VV" A W J r .J^K i^VT/k AT SHAW O. FINALS—These three men played significant puts in the 103 rd Convocation for the Conferring of Degrees at Shaw University Sunday, . — l SEMIOft CLASS EXERCISES at Durham Business College, And these young people singing and relaxing while they reminisce about the past year and fore tell future successors. (Photo by Purefoy) Aide Named For NAACP PR Man NEW YORK Appoint ment of Luther P. Jackson :S asociate director of pub lic relations for the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People was announced here. June 1, by NAACP ExecutWe Director Rov Wilkins. Mr. Jackson will also serve as assocatie editor of The Crisis, the Association's monthly organ, the nation's oldest Negro magazine, found ed in 1910 by the' late W. E. B. Du Bois. He will work under direction of Henry Lee Moon, public relations director and editor of The Crisis. A GRADUATE of the Vir ginia State College in Peters burg, Mr. Jackson receiv« his master's degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journal ism. Later, under a Ford Foundatoin grant, he studied at the Urban Studies Center at Rutgers University in New Jersey. He joined the NAA CP staff on May 20 after completion of a year's study at Columbia University un der a Russell Saige fell ow ship in the behavioral sci ences. During the period, he also served as a teaching as sistant in the School of Journ alism. Born in Chicago, March 7, 1925, Mr. Jackson was rear ed on the campus of Virginia State College where hi«- late father was head of the histo ry department and an active leader of the Virginia State NAAOP. He served three years in the U. S. Marine Corps during World War 11. He lives in White Plains wth his wife and two sons. Two Negroes Appointed To Health Council RICHMOND—Two Negroes were appointed on Thursday by Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. to the 22-member by-racial Advisory Health Planning Council for Virginia. They are Dr. Ruth W. Diggs, coordina tor of the Department of Spe cial Education of Norfolk State College and Dr. Jesse J. Bates of South Boston, presi dent of the Old Dominion Medical Society. Dr. Diggs was appointed to a term of three years along with seven other ap pointees. Dr. aßtes was ap pointed to a term of two years. June B. From left, they am Dr. Asa T. Spaulding, President of the Shaw Board of Trustees and President-emeritus of N. C. Mutual Life Insurance Co., by TrioMPSoN SURVIVAL IN THE W/lderness separates THE 'MEN PROM THE BOYS IN ONE SOUTH SEA ISLAND TI2IBE. EQUIPPED WITH ONLY A KNIFE TO dJE &AZK.ED UP THE III!• IlflfTT7!7lfm KI&HT TREE AND SAVED LINCOLN. A WOUNDED DOG THAT -rffflully 1111^ YOUNG LINCOLN BEFRIENDED REPAID HIM py ALL;/ NIGHT WHEN THE TWO LOST ON A HUNTING TRIP. / THIS CANINE CALL ALERTED/ THE SEARCH PARTY HE- LP DRIVERS' VERVES GURVIVS THE CONFUSION OF AN | ;.. ON£ S p NONE NUMBER^CALL Ml' x uH S " "'" \oR CANAPA,ANP TWO ASPIRIN TABLETS! MUtM. COMPANY,CONTINEMTAL INSURANCE, CLAIMS ADJUSTERS ALL OVER . "*KTHE COUWTCY--AND EMERGENCY! £ LET'S HAVE A PARTY mSBv wwjL v * Any day is a good day for a children's party and arty number can come even one child. Turning lunch into a party may lift the strain from the gloomiest day...and, this can be done with a simple turn of service that requires no fuss or bother. An ordinary soup lunch can become beguiling . . . when funny faces appear on the soup . . . when biscuits filled with jelly take in triguing shapes. . . and when clowns are made of marsh mallows. The next time rainy weather keeps the small fry inside your house and vour Dr. Andrew Heiskell, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Time, Inc., and Publisher of Life Magazine, featured speak er; and Dr. James E. Cheek. Shaw University President. imagination is taxed for ideas to keep tots entertained, have a party! Your easiest gestures will get much applause. FUNNY I ACK SOUP I run (111 ill pliel l*x con ilcnM'il tomulo soup 1 run (.a in plie I I*h run denscd creiim of chick en MOtip 2 HO iip runs milk or wulrr Dry rrrrul Blend the two soups and milk or water in saiirr|uiii. Heat, liul do nol lioil. Make fucc* on surfurr of Miup willi cereal. Makes 4 to A nervingK. A Taste Of The Orient ' «oJjjß^k v ""' jfl Thanks to the miracles of je is becoming very scrutable in visited Japan last year and raving about the cherry blos soms, the Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples, and the unique Japanese cuisine. Since many foods are eaten raw with a sauce and condi ments, or cooked at the table, dining can.be an exciting ad venture in itself. "At the tem pura bar of Tokyo's Hotel Okura, for instance, skilled chefs cook large Japanese shrimp and baby vegetables to individual order. And at the sushi bar, the guest points out •the fish or other delicacy he prefers, and it is swiftly sea soned, combined with rice, shaped, and served with a highly good humored stream of chatter that is traditional with the sushi men. Of course no visit to Japan would be complete without tasting xukiyaki. In the Hotel Okura's Yamazato Room, kimono-clad hostesses prepare this sliced beef and vegetable dish in savory shoyu (soy) sauce right before your eyes. P'or the visitor who misses his own cuisine or wishes to sample dishes of other coun tries, the Okura offers a tempt ing variety of international Keep Kids Away! * J itfk* It seems to he the nature o the time. They're naturally cur where the action is. When d.i mqwer, that's almost a signal that says "let's gather around." It's the wise parent, however, who sets down-ami keeps-the rule that smallfiv, pets, and power tools are mutually exclu sive according to the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute. Clearing the area of children is the first safety rule everyone must follow. The danger of flying objects is always present in power mowers. Statistics show that many persons Have been seri ously injured by flying objects— and a few have been killed. Taking children and pets away from potential danger is neces sary for their own protection— although you might seem like the "bad guy" to order them awav. Although a lawn tractor looks like a vehicle, it isn't! It's a tool-and a powerful one* at jfypejffappenhigs... t travel, the "inscrutable feast" ideed. Over 200,000 Americans /these returning travelers are restaurants. There's the French Orchid Room where you can enjoy Uiihtlnnillr Nieoixc— along with French bread and vintage wines. In addition, there's the gour met Chinese restaurant—Toh- Ka-Lin; the very American Camellia Corner; the Continen tal Room, which serves every thing from Spanish'gazpacho to Danish open sandwiches, and the Kmerald Room for roman tic dance music or exciting jazz against a background of flood-lit gardens. In dining, as in other areas, Japan is dra matically combining the tradi tional with the modern and coming up with a very tasty dish!' f children to get underfoot all ious and like to be, so to speak, iddy gets out the power lawn that. It's very important to withstand the entreaties of "Please, give me a ride, Daddy." The best rule to make and en force is "No Riders—ever." . Children should never be al lowed to operate the machine. And that should go for inex perienced adults as well. If you ieavo. the engine running even briefly while >iou step away, you'll tempt a child into inves tigating the apparatus. With over 26 million owners of poAver mower equipment, more than 10(1 million persons a majority children are ex posed to their use and abuse. The Outdoor Power Equipment Institute suggests that you be adamant about safety rules and regulations. Kids will be kids. And mowers will be mowers. And it's up to you to make sure that the twain never meet ! I I | ~M^ J^H t^T ; fl H jfl illu jP^i^^ k y k [■■ AOOIE PRO DRAFTEES SET TIPS A&T State University basketball stars, who were ball stars, who were recently drafted fay pro teams,, get k .V*~ 4^ iw mm . GREENSBORO MAYOR CIT*S BRAINY GRADUATES—Mayor 1 Carson Bain offers congratula tions to A&T State University students Cheryll Suber, Spar Ex-Newsboy Has Bright Future Ahead NEW YORK lt wasn't so long ago that Ernie Wheel wright and Tom Scott sold copies of the "Columbus Dis patch" outside the main en trance to the Ohio capital city's Neil House and Deshler Hilton (now the Beasley Desh ler) hotels. They're still friends. Wheel wright, as most football fans know, is the famed star of the National Football League At lanta Falcons Scott is an ac tor and a good one, on TV, in films and on the stage. BUT THESE two success ful young men have not for gotten their hometown ties 'of earlier days and the people who—in one way or another— gave them encouragement, help and advice on the way up. Whenever they return "home" for a visit, they al ways'stop by the circulation department of the Dispatch to see and chat with the news- Paper's manager for street sales,' Gus Kavados, their boss when they were 'news boys. Kavados was a great help and inspiration to the boys when tliey were growing up, his two well-known "proteges" say. Wheelwright i s one ol Ihe outstanding fullbacks in pro fessional football, his record speaking for itself. Less is known about the second form er newsboy, Tom Scott, even though he too, has made a great sucess ouT 1 of life. Scott has a fine reputation in New York as a skilled ac •tor and singer. He is in de mand, too, for the less glam orous but imDortant televis ion job called the "voice over" —a voice, often off-ca mera, selling advertised pro ducts on TV. AT PRESENT, he is appear ing in an on-camera segment of a man-in-the-strect inter view commercial in behalf of the Esso tiger (the one "in the tank"). The famous cat is currently doing battle with his sponsor's ad manager, who keeps saying—in the commer cials, anyway— that the tiger should be fired. The son of Bernard Scott of Columbus, Tom made his de but in professional show busi ness on a "traffic court" pro gram carried by a Columbia television station.. . SINCE arriving in New York, he has appeared on many Manhattan-originated TV shows. He created the roles of Dr. Scott Evans for the ABC-TV serial "A Time For Us" and of Dr. Frazer on CBS-TV's "Guiding Light." He made at>out 20 appearances on SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1968 TOE CAROLINA TIMES— friendly tips from Lou Hudson (second from left) a star for the Atlanta Hawks. Taking it all in are George Mack (left), picked by the Philadelphia 78ers; Ted tansburg, S. C. and Patricia Mohley, Greensboro, following their graduation last Sunday. Both young ladies received the bachelor of sciene degrees in ,Jk I■ TOM SCOTT * "The Patty Duke Shoyv" and has been seen on "Look Up And Live," "The Defenders" and "Coronet Blue," amonf others. Tom has had roles in sever al U. S. Na v y film s, ia MGM's "Mr. Buddwing," in Un i versal - Intematifenal'l "Mirage," and he played th« starring role in the Louis De- Rochemont production "What's in it For Me." OFF BROADWAY, he has been seen at The Living In summer stock he has ap peared at the Dayton (Ohio) Playhouse; the Playhouse on the Green, Worthington, Ohio; and at the M a s s a chusetts' Berkshire Playhouse. His nightclub act has been preg- SUMMER PROGRAM Laurinburg Institute Now Admiting For Summer Term June 24-August 5 LAURINBURG, N. C. ACADEMIC English, World Literature, Algebra, Trigo nometry, U. S. History, French, Commercial Science RECREATION Swimming, Tennis, Basketball, Horse Riding DORMITORIES: Boys-Girls Grade 8-12 * S3OO includes: Room-Board-Tuition FOR APPLIANCE WRITE Mrs. S. E. McDuffie Executive President LAURINBURG INSTITUTE P. O- Box 1788 Laurinburg, North Carolina 3A Campbell, also drafted by Phil adelphia; and Sylvester (Soapy) Adams, picked by the New York Knickerbockers. engineering mathematics. Miss Mobley was "Miss A&T" thg„ past school year. (Peters photo* WOOD UTILITY POLES r BY (* J PAUL D. _ AMERICAN WOOD PRESERVERs'INST POLE POWER I hc current estimate of the number of wood utility pole** now in use in the I nitod States IS 100.000.000. It isn't shocking when vmi stop to ihmk that ? > 1h ,s a ll aI • -•/ ..... «.r P..1-frjfil frjfil v Upports the f N^ _ !j wires that de |ivi'r " r ~Uthe nations electricin In homos, farms and industry. Wood is a natural insulator of eleetricitv and utility poles art' a natural national asset Re cently. in keeping with the na tional interest in outdoor beau titration, the utility pole has taken on a new look and will set a new standard of industrial beauty This country over head electrical delivery system represents a national invest ment of l?(> (i billion dollars, hut replacement hy anv other sys tem would cost homeowners billions more Holes are a stand inn example of a yirnd way to keep utility costs at a minimum ented by No. One Fifth Ave nue in New York as well as at Columbus' El Tempo and Avant Garde clubs. The future looks bright, in deed, for the one-time news boy. For those who might have similar ambitions, Tom has this advice: