down boff! vets good queen ffy'newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1966-04... ·...

1
Fashion World Split Down the Middle ffy' Strut-lured unil jjeometrical is Vidal Sassoon's way lo hair beauty (left). John Garrison's coiffures are lacy and soft. NEW YORK (CFN) ?Two opposing hairdresser camps are going at each other at the moment with scissors and comb! The controversy concerns the architectural versus the soft look in hair design. . woman's type or personality, by lightening, brightening, or deepen- ing her own hairshade. Even cov- ering gray hairs. Apparently, age is the key to the fashion-world split. The young adult seems to favor the new and streamlined, while the over-30's take a more traditional approach to fashion. It is unlikely that the two opposition forces will com- promise in the near future, since the "way-out" set, as their elders like to call it, is gaining new mem- bers every day. Population experts tell us that, by 1970, 76 per cent of our cit- izenry will be between 20 and 25 years old. And that makes a lot of supporters for the "Upbeat" look. The Clairol Institute of Hair- coloring recently clarified the is- sues in a show called, "Beauty and the Upbeals" presented for the nation's press. The leading exponents of both schools of hair- style were on hand to inform and entice the audience to their way of thinking. the Garrison models, sporting soft, loopy coifs, with a burst of applause. It was another story, however, where the younger members of the press were concerned. The curly, feminine coifs received po- lite applause, but the real enthusi- asm was accorded the structured, chiselled hairdos." Vidal Sassoon, front-rank advo- cate of today's stark, geometrical hairstyles, showed his coiffeur de- signs in contrast with those of John Garrison, a hold-out for the soft and feminine in hairstyling and raiment. The results were dramatic. Some editors gasped as the short- haired Sassoon models came on- stage. These same women greeted Innovations in hairstyling are matched by those in haircoloring. Quick shampoo-in colorings like Nice 'n Easy make it so simple to accent one's natural hair color. Both Mr. Laurence, Vidal Sas- soon's chief haircolorist, and John Garrison used the haircolorings to more clearly define a young The one thing that may change their views will be boredom with the fashion, in a few years. |j p H ONE 682-9295 Al)l% Laundry and | Iff CASH & CARRY OFFICES p Corner Roxboro and Holloway Street Quick An A Wink?Roxboro Rd. at Avondale Dr. Drive-In, Cor. Broad and Englewood Ave. CASH IN A 7%A . rrpfwimflß . MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS . SHOT GUNS and MIES . USED TELEVISIONS PROVIDENCE LOAN OFFICE 106 I MAIN DIAL 682-4431 A /INTEREST NOW CUT s 1/g AT PROVIDENCE \% \ Applications For Federal Posts Available Applications are still being accepted for the 1966 Federal Service Entrance Examination. There has been an additional test recently authorized by the U. S. Civil Service Commission to be conducted on June 18. Ap- plications must be received by May 17 This examination, open to college seniors and gradu- ates regardless of major study, as well as to persons who have had equivalent experience, of- fers the opportunity to begin a career in the Federal service in one of over 200 kinds of positions. These positions are located in various Federal agencies both in Washington, D. C. and throughout the U.S. A few overseas positions will also be filled. There is a possibility of a orobable increase in the num- ber of placements from the FSEE, especially college wom- en. Depending on the qualifi- cations. ot the candidates start- "Trnfsarariea nu - persons ap- pointed from tHis examination wi>Nae_ssi&l»-«nd $6269 a year, test is required. Seagrams Ffl Stven I C/lji/ifj MKT'<s: I seaym s $4.10 Seven y Croum 4/5 QT. I "? mL. AMERICAN Ki M I BltNI)i:D WHISKEY y&iUU I <*/ ds&Ht/u* chutdt* wrtb*/ a tuioe efAtmvmM ifip yjp <gp ijjg> ifjf KINOCO » tOTIKO »Y iOMC* ( »«*««*«* «?? mwwihciiuira. ino. "* jOSBAMMTllfM COWUIT. «W TOW CITY. BUWCO WHISKEY. M PlOOf. 86% BMHI KUTMI MITt Discharged '55 Vets Eligible For Home Loan WINSTON-SALEM Vete- rans with more than 180 days of active military duty dis- charged from the service since January 31. 1955, have at least until March 3, 197fi to complete a GI home or farm loan under I the new GI Bill. W. R Phillips, j Manager of the Winston-Salem I Administration Regional Office i pointed out today. The new law. bringing to vet- | erans of the p'ist-Koroan pe- j riod GI loan privileges \u25a0 hither- : to available only to veterans of World War II and the Korean ("Conflict, carries its o'.\n mini- [ mum deadline of in after 1 the actual siiinitig of the hill on | March 3, 19G6 Phillips said a maximum eli- gibility date of twenty years I after discharge from the quali- ! fving active is also in I the law. Veterans discharged [ because of service-connected ] disabilities will have the maxi- mum 20-year entitlement. Between those minimum and maximum periods, individual veterans will reach thejtermi- nation of their ac cording to the following for- mula: Add ten years to the date of the last discharge from active service plus one year for each three-month period of that ser- The veterans must hold a dis- -harge other than dishonor- able. However, Phillips said, if a veteran is released because if a service-connected disabil- ity, the service time may be less than the-stipulated 180- plus days period. The new law also benefits those servicemen who remain on active duty after complet- ing at least two years of serv- ice. They may obtain VA-guar- anteed loans while still in the armed forces. For details see Service Announcement No. 369. The announcement may be obtained from George E. Moore, Jr., Ex- aminer-in-Charge, located a t Window 11, Main Post Office, Durham, college placement of- fice, Civil Service Regional Of- fices, or from the U.S. Civil Service Commission, Washing- ton, D. C. Shrinks Hemorrhoids Without Surgery Stops Itch?Relieves Pain For the first time science has found ? new healing substance withthe as- tonishing ability to shrink hemor- rhoids and to relieve pain - without aurgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduc- tion (shrinkage) took place. Most ?mazing of all results were so thor- ough that sufferers made astonishing \u25a0tatements like "Piles have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne®) ?dis- covery of a world-famous research institute.This substance is now avail- able in tuppoiitory or ointmtnt form called Preparation //®. At all drug counters. \u25a0Mpppw>». 1 1 1 ipm 1 flfpti H. SAT. I RADIO DISPATCHED DRIVE IN SERVICE torn . DIAL I 682-1566 WEAVERS CLEANERS 1212 FAYETTEVILLE DL'RHAM j? The Best Way To £ Express Sympathy Evary In MM it ?? funaral pi »c? iit chaaafi wHh H car*. At a raanH, our dof«l jjn blankah. tprayi and wraatha 7 naad not ba MMMMUrihf fcL Una of aipamtva ta ba Waawtl- T ful. La« ai iktw you ur-plaa. ? Long's Florist SOI Fayattevlll* St. I Durham, N. 0 FLASH! BOFF! AARGH! Good grooming is IN! NEW YORK (CFN) ?You may not have heard about them in your neighborhood yet, but a mad, frenetic, appealingly ag- gravating group known as the "younger generation" is fast taking over the country. They range in ages anywhere from 15 to 25 and their membership is growing everyday. They are becoming legends in o their own time with such "hap- penings" as these: local high school students in Boston have formed tree-climbing societies to keep teenagers off the streets; more youngsters would prefer to become teachers than a sixth Be.itle: 1965 saw teenagers con- sume .*SO million pizzas tfor an hors-d'oeuvre!.) spend more money on clothes and grooming accessories and still managed to look sloppier than any other group at any other period in history, except maybe tor Atilla and his Huns (no. not another Liverpudlian singing group.) lo put it more concisely, to- day's frug-oriented youngster is swathed in contradictions; And the more sensational and rather appalling object lessons of shaggy hair, ghastly grooming habits and wearing apparel really represent a fraction of the actual teenage population. A survey of high school sen- iors and college freshmen in six leading cities, conducted recently by the National Institute of Dry- cleaning clearly showed that the majority of young people felt that "casual" definitely did not mean sloppy. On the contrary, most young- sters today regard the deliber- ately sloppy dresser, that- "u\i- made bed" look, the "bare feet bunch." and the "shaggy dog- faced boy' syndrome, as being phony, pretentious and just as unwelcome at a party or on campus as the too-nattily attired clown with ultra-sleek clothes, ornate jewelry and "that off the grease rack" look. One Princeton freshman who was all for casual styles said, "Ideally, the look you want to achieve in your clothes is one of Photo coiirus) CitaiuM- FIIKT* Markctinc Co. "The apparel off proclaims the man" HAMLST, ACT I, SCENE 3 complete indifference; as though your mind and your money were being spent elsewhere. But make sure whatever you wear?even blue jeans?is clean and neatly pressed. Good grooming makes all the difference if you've got a midget-size clothes budget to work with." food spots are definitely major faux pas on the current scene. Granny dresses, shapeless sacks, wispy discotheque dresses, how- ever Mod. Boss or Pop. must look cusp and fresh and brand- new snowfall clean, according to most of the girls interviewed "Good grooming makes good sense" is this year's slogan for the annual Good Grooming Week. April 24th through 30th. Ami since today's younger gen- eration is so action-minded and socially aware, they should be persuaded that this is the perfect time to take a drvcleancr lo lunch! Defeat of the So-Called Anti- Discrimination Bill Called For NEW YORK?The American Jewish Congress this week call- ed for defeat of a bill in the state legislature that it said would "paralyze" efforts by lo- cal boards of education to end de facto school segregation. Gordon said the proposal would make it illegal for school boards to reorganize or rezone attendance lines. "Such restrictions on a local board and state education au- thorities would be educational- ly absurd and could lead only to chaos," he said. Murray A Gordon, chairman of the New York Metropolitan Council of the Congress, said that the bill (S.I. 2311) intro- duced by Senator Norman F Lent, Republican of Nassau "The restrictions -w ou 1 d freeze local schools into their existing mold, paralyze local school board from doing any- thing about the problem and, in the process, build up com- munity discord." "masquerades as an anti-dis- criminatory measure but, in fact, prohibits local boards of education from assigning pupils in a way to create racial bal- ance in the schools." The American Jewish Con- gress leader noted that the I State Board of Regents was I strongly opposed to the Lent Bill. The bill provides that "no student shall be assigned or compelled to attend any school" on account of his race creed, color or national origin. "In actuality," the American Jewish Congress leader declar- ed, "the Lent bill seeks to keep white pupils from being as- signed to predominantly Ne- gro-attended schools. "Its main purpose is to main- ' tain the status quo and, with it Ide facto segregation." WHEN YOU CONSULT US ABOUT REAL ESTATE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INSURANCE MATTERS. OUR MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, AUTO, FIRE AND ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE PROTECTION AS- SURES YOU OF THE VERY BEST. Consult Us Before You Build, Sell Rent or Renovate Union Insurance & Realty Co. 114 FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE M2-11U Across The Nation... Now Tire Protection ISSM TM, ? Full Road-Haiard and Workman.hlp Guarantee (Just Ilk* M \u25a0 new tire) H backed by TRJ mrmbcri »1) over America. Now more than ever, It paya to buy We Uae Only the ? EASY TERMS Be* OUT FINEST MATERIALS ? ONEDAY SERVICE Retraad. Quality 100% Rubber | GUARANTEED Go Elsewhere! I P/ gg I RIGSBEE TIRE SALES 108 Lakewood Ave. Phone 688-1383 Stewart Rig.be. Cloeed Wednnday. at 1 P.M. - Open AD Day Saturday. J. D. Brother* 2720 Hillsboro Road 286-4444 SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1966 THE CAROLINA TIMES- A Queen on the Campus "*&* S^JIPIP Junior Mi«s A Stmlv'ftr Grae«* NEW YORK ((FN) On a snow-covered campus near Detroit. Michigan. the -sjnile of 17-year old freshman Patricia Angela Gaunder is warm enough to start daffodils growing in the snow. 0 ? Radiantly all-American. Patri- cia is America's Junior Miss of l l >ftS; truly a unique title, because the annual Junior Miss Pageant is j not just a "twain > contest." Spoil- j sored In several leading I'. S. corporations, including John H. j Breck. Inc.. the Pageant emplia- i sizes character development. I grace, and personality in the 50 I senior high school girls who rep- resent their individual stales. The annual Pageant was devel- j oped from a long-ago tradition? [ Mobile. AI aham a"s colorf ill i A/.ilea Irail f estival?in which 1 only local girls were permitted to 1 promenade. Hut last year. 40.000 j girls from even slate in the Union participated in 900 state : and local pageants before the i fifty finalists were chosen. Pat t launder, an ardent hospital | volunteer, member of the glee ! club, and a surprisingly good I basketball player, represented Michigan's pride and hopes and traveled to Mobile where she re- ceived her crow n before a nation- wide television audience. As America's Junior Miss. Pa- t tricia received a complete college scholarship donated by the Pa- geant's sponsors including Jolta H. Breck. Inc., an extensive tour | of the United States and many other prizes. In addition, Patricia is making a series of guest ap- pearances on CBS-TV's "Alumni i Fun." the popular game show j A "Kp)jiil" Freshman sponsored by the American Cya- namid Company., where well- known college graduates compete for scholarship grants for their respective universities. In keeping with the spirit of the Junior Miss Pageant. Queen Patricia entered Marygrove Col- lege near Detroit, Michigan, where she is studying to become a teacher. When she graduates, it is a toss-up question whether Pa- tricia will join the Peace Corps or work in this country with seriously handicapped children. Lightly lies the head that wears the crown?when she is the reign- ing America's Junior Miss. Imported MACNAUGHTON CANADIAN WHISKY 2 pint f|| 11 41 \u25a0 IMPORTED 1 I MACNAUGHTON I I CANADIAN WHISKV I A BLEND \u25a0 *ru/ /J?uhd undtl of tA* aruis/u*n AGED SIX FULL YEARS H \u25a0 I \u25a0 A PRODUCT OF CANADA R CANADIAN WHISKY. A BLEND ? 6 YEARS OLD ? 86.8 PROOF ? ©SCHENIEY IMPORTS CO.. N Y.. N.Y. 3B

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Page 1: Down BOFF! Vets Good Queen ffy'newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1966-04... · woman's type or personality, by lightening, brightening, or deepen-ing her own hairshade. Even

Fashion World Split Down the Middle

ffy'

Strut-lured unil jjeometrical is Vidal Sassoon's way lo hairbeauty (left). John Garrison's coiffures are lacy and soft.

NEW YORK (CFN) ?Two opposing hairdresser camps aregoing at each other at the moment with scissors and comb! Thecontroversy concerns the architectural versus the soft look inhair design. .

woman's type or personality, by

lightening, brightening, or deepen-ing her own hairshade. Even cov-ering gray hairs.

Apparently, age is the key tothe fashion-world split. The youngadult seems to favor the new andstreamlined, while the over-30'stake a more traditional approach

to fashion. It is unlikely that thetwo opposition forces will com-promise in the near future, sincethe "way-out" set, as their elderslike to call it, is gaining new mem-

bers every day.

Population experts tell us that,by 1970, 76 per cent of our cit-izenry will be between 20 and 25years old. And that makes a lotof supporters for the "Upbeat"look.

The Clairol Institute of Hair-coloring recently clarified the is-sues in a show called, "Beautyand the Upbeals" presented forthe nation's press. The leading

exponents of both schools of hair-style were on hand to inform andentice the audience to their way

of thinking.

the Garrison models, sportingsoft, loopy coifs, with a burst ofapplause.

It was another story, however,where the younger members ofthe press were concerned. Thecurly, feminine coifs received po-lite applause, but the real enthusi-asm was accorded the structured,chiselled hairdos."Vidal Sassoon, front-rank advo-

cate of today's stark, geometricalhairstyles, showed his coiffeur de-signs in contrast with those of

John Garrison, a hold-out for thesoft and feminine in hairstyling

and raiment.The results were dramatic.

Some editors gasped as the short-haired Sassoon models came on-stage. These same women greeted

Innovations in hairstyling are

matched by those in haircoloring.

Quick shampoo-in colorings likeNice 'n Easy make it so simple

to accent one's natural hair color.Both Mr. Laurence, Vidal Sas-

soon's chief haircolorist, and JohnGarrison used the haircoloringsto more clearly define a young

The one thing that may change

their views will be boredom withthe fashion, in a few years.

|j pHONE 682-9295

Al)l% Laundry and |

Iff CASH & CARRY OFFICES pCorner Roxboro and Holloway Street

Quick An A Wink?Roxboro Rd. at Avondale Dr.

Drive-In, Cor. Broad and Englewood Ave.

CASH IN A 7%A. rrpfwimflß. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. SHOT GUNS and MIES. USED TELEVISIONS

PROVIDENCELOAN OFFICE

106 I MAIN DIAL 682-4431 A

/INTEREST NOW CUT s1/g AT PROVIDENCE \%

\

ApplicationsFor FederalPosts Available

Applications are still beingaccepted for the 1966 FederalService Entrance Examination.There has been an additionaltest recently authorized by theU. S. Civil Service Commissionto be conducted on June 18. Ap-plications must be received by

May 17 This examination, opento college seniors and gradu-

ates regardless of major study,as well as to persons who havehad equivalent experience, of-fers the opportunity to begin a

career in the Federal servicein one of over 200 kinds ofpositions. These positions are

located in various Federalagencies both in Washington,D. C. and throughout the U.S.A few overseas positions willalso be filled.

There is a possibility of a

orobable increase in the num-

ber of placements from theFSEE, especially college wom-

en. Depending on the qualifi-

cations. ot the candidates start-"Trnfsarariea nu - persons ap-

pointed from tHis examinationwi>Nae_ssi&l»-«nd $6269 a year,

test is required.

Seagrams FflStven

I C/lji/ifj MKT'<s:

I seaym s$4.10 Seven y Croum

4/5 QT. I "? mL.AMERICAN

Ki M I BltNI)i:D WHISKEYy&iUU I <*/ds&Ht/u* chutdt*

wrtb*/a tuioe efAtmvmMifip yjp <gp ijjg> ifjf

KINOCO » tOTIKO »Y iOMC* ( »«*««*«* «??

mwwihciiuira. ino."*

jOSBAM MTllfM COWUIT. «W TOW CITY.BUWCO WHISKEY. M PlOOf. 86% BMHI KUTMI MITt

Discharged '55Vets EligibleFor Home Loan

WINSTON-SALEM Vete-rans with more than 180 daysof active military duty dis-charged from the service sinceJanuary 31. 1955, have at leastuntil March 3, 197fi to completea GI home or farm loan under

I the new GI Bill. W. R Phillips,j Manager of the Winston-Salem

I Administration Regional Officei pointed out today.

The new law. bringing to vet-

| erans of the p'ist-Koroan pe-

j riod GI loan privileges \u25a0 hither-: to available only to veterans of

World War II and the Korean("Conflict, carries its o'.\n mini-[ mum deadline of in after

1 the actual siiinitig of the hill on

| March 3, 19G6

Phillips said a maximum eli-gibility date of twenty years

I after discharge from the quali-! fving active is also in

I the law. Veterans discharged[ because of service-connected

] disabilities will have the maxi-mum 20-year entitlement.

Between those minimum andmaximum periods, individualveterans will reach thejtermi-nation of their ac

cording to the following for-mula:

Add ten years to the date ofthe last discharge from activeservice plus one year for eachthree-month period of that ser-

The veterans must hold a dis--harge other than dishonor-able. However, Phillips said, ifa veteran is released becauseif a service-connected disabil-ity, the service time may beless than the-stipulated 180-plus days period.

The new law also benefitsthose servicemen who remainon active duty after complet-ing at least two years of serv-ice. They may obtain VA-guar-

anteed loans while still in thearmed forces.

For details see ServiceAnnouncement No. 369. Theannouncement may be obtainedfrom George E. Moore, Jr., Ex-aminer-in-Charge, located a tWindow 11, Main Post Office,

Durham, college placement of-fice, Civil Service Regional Of-fices, or from the U.S. CivilService Commission, Washing-

ton, D. C.

Shrinks HemorrhoidsWithout Surgery

Stops Itch?Relieves PainFor the first time science has found

? new healing substance withthe as-tonishing ability to shrink hemor-rhoids and to relieve pain -withoutaurgery. In case after case, whilegently relieving pain, actual reduc-tion (shrinkage) took place. Most?mazing of all results were so thor-ough that sufferers made astonishing\u25a0tatements like "Piles have ceased to

be a problem!" The secret is a newhealing substance (Bio-Dyne®) ?dis-covery of a world-famous researchinstitute.This substance is now avail-able in tuppoiitory or ointmtnt formcalled Preparation //®. At all drugcounters.

\u25a0Mpppw>». 1 1 1 ipm 1

flfptiH. SAT.

I RADIO DISPATCHEDDRIVE IN SERVICE

torn

. DIAL

I 682-1566

WEAVERSCLEANERS

1212 FAYETTEVILLEDL'RHAM

j? The Best Way To£ Express Sympathy

Evary In MM it ??

funaral pi»c? iit chaaafi wHhH car*. At a raanH, our dof«ljjn blankah. tprayi and wraatha7 naad not ba MMMMUrihffcL Una of aipamtva ta ba Waawtl-T ful. La« ai iktw you ur-plaa.

? Long's FloristSOI Fayattevlll* St.

I Durham, N. 0

FLASH! BOFF! AARGH!Good grooming is IN!

NEW YORK (CFN) ?You may not have heard about themin your neighborhood yet, but a mad, frenetic, appealingly ag-gravating group known as the "younger generation" is fasttaking over the country. They range in ages anywhere from 15to 25 and their membership is growing everyday.

They are becoming legends in otheir own time with such "hap-penings" as these: local highschool students in Boston haveformed tree-climbing societies tokeep teenagers off the streets;more youngsters would prefer to

become teachers than a sixthBe.itle: 1965 saw teenagers con-sume .*SO million pizzas tfor anhors-d'oeuvre!.) spend moremoney on clothes and groomingaccessories and still managed to

look sloppier than any othergroup at any other period inhistory, except maybe tor Atillaand his Huns (no. not anotherLiverpudlian singing group.)

lo put it more concisely, to-day's frug-oriented youngster isswathed in contradictions; Andthe more sensational and ratherappalling object lessons of shaggyhair, ghastly grooming habits andwearing apparel really representa fraction of the actual teenagepopulation.

A survey of high school sen-iors and college freshmen in sixleading cities, conducted recentlyby the National Institute of Dry-cleaning clearly showed that themajority of young people feltthat "casual" definitely did notmean sloppy.

On the contrary, most young-sters today regard the deliber-ately sloppy dresser, that- "u\i-made bed" look, the "bare feetbunch." and the "shaggy dog-faced boy' syndrome, as beingphony, pretentious and just asunwelcome at a party or oncampus as the too-nattily attiredclown with ultra-sleek clothes,ornate jewelry and "thatoff the grease rack" look.

One Princeton freshman whowas all for casual styles said,"Ideally, the look you want toachieve in your clothes is one of

Photo coiirus) CitaiuM- FIIKT* Markctinc Co.

"The apparel off proclaims the man"HAMLST, ACT I, SCENE 3

complete indifference; as thoughyour mind and your money werebeing spent elsewhere. But makesure whatever you wear?evenblue jeans?is clean and neatlypressed. Good grooming makesall the difference if you've gota midget-size clothes budget towork with."

food spots are definitely majorfaux pas on the current scene.Granny dresses, shapeless sacks,wispy discotheque dresses, how-ever Mod. Boss or Pop. must

look cusp and fresh and brand-new snowfall clean, according tomost of the girls interviewed

"Good grooming makes goodsense" is this year's slogan forthe annual Good GroomingWeek. April 24th through 30th.Ami since today's younger gen-eration is so action-minded andsocially aware, they should bepersuaded that this is the perfecttime to take a drvcleancr lo lunch!

Defeat of the So-Called Anti-Discrimination Bill Called For

NEW YORK?The AmericanJewish Congress this week call-ed for defeat of a bill in thestate legislature that it saidwould "paralyze" efforts by lo-cal boards of education to endde facto school segregation.

Gordon said the proposalwould make it illegal for schoolboards to reorganize or rezoneattendance lines.

"Such restrictions on a localboard and state education au-

thorities would be educational-ly absurd and could lead onlyto chaos," he said.

Murray A Gordon, chairmanof the New York Metropolitan

Council of the Congress, saidthat the bill (S.I. 2311) intro-duced by Senator Norman FLent, Republican of Nassau

"The restrictions -w ou 1 dfreeze local schools into theirexisting mold, paralyze localschool board from doing any-

thing about the problem and,

in the process, build up com-munity discord."

"masquerades as an anti-dis-criminatory measure but, infact, prohibits local boards ofeducation from assigning pupilsin a way to create racial bal-ance in the schools." The American Jewish Con-

gress leader noted that theI State Board of Regents was

I strongly opposed to the LentBill.

The bill provides that "nostudent shall be assigned or

compelled to attend any

school" on account of his race

creed, color or national origin.

"In actuality," the AmericanJewish Congress leader declar-ed, "the Lent bill seeks to keep

white pupils from being as-

signed to predominantly Ne-gro-attended schools.

"Its main purpose is to main-' tain the status quo and, with itIde facto segregation."

WHEN YOU CONSULT US ABOUT REAL ESTATE

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INSURANCE

MATTERS. OUR MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCEIN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, AUTO, FIRE AND

ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE PROTECTION AS-

SURES YOU OF THE VERY BEST.

Consult Us Before You Build, SellRent or Renovate

Union Insurance & Realty Co.114 FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE M2-11U

Across The Nation... Now Tire Protection ISSMTM, ? Full Road-Haiard and Workman.hlp Guarantee (Just Ilk* M \u25a0 new tire) Hbacked by TRJ mrmbcri »1) over America. Now more than ever, It paya to buy

We Uae Only the ? EASY TERMS Be* OUT

FINEST MATERIALS ? ONEDAY SERVICE Retraad.

Quality 100% Rubber | GUARANTEED Go Elsewhere! I P/gg I RIGSBEE TIRE SALES

108 Lakewood Ave. Phone 688-1383 Stewart Rig.be.

Cloeed Wednnday. at 1 P.M. - Open AD Day Saturday. J. D. Brother*2720 Hillsboro Road 286-4444

SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1966 THE CAROLINA TIMES-

A Queen on the Campus

"*&*S^JIPIPJunior Mi«s A Stmlv'ftr Grae«*

NEW YORK ((FN) On a snow-covered campus nearDetroit. Michigan. the -sjnile of 17-year old freshman PatriciaAngela Gaunder is warm enough to start daffodils growing inthe snow. 0 ?

Radiantly all-American. Patri-cia is America's Junior Miss ofl l>ftS; truly a unique title, becausethe annual Junior Miss Pageant is jnot just a "twain > contest." Spoil- jsored In several leading I'. S.corporations, including John H. jBreck. Inc.. the Pageant emplia- isizes character development. Igrace, and personality in the 50 Isenior high school girls who rep-resent their individual stales.

The annual Pageant was devel- joped from a long-ago tradition? [Mobile. AI aham a"s colorf ill iA/.ilea Irail f estival?in which 1only local girls were permitted to 1promenade. Hut last year. 40.000 jgirls from even slate in theUnion participated in 900 state :and local pageants before the ififty finalists were chosen.

Pat t launder, an ardent hospital |volunteer, member of the glee !club, and a surprisingly good Ibasketball player, representedMichigan's pride and hopes andtraveled to Mobile where she re-ceived her crow n before a nation-wide television audience.

As America's Junior Miss. Pa- ttricia received a complete collegescholarship donated by the Pa-geant's sponsors including JoltaH. Breck. Inc., an extensive tour |of the United States and manyother prizes. In addition, Patriciais making a series of guest ap-pearances on CBS-TV's "Alumni iFun." the popular game show j

A "Kp)jiil"Freshman

sponsored by the American Cya-namid Company., where well-known college graduates competefor scholarship grants for theirrespective universities.

In keeping with the spirit ofthe Junior Miss Pageant. QueenPatricia entered Marygrove Col-lege near Detroit, Michigan,where she is studying to becomea teacher. When she graduates, itis a toss-up question whether Pa-tricia will join the Peace Corpsor work in this country withseriously handicapped children.

Lightly lies the head that wearsthe crown?when she is the reign-ing America's Junior Miss.

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