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. I 7 I I I
CAMPUS-BOUND Gwendo
lyn Wilson receives congratu
lations from Harry B Warner,
president of The B. F. Good
rich Company, on her selection :
at winner of a four-year B. F. 1
Goodrich National Achievement
Scholarship Award. Her father, 1
Albert Wilsoh. is shown in I
is rue onw
v/Auet? ciTV IN bionTH «> rmm
4«it«3ir A ' THE U/AU* we/zf --p-s-vjpr
SStcT ifi m wcy ir-'&eNTW.
"Make Mine Ss-Eairs #r* Electronic Martini"
fffe el&clßgro weji
The cash register is honest, even cour
teous, with an ever-ready "thank you"
for anyone it serves, but its heart is
as cold as steel. Recently, however, it
has learned a gentler art than money
changing. A new version the NCR
"Electra-Bar" actually mixes cock
tails, a friendly pursuit almost every
where.
The NCR "Electra-Bar" has a reper
toire of 36 recipes selected by the bar
owner who also stipulates the quanti
ties and proportions of the ingredients.
The bartender simply touches one but
ton on the register perhaps the one
labeled DRY MARTINI places the
glass or shaker under the dispenser,
and the gin and vermouth flow through
I .... "....
H H \ vwwrm nop >*„»*..„• - ■ >
n
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An* kair-do it. JUHI a starting point—and, any and all variations are right. The three Breck
Hairstyling winner*, Deborah Lege, Dawna Singleton and Linda McQueen, know that back-to
school style* must be casual and carefree—capable of going from football game to formal dance.
I
mi?' J
LMi's shoulder length hair is
alt* an all-rotatd do. Sht Macs
median aad juwbo size rollers
Is give her hair body and finds
that Brack Satin Conditioner
helps keep the bounce in her
carle from laying to mitkt.
'*: 4? •tf i *
center. Miss Wilson, who is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Al- 1
bert Wilson, 166 Cuyahoga i
street, Akron. Ohio, plans pre- i
medical studies at the Mans- 1
field (Ohio) regional campus i
of Ohio State University. Miss i
Wilson, who graduated in June 1
from Akron North High School,
separate tubes Into the glass In less
than two seconds.
The "Electra-Bar" pours the cocktail
ingredients with computerized precis
ion to assure that every imbiber re
ceives full measure every time. Every
bourbon manhattan is exactly like ev
ery other. But the register's calculating
heart still throbs inside. While pouring,
the "Electra-Bar" subtracts the liquor
dispensed from the inventory it keeps
of liquor behind the bar, and performs
all the conventional register functions.
The purpose of the Electra-Bar sys
tem is not to eliminate the bartender,
but to lighten his load so that he can
devote more time to his psycho-thera
peutic duties. His heart remains as
warm as the register's is cold.
DO-IT-YOURSELF HAIR
NEW YORK (ED)-It's a do- recent Breck Hairstyling Con
it-yourself year, especially for test have come up with perky
hair and the back-to-school and carefree hair styles that
picture is prettier than ever, are right for all-time wear and
The three grand winners of the on-the-go activities.
JTM K
iF J
^ K 9±
Neat aad attractive. Dawna's "California Whisp"is an easy setting
}eb. Medium aise rollers are used for extra body, while the bangs
ud fsather sides are held in place with Scotch tape at night.
was employed this summer
by BFG in the company's sum
met youth program. In high
school, she was a member of
the National Forensic League
and International Thespians
and was inducted 1 into the Na
tional Honor Society.
Black Minister to Lead Historic
American Church in Boston
BOSTON, MM. - Dr. RSO
ford Q. Gaines, a Black
humanist fthdt thao
togian, aaaumaa the pastorship
this waak of) historic Arlington
Street Church, a famous
American pulpit for over two
hundred years. A member of
the humanfttk Black Unitarian
Universalis! Caucus, he suc
ceeds Rev. Jack Mendelsohn,
pastor of the downtown Boa
ton church from 1958 until
two years ago. Dr. Gaines
made his initial appearance be
fore the congregation this
week snd will formally open
his ministry there st 11 s.m.
Sunday, September 20.
Dr. Gaines comes to Boston
from Champaign-Urbans, Illi
nois, where he hss been the
minister of the Unitarian Uni
versallst Church snd both di
rector of the Afro-American
Studies Commission and lec
turer in psychology at the
University of Dlinois, an ac
tive political leader there, he
was a member of SOUL, the
countywide Black neighbor
hood organization, and other
groups directly involved with
development of the Black com
munity.
Born in the Black communi
ty of Nova Scotia, Canada, he
holds the Bachelor of Arts de
pee from Western Reserve
UnUwi'v Ohio,
and the Doctor of the Minis
try degree from the Meadville
Dr Golden Gets
Appointment in
C. Hiir Schools
Dr. Loretta Golden of
Chapel Hill has received a
joint appointment from the
Chapel Hill City Schools and
the FPG Child Development
Center of UNC as Curriculum
Specialist in the Frank Porter
Graham Elementary School
Program. The Frank Porter
Graham Project includes both
the preschool and the elemen»
tary levels and will be housed
in existing and new buildings
on the campus of the FPG
Elementary School. The pro
ject's goals are to provide
quality public education ex
periences for all children at
tending the school and to seek
new information through re
search in curriculum develop
ment and learning processes.
As Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Golden will work coopera
tively with the Principal and
the Director of Elementary
Education to provide leader
ship and support in the key
areas of social studies and
language arts. Dr. Golden will
be available to work directly
with teachers ai)d children in
the classroom as well as pro
viding assistance through new
ideas and planning. Of her sup
portive role with teachers, Dr.
Golden says:
I believe that schools can
awaken in pupils the joy and
excitement of learning. I will
help teachers plan experiences
that will encourage children to
investigate, explore, and dis
cover ideas on their own, and
to pursue learning at their own
pace.
The schools can provide an
environment in which creative
thinking is valued and re
spected. I will help teachers
plan a program which en
courages and rewards creativity
not only in art and music, but
also in social studies, science,
and the language arts.
Loretta Golden received a
B. A. at U. C. L. A. and an
M. A. and Ed.D. from Stanford
University. She was an ele
mentary school teacher in
southern California, a teacher
at Stanford University Nursery
School, and a teacher in the
education department of two
California state colleges, and
the University of Maryland.
She taught for two summers
at New York University. She
organized and was first direc
tor of the Neuva Day School,
a school for high ability and
creative children in California.
For the past two years she was
Assistant Director for Curricu
lum of the Durham Education
Improvement Program, a Ford
Foundation project for low
income children.
Theological Schs>l of the U A
vanity of Chicago.
For 14 yaars before he
entered the ministry, he was a
professional lithographer.
Since 1966, he has been direc
tor of the Chicago Center for
Urban Ministry's Youth Educa
tion Project, a chaplain intern
at University of Chicago Ho*-
pitais and dkector of the
Channing-Murray ' Foundation
on the Urbana campus of the
University of Illinois.
He has been co-director,
with Dr. Elizabeth Ross, of
the University of Chicago Hoe
pita Is seminar far patients with
terminal illness, and an active
reeearcber in the ana of coun
seling the dying. He has alao
researched in the area of man
power training; and haa been
an independent reeearcber on
the' hiring and promoting of
Black people at the manage
ment level in Chicago.
Dr. Gaines, 40, is married
snd the father of two children
(Helen and Caroline, ages 6
snd 2). His wife, the former
Harriet Lati more of Kansas
City, Missouri, Is an occupa
tional therepiat.
In taking the pulpit made
famous by the American
Abolitionist William Ellery
Channing (whose statue at Bos
ton Common bees the
church), Dr. Gaines says he
intends "to assert religion as
something you get up and do,
not something you sit down
and think!*' In his opening
talk with the congregation, he
promises to involve them in
giving organized attention to
the war being waged against
Black people arid the systema
tic violation against what is
human and good in mankind.
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1 70 -HOUR I
# Mm SERVICE
. That's all the time it takes to get your trephiae
awl Plaque* complete with engraving.
Over 800 Trophies St Plaques in Stock
TRIANGLE TROPHY CENTER
1U WeDras Village SHoppiag Crater Phrae NMM
Opra IUI Dally—til II Friday NtgMa
rmnrn^i
I Home of Qualify Products I
I 11H1TH DUHLOP TIRES I
MAONAVOX FIRESTONE TIRES
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TAPPAH SKAT COVERS
TEDDERS BRAKE SERVICE I
I KITCHEN AID ALIGNMENT
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"WE FINANCE OUR OWN ACCOUNTS'
Service What We SelL^
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CONVOCATION SPEAKER
The Rev. Percy Smith, Jr. of
Montgomery, Ala., second from
right, takes time out following
his Opening Convocation
speech Friday at Livingstone
College to chat with several
Alabama students at the col
lege. Finding a lot to talk
about, from left, are: Andrew
Smoke of Mobile, Miss Patricia
Harris of Opalika, Miss Glenda
Bargamier of Greenville, and
Miss Sandra Norrls of Green
ville. The minister is a candi
date for the U. S. Congress
from Alabama's Second Con
gressional District.
Reminder VA home
loan benefits to WWII vets
ended July 25, but benefits
to other veterans are not
affected.
tjjnE ACcnc FOX
HAS THICK HAIR
Ok) THfc" POJTOM
OF ITS FEET /
THE STORY OF JACKIE 0:
YOU CANT JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER!
"Jackie Kennedy was like a
sister to me and neither time
nor distance can erase the
memories of the years we
shared together. I wiah her
happiness and all good things. I
cannot express how much she
has enriched my life by letting
me put one foot in Camelot."
With those words, Mary
' r-*HU
Mary Barelli Gallagher
Baretli Gallagher —personal
secretary to the former First
Lady—ended her know-it-all,
tell-it-all best seller, "My Life
With Jacqueline Kennedy."
Now, this book that made
headlines all around the world
and had everybody talking is
available in paperback form,
wherever paperbacks are sold.
Mrs. Gallagher felt compelled
to write this soul-searching and
intimate revelation of life with
the Kennedy she knew
and worked for from 1953
until 1964—t0 dispel the
myth that has grown up
around them; to identify them
as quite real, flesh-and-blood
human beings with faults as
well as virtues. As a result.
. , • >v i/m. | ' i»l
.. # «iv' 'V'li. V > JOY I '
I
CONSULT US ABOUT OUR INSTALLMENT
PAYMENT PLAN
Union Insurance & Realty Co.
•14 FAYETTE VILLI ST. PHONE M2-11U
m
Hal Morrow
Midnight-6 A.M.
WSSB is the only Durham Radio
(Station that stays on 24 hoilr a day
Tdays week, 365 a year.
1490
Radio No. 1 Durham
many of the realities revealed
are more than just startling.
According to Mrs. Gallagher,
Mrs. Kennedy spent more
money on horses than on her
children and more time in bed
than attending to stately, wife
ly and motherly duties. In try
ing to explain why Jackie's
way of living contrasted so
greatly with the average Ameri
can housewife and mother,
Mrs. Gallagher says, "I can
only explain it one way . . . she
was born and groomed to a
queenly role."
Readers will also find the
now-famous disclosures of the
former First Lady's $40,000-a
--year clothing bills, hand-ironed
stockings, constant kitchen
turnover and stinginess in sala
ries. In the constant tug-of-war
between President and First
Lftdj oX Sfr astronomical
bills, John Kennedy is pictured
as the typical all-American hus
band, which will seem familiar
to every married reader.
"It really isn't a nasty book"
says the silver-haired Mrs.
Gallagher, who pictured her
former boss as aloof, extrava
gant, selfish, but sometimes
charming. "If I had not written
this," she further states, "his
tory would be denied."
"My Life With Jacqueline
Kennedy" is the inside story
about the real Jackie, now Mrs.
Aristotle Onassis. If your local
store is sold out of the new
paperback, you can get your
copy direct from the publish
ers: Paperback Library, Dept.
N.A., 315 Park Avenue South,
New York, N.Y. 10010.
Did the author do right? Did
she betray a trust by "telling it
like it was?" Or, did she per
form a service for history? You
be the judge.