Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Feb. 25, 1967, edition 1 / Page 14
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—THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT., FEBRUARY 25, 1967 8B f : - - • {s•* ■■ " fr bl * jtijj/L K||^ Ibk fl c - £IA H 'V'"' :'-**^^k IN D C.) —In gratitude for finan cial help to the Delta Ministry from other continents, a hand- j crafted wooden cross was pre sented here Monday (Feb 6) to Botswana's Ambassador Z. K. I Matthews (right), former Afri ca secretary for Interchurch Aid under the World Council of Churches. The gift was brought by Clarence Hall (left), Mayersville, Miss., director of the farm program at Freedom I City, and Owen Brooks, acting ' HINTS FOR A HEALTHIER CAT IPS^JI W gggg [ I *'iom £' W \i A m W 4 m %. V MF m m telis domestica. to use the cat's Latin name, is an altogether hardy soul. But though she is usually in fine fettle, she may, on occasion, exhibit symptoms of a disease or difficulty that demands prompt action on the part of the owner. Such symptoms, according to experts at Purina's Pet Care Center, include the following: TEETH AND GUMS: If your cat only stares at her food and drools excessively, consult your veterinarian immediately. She may suffer from gum disease and have large amounts of black tartar around her teeth at the gum line. The veterinarian may wish to remove the tartar deposits and recommend a dry cat food to strengthen and massage her gums. FLEAS: Vep' often cats al lowed outside pick up fleas. These parasites are annoying and dan gerous. They may carry worm eggs and other infections. Your veterinarian can recommend a good commercial flea powder ap proved for cats. Don't use a dog flea powder on tabby unless the label states it may be used for \ ' . Our community is you and I and he and she and they and we. Which brings us back to you and us. What we think, what we say, what we do pretty much determines the spirit of our community .. . and the progress of our town. We here at the bank take pride in our commu nity and what our many services do to aid in our community progress. Come in and meet us. ' jLjr.T/.ar-; ".rr r : I I director of Delta Ministry. ICA | channeled over $150,000 from Court Shores Up Defendants' Rights WASHINGTON - - The Supreme Court Monday shored up federal constitutional rights of defendants in state criminal trials. cats. Otherwise, if she licks it, it may prove fatal. / WORMS: A dull and watery eyes, sneezi/g, cough ing and vomiting are symptom® of worms. Often the cat eat venously but fails to gain welgHT Fortunately, treatment is simple and recovery rapid once the cat is placed under th«. veterinarian's care. MITES: Any unusual accumu lation of dirt and wax in a cat's ears becomes a breeding ground for mites, the tiny parasites that cause a cat to shake her head frequently, paw her ears, rub her head against furniture. Keep cat's ears clean by swabbing gently. If mites are present and you can not clean them out, consult your veterinarian. Following these hints will help your felis domestics live to a ripe, old age. overseas Christians during ,2V4 years to the Delta Ministry, a Henceforth, it said in a 7-1 decision, when federal constitu tional rights are violated the burden will be on the state to prove "beyond a reasonable doubt" that the infringement "did not contribute to the verdict." "With faithfulness to the constitutional union of the states," said Justice Hugo L. Black, "we cannot leave to the states the formulation of the authoritative laws, rules, and remedies designed to protect people from infractions by the states of the federally guaran teed rights." The dietri»e was aaaoaneed as the court set aside the convictions of Mrs. Ruth Elizabeth Chap ma ■ aad Thomas Leroy Teak la the lMt ataytag af a Lodi, CaUl, bartender. • Neither testified and the state prosecutor, Black aaid, took . full advantage of his right--- under the state constitution to comment upon this, "filling his argument to the jury from beginning to end with numerous references to their silence,and inferences of their guilt result ing therefrom." Teale was sentenced to death and Mrs. Chapman to lift in prison. In 1965, two years after the trial, the Supreme Court ruled in another case, that reference! to this nature violate federal constitutional rights. The court applied this ruling to the Chapman-Teaje case because it was not closed in 1965, but was being appealed. In setting aside the convic tions, Black said far the majartty that Mrs. Cfcapmaa and Teale "are entitled te a trial free (rem the presanre of uacoesUtatleaal confer ences." In other rulings the court —By a 6-3 vote sent a plan for districting of the Texas House of Representatives back to • three-Judge >ael in Houston where the state will be required to justify variations in populations for representatives. —Upheld by a 5-4 vote a California narcotic convictions despite a claim by the defend ant, Nathan Cooper, of Rich mond, Calif., that police had illegally seized evidence from his automobile. —Agreed to give state police tome new guidance on their authority to search private apartments of "supicious char acters" (or evidence. The case was brought to the high court by the Massachusetts attorney general. —Refused to review a Feder al Trade Commission finding that Bakers of Washington, Inc.. a 59-member bakers asso ciation, and others illegally conspired to raise bread prices in the state of Washington. 4 Die In Honduran Airliner Crash, Fire TEGUCIGALPA, H—df— — An Honduran airliner with 4 passengers aboard crashed and burned Monday on tha runway, roar persons died. The number ef injured or burned was not determined. Among those who escaped uninjured from the plane was the minister of interior. Virgflie Urmeneta. The plane, a DCd of the Sorvtck* Aereos de Honduras, came in from the coastal tew* of San Pedro Sula. project in Mississippi to work with the impoverished. ! What you don't get from I i your first wife you arc unlikely I jto get from your second or I 'tenth wife, so we have loamed from the confessions of the |wise men of long, long ago.. C&lßu f , O Km B ■ • * If Jfc ftr - , . K y!^, WOUNDED BUDDIES (Near Bong Son, South Vietnam Wounded buddies each other to a waiting helicopter v «. . ■■ • •-*. . \ t • ■ HAVE YOU TRIED THE NEW \ ' SOFT ROLL SHIRT? | ,' ' \ 1 \ i CALL 682-5426 4. i. 1 m N. MANGUM ST. DURHAM,*. C m' i ' if iinil ■ i ii"BLhni in i ■ ■ » ■ > ■ 11 I^My^ Tom's mmmm: «*■ Now 3 Convenient LOCATIONS M i Your clothes look better longer. KK^ 9 yiaK Colors brighter with "MARTINIZ- \YftjiVPZl ■ ING" the most in Dry * 1' Cleaning . . . and yotif""™ r*—fl save, too! **•MnM* )'| rll • mi sHrrs I. .nj dollars gfgk B - i M mo> cum n£m 1 ft gL£r~ 690 »:■ >-Ml -s±l2b TOM?— , .. c-T-^n 0-wour „ I mmwe. £■ ■ ■.■ninycu— tSSSrBB^ Viet War Protesters MobHHH STANFORD, Calif. - Anti-Vietnam war dtmonstraton attempted to mob Vice President Hubert Humphrey Monday at Stanford University but were halted by a cordon of Secret Service agenta ami sheriff's deou ties. Some of the demonstrators called the vice president a "war criminal." Screaming "Shame, shame," some 900 demonstrators rushed at Humphrey a* he went to his limousine after participating in a student forum at the univer sity audtorium. None of the students managed to get to Humphrey. Several grappled with officers who locked arms to prevent the youths from reaching the vice president. When Humphrey reached his car, the mob e young men aad women surged te the vehicle. They banged oa the windows aad doers with their fists. Some shouted "Burn, baby, burn." As the car pulled away from the auditofium parking area, agents ran ahead of the vehicle, shoving demonstrators out of the way. At least one person suffered minor injuries when he attempt ed to block the car and was pushed to the ground by an officer. Humphrey, visibly shaken at the outset of the ruckus, smiled as the car moved past the demonstrators, enroute to San Francisco. Tho wild scene contrasted Sharply with the reception the vice president received from 1,700 students who jammed the auditorium for the forum. He was heckled only once during north of Bong Son after a heavy Communist attack. (UPI Radiotelephoto By Shunsuke Akatsuka g, VALENTIN! GREITINOS (Phan Rang, S. Vietnam) "Happy Valentine" and "Love and Kisses" are the Valentine the question and answer sesaloa Involving the war. Silent protests and walkouts had been planned by students and faculty members for the forum. The mob scene outside appeared to be spontaneous as the demon strators spotted Humphrey leis urely strolling across a grassy slope to his car. "I just wanted to tell him what's really going on in Viet nam," explained Jeffrey Collins, 21, a non-student. The youth tumbled by an agent as the car sped away smashed his eyeglasses when he landed on the pavement. He was shaken up but did not appear to be seriously hurt. Two men working as a team will produce more than three working as individuals. —McCormick —^Pip^Dr^arnsrV Gen. Douglas MacArthu?) Gunfire rattled in the distance and a shell whistled overhead as. the man standing at the entrance of the cave fortress drew deeply on his pipe, dreaming of the day when he would return to defeat the Japanese who had seized the Philippines. The year was 1942. The place was Corregidor. The man was Gen. Uauglas Mac Arthur, affectionately called "Dug-out Doug'' by his men. Hopelessly outnumbered by the foe, Mac Arthur vowed, "X shall return" and, on March 11th, escaped the island with his wife and son and a handful of officers. Return, Mac Arthur did—to see his dream come true. On Septem ber 2, 1945, the man forced to flee Corregidor on a PT boat stood aboard the mighty batilesEip Mii souri to accept the formal sur render of the Japanese. * f»• y Seagram's Fjl Crown . |scoytt^ •' I Seven Crouin %A*o I 1 AMERICAN > ■ BLINDED WHISKEY , £ 70 t>V^i viCjhy cf AjAn*tit* tXdutrii* PT, ;; v' wed t/cS,/it/P'/hatTta/ » UrMni/ a /HIST c>f bat rruOJ £ ».I»9I0 t »OtlUo •! ICIIP" I 1WI« t»• I . JMIKIIIK I*o . lU' 1 I II I LI . • . {■t;uv ;s* .;;••} ;:v?iv sf* •:»\; *'. ?.;*:??■••• }•••. •; *.\'-' «•••/;*•»;?: •;/ messages being tent to the Viet Cong through the 105 mm howit zers of the Second Battalion, 320 th Airborne) Artillery, from Summit Meeting Gete Approval BUENOS AIRES Foreign mioiaters of 20 American na tions agreed Monday to bold a summit conference of their presidents in Punta del Este, Uruguay, but did not immedi ately set a date for the meeting. It was the first formal ap proval of the long-discussed summit meeting proposed by Argentina in April 1965 and warmly qpdorsed by the United States. • Although the date for the summit meeting was held open, the foreign ministers agreed on two follow-up program-drafting conference* to be held in Uruguary. 4 jfflfissfr WHEN YOU CONSULT US> ABOUT HEAL ESTATE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INSURANCE MATTERS, OUR MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, AUTO, FIRE AND ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE PROTECTION AS SURES YOU OF THE VERY BEST. Consult Us Before You Build, Sell Rent or Renovate Union Insurance & Realty Co. 814 FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE 482-1133 the paratroopers of the 101 st Airborne Division's First Bri gade. (UPI Photo) MAIDS New York Sleep-in jobs. Salaries to $65. Fare ad number. Able Maids Agency, vanced. Rush references, phone 163 N. Main, Freeport, N. Y AM AND FM RADIOS LUGGAGE WRIST WATCHES Royal Portable Typewriter $34.95 Poleroid Camera $24.95 Sam's Pawn Shop 122 E. Main St. Ph. 682 2573 Durham. N. C.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Feb. 25, 1967, edition 1
14
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