Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Sept. 14, 1968, edition 1 / Page 13
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LEATHER LOOKS-FOR LITTLE MONEY i\ ft ■ , U InR Dfe® M H |r J flat Timr to lot thai leather look liven up your wardrobe! W in not take a lip from some legen dary ladies who knew the lure of leather-anil of styles bor rowed Irom the hoys'.' Kobin Hood's Maid Marian v ery likely wore a doeskin doub let while frolicking in Sher wood Kurt 'Ml. And Pocahontas undoubtedly sported a Tringv buckskin shift. Stitching up real leal her. can he tricky, hut the new leather look-alikes make lor simpler sewing—at a sub stantial saving. Transform that Wild West unilorm. the cowboy shirt, ihtu a sleeveless or long sleeved bill ton front dress with McCall's Pattern srSM'-KI. Copied from the cowhands arc buttoned flap pockets and a hip-slung (or waist ivhittlling) belt. A split level version, shirt and skirt in sunset and sand shades, double- I lit* design s imp. let The "vest" til' ever\thing is a 11• imin• version ol an Knglisli gentleman's waistcoat. I'nlike (lie l.niidiin clulniian. the all-. American girl will sport her vest atop a dirndl skirl marked Houston Kidney Transplant Dies One organ transplant reci pient died early Sunday in Houston the day after the doctor who performed the world's first human heart transplant com* pleted, half way around the world, his third such operation. Gaetan Paris, Canada's se cond arid longest living heart transplant, returned to the hospital Sunday after he suf fered a cut in his head in an automobile collision. He was'being driven home by his wife when their car collided with another around 2 a.m. Mrs. Paris was not injured in the accident. His condition was PUGGY by Horace Elmo> 'WHAT'S\ /I'M H I"DOUTCRY-TIL TAKEI I'll v ( I CAN'tH (BUT MV AREAK NMRONS, (lOSTED! YOU HOME I WHERE 00 |j MMf > REMEMBER f CODE 15 4303 f) iin / PUGGY _ by HbraceElmo PUGGY, \A/\LL VOL! HELPJI I TOM MVS RE PORT J I" HE EXCELS IM INITIATIVE] YHOW, IF HE'D OHLV LfAHA ["Bl ■ " , ry —- THE FIZZLE FAMILY TVAT DEPARTMENT STORE ('....AND NOW I'LL J I HAVE AM AXE TO [YOU'LL FINOTHE TOOL" \_XMQ Mgrw; w v °BSSjsaf &7* THE FAMILY , 90651 THEY'RE PICKETING K 1 7UST CM ' T f EVERY BODY'S || IQ k A |#Al/ f%linrll Computer Programming Center is now enrolling IDIYI KvV UUIIdI » special aix-weekucourse in Computer Key ' Punch Operator*.^ nnerators Qre H ® r * is an excellent opportunity for young women to learn a clerical skill In just six weeks MAAJ commanding a salary comparable to that paid to UrGenTly n©GQ" • good secretary. Call 489-2351 today for com p % A # details. ed... We can I train you ill / X o*n ll' P l PROGRAMMING I . . • I CENTERofbu rham, Inc. just six weeks 1" ,u . m .1.M1.c=1 I * M .1 ■ by a blow I rout and center. For sporty separates, mix with wools and tweeds. Or he a hold smoothie in matching vest and skirl, regular length or modish ly mini. Whip up a supply of shirts in pastels or plaids and watch wiir wardrobe multiply before your eyes. The ihrcc part harmony. McCall's Pat tern For Young Juniors and Teens. Pattern JtSlil.'K). Vested interests can pull a switch by adding sleeves to a weskit paired, with the Iront- jumper of McCall's Pat tern = !M:I2. Curving princess seams, top stitched, (latter the ligure and give a smooth finish to your -leather look-alike. Match jacket and jumper, add a checked wool weskit and bright turtleneck sweater, and you have a perfect outfit for country weekends. Photos, courtesy McCall's Pattern Mag- I'he leal her look Is hot h sport >' and sophistiealed. And since imitation is the sincerest form ol flattery, styles borrowed Iron! Hie hoys are sure lo impress the man in your lile! reported as not serious. Other transplant patients across the nation and one in Canada were reported in satisfactory condition. William Kaiser, 41, the only man to be involved in two multiple transplants, died early Sunday of a cardiac arrest. Just last Tuesday, Kaiser had celebrated the eighth birthday of his son Billie in his Methodist Hospital room. Billy's wish, when he blew out the candles on his cake, was for his father to get well so the two could once again play baseball together. Billy and his father spent much of their leisure time in Mideast Often Hit By Quakes NEW YORK - "The Earth vomited up the bones of the dead, and waters burst forth. A. mountain in Shahr-Rey was cleft asunder, and a village with its inhabitants was suspended between Heaven and Earth during half a day, then it was swallowed up. The Earth was rent in a mighty chasm and waters came forth from it and volumea of smoke .... 150 settlement! sank Into the ground." Thus the chronicler As-Soyut! described an earthquake that devastated Iran in the year 967. A recent search of ancient Persian and Arabic accounts has, in fact, shown that the region has been beset by quakes since the start of recorded history there. From December, 1893, into January of the following year a series of tremors took an estimated 180,000 lives and produced a terrifying "black wind,'' presumably clouded with smoke and dust. The recent devastating earthquakes in northeast Iran were therefore nothing new in the history of that troubled land. These tremors resulted in many thousand deaths and injuries. A spokesman for the Red Lion their ' Odessa, Tex., home throwing a baseball back and forth. Kaiser, who received the kidney of Mrs. Nelva Lou Hernandez Aug. 31, received a previous kidney in another multiple transplant. Mrs. Her nandez' heart, lung and other kidney were given to other recipients. When James C. Cobb received the heart May 5 of a 15-year-old boy killed in traffic accident, Kaiser was the recipient of the teenager's kidney. Kaiser re jected this kidney less than a week later and it was removed. l New York Strike Outlook Unclear NEW YORK . -With only a few hours left before the scheduled opening of New York City's 1.1 million-pupil school system for the fall term, it was unclear whether classes would begin. Mayor John V. Lindsay and the president of the Board of Education said yes. The head of the 53,000 member teachers' un ion said no. The teachers, members of the AFL-CIO United Federation of Teachers, voted overwhelming! Iv Sunday to strike in connec tion with a dispute over the ouster of 10 teachers by a most ly Negro local school board in Brooklyn. Lindsay, during the taping of his weekly television show, said Sunday night that all concerned and Sun Society, the Iranian relief organiiation, said it was the worst disaster in the 6,000- year history of that nation. Presumably he was unaware of some of the early chronicles cited in a study published last April in the bulletin of the Seismological Society of America by N. N. Ambraseys at the Imperial College of Science at the University of London. In the early days, as now, the villages of Iran were highly vulnerable to quakes because of 'heir mud-brick construction. Cobb died three days after the operation. Pregnant Woman Petrus Johannes Smith, a 52- year-old white South African policeman Saturday received the heart of an unnamed pregnant black woman in the world's 42nd and latest heart transplant. The operation was performed by a team led by Dr. Christiaanßarnard. Barnard performed the first heart transplant Dec. 3, 1967. This lastesst operation was Barnard's third. had "reached the agreement that the needs of Ihe children ... come first. There Is no rea son for the schools not to open tomorrow " Mrs. Rose Shapiro, president of the Board of Education, said: "New York City schools will be open tomorrow as scheduled." She said the board was direct ing the ousted teachers to re turn to their assigned posts and said the local governing board had agreed not to prevent their return, although they opposed it. At the same time, UFT presi dent Albert Shanker said there would be "picket lines around every school." He said that even if a settlement were reached "right this minute, we couldn't get the schools open to morrow." A potsherd Is a piece of broken pottery. CHOOSE-ITmELFSrV^.IA TO GET THE MOST PROM YOUR AIR-CONDITiONER SO YOU CAN "KEEP YOUR COOL" NO MATTER HOW HIGH THE TEMPERATURE, HEELD THESE E*PEtdT TIPS FROM AIETEMP. I. MAKE FRIES/PS WITH YOUR. 2. SAYS "FOLLOW THERMOSTAT. YOUR UNIT" HAS P'tZECTIOMS " READ AMD HEED A THERMOSTAT WHICH PERMITS THE MANUAL THAT COMES WITH SELECTION OF THE TEMPERATURE YOUR AIR-CONPITIONER . FOR. PEST SUITED FOR ROOM AMD INSTANCE, CHECK THE FILTER WEATHER CONDITIONS.FIND PEEIODICALLY.A PIETY ONE OUT WHERE IT SHOULD &E MEANS MORE VtoRK WITH LESS SET TO KEEP YOU AND THE EFFICIENCY FOR YOUR UNIT. FAMILY MOST COMFORTABLE ... WASHING YOUR OLD FILTER IS AND LEAVE IT THERE ! f OWLY TAKES A MINUTt. jjj| | 3- DON'T * BLOW HOT ANP 4- «£ YOUR OWH WEATHERMAN COLP. " SWITCHING YOUR IF YOU FOLLOW THESE SIMPLE UNIT ON ANP OFF ADDS AN SUGGESTIONS FROM AT E*TKA LOAP ANP LOWERS CHRYSLER AIRTEMP--YOUtf^SIR ITS EFFICIENCY. LEAVING CONPITIONER WILL SUPPLY YOU IT ON, PROPERLY SET, WILL WITH PLENTY OF CLEAN, COOL PROVIDE NOT ONLY COMFORT ANP PERMIT YOU CONSISTENT COOLING, BUT TO TRANSFORM SUMMER'S ALSO A STEAPY SUPPLY OF SULTRIEST DAYS INTO THE __ FRESH, FILTERED AIR. INDOOR CLIMATEOFYOURCHOICE.iI W S SB Radio 1 In Durham Buck Po« Program Director 3-7 P.M. 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The severe correction was attributed in part to a continuing heavy flow of foreign steel. Steel imports were over 1.5 million tons in July. SATURDAY, SEPT. 14, 1968 THE CAROLINA TTMES- by THoMPSoN 4A£ fONTtjHAJ.- I J-f.A /Ay Wi y .'lt "Tilt, Goi-riv GAIL ft'ifi./ V£P&AZANq A/AA.Tcw'* M^'tPOt MACKINAC o#/PG£ ! ARE SE-EN BV MOTORISTS ON THE AII BOATS 'RUB NOSES " WITH GULLS ANU \FLOCKS OF FLOATING DIX KS THAT LOOK. R.OAP IS SO POPULAR THAT A SECOND 24-MILE SPAN WILL tAE COMPLETED BY MAY, 1969/ CONNECTING METROPOLITAN NtW ORLEANS WITH THE OZONE RELT OF LOUISIANA - - A PARAPISE OF CAMP SITES, PARKS, FISHINo bTßt*Mt> f"| AND SHELLFISH RESTAURANTS. U SAFM \THAN SORRY^ PROVIDE PROTECTION WITH AUTO INSURANCE _ your rates and bene fits on auto insurance with other companies? Before you renew or start a new policy, check with us. Com pare our low rates. - CONSULT US ABOUT OUR INSTALLMENT PAYMENT PLAN Union Insurance & Really Co. | >l4 FAYKTTIVItLK ST. PHONK AtHIM Purefoy's Photography and GEORGE AND PUREFOY'S HORSE RENTALS Riding Lessons and Pony Rides Natural Color Black and White Commercial Wedding - Family Photos Proms - Dances and Groups CALt: DAY 682-2913, WEEKEKJ 682-7316 5B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Sept. 14, 1968, edition 1
13
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