By GARY STEWART Editor As a child, Deborah Hayes was ashamed of being tall. Everyone pushed her into basketball, a sport she hated. Now, she’s a model and Talent Agency Director, and tall is in. She’s proud of it. The daughter of Bob and Sue Hayes of Kings Mountain, Deborah today is Talent Agency Director for the Barbizon Schools in Charlotte. She recruits models, books models for various fashion shows, ads and commercials, and coor- dinates a number of fashion shows herself. With the track record she’s built since taking over as head of the Barbizon programs, there may be no stopping her. After admittedly being a flop in basketball, some of her high school friends encouraged her to try modeling. She entered Bar- bizon to study fashion merchan- dising. “I was the worst one in the class,” she recalled Monday in her office in the Outlet Square in ‘Charlotte. “Everybody had to beg me to keep going back.” But, graduation night, things seem to fall in place and she was the best in the graduation fashion show. The next day she received a call from Belk’s asking her to be an alternate in “Seranade to Autumn”, the big- gest fashion show in Charlotte. She worked for Belk’s for three months, then with Ivey’s for another year, and then joined another modeling school in Charlotte as a teacher. “I was making good money,” she recalled, “but was not getting the exposure I wanted.” She joined Barbizon a year ago as combination Head of Staff and Talent Agency Direc- tor. Under her guidance, the school grew at such a rapid pace she was made fulltime Talent Agency Director and someone else was hired as Head of Staff. “The more they want me to do, the more I want to do,” she says. “Except for my dog, Prisci, and swimming, I don’t have any hobbies. I'm usually so tired when I get home at night, I just hit the couch.” Deborah goes to school part- time at UNC-Charlotte, where she’s a business major. She lacks two years on her studies, and then hopes to either open her own modeling school or land a modeling job in New Y ork City. She has booked shows at several locations in Charlotte and this week coordinated a show at the Ramada Inn for the Charlotte Humane Society. The show was her personal attack on the recent N.C. Legislature’s ap- proval of allowing animals to be sold for lab research. Deborah has appeared on several televison specials and in TV, newspaper and magazine ads. She plans to travel to New York this winter for a possible layout and feature story in “Vogue.” As her father says with pride, Miss Hayes has a lot of initiative. She also has a lot of intensity. To build Barbizon to the biggest modeling school in Charlotte, she didn’t just sit back and wait for business. She went all over the big city, knocking on doors and selling her models. “The hardest thing about booking a model is that the client is looking for one specific thing,” she says. “You have to convince them that who you’ll send will be Lost Berry exactly what mind.” Deborah keeps a list of over 100 models but works with only about 20 at one time. She limits her class sizes to 10. they have in The market is constantly changing, thus, some models get steady work for awhile, and then business slacks off. “Most people now want the All-American, Miss America look,” Deborah says, “or the tall, very high fashioned type. The people in Charlotte are very par- ticular about hair.” The general feeling that “gentlemen prefer blondes” doesn’t necesarily apply in all modeling cases, she says. “For ads, especially, they don’t want blondes,” she said. “They want dark hair that will show up in color pictures. If the ad is for glamour, then they want blondes.” She has made many ads and commercials of her own, as well as a panty hose package. She’s appeared on “Top of the Day”, “Channel 18’s Forum” and “Good Morning With Jim Pat- terson” twice. She’s been invited to do some work this winter with the biggest modeling agency in New York City, and will make another trip to New York to “knock on doors” and give out headsheets (personal information) on Bargizon models. “A lot of people in Kings Mountain ask me if all this has changed me,” she said. “It hasn’t. I no longer hate being tall. I rather enjoy it now. My best friends from Kings Mountain will always be my best friends and my first loyalty will always be my parents. If the time ever comes when they need me, I'll quit everything and go to them. “This has made me more self- confident,” she added. “I’m con- fident that if I have to depend on myself, I can do it. I work hard and I feel like if I can take something like this and develop it, nothing can stop me, in- cluding taking over all of New York City someday. But if I never make it big in New York, that’s okay, because I’m satisfied Plants Replaced in Fall Strawberry plants are Cn QR SSG rT among the victims of this summer’s dry, searing heat and may have to be replaced. Both home garden and com- mercial plantings are affected. North Carolina State University agricultural ex- tension specialists suggest to growers that orders for plants should be placed im- mediately to assure availa- bility this fall. The plants can be set in early fall for a light crop of berries next spring. The best procedure is to plant in dou- ble rows about 12 inches apart. The plants should be in the ground before Nov. 15 in most sections of North Carolina. The NCSU specialists urge growers to mulch new plantings. Left unmulched, they are likely to heave out of the ground this winter with the freezing and thaw- ing of the soil. Replacing lost plants this fall won’t assure you of a bumper crop of berries next spring. The yield will be sparse from these new plants the first season, but produc- tion should be good the fol- lowing season. Deborah Hayes Makes It Big In Modeling Shooting For The Stars DEBORAH HAYES ...During a relaxing moment with myself and am happy with what I’m doing. For once in my life, I don’t hate getting up and going to work.” For aspiring models, her ad- vice is to be determined and work hard. “Y ou don’t necessarily have to be pretty or tall,” she says. “You just have to be determined and have to develop yourself to where rejection doesn’t hurt your feelings. In this business, you’re rejected more than you’re accepted. “You have to have people to stick behind you,” she added. Located In The CLEVELAND MALL Shelby, N.C. MORE IN SIZE MORE IN STYLE MORE IN VALUE SIZES 12-20 2-26 30-52 t 00 00 ‘Til 9: ND M N.C. Ladymore Clothing Fhe Full HFigure Lady” ALL CLEVELA Shelby, Monday Thru Saturday 10 “There are many times that you don’t want to go on. That’s when you have to have someone who believes in you, like my parents always believed in me. My daddy’s my biggest fan. He carries around a miniature port- folio in his wallet. I've always told them that if I ever make it big, I’m going to buy them a big fancy house with a big swimm- ing pool and teach daddy how to swim.” DEBORAH HAYES...In recent fashion show DEPARTMENT STORE KINGS MOUNTAIN. 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