Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Nov. 16, 1968, edition 1 / Page 14
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—unc ftarwj—, tiwb SATUBDAY, NOV. M 6B Newsman Leads Stout Explorers River Trip ww-' , • r I ■ J § b m I liff BLUFFTON. INDIANA They're remodeling and refurnishing the "Scimitar", whose hom* port of Bluffton la soma 150 miles inland. The land-locked raft-houseboat, built by the Scouts of Bluffton's Explorer Post 2144, Is being readied for its IMS trip down the Ohio and the Mississippi to New Orleans. Last summer the 3V4 ton raft took its crew of 18 Scouts and their four adult leaders to Tip ton ville, Tennessee, on the Mississippi a trip of approximately 600 miles. An abandoned rock quarry near Bluffton, flooded by rains and seepage, is the testing basin for the 16 by 30 foot craft, on which the Scouts erected the enclosed galley, storage area and pilot house. The forty-four 55-gallon drums which provided flotation, are being replaced by steel pontoon;, according to Explorer Advisor Mike Thoele, of the news staff of the Bluffton News-Banner. Astronaut: Russians Trail US. NEW YORK -One of the crewmen of the highly successful Apollo 7 spaceflight said Sunday the Russians "are looking at'the handwriting on the wall and it is looking like they are not Number One." Astronaut Walter Cunningham made the statement in a nationally televised panel pro gram (NBC's "Meet the Press"). His fellow crewmen, command pilot Walter Schirra and Donn Eisele, were also on the program. Cunningham was asked about the Russians' greater number of unmanned spaceflights com pared with United States flights. "They seem to be going on a different path from ours," Cunningham said. But he said the idea that Russia would be getting more for their dollar than we" li Dot correct Schirra said he felt the duplicate spending of billions of dollars for both a military and a civilian space effort iS justified. "I have an opinion both have merit," Schirra said. "But I am not that deeply involved in the military program." The astronauts said they would have some changes to suggest for the next American flight—a better menu, better medical sensors, and perhaps some way to keep commercial radio from barging in on the spacecraft's communications to earth. - Marriage (Continued from front p*ge that is not threatening to him. Communicating also means listening cartfcfiy providing a secure climate ia x whlch we can talk. 5. Try to work out some constructive little "first moves." 6. Be determined, but be patient. 7. If, after a really determin ed try over a reasonable length of time, you cannot solve the problem, seek counseling help. In Illustrating their views, the Klemen discuss specifical ly the sexual relationship and CunQy spending patterns. Since "Often sexual problems are the result of a Bene rally . poor relationship between the part am," they trace the roots of some typical difficulties to the different conditioning of boys and girls, and the consequent disparity between their expec tation* Conflicts should be re solved through patient working out of differences - lest they lead to a pasdpltous break up of the marriags. "One of the most —dad areas of walls tic expectations for most ygung insrrlsfsa," the Klemen write, "Is the realization that spending patterns change as the marrtags goes along." The Early Years of Marriage Is No. 424 In the Ptthftc Affelis Pfcmphlet series, now la Its SSiri yaar. Ifca seriss Includes many other dMlngukbed titles sad economic jaoMsms ace relations, sod hsalth and ■deuce. All paaoptlsts ssQ for IB asms each; a Hst Is awllaMa The twin outboard motors are being replaced by an Inboard power plant, and paddle wheels. And, Thoele said, he hopes to add an LP-gas refrigerator to the galley equipment, which al ready consists of a full-sized LP-gas kitchen range, including an oven. "Chief" of the galley was Bob Spauldlng, a former Navy quarter master and veteran camp cook, and one of the four adult leaders aboard the Scimitar. The Scimitar, after its "maiden cruise" on the quarry pond, was disassembled and trucked to Marion, Indiana, where It was launched on the Ohio. Next year, said Thoele, it is planned to truck the raft to the Ohio river at Evansville, Indiana. The LP-gas equipment was furnished by the Blue Flame Gas Corporation of Bluffton, which also trucked the Scouts' vessel from Bluffton to Marion, and from Tiptonville back home. Huck Finn never hid it so good. American Forces Kill 30 Reds in 3 Battles SAIGON American troops clashed with enemy forces in three separate battles Sunday, killing 30 of the enemy, U.S. headquarters reported. The fighting was scattered, however, and ground activity remained at a relatively low level. Troops of the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment killed 13 ene my soldiers during a sweep southwest of An Loc, about 50 miles north of Saigon, spokes men said. One u.s. soldier was reported killed in the clash: Nine miles north of the tal, Ist Division troops 10 Viet Cong and killed six with the aid of helicopter gunships No U.S. casualties were report ed there. Northwest of Saigon, near Tay Ninh City, helicopter gunshio crews spotted about 100 enemy troops and opened fire. The enemy force fired back with small arms and automatic weapons while attempting to es cape. Air crews reported thev observed 11 bodies after the bat tle ended. Reds Killed In other action, a South Viet namese infantry battalion re ported it killed 40 enemy troops Sunday night after being at tacked in the Mekong Delta 60 miles southwest of Saigon. Government casualties were '.ermed light. A spokesman said the enemy attacked after firing 20 rounds of recoiless rifle fire and rocket grenades at the government po sition. A ground \3efeault fol lowed, but the infantry troops, aided by a nearby company of popular force troops, rebelled it. At St. Jude Children's Hospital— Danny Thomas Puts His Luck To Work For Sick Children! Danny Thomas to a lucky man. So lucky that he founded the famous St. Jude Children s Research Hospital in gratitude, and to keep a sacred pledge he made when his career was at its lowest point. His luck held up. First, he was successful In finding generous people to contribute to the building of St. Jude's. Then, he was able to interest the University ofTennessee's School in staffing the hospital - and In concentrating on research, especially in the fields of leukemia and other cancer and blood-related dis eases. Again, Danny's hick came through. A research hospital is enormously expensive. The staff must be specialists of high standing in the medical field. Equipment is complex and costly. But Danny found thousands of Americans will ing to Join him In helping to support the hospital. All Treatment Is Free Thousands of out-patient treatments are given every year to leukemia-stricken chil dren. Hundreds of others are given full-time care. AND NO ONE PATS ONE PENNY FOR SUCH CAKE All children, all races, all religions are treated alike. Now, Danny's fabulous hick is spreading to the specialists, and to the children stricken with leukemia. Leukemia is cancer of the blood. A few years ago, all such children could look forward to only a few more months of life • months filled with the torture and pain of the disease which kills more children in Amer ica than any other. NOW, ALMOST 30 PER CENT OF THOSE WHOSE CANCERS ABE CAUOHT EARLY ENOUGH CAN BE SAVED. NOW, HALF OF THOSE WHO CAN BE KEPT ALIVE FOR FIVE YEARS THROUGH THE CHEMICALS THEY RECEIVE AT ST. JUDE'S CAN LOOK FOR WARD TO A NORMAL LIFE SPA*. Most doctors, and most hos pitals,. must refer ieukemie sirickan children to one of the Earlier, enemy troops shot down two U. S. Ist Air Cavalry Division helicopters in a battle near the Cambodian bor der. A rocket downed one helicop ter in flames and automatic weapons fire felled another in a group of eight assigned to pull a South Vietnamese company and its American advisers from a jungled area 50 miles northwest of Saigon to rest after a skir mish Saturday night. Cavalryman Hurt Associated Press photogra pher Henri Huet reported one American cavalryman was wounded in the helicopter that burned. The second craft was recovered. For tne third straight day, 852 bombers staged heavy strikes in the air-groand effort to block any drive on Saigon by 15.000 to 20,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops report ed strung out in a 50-mile-long arc near avowedly neutral Cam bodia. Twenty-five of the eight-en gine jets loosed 750 tons of ex plosives on known and suspect ed positions of the enemy, some a bare four miles from the fron tier. The 18,000-man Ist Air Caval ry Division moved into that area from the north last week to beef up the Allied ground forces. U.S. officials said one of its units—B Company, Ist Bat talion, Bth Cavalry Regiment found a deserted enemy base camp, with fortifications large enough to accommodate a regi ment, about 75 miles northwest of Saigon. nation's tow leukemia centers such as St. Judo's. There then begins the race against death, a race in which chemicals are used to keep the child alive, until they lose their effective ness and another combination must be found. ~" While the delicate treatment of such children proceeds, great contributions to medical knowledge and to its war oo cancer are being made. St. Jude's departments of pathol ogy, epidemiology, immunol ogy, bacteriology, chemother apy, nutrition and cell biology are dally adding bits and pieces of data that will help fell mankind. Danny Is hoping • tor the sake of thousands of children who would die were it not for St. Juds's • that his look win hold out. He's hoping that the people to whot te make • gift that emdd wrfl help hi toeptagscMldattve Mystery Witness To Face Yemenis NEW YORK —A myste ry informant will be the star witness Tuesday when a Brook lyn grand Jury begins an investigation ai an alleged coqsoincy by three Yemeni Immigrant! to assassinate Prea- H« skill Richard M. Nixon. The Pottos Department and the Port Authority police ordered "total security ,r for Nixon on his arrival here Monday from Key Biscayne, Fla., via Washington where be conferred with President John son. The Secret Service also was reported taking additional precautions since the plot •ospects were arrested in Brooklyn Saturday. The federal government signi fied its interest in the case Monday by ordering U.S. attorneys to confer with Brook lyn police authorities. No one would say whether there were indications the case was linked to the murder of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles last June but acting Brooklyn District Attorney Elliott Golden said nothing was being over looked. Golden's staff worked on its presentation to the Kingsl Men, Women Nabbed In Detroit Bombings DETROIT —Police ar rested nine young men and two young women Monday and hunted eight other persons on charges 01 conspiracy in eight recent bombings in the Detroit area and in nearby Ann Arbor. The bombings included government offices, policemen's cars and a school building. Police called the alleged con spiracy "an anti-establishment, anti-government plot." Those arrested, ranging in age from 18 to 24, included several former university students. They were picked up by police in a series of raids in Detroit, Warren and St. Clair Shores. All were charged with con spiring to damage property with « HEALTH HINTS 5* National Association Of Bhie Shield Plans Jogging Jogging is an exercise de signed to stimulate circulation through an up-and-down movement of the legs and arms. Medical authorities con sider jogging a preventive mea sure in heart disease. Before taking up this exercise, visit your physician for a check-up, especially if you are over weight or have a history of heart trouble. Once you start jogging, follow a systematic schedule faithfully. Dizziness If you experience a momen tary sensation of dizziness, don't take it too lightly. Dizzy spells or vertigo may indicate a disturbance in the middle ear, especially if accompanied by nausea. Several factors may account for this condition. If dizzy spells occur frequently, or become severe, visit your physician for a thorough examination. *'"*"" I ( ..... MM V / WHY? Your savings add up fast. Your savings are always available. Your money supports community growth. Mutual S A Loan Aseocfaffon lit V. farrltb St., Nrbsp, N.C. • County Grand Jury which Is scheduled to hear testimony frqm a pun who claims the msuscts approached Mm to Jdn thair conspiracy. His unidenti fied man reportedly tipped off police who arrested Ahmed Namegn 43, and his sons Hussein, 20, snd Abdo, 16, in a raid on their shabby apartment. The three were charged with' conspiracy In the first degree to' commit murder, for which they face 15 years imprisonment each if convicted; criminal solicitation in the first degree, involving importuning commis sion of murder, for which they 1 face seven years in prison; and! illegal possession of weapons,, for which they face up to a year' in prison. There were rumors that at least one of the Namaers, pos sibly Hussein, had made trips to California but Golden said he! knew nothing of this although I "there is one aspect of that type we are looking into." A Federal Bureau of Investigation official and police authorities in Los Angeles said they had I received no official request to investigate the possibility of visits there by the Namers w explosives, a crime punishable by up to 25 years in prison. Had anyone been hurt in any of the explosions, the maximum penal ty would have been life imprisonment without parole. Target of Bombs The targets of the bombs included the Central Intelligence Agency office in Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan Institute of Science and Technology, an army recruiter's car in Detroit, a /draft board office in Roseville, the cars of three Detroit policemen, and the South Lake School . District offices at St. Clair Shores. Damage to the buildings and offices was minor, but the cars were demolished. Sore Throat - If redness and soreness in 1 * the throat is accompanied by fever, consult your physician. A sore throat may De caused by the dangerous and highly contagious "strep" (atreptococ cus) germ. Your doctor can determine if this is the case and then prescribe the neces sary medication.. Take the proper precautions at the first sign of a sore throat. 819E^tt^Kfri§&S MlHf J^HV^MlfiiHii MB •■*?>»' J CHMMLIAMRS AT WINT TON-SAL RM STATt—Barbara Still, Mary Curry, Brenda Per ry, Mable Boyd, Nettle McGlll, Georgia Jones, Gloria Herring and Virginia Warren. These co-eds will be cheering the Rams on to victory when The Rams meet the Shaw-Bears during the homecoming game at 2:00 p.m. November 10 at Bowman Gray Stadium. School Strike Persists Despite Optimistic Note NEW YORK , -Opti mism persisted Monday in negotiations to end the city's 10- week-long teachers strike but there was no definite evidence of progress toward reopening 900 public schools to 1.1 million students. The few schools where nonstriking teachers and volun teers have been holding classes were closed anyway for Veter ans' Day. Talks between the United Federation of Teachers and the Board of Education continued throughout the day at Grade Mansion, Mayor John V. Lindsay's residence. UFT President Albert Shan ker reported no progress and said he doubted whether the schools would open Tuesday, as some officials had hoped. Walter J. Degnan, president of the Council of Supervisory Associations, which represents striking-school administrators, said "flttß* 'flfr no progress" had been made. Asked if he thought the schools might open Tuesday, he replied, "I suppose anything's possible, but I doubt it." WEAR FT NATURAL or COMB n STRAIGHT »Drr looking. dnfl, kinky hair looks HTo iler —in seoonds. when you apply a dab of MURRAY'S Superior HAIR DRESSING POMADE. Adda ■par kling highlights. Nev er sticky or greasy. Straight, hard-to manage hair become* softer, silkier and holds that inst eorobed look ail day. A favorite far More than 40 years. MURRAY'S HAIR DRESSING POMADE Contains no acids, alkalies or other harah isritacts. It's the inexpensive way to good grooming. On sale at all drag and cos metic counters. Trial siae 26c—Economy size 50c. Get MURRAY'S today. MURRAY'S SUPERIOR PROOUCTS CO. 456 liitm M**"4l2ol NO PLANS FOR THE WEEK-END? t \ What a great time to start doing something about that unfinished room or basement! PUSHED PANELING MAKES IT SO EASV Visit Pontic Unlimited. Over 80 varieties of prefinished paneling in oil price ranges. And the great thing about it is that you can buy your paneling right on the spot—see every piece you are getting and actually be installing it this week-end. All the acces sories you need for a "do-it-yourself" job. $3.85 TO $37.50 PER PANEL All sizes All thicknesses Talk to Jack Evans-Mr. Paneling himself! PANELS SATU(*bAYS UNLIMITED ™ eiwmmm,wceereuTM Jfa qua fity you want... HI pgfuavw call tiMMt ■PWIMNUN MIHT SUILOINE BACK O • COUTTMOUIB the pri cf you want to pay Duke Medical Dean Named to| National Post I Dr. William G. Anlyan, dean of the Duke University School of Medicine, has been elected chairman of the Council of Deans of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The AAMC is the nation's ma jor organization representing the administrative and educational framework of medical schools and teaching hospitals. Another Duke faculty member, Dr. Daniel C. Tosteson, chairman of the department of physiology andi pharmacology, was named chairman-elect of the associa tion's Council of Academic Societies. As chairman-elect he will take over direction of that council next year. The outgoing chairman of the Council ef Academic Societies also is a Duke faculty member, Dr. Thomas D. Kinney, pro fessor of pathology and meaical education. Your professional beautician knows the answer... Can your hair be damaged from brushing, alone? All hair becomes damaged from exposure to sun and natural elements. Certain greasy compounds and many chemicals, im properly used, also take their t011... not to mention simpls at teriipfs.it beautifying the hair with any brush not made of natural bristles. The results are brittleness, breakage, dry and dull looking hair. Your professional beautician knows how artificial bristles actually brush away a great deal of the "lubricants" of the hair that give it body, lustre and protection. And trained beauticians claim that nothing beats Clairol* condition* Beauty Pack Treat ment for overcoming brittleness, dryness and breakage ... leaving hair lively and easy to manage, condition* is an easy-to work-with creme which can even be applied during a chemical straightening retouch to prevent drying of hair that has been previously relaxed, condition* is the ultimate in repairing deep down damage. And, when time is a factor for their customers, hairdressers turn to new Clairol* Hair Dew*—the lotion condi tioner that penetrates so fast many think of it as an instant conditioner. When applied regularly by your beautician, Clairol Hair Dew adds body, softens and gives a glowing new look to your hair that many friends will notice and admire. Damage can come from using brushes with artificial bristles. But damage to every woman's hair comes from so many other causes that all human hair (including wigs) needs to be re vitalized periodically. Visit your professional beautician and ask this expert to check the condition of your hair. Only your professional beautician knows the answer for sure. © Clairol Inc. 1967 Courtesy of Clairol Inc. *TM ■pp W Mrs. Kay Dunham, substitute school secre tary with recent tarvica at Proipact Heights HS, Brooklyn, has a proud alias —Mri. Naw York State. Naw quaan of homemakers holds distinction of bainq first Negro woman to j»in itata titla in annual Mrs. Amarica compatition. Sha won high ratings for participation in com munity and eharitabla projacts.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Nov. 16, 1968, edition 1
14
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