson's performance will be
the first hearing of his "Ne
gro Folk Symphony" in the
area. On that date the program
will include the American pre
miere of Ligeti's "Apparitions
for Orchestra," and the area
premiere of Ballet Mechanique
by Georges Antheil.
Dawson's "Negro Folk Sym
phony" was recorded In 1963
on Decca Gold Label Records
by Leopold Stokowski and the
American Symphony Orchestra.
In 1956 Dawson was sent to
Soain by the ,U. S. Department
of State to conduct various
choral groups in that country.
Words came back that every
where he -.vent, "he won the
hearts, admiration and grati
tude of all."
Since the passage of the
Voting Rights Act last Aug. 9,
mare than 177,000 Negroes
have been registered to vote in
the South.
Call 681-8512 for News Service
With Our Area Servicemen
TACHIKAWA, Japan Staff
Sergeant Wade H. LeGrand;
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Ee-
Graod of Mount Gilead, has
been awarded the U.S. Air
Force Good Conduct Medal at
Tachikawa AB, Japan. --*-
The medal was presented to
Sergeant. . LeGrand for exenv
plary behavior, efficiency and
fidelity dining' the ' past three
vears He is an automotive
.body repairman assigned to Ta
chikawa as'a member of the
Pacific Air Forces which pro
vides air offensive and defensive
units in Southeast Asia, the
Far East, and Pacific.
The sergeant, a graduate of
Mineral Spring High School in
Ellerbe, attended Fayetteville
State College.
David L. Wallace, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Alex Wallace of 909
Pavie Ave.,' New Bern, has
been promoted to technical ser
geant in the U.S. Air Force.
Sergeant Wallace is a fuel
supervisor at Tachikawa AB,
Japan. He is a member of the
Pacific Air Forces, the nation's
combat-ready air arm guarding
the 10,000-mile Bamboo Cur
tain.
The sergeant is a graduate of
West Street High School.
His wife, Joyce, is the daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Best
of Rt. 2, New Bern.
BIG SPRING, Tex. Second
Lieutenant Clifton P. Dunne
gan, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. P. Dunnegan, Sr., of 15 Mon-
m
m MM
LEGRAND
9 - / -
ym.......
Tw&tv \ 95% of the dryers
sold in the Piedmont Carolinas
. are electric Why should
we try to sell you one?
k We want everybody
Flameless electric dryers do a lot to make people
happy. They cost less initially. They operate w
economically. And they provide year-round
your clothes drying. But electric dryers Sfe? k
are more gentle than the sun to delicate fabrics
and colors. That's why 95% of the Carolinians who Jm 'Jm flPp^ll
buy dryers are so happy. Wouldn't you like to be, r/ / Hp' Jljfl
too? See your favorite electric appliance dealer or C.&J K*' J|
iirap - ' I^l
mouth St., Winston-Salem, has
been awarded U. S. Air Force
silver pilot wings upon gradu
ation at Webb AFB, Tex.
Lieutenant Dunnegan is be
ing assigned to George AFB,
Calif. He will be a F-4C Phan
tom pilot in the Tactical Air
Command which provides com
bat reconnaissance, aerial fire
power and assault airlift for
U.S. Army forces.
The lieutenant attended Jas.
A. Gray High School, and
Staunton (Va.) Military Acad
emy. the University of Michi
gan and the University of X.
C. He has a B S. degree in mar
keting. and "was commissioned
through the Air Force Reserve
Officer Training Corps pro
gram.
ANNAPOLIS. Md. Mid
shipman Second Class Gary B.
Bastian. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Bastian of Golf
Manor Drive* Route 6, Con
nersville, Ind., attended Duke
University, Durham, will par
ticipate in an annual presen
tation at the Naval Academy
Chapel, where he is a member
of the Midshipman Choir.
USCGC INGRAM Seaman
Apprentice Oliver D. Ellis,
USCG, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.
O. Ellis of Route 1, Bahama,
has completed a three-week
weather patrol aboard the
Coast Guard Cutter Ingham, an
ocean station vessel, operating
out of Norfolk, Va.
_ •. iBRJ
*st> /■"MM^yfl
DUNNEGAN
Ms m
*«.
INSTALLATION CEREMONY—
Dr. Alinzo Kenlon (2nd from
right (installs AAUP chapter
officers at Winston-Salem State
College: L. to r.: Hamlet E.
Goore, vice president; Mrs.
While patrolling Ocean Bra
vo, the vessel acted as an aids
to-navigation for trans-oceanic
aircraft, relaying communica
tions between the aircraft and
coastal radio stations, while U.
S. Weather Bureau personnel
made weather observations for
relay to the Weather Bureau.
On the basis of their obser-
jj
WALLACE
Sylvia S. Saunders, recording
secretary; Dr. Edith J. Hadley,
treasurer; Mrs. Meada Poindex
ter. corresponding secretary;
James S. Galloway, president
and Dr. Alphonso R. Vick, par
vations, weather forecasts were
predicted for worldwide aero
nautical and general use.
USS AMERICA Radarman
Seaman William T. East, USN,
\ _ /
CASH IN A
. TYPTWHTTHK
• MUSIC AL MSTRUMB4TS
• SHOT GUNS M 4 WFLES
• ust D nuvisete
PROVIDENCE
LOAN OFFICE
IM E main DIAL 682-4431 /*,
/INTEREST NOW CUT
Vi AT PROVIDENCE
1
liamentarian. Dr. Kanlon la
president of the Wake Foreat
College chapter of the (AAUP)
American Association of Uni
versity Professors.
ward of Miss Lizzie G. Chand
ler of 2811 Fairlawn Rd., Dur
ham, is serving aboard the at
tack aircraft carrier USS
America, operating in the Med
.iterranean with the 6th Fleet.