1
>?TOE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1870 1 &* «-» LMf *H kmi _ Mi«J\u25a0dß^Brai^ESaJ****** - \u25a0 - 12P -m 1 PQH BMaft ; . :.>x-is# *»«?« MMMHW wi liMM BBBMl^^fcdl^^B^^.^B^Bß.'"V^ P^BPUP^^Bi^BP^BBBPP^^B B^m£*iPif^fr<M»BßlM*MC]Wl»^.T!^MEJiFMßigwttilfafcaßßQßl <F 888 lAil HaBOT »?-»».^y f ? r^gA±>-- -3 ?? aM i « n ff -'V .?.» ' *.^Ew | i^ii9^^*w i *?'^\l!Mbl^Jrfi-"Bf~ byf - IwßSJ".^l^Bbm t *** *«stisr* *jbPß \u25a0' i lfcj»J - i^Ba j^sS^roPMßSislTwiKl|» |,lfI AjfrWrWKXl^ityiWyg^V - *1,5, SHAW GRADUATION CLASS OF 1970 FTODAY'S FARE] Thursday H 33n pm - MOVIE "And Baby Makes Three" A divorcee is told she is going to have a baby in this 1949 drama. W n.AL 430 pm. - DOl BLK FEATURE MOVIE "Storm Fear," a IQ.Vi drama about a man and his accomplices who are on the run after the hank holdup. The man and his accomplices decide to hole up in a farmhouse belonging to the leader's brother: Jack London's tale of a ship voyage piloted by an inhuman captain is retold in the 1941 film, "The Sea Wolf." WRDU t 5 p.m. PERRY MASON' "The Darling Dropout." A drifter gets a iob from a well-to-do-junk dealer but then quits the job after a heated argument. WTVD -t, « ... _ r>n T.V GRAHAM SPECIAL The evangelist is seen on his East Tennessee crusade. His topic: the meaning of luojiKiit nay. t.thei Waters sings "His Eye Is On the Sparrow" and gospel singer George Beverly Shea sings "He Touched Me." Pianist Ted Smith also appears. W'RAL Rp m. HAPPY DAYS This is the first in a summer series trying to recapture the past recalling the music of the 30s and 40s Tonight's guests are Buddy Rich, big band singers Helen O'Connell and Bob Eberle, and Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy WFMY 8 p.m. I SPY Ann opens on Broadway, but she has to put up with more than the usual opening jitters she's got her finger stuck in the kitchen faucet. WRDU 8:30 p m. NET PLAYHOUSE The prisoner-of-war drama, "Naked Island," is set in the final days of World War 9 p.m. MOVIE Herman Wouk's 1954 Pulitzer Prize novel is the basis for the World War II film, "The Caine', Mutiny." Legal and moral issues are brought into question as minesweeper officers revolt against a captain they consider mentally unfit. WFMY 9 p.m. MOVIE The 1959 British courtroom drama, I "Libel." start Dirk Bofcarde and Olivia de Havilland. A Canadian war veteran makes the claim that he is really an actor who murdered Sir Mark Loddon while escaping from a German concentration camp. WRDU 11 p.m. MOVJE "Sergeant York." A recruit from Tennessee becomes one of the most popular soldiers of World \u25a0 War I in this 1941 film. 11 30 p.m. MOVIE "Running Wild." the 1935 film about a rookie cop who poses as a hoodlum to get inside information on auto thieve* Keenan Wynn, William Campbell, Mamie Van Doren, Kathleen Cam, and Jan Merlin star. WRAL Dr. Cheek Addresses Shaw Class Of 1970 RALIEGII Dr. James Ed- ward Cheek, president of Ho- ward University in Washing- ton, D. C. and former presi- dent of Shaw University, spoke to the largest graduating calss in the history of Shaw on the heels of his appointment to a special commission to seek the causes and cures of campus unrest and violence in the United States by President Richard Nixon. in the form of applause, Dr. James Cheek expressed his gratitude to what he called his friends, for the opportunity to return to Shaw's campus where so much of his energies were expended and where so much of his love still remains. white, those speaking the Eng- lish language and those profes- sing the Protestant religion. He said slowly during the past three hundred years those scales have gradually adjusted to equalize the opportunities and benefits in the American system, however in the latter half of the twentieth century, for those born non-white, the scales of social justice remain totally out of balance. A 1955 graduate from Shaw, Cheek talked about "Civil Rights and Social Jus- tice" The Crisis of Race in The Seventies." Introduced by his brother who succeed him at Shaw, Dr. King V. Cheek, Jr. amid some 30 seconds of roaring welcome He said that throughout the history' of America the scales of social justice have been weighed in favor of those born He said when the Kerner Commission described "racisifr" as out chief domestic problem and warned that we were mov- ing toward two unequal socie- ties many Americans expressed outrage and disbelief. He told the graduates, "Re- member you leave here as edu- cated men and women, but you also leave here as Black men and women and the disin- herited black -- fed up and de- termined to be free - will not be intimidated by threats of detention camps or stopped by guns and bullets, or fooled by "cosmetic" and "window dres- ing" activities of their govern- ment. The disadvantaged poor - hungry and desperate - will not for long accept their state as a destiny fixed by fate; nor will they very long remain dis- organized and without leader- ship." Friday Highlights 10 a.m. GALLOPING GOURMET The galloper bumbles, around and hams it up, and if you go for the bait, you'll see how be throws together a recipe of Italian ham and cheese. WTVD 11 a.m. FRENCH CHEF Julia Child prepares poached' chicken with wine. WUNC 11:30 a.m. MISTEROGERS Misterogers reads about the. alphabet. WUNC 1 p.m. GIRL TALK Guesti are Mrs. Birch Bayh and Mrs. Richard Schweiker. WFMY 330 p.m. MOVIE "Alias John Preston." (English 1955) A well-do-do man settles down in a small English village, but is viewed with suspicion by the townspeople. WRAL ? 530 p.m. SESAME STREET The letters A. B, X, and the numbers four and five are discussed for the edification and enjoyment of erudite tykes. WUNC 6pm.? MOVIE Charlie Chan in Panama." (1940) Turmoil grips the Panama Canal Zone when it is learned that spies are planning to blow up the canal. Charlie sets out to find the spies. Sidney Toler, Jean Rogers and Lionel Atwill. WRDU 8p m. YOUNG ARTISTS Featured are violinist Walter Verdehr and pianist David Renner. WUNC 9 p.m. MOVIE Vivien Leigh stars in "The Roman Spring of Mrs, Stone." (1962). Actress Karen Stone plays the newly widowed, lonely and almost-middle-aged woman in an adaptation of Tennessee Williams' only novel. The plot centers on her affair with Paolo, an unscrupulous Roman gigolo. WTVD, WFMY 11 p.m. MOVIE "Treasure of Sierra Madre." (1948) Three pennilesi prospectors strike gold in the hills. But bitterness and friction develop. Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston. WRDU 11:30 p.m. MOVIE "Tammy and the Bachelor." (1957) Ros» Hunter produced this story of a bayou girl and her romance with a pilot whose plane crashes near her rlverboat. Debbie Reynolds, Peter Brent. WFMY 11:30 pm. MOVIE "Tight Spot", <1955) Policy try to persuade Sherry Conley to inform on a gang leader. Ginger Rogers, Edward G. Robinson. WRAL _ * Saturday Highlights 7pm? SUNRISE THEATER Robert Reed stars In "Blood Lust." 2pm - BASF.BALL The NBC Game of the Week, to be J announced. WTVD J 2 pm - SATURDAY MOVIE MATLNEE - A feature film will be announced. WRDU 3 p.m. SHOWCASE Spencer Tracy stars in "The Last Hurrah " WFMY S pm - ALL AMERICAN COLLEGE SHOW - Arthur Godfrey is host to special guest Art Linkletter and talents Phil Driscoll and Debbie Sullivan. WTVD BJO p.m. F-TROOP - "?ye-Bye Balloon." WRDU 'I ?p m. SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE Frank Sinatra .stars ' In "Kings Go Forth," the story of an American lieutenant on I leave 4ho falls in love with an emotionally upset girl. WTVD | 11 pm MOVIE "The Conspirators." WRDU 11.30 pm. MOVIE Charlton Heston stars In "The ' Private War of Major Benson " WFMY I 12 30 p.m - STARLIGHT THEATER - Paulette Goddard ' and John Lund star in "Bride of Vengeance." WRAL J OF U.S. UTRAL_jp|g!IS_QISIiyiD_FROM_G RAIN_9g_PROO f GORDON'S PRY GIN CO .HP UNOfN. N ). WBF//j ""N / VC JrV fl JEAN WILLIAMS, DELIGHTFUL YOUNG DRESS DESIGNER: "I don't believe in'Bubble-Gum'fashion...the kind | that's in today and out tomorrow. For my clients, <r# I design the smooth classics that suit them best. | \ [ Maybe that's why I choose Gordon's Gin. It's always I v. smooth, always dry, which suits my taste best! 5 " ! GORDON'S GIN, CREATED IN LONDON, ENGLAND IN 1769. I J I GORDONS j BIGGEST SELLER IN ENGLAND, AMERICA, THE WORLD. J 4111 ?? FT DISTILLED 10 $2.60 K London DRY A, 4/5 OT. WMT F GIN Y Gordon's? It's how the English keep their gin up! . i-m- ? j \u25a0 fSUCHA . rirtsr | or coupon you _ K ( j I accept as our authorized agent, we will ( I 1 I pay you face value plus 3f handling \ I I\\ j charges, provided you ond your customer \. ~y\ * ,he le,ms offer; any other : I your | 0 purchase to cover coupons jJ shown upon O O Your customer must pay any sales tax. m <J | /^^B^v JMk p,r-| ptriv / Cash value 1/20 of IC. Void Q r II S. C. Johnson \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0? the fu inc. po. Bo* wmjmmKx 269 r n , 1130, Clinton, lowa IB \u25a0 ime or Raid 52732 ° ff#r 9°° d 2 | bug uoc.A'ioi. A 'i 0 i 970. | I """? ? ? " "" ">" " Raid House & Garden. The indoor-outdoor bug killer. Won't leave oil stains on draperies or furniture, won't harm plants or shrubs. Raid Anl and Roach Killer- Penetrating Raid vapor goes through wall cracks and crevices kills *, bugs where they hide. And its continuing action keeps knocking 'em dead *****«»>*, for weeks. Raid Flying Insect Killer. Patented non-oily formula has a 1 f fresh, clean odor. It smells so nice but it kills bugs so dead. Raid Yard Guard, . _ , . i i lit ? N3 7ft»i ...rftHIM i||i l'"ii i i l iin iii " 'hi in Jungle-tested formula kills flying insects up to 20 feet away. Clears out flies, \ W'LL F R«in «. Wii. U.S.A. mosquitoes, gnats and ants. Perfect for your back yard, patio or picnic area. AT!' B M'l"r.i. *«d A FIELD DAY FOR SYNTHETICS % v'' ' ». ._/\u25a0 aJSKfI Typical high school gymasium (at Bishop Ward High in Kan- sas City) contains 6,000 square'feet of 3/16-inch-thick tan Uni--. Turf. Basketball court lines can be changed within minutes into indoor track, tennis courts, volleyball surface, practice golf area, archery range or scrimmage area. A "sports extra" if there ever was one. Within the next several years youngsters in almost every city and town in the United States could be playing baseball or football on fields equal in quality to those used by the top professional teams. Synthetic playing surfaces, already in broad use by pro- fessional and collegiate teams, are making it possible for the smallest community to have baseball diamonds, football fields, even basketball and ten- nis courts as good as any to be found anywhere. Best of all, the synthetics, in addition to providing outstand- ing playing areas, also help reduce the number and serious- ness of athletic injuries, and require little or no mainte- nance. James N. Mason Vice Presi- dent of American Biltrite Rub- ber Co., Inc., of Boston, said studies conducted by his com- pany among schools which have installed Uni-Turf and Poly-Turf playing surfaces prove the point. In almost every instance, acceptance of the surfaces by players, coaches, and those concerned with maintenance has been universal. courts, gymnasiums and tracks, .has already won the approval of the United States Lawn Ten- nis Association. And, the United States Basketball Rules Committee has' recognized Uhi-Turf as an acceptable sur- face for inter-collegiate play. The company's other synthetic playing surface, Poly-Turf, has been selected for installation in the Orange Bowl in Miami, site of profes- sional football's Super Bowl. It already is used by several col- leges for football, and a num- ber of schools are considering its use on baseball diamonds. As in basketball, Uni-Turf has helped reduce injuries in tennis, The uniform surface, which insures an even bounce of a tennis ball every time, also aids in cutting down the num- ber of twisted ankles. Both Uni-Turf and Poly- Turf are weather-resistant and are colorfast. They can be hosed off or vacuumed When dirty, and are practically inde- structible, thus permitting maximum use for multiple pur- poses. And the field upon which the most important profes- sional football game of the year, the Super Bowl, is played, will be duplicated in the years ahead at hundreds of high schools and colleges. Biltrite's Uni-Turf, a vinyl plastic material designed for use on tennis co.urts, basketball DEAR DADS: This is a special wish on your big day, To have a good time JZSyfm in every way. Taken for granted through % J&M most of the year, m You're still in all chil- drens' hearts, never fear. So on this day, more than all the rest, Please know that we know, 'Father Knows Best.' Mechanics & Farmers J* p Mtilk IM WIST FAMISH IT. DURHAM, H. C. Louisville to Shift to Year- Round School A decision to operate school classes on a year-round basis has recently been ap- proved by the Jefferson Coun- ty (Louisville), Kentucky, Board of Education. This will involve the transition from a two-semester, 176-day school calendar to four quarters of 60 school days each. The county's 90,000 pupils would be re- quired to attend three quar- ters with the option of going to school all year. Teachers will also have the option of working the full year, at addi- tional salary, or working the traditional nine-month school year. Officials hope the plan will help reduce the number of dropouts, enable schools to handle larger enrollments, and save the cost of constructing new buildings. The school board has applied for Federal funds to finance planning of the transition and the availabi- lity of the money will deter- mine when the system goes in- to effect. ! . Pretty Feet = Pretty You # fgffr EHVr ? / Gjfr t rjfcgHE HfaL 3&SB* Whether you're an Arabian princess or an American house- wife, pretty feet are an important part of your fashion picture this summer. Feet for 1970 should not merely be shod; they should be decorated, pampered, liberated. How can you achieve summer foot beauty? The answer is sandals. Sandals with style! Sandals with flair! Sandals with variety! Sandals with freedom! Sandals that look like jewels on your feet! Sandals are fun as well as fashionable. Coast-to-coast, women of all ages are wearing them in the sand, in the supermarket, in the city, in the country. There is a sandal for everyone: scuffs, thongs, nearly-nude play shoes, toe-in city shoes, flats, heels, strips, straps, bright colors, antiqued dark colors. But fashion isn't the only consideration in buying sandals. Comfort should be considered too. The manufacturer of Red Ball Fun Fashions suggests .several ways you can choose the right sandal for your foot and avoid aching arches and swollen feet. For instance, check more than size and color when you shop. Try on the sandals. Because of open toes, straps and boxy heels, you may find that your usual size no longer fits your foot. Check the shape of the sandals too. There's more to fit than the right length and width of a shoe. The "lasts"' or forms over which the sandals are made should also be designed for ample depth and for the proper distribution of weight between the ball and heel of your foot. 4B

aM i ff-'V .?.»newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1970-06... · 6/27/1970  · drama, "Naked Island," is set in the final days of World War 9 p.m. MOVIE Herman Wouk's 1954

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Page 1: aM i ff-'V .?.»newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1970-06... · 6/27/1970  · drama, "Naked Island," is set in the final days of World War 9 p.m. MOVIE Herman Wouk's 1954

>?TOE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1870

1 &* «-» LMf *Hkmi _ Mi«J\u25a0dß^Brai^ESaJ******-\u25a0

- 12P -m 1 PQH BMaft ; . :.>x-is# *»«?«

MMMHW wiliMM BBBMl^^fcdl^^B^^.^B^Bß.'"V^ P^BPUP^^Bi^BP^BBBPP^^BB^m£*iPif^fr<M»BßlM*MC]Wl»^.T!^MEJiFMßigwttilfafcaßßQßl <F

888 lAil HaBOT»?-»».^y f? r^gA±>-- -3 ?? aM

i « n ff-'V .?.»' *.^Ew|i^ii9^^*wi

*?'^\l!Mbl^Jrfi-"Bf~ byf - IwßSJ".^l^Bbmt****«stisr* *jbPß \u25a0' i lfcj»J - i^Baj^sS^roPMßSislTwiKl|» |,lfIAjfrWrWKXl^ityiWyg^V

- *1,5,

SHAW GRADUATION CLASS OF 1970

FTODAY'S FARE]

Thursday H33n pm - MOVIE "And Baby Makes Three" A

divorcee is told she is going to have a baby in this 1949 drama.

W n.AL430 pm. - DOl BLK FEATURE MOVIE "Storm Fear,"

a IQ.Vi drama about a man and his accomplices who are on the

run after the hank holdup. The man and his accomplices decideto hole up in a farmhouse belonging to the leader's brother:Jack London's tale of a ship voyage piloted by an inhumancaptain is retold in the 1941 film, "The Sea Wolf." WRDU t

5 p.m. PERRY MASON' "The Darling Dropout." Adrifter gets a iob from a well-to-do-junk dealer but then quits

the job after a heated argument. WTVD-t, «

..._ r>n T.V GRAHAM SPECIAL The evangelist is

seen on his East Tennessee crusade. His topic: the meaning ofluojiKiitnay. t.thei Waters sings "His Eye Is On the Sparrow"and gospel singer George Beverly Shea sings "He TouchedMe." Pianist Ted Smith also appears. W'RAL

Rp m. HAPPY DAYS This is the first in a summerseries trying to recapture the past recalling the music of the30s and 40s Tonight's guests are Buddy Rich, big band singersHelen O'Connell and Bob Eberle, and Edgar Bergen and CharlieMcCarthy WFMY

8 p.m. I SPY Ann opens on Broadway, but she has toput up with more than the usual opening jitters she's got herfinger stuck in the kitchen faucet. WRDU

8:30 p m. NET PLAYHOUSE The prisoner-of-wardrama, "Naked Island," is set in the final days of World War

9 p.m. MOVIE Herman Wouk's 1954 Pulitzer Prizenovel is the basis for the World War II film, "The Caine',

Mutiny." Legal and moral issues are brought into question asminesweeper officers revolt against a captain they considermentally unfit. WFMY

9 p.m. MOVIE The 1959 British courtroom drama, I"Libel." start Dirk Bofcarde and Olivia de Havilland. ACanadian war veteran makes the claim that he is really anactor who murdered Sir Mark Loddon while escaping from aGerman concentration camp. WRDU

11 p.m. MOVJE "Sergeant York." A recruit fromTennessee becomes one of the most popular soldiers of World \u25a0War I in this 1941 film.

11 30 p.m. MOVIE "Running Wild." the 1935 film abouta rookie cop who poses as a hoodlum to get inside informationon auto thieve* Keenan Wynn, William Campbell, Mamie VanDoren, Kathleen Cam, and Jan Merlin star. WRAL

Dr. Cheek Addresses Shaw Class Of 1970RALIEGII Dr. James Ed-

ward Cheek, president of Ho-

ward University in Washing-ton, D. C. and former presi-dent of Shaw University,spoke to the largest graduatingcalss in the history of Shaw onthe heels of his appointmentto a special commission to

seek the causes and cures of

campus unrest and violence in

the United States by PresidentRichard Nixon.

in the form of applause, Dr.

James Cheek expressed hisgratitude to what he called his

friends, for the opportunity to

return to Shaw's campuswhere so much of his energieswere expended and where somuch of his love still remains.

white, those speaking the Eng-lish language and those profes-

sing the Protestant religion. Hesaid slowly during the pastthree hundred years thosescales have gradually adjustedto equalize the opportunitiesand benefits in the Americansystem, however in the latterhalf of the twentieth century,for those born non-white, the

scales of social justice remaintotally out of balance.

A 1955 graduate fromShaw, Cheek talked about

"Civil Rights and Social Jus-

tice" The Crisis of Race in The

Seventies."Introduced by his brother

who succeed him at Shaw, Dr.King V. Cheek, Jr. amid some30 seconds of roaring welcome

He said that throughout thehistory' of America the scalesof social justice have been

weighed in favor of those born

He said when the KernerCommission described "racisifr"as out chief domestic problem

and warned that we were mov-ing toward two unequal socie-ties many Americans expressedoutrage and disbelief.

He told the graduates, "Re-member you leave here as edu-cated men and women, butyou also leave here as Blackmen and women and the disin-

herited black --fed up and de-

termined to be free - will not

be intimidated by threats ofdetention camps or stopped byguns and bullets, or fooled by"cosmetic" and "window dres-

ing" activities of their govern-ment. The disadvantaged poor- hungry and desperate - will

not for long accept their state

as a destiny fixed by fate; norwill they very long remain dis-

organized and without leader-ship."

Friday Highlights10 a.m. GALLOPING GOURMET The galloper bumbles,

around and hams it up, and if you go for the bait, you'll see howbe throws together a recipe of Italian ham and cheese. WTVD

11 a.m. FRENCH CHEF Julia Child prepares poached'chicken with wine. WUNC

11:30 a.m. MISTEROGERS Misterogers reads about the.alphabet. WUNC

1 p.m. GIRL TALK Guesti are Mrs. Birch Bayh andMrs. Richard Schweiker. WFMY

330 p.m. MOVIE "Alias John Preston." (English 1955)

A well-do-do man settles down in a small English village, but isviewed with suspicion by the townspeople. WRAL

? 530 p.m. SESAME STREET The letters A. B, X, andthe numbers four and five are discussed for the edification andenjoyment of erudite tykes. WUNC

6pm.? MOVIE Charlie Chan in Panama." (1940)

Turmoil grips the Panama Canal Zone when it is learned thatspies are planning to blow up the canal. Charlie sets out to findthe spies. Sidney Toler, Jean Rogers and Lionel Atwill. WRDU

8p m. YOUNG ARTISTS Featured are violinist WalterVerdehr and pianist David Renner. WUNC

9 p.m. MOVIE Vivien Leigh stars in "The RomanSpring of Mrs, Stone." (1962). Actress Karen Stone plays thenewly widowed, lonely and almost-middle-aged woman in anadaptation of Tennessee Williams' only novel. The plot centerson her affair with Paolo, an unscrupulous Roman gigolo.WTVD, WFMY

11 p.m. MOVIE "Treasure of Sierra Madre." (1948)

Three pennilesi prospectors strike gold in the hills. Butbitterness and friction develop. Humphrey Bogart, WalterHuston. WRDU

11:30 p.m. MOVIE "Tammy and the Bachelor." (1957)Ros» Hunter produced this story of a bayou girl and herromance with a pilot whose plane crashes near her rlverboat.Debbie Reynolds, Peter Brent. WFMY

11:30 pm. MOVIE "Tight Spot", <1955) Policy try topersuade Sherry Conley to inform on a gang leader. GingerRogers, Edward G. Robinson. WRAL

_

*

Saturday Highlights7pm? SUNRISE THEATER Robert Reed stars In

"Blood Lust."

2pm - BASF.BALL The NBC Game of the Week, to be Jannounced. WTVD J

2 pm - SATURDAY MOVIE MATLNEE - A feature filmwill be announced. WRDU

3 p.m. SHOWCASE Spencer Tracy stars in "The LastHurrah " WFMY

S pm - ALLAMERICAN COLLEGE SHOW - ArthurGodfrey is host to special guest Art Linkletter and talents PhilDriscoll and Debbie Sullivan. WTVD

BJO p.m. F-TROOP - "?ye-Bye Balloon." WRDU 'I

?p m. SATURDAY NIGHTMOVIE Frank Sinatra .stars 'In "Kings Go Forth," the story of an American lieutenant on Ileave 4ho falls in love with an emotionally upset girl. WTVD |

11 pm MOVIE "The Conspirators." WRDU

11.30 pm. MOVIE Charlton Heston stars In "The 'Private War of Major Benson " WFMY I

12 30 p.m - STARLIGHT THEATER - Paulette Goddard 'and John Lund star in "Bride of Vengeance." WRAL J

OF U.S. UTRAL_jp|g!IS_QISIiyiD_FROM_G RAIN_9g_PROO f GORDON'S PRY GIN CO .HP UNOfN. N ).

WBF//j""N / VC JrV fl

JEAN WILLIAMS, DELIGHTFUL YOUNG DRESS DESIGNER:

"I don't believe in'Bubble-Gum'fashion...the kind |that's in today and out tomorrow. For my clients, <r#I design the smooth classics that suit them best. | \ [Maybe that's why I choose Gordon's Gin. It's always I v.smooth, always dry, which suits my taste best! 5

"

!GORDON'S GIN, CREATED IN LONDON, ENGLAND IN 1769. I J I GORDONS j

BIGGEST SELLER IN ENGLAND, AMERICA, THE WORLD. J

4111 ?? FT DISTILLED10 $2.60 K London DRY A,

4/5 OT. WMT F GINY

Gordon's? It's how the English keep their gin up! . i-m- ?j

\u25a0 fSUCHA . rirtsr

| or coupon you_ K ( j I accept as our authorized agent, we will ( I 1I pay you face value plus 3f handling \ I

I\\ j charges, provided you ond your customer \. ~y\ *

,he le,ms offer; any other : Iyour |

0purchase to cover coupons

jJ shown upon O

O Your customer must pay any sales tax. m

<J | /^^B^vJMk p,r-| ptriv / Cash value 1/20 of IC. Void Q

r II S. C. Johnson

\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0? the fu inc. po. Bo* wmjmmKx 269r n , 1130, Clinton, lowa IB

\u25a0 ime or Raid 52732 °ff#r 9°° d 2| bug uoc.A'ioi.

A'i

0

i970. | I"""? ? ? " "" ">" "

Raid House & Garden. The indoor-outdoor bug killer. Won't leave oil stains ondraperies or furniture, won't harm plants or shrubs. Raid Anl and Roach Killer-

Penetrating Raid vapor goes through wall cracks and crevices kills *,

bugs where they hide. And its continuing action keeps knocking 'em dead *****«»>*,for weeks. Raid Flying Insect Killer. Patented non-oily formula has a 1 f

fresh, clean odor. It smells so nice but it kills bugs so dead. Raid Yard Guard,. _ , .

i i lit ?

N3 7ft»i ...rftHIM i||i l'"iii i l iin iii " 'hi inJungle-tested formula kills flying insects up to 20 feet away. Clears out flies, \ W'LL F R«in «. Wii. U.S.A.

mosquitoes, gnats and ants. Perfect for your back yard, patio or picnic area. AT!'B M'l"r.i.*«d

A FIELD DAY FOR SYNTHETICS

% v'' '». ._/\u25a0 aJSKfI

Typical high school gymasium (at Bishop Ward High in Kan-sas City) contains 6,000 square'feet of 3/16-inch-thick tan Uni--.Turf. Basketball court lines can be changed within minutes intoindoor track, tennis courts, volleyball surface, practice golfarea,archery range or scrimmage area. A "sports extra" if there everwas one.

Within the next severalyears youngsters in almostevery city and town in theUnited States could be playingbaseball or football on fieldsequal in quality to those usedby the top professional teams.

Synthetic playing surfaces,already in broad use by pro-fessional and collegiate teams,are making it possible for thesmallest community to havebaseball diamonds, footballfields, even basketball and ten-nis courts as good as any to befound anywhere.

Best of all, the synthetics, inaddition to providing outstand-ing playing areas, also helpreduce the number and serious-ness of athletic injuries, andrequire little or no mainte-nance.

James N. Mason Vice Presi-dent of American Biltrite Rub-ber Co., Inc., of Boston, saidstudies conducted by his com-pany among schools whichhave installed Uni-Turf andPoly-Turf playing surfacesprove the point.

In almost every instance,acceptance of the surfaces byplayers, coaches, and thoseconcerned with maintenancehas been universal.

courts, gymnasiums and tracks,.has already won the approvalof the United States Lawn Ten-nis Association. And, theUnited States Basketball RulesCommittee has' recognizedUhi-Turf as an acceptable sur-face for inter-collegiate play.

The company's othersynthetic playing surface,Poly-Turf, has been selectedfor installation in the OrangeBowl in Miami, site of profes-sional football's Super Bowl. Italready is used by several col-leges for football, and a num-ber of schools are consideringits use on baseball diamonds.

As in basketball, Uni-Turfhas helped reduce injuries intennis, The uniform surface,which insures an even bounceof a tennis ball every time, alsoaids in cutting down the num-ber of twisted ankles.

Both Uni-Turf and Poly-Turf are weather-resistant andare colorfast. They can behosed off or vacuumed Whendirty, and are practically inde-structible, thus permittingmaximum use for multiple pur-poses.

And the field upon whichthe most important profes-sional football game of theyear, the Super Bowl, isplayed, will be duplicated inthe years ahead at hundreds ofhigh schools and colleges.

Biltrite's Uni-Turf, a vinylplastic material designed foruse on tennis co.urts, basketball

DEAR DADS:

This is a special wishon your big day,

To have a good time JZSyfmin every way.

Taken for granted through % J&Mmost of the year, m

You're still in all chil-drens' hearts, never fear.

So on this day, more than all the rest,

Please know that we know,

'Father Knows Best.'

Mechanics &FarmersJ*p Mtilk

IM WIST FAMISH IT. DURHAM, H. C.

Louisville toShift to Year-Round School

A decision to operateschool classes on a year-roundbasis has recently been ap-

proved by the Jefferson Coun-

ty (Louisville), Kentucky,Board of Education. This will

involve the transition from atwo-semester, 176-day schoolcalendar to four quarters of 60school days each. The county's90,000 pupils would be re-quired to attend three quar-ters with the option of goingto school all year. Teacherswill also have the option of

working the full year, at addi-

tional salary, or working thetraditional nine-month schoolyear.

Officials hope the plan willhelp reduce the number ofdropouts, enable schools to

handle larger enrollments, andsave the cost of constructingnew buildings. The schoolboard has applied for Federalfunds to finance planning ofthe transition and the availabi-lity of the money will deter-

mine when the system goes in-to effect. !

.

Pretty Feet = Pretty You#

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Whether you're an Arabian princess or an American house-wife, pretty feet are an important part of your fashion picturethis summer. Feet for 1970 should not merely be shod; theyshould be decorated, pampered, liberated.

How can you achieve summer foot beauty? The answer issandals. Sandals with style! Sandals with flair! Sandals withvariety! Sandals with freedom! Sandals that look like jewelson your feet!

Sandals are fun as well as fashionable. Coast-to-coast, womenof all ages are wearing them in the sand, in the supermarket,in the city, in the country. There is a sandal for everyone: scuffs,thongs, nearly-nude play shoes, toe-in city shoes, flats, heels,strips, straps, bright colors, antiqued dark colors.

But fashion isn't the only consideration in buying sandals.Comfort should be considered too. The manufacturer of RedBall Fun Fashions suggests .several ways you can choose the rightsandal for your foot and avoid aching arches and swollen feet.

For instance, check more than size and color when you shop.Try on the sandals. Because of open toes, straps and boxy heels,you may find that your usual size no longer fits your foot.

Check the shape of the sandals too. There's more to fit thanthe right length and width of a shoe. The "lasts"' or forms overwhich the sandals are made should also be designed for ampledepth and for the proper distribution of weight between the balland heel of your foot.

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