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V . ■ -ds Err *** V^ Mi'lW V EPvJ Ljt J jf nl 1 p*fl f- ilr^^ Efl ■rr SWEET LOLLIPOP, SWEET CONTRACT—(AtIanta, Ga.) At- 1 lanta Braves outfielder Hank Aaron tries his niece, Wonya Lucas' lollipop, but finds it not merely so sweet as the rec Fa* 3o Tl " v a ■Bo m m kSP? v W I PBm ' tL PICKETS PROTEST WALLACE APPEARANCE—(AtIanta) For mer Alabama Governor George Wallace is escorted into State Capitol by Georgia State Troop SPACE-AGE SPIDER Electric ertgineer. lo con.truct entire circuit, about the ""The e'ye "electronic apider," no bigger than a period at the end of this sentence, Is the circuit. The leg* are connector, which tie the circuit to o %lifl Laboratory, where the Uny circ H it wa. developed, Lone of more than 50 General Electric center. Involved in advanced scientific and technological project.. j ord major league contract he'd i just inked for Braves president Bill Bartholomay. The Nation al League home run king got a new two-year pact, calling for > ers as other helmeted troop ers watch. About 75 pickets (background with flags) both white and Negro, were on hand SIOO,OOO each year. It's thought to be the richest single contract ever signed by a major league baseball star. (UPI Telephoto) to protest the appearance of Wallace before the Georgia Legislature^ I (UPI Telephoto) Gov't of East Nigeria Names U. S. Repres. NEW YORK—Aggrey K. Oji has assumed the post of Liaison Officer, in the United States of the government of Eastern Ni geria. Eastern Nigeria is one o( the four regions of which the republic of Nigeria, most populous nation of Africa, i« comprised. Oji said his mission is to ad vance the trade and investment interests of his government and to malce known the point of view of Eastern Nigeria in this country. He maintains » temporary office at 130 E. 50ta St., New York City. Oji was born at Arochuicwu, POPULATION EXPLOSION Joanna Moore, featured in Universal'. "The War Wagon," Is in the midst of an unusal population explosion. Hie cat count at her house jumped from four to twenty five as four litters arrived within the space of two weeki. , It is excellent to have » giant's strength; but it is ty rannous to use it like a giant. —Shakespeare Dr. J. Hope Franklin Addresses U. of Rochester on Douglass ROCHESTER, N.J. -"Fre derick Douglass spoke to our generation as well as his own, "Prof. J din Hope Franklin of the University of Chicago history depart ment said in a recent address at the University of Ro chester. Franklin spoke at the se.- cond of the University of Rochester's three - month Frederick Douglass Sesqui centennial Lectures. The lectures are being given in in h mor of the 150 th anni versary of the birth of Fre derick Douglass, the distin guished 19th Century Negro American who lived and work ed in Rochester for many years. No defect in American life esca psd his (Douglass') searching scrutiny and his withering criticism, "Prof- Franklin *=aiH. Because Douglass believed the "framework of the A merican social order was sound," Franklin asserted, "he wrote and spoke and worked so hard to induce the American people to conduct their lives and order their relationships within that framework. In the area of civil rights, Douglass wrote "with a. poignancy and a sensitivity that make his views rele vant 75 years and more after he uttered them." Franklin said. Noting that the United States C cmmission on Civil Rights was established more than a half-century after Douglass* death, Franklin pointed out that "the Com mission's fields of inquiry housing, voting, education, employment, and the admini stration of jus fice—are the same fields «ith which Dou Milestone in the Study of Heart Revealed by Many Scientists WASHINGTON, D. C.—De velopment of an artifical heart, a vaccine to prevent rheumatic fever, heart transplants work ing on the same principle as the eye-banks . . . These are a few of the potential mile stools, ill. the . country's rapWJjr, progressing heart research ef fort. In laboratories across the country, experiments with ani mals are yielding results which support a conclusion that we may be on threshold of eradi cating many forms of heart disease, the cause of an esti mated 34% of U. S. deaths" each year. Here are stiihe re cent examples of laboratory animal research which have scientists hopeful: At the University of Chffcago, scientists have come up with a vaccine found to be safe and effective in extensive tests with mice, rabbits and guinea pigs against the most common type of streptococcus infections (strep throat). Streptococci are the common cause of rheumatic fever in children. The researchers, Dr. Eugene N. Fox, Mrs. M. K. Wittner and Dr. Alhert Dorfman, have suc cessfully tested the vaccine on nearly 50 adults, and further testing, particularly on infants, will be carried out to conclu sively demonstrate the effec ■ RL ■lpm _' - W m AGOABY OJI Eastern Nigeria, where he had his early education. He studied economics and law at the Uni versity of London and holds an LL.B. degree with a specilin tion in intentional law. Until November, 1966, he wu the Nigerian Consul (Commer cial) to the United States, a post which Me held sincfe Aug ust, 1062. His earlier overseas service was at the Nigerian High Commission, London, in 1960-1081. Before Joining the Foreign Service, he served the fedral govrnment of his country ts Commercisl Officer snd Import and Export Licensing Author ity, wtilcta assignments took him to all parts of Nigeria. glass was so deeply con cerned; and his remarks about American deficiencies ' in these fields could well have been testimony taken by the Commission in ,cme of its many hearings." Franklin observed that '-'the remedies for the conditions created by racial prejudice and conflict were implicit in Douglass' analysis of the conditions. The public must make available the kind of educati cn and training for every citizen that will make it possible for him to function effectively in a free society. There must be fair employ ment that recognizes skills and not color as the basis for the effective performance of the required tasks. The government should be strong enough and honorable enough to protect the rights of the weak as w:ell as the strong. Every citizen must have the full and free oppartunity to exercise the franchise in order to secure that better government that will effec tively administer justice to all. Every citizen should employ every reasonable means to secure the enemy, ment of every civil right that is enjoyed by others." Franklin concluded: "Dou glass has recently been cal led the 'Father' 0 f the Civil Rights Revolution This is a sobriquet not easily won nor lightly c aiferred. It was wen because of the conso nance of his views and acti ms with those who to day seek equality. It «:as cmferred because of the growing recognition that his ccunsel and leadership are as fresh and as effective as they were 75 years aga" tiveness of the vaccine Suregons have be:>n success ful in transplanting the hearts of dogs to other dogs. Thepe experimental operations are a step in learning how to "hank" human hearts for the purpose Jif rustoriftt -thejßV later, Jto_ nor mal function as replacements in patients whose hearts are beyond repair. Dr. Adriin Kan trowitz, of New York's Maimon ides Hospital, has dog patients with transplanted hearts living with no "apparent ill effects months affer transplant opera tions. Two Stanford University surgeons, Dr. Robert B. Wuer fleine and Dr. Norman E. Shumway, recently announced that they had transnlan'ed hearts of 10 cadaver dogs to 10 canine patients in a successful but limited experiment. Mechanical heart pumps to ai d diseased human hearts have been developed, ar.d a totally implanted artificial heart is now considered fea sible for the future. Dr. Kantrowitz and Dr Mi chael Deßakey, of Baylor Uni versity, made medical history last year when they successful ly employed mechanical boost ers to assist the human heart's main pumping Chamber (left ventricle). It took years of lab oratory work with dogs for them to reach this point. ~ In 1958. for example. Dr. Kantrowitz's early work in this field was reported by the Na tional Society for Medical Re search following his successful use of a booster heart on a dog. Eight years of refining this procedure was necessary before he was ready to utilize a heart pump on a human. Equally painstaking research undoubtedly will be necessary before a safe and effective complete mechanical heart is ready for a human patient. Its ultimate development, though, has been termed inevitable by Dr. Lewis E. January, Presi dent of the American Heart AssoociaUon. u y I !: . .. oshinaT^S^ • i ipmhu • MUBCALMIMMNft ■ , :ss«ssr !■ ' PROVIDENCE >, i ' LOAN OFFICE \ ' 5 , m%~mm DtAl —l-4431/;> M' ■ iNTturr NOW CUT \\ ' 1 "M AT PROV,MNCI -d imJUyLi. u- I W M/mA■ mJm ifl ■ ML KfI 81. r» B % n|H - Jfl ifl H RELEASED BY VIET CONS— (Travis Air Force Base, Calif.) —Two United States soldiers re leased from Viet Cong capti vity landed here and were whisked away by Air Force of- rS 8* \ kil I -"Y- 1 Hf ' j.v, CRUMBLED HOOD —(Natchez, Miss." —Crumbled hood lies in muto testimony to powerful ex ilcsion which ripped pickup truck fatally injuring Negro One way to be "in'? as an in-law is to stay at a hotel or motel when you visit your children. Prevents problems! VACATION A LA MODE Near paradise is Guade loupe's beach, fringed with palms and dotted with tiny fishing fleets. Air France flies direct from New York to this French Caribbean island of scenic beauty and old world charm. THREE WAY STRETCH _ J"! ! GEEQ| j Your stomach is a pear shaped pouch that can hold two to three pints of food ac cording to the makers of Di-Gel, an aid for relieving gassy acid indigestion. The walls of the stomach harbor more than five million glands concerned with the chemical processing of things you eat. SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES— iieers. Pfc. Charles E. Crafts,, ' (C , North Jay, Maine, and Sgt. [ Sammie W. Vvomanck, (L), j Farmville, Va., with unidenti fied person, are shown as they left the airstrip after their ar leader Wharlest Jackson. Po lice confer here behind roped 1* ' i i.' HAVE YOU TRIED THE NEW SOFT ROLL SHIRT? ' ! | CALL 682-5426 | 1 so# N.MANtitJM jr. I J ■J J ■- J>. JLA L -I—l JL— J J —J-J J-Ll- Purefoy's Photography Call: Day 682-2913, Weekend 682-7316 Listen to WSSB Radio 1 In Durham Durham's Only 24 Hour Station o 1490 on Your Dial rival. The Viet Cong released the two without comment on Feb. 7th. Crafts was captured Dec 29, 1964 and Womack last October 7. (UPI Telephoto)) off area where tarp covers re mains of truck. (UPI) 7B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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March 11, 1967, edition 1
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