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PAGE SIX THE NEWBEJfEY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA ■»-— 4 THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1961 CROSSWORD PUZZLE PHZZLli N*. <MS # 1 5 9 14 15 16 17 )8 19 20 22 24 25 27 29 34 35 37 41 43 45 40 48 50 51 53 55 ACROSS Head cover ing i pi.) N. rrow ap. rture Theater passageway Ardor Biblical weed Attempted Genus of I'rofes Solar disk A slight coloring Abbreviated bathing suit Rail General (abbr.) Disembark Chair (pi.) Plot -■r-jnoun Hail Trojan hero Angled for certain fish To harvest Struggles for breath Dodecanese island Toward the tenter Collet t ^ S O .upy a S^* e t Ft male ruff Ordm nces More thinly seutte red 59 Rotate 60 Man’s name 61 Genus of dolphinlike cetaceans 63 Cloister 67 Lowest point 69 Succulent plant 71 — Speaker, famous outfielder 72 Cubic meter 73 Close by 74 Heraldry: grafted T5 Chariot of ancient Briton 76 Makes lace edging 77 Fortune teller DOWN Medicinal' plant Turkish regiment Armoured vehicle Slow moving creatures Discoloring 6 Buddhist pillar Native metal (pi.) Singing voice 9 Member of a diplomatic staff 10 Son of Bela (Bib.) 11 To scorch 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 12 Light and fine, as a line 13< Paradise (pi.) 21 Back of neck 23 The Varangians 26 Fear 28 Part of boat 29 Worry 30 Part of stove 31 Tidy 32 Alleviates 36 Gaiters 38 For fear that 39 Great Lake 40 Periods 42 Young salmon 44 Turtle (pi.) 47 Wished for 49 Move 52 Even (poet.) 54 Joins 55 Intellif ence 56 Map o. town site (pi.) 57 Military assistants 58 Laughing 62 Appellation of Athena 64 Trieste wine measure (pi.) 65 Ceremony 66 River of Europe 68 Anger 70 Cereal grain 1 T E R M A L E P L A T S E N A E |G u 0 V A L B S El L UiS T_ lL Answer to Puzzle No. 614 HANGING ON . . , architecture can admire construction of Nevada’s tallest building in the background, or Kathy Bolling, who is hanging on to a pole we cannot see. CWIDREN* MATCHED TROUBLE/ Reef matches out of the reach g OF Y0UN6STERS - ALWASSf Going Sfesdy With Cir! Who Can't Date THE WEEK’S LETTER: “I am a boy of 14. I’m going steady with a girl of 13. I like her a lot and she likes me also, but she has a stepfather that is very strict. He does not even know that we’re going steady. If he did, hard telling what he would do to her. Anyway, he won’t let her go on dates or go to any parties. We are not able to see each other ex cept in school, so it’s no fun to go steady with a girl you can’t ever see. I want a girl that can go on dates with her parent's per mission. What should I do?” OUR ANSWER: Get yourself apother girl to take to parties and dates; keep your school friend ship with the girl who can’t go to such parties. This might sound like advice to stop going steady— and maybe it is. It is the opinion of this writer that you cannot definitely set an age when it is right to start going steady,, but nonetheless the boy and girl who start going steady too early miss out on much of the real fun there should be in grov. 'ng up. They don’t make as many new friends as do the boys and girls who “cir culate.” They get to the point where they would rather “just be together” doing nothing, than going out with the crowd. It seems like more fun, but it isn’t. “Steadies” just don’t realize how much fun the others are having. When a hoy knows that a qirl’s 'parents refuse to let her date 01 go to parties, he is wise to accept this situation. Some boys seem to think it “wrong’ 1 for parents to do this, and, sometimes innocent ly, they urge the girl to ignore her parents wishes and go to parties or other social affairs in the hope that the parents won’t learn about it. Invariably, this is bound to lead to trouble. Parents, after all, are the final authority. It does not matter that one or the other is a step-parent. They are concerned, with few exceptions, with what is best for their children. They may not al ways be 100% right, but they believe they are, and teenagers should give them credit for this. To sum up the problem, we don’t think that this week’s letter writer should stop being school friends with this girl because she cannot date. Neither do we think he should stop going to parties himself and be content to go “steady” with the girl at school. When her parents believe that she is old enough, she will be able to go to parties. Waiting for that time is just a part of growing into adulthood. If yon have a teenage problem yon want to discuss, or an observation to make, address your letter to FOR AND ABOUT TEENAGERS, NATION AL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER SERV ICE. FRANKFORT. KY. $7,0004)0 May Be YOURS WATCH YOUR $1.00 BILLS FOR ANY $1 BILL YOU RECEIVE . . .fro mthe sponsors ... may be a winner! Listen to Announcements every hour on , . . As part of this feature program, hund reds of $1 bills have been put into circu lation . . . and numbers taken from these $1 bills are being announced daily on WKDK! There’s a different number ev ery hour . . . and every one is worth a big cash prize. So keep your eyes pealed for WKDK Lucky Bucks . . . keep list ening for the serial numbers of Lucky Bucks on WKDK. WKDK 1240 ON YOUR DIAL SPRING INTO ACTION . . . Model Jan Peters perches on top a giant spring to boost the Production Engineering Show at Navy Pier, Chicago. / i OLD TOP-IC . . . “Customer” is being fitted at the Interna tional Coiffure Festival in Paris to achieve a hairdo typi cal of the kind worn in the Mid dle Ages, for the festival’s “historical” exhibit. CUBBY HOLD . . . Polar bear cubs try to put on a real bear hug but they’re not quite old enough. Sally and Sam are gifts from Russia to the London Zoo. Drexs Patftrn No. 1384 — Flattory for matrons—A softonod vsrsion of tbs always- popular classic in sizos that spoil flattory for tho slightly maturo figure. No. 1384 with PHOTO-GUIDE is in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Bust 36 to 50. Size 38 bust. 5 r /« yards of 35-inch. Needlework Patten No* 356-N—Six cute designs of a kitten's romance that will add color and charm to a set of kitchen towels! No. 356-N has hot-iron transfer for 6 designs/ color chart/ stitch illustrations. Send 35c for each drees paHen, 25c for each needlework patten (add 10c for each pattern for first doss mailing) to AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Dept. ~NWN$," 367 West Adams Street, Chicago 6, ML AMERICANA College Notebook Duquerne University V, ■ * -' ; mm Administration Building, Dnq TJniversity Duqueene University, located on the Bluff overlooking Pittsburgh’s “Golden Triangle,” was founded in 1878 by priests of the Holy Ghost Congregation. A co-educational institution of higher learning, Duquesne was originally known as Pittsburgh College of the Holy Ghost. Its name was changed to Duquesne University in 1911 when thd school received a university charter. Some 5,412 students are enrolled in the University’s eight schools. The College of Arts and Sciences forms the core of the University, which also includes the Schools of Business Administration, Music, Education, Nursing and Phar macy, in addition to the School of Law and the Graduate School. Soon to be constructed, a 10-story men’s dormitory will help meet a steadily increasing demand for campus accommodations. With a faculty of 325 members, Duquesne is accredited by the State Council on Education of the Pennsylvania Department of Pub lic Instruction, and by the Mid dle States Association of Colleges . and Secondary Schools. Both Army and Air Force R.O.T.C. programs are available for male students and Duquesne maintains its own Placement Service which helps graduates to obtain suitable employment when their educational courses are completed. Duquesne’s Debate team is na tionally recognized as also is the basketball Dukes, consistently ranked among the nation’s top teams, and winner of the National Invitational Tournament cham pionship in 1955. Degrees available at Duquesnl include, on the undergraduate level, the Bachelor of Arts, Bach elor cf Science, Bachelor of Edu cation, and Bachelor of Music. Graduatt' degrees are the Bache lor of Law, Master of Arts, and Master of Science. Doctorate pro grams are offered in Chemistry. English, and Philosophy. , Duquesne University graduates have achieved prominence in many fields. SPIRAL ROADWAY . . . Novel parking ramp goes ’round and ’round all the way to the top of a department store in Wuppertal, Germany, for customer parking. >i : v. >. f.■ ■ f?rkg ■ 1 v.‘3 >>k^ NOSE COUNT . . . Nose cones for IM-99 Bomars missiles are checked on the assembly line at Boeing’s Missile Production Cen ter In Seattle. They are capable of detecting and destroying enemy bombers. I CANT CONTINUE WATCHING TELEVISION A.NP HAVING DATES-. -AND STILL KEEP UP MV SCHOOL WORK “I’d say her chances are less than 10,000 to one!” sip in •V.-Vz’.-..' m *• .jr. iii SI 1 81$ m iMILTOWN ELEMeMTAeV SO OOU - •% . . Nearly four hundred kids, each with -thirty cents lunch money! . . . . Man, that’s a pretty big haul!” DRIVERS... HAVE YOUR NEW DRIVER’S LICENSE LAMINATED IN CLEAR PLASTIC Plastic lamination assures you of protection for your license which must last four years, and keeps it neat and attractive. Two to three day service. THE SUN OFFICE Telephone No. I CAROLINA METAL WORKS Sheet Metal - Heating - Air Conditioning COLLEGE ST. EXTN. TEL. 115 A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President A Treasurer.