The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 23, 1961, Image 3
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1961
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE THREE
AUGUSTA • GEORGIA
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1961
7:30 AM—Church In Th« Home
8:00 AM—Walley Fowler Show
8:00 AM—Parade of Quartets
12:00 N —Lewis Family
1:00 PM—Sports Clubhouse
1:1S PM—House Hunters
1:30 PM—Curtis Baptist Church
2:00 PM—Pro Football
5:00 PM—Matties Funday Funnies
5:30 PM—Amos 'n Andy
8:00 PM—Leave It To Beaver
6:30 PM—Blue Angels
7:00 PM—Ernie Kovacs Special
7:30 PM—Walt Disney
8:30 PM—Lawman
8:00 PM—Bonanza
10:00 PM—Dr. Kildare
11:00 PM—Best of Post
11:30 PM—Assignment Underwater
^tOn ** —«*— O"
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
6:30 AM—Continental Classro im
7:00 AM—Today
7:25 AM—Local News
7:30 AM—Today
8:25 AM—Local News
8:30 AM—Trdsy
8:15 AM—The Debbie Drake Show
8:30 AM—Love That Bob
10:00 AM—Say When
10:30 AM—Play Your Hunch
11:00 AM—Price Is Right
11:30 AM—Concentration
12:00 N —Truth or Consequences
12:30 PM—It Could Be You
12:55 PM—NBC News
1:00 PM—Day In Court
1:25 PM—Midday Report
1:30 PM—Make A Face
2:00 PM—Number Please
2:30 PM—Loretta Young Show
8:00 PM—Queen For A Day
8:30 PM—Who Do You Trust
4:00 PM—American Bandstand
4:30 PM—Here's Hollywood
4:55 PM—NBC Afternoon Report
5:00 PM—Santa Claus
5:80 PM—Amos 'n
11:00 PM—N’ws
11:'”-' -"'p-t'-cr
n-n r -'s
nris r>M—Tark P=*r
1 : r 0 AM—Sign Off
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1961
I
6:00 PM—Rip Cord
6:30 PM—’’'eatherman
6:35 PM—Evening Ed'lion
6:45 PM—NBC News
Huntley-Brinkley Report
7:00 PM—Top Cat |
7:30 PM—The Golden Years
9:30 P'*''*'—D^r.-^rous Robin
9:00 PM—We The People
10:00 PM—The World of Billy Graham
11:00 PM—News
11:05 PM—Weather
11:10 PM—Soo-ts Life
11:15 PM—Jack Paar
1:00 AM—O'f
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1961
9:30 AM—Today
6:00 PM—Huckleberry Hound
6:30 PM—Weatherman
6:35 PM—Evening Edition
6:45 PM—NBC News—
Huntley-Brinkley Report
7:00 PM—Whirleybirds
7:30 PM—My Thr^e Sons
8:00 PM—Donna R«»ed Show
8:30 PM—Real McCoys
9:00 PM—Shannon
9:30 PM—Victoria Regina
11:00 PM—News
11:05 PM—Weather
11:10 PM—Rports Life
11:15 PM—Jack Paar Show
1.00 AM—Sion Off
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1. 1961
,6:00 PM—Alvin and the Chipmunks
6:30 PM—Weatherman
6:35 PM—Evening Edition
6:45 PM—NBC News—
Hunfley-Brinkley Report
7:00 PM—National Velvet
7:30 PM—Sea Hunt
8:00 PM—Mrs. G. Goes to College
8:30 PM—Alfred Hitchcock
9:00 PM—77 Sunset Strip
10:00 PM—Target Corrupters
11:00 PM—News
11:05 PM—Weather
11:10 PM—Snorts Life
11:15 PM—Jack Paar
1:00 AM—Sign Off
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1961
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1961
5:00 PM—Royal Canadian Mounted
Police
6:30 PM—Weatherman
6:35 PM—Evening Edition
6:45 PM—NBC News—
Huntley-Brinkley Report
7:00 PM—The Everglades
7:30 PM—Cheyenne
0:30 PM—Price Is Right
0:00 PM—87th Precinct
10:00 PM—Thriller
11:00 PM—News
11:05 PM—Weather
11:10 PM—Sports Life
11:15 PM—Jack Paar
1:00 AM—Sign Off
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1961
.8:00 PM—Le Fevres
6:30 PM—Weatherman
6:35 PM—Evening Edition
6:45 PM—NBC News—
Huntley-Brinkley Report
7:00 PM—Car 54, Where Are You?
7:30 PM—Hospital "Hope"
8:30 PM—Rifleman
9:00 PM—Dick Powell Show
10:00 FM—Cain's Hundred
7:00 AM—The Story
7:30 AM—Farm & Home Hour
8:00 AM—Sheriff John Presents
Tarzan
9:30 AM—Pip The Piper
10:00 AM—Shari Lewis
10:30 AM—King Leonardo and His
Short Subject
11:00 AM—Fury
11:30 AM—Make Room For Daddy
12:00 N —Top Ten Dance Party
1:00 PM—NCAA Football
5:00 PM—All Star Golf
6:00 PM—NBC Saturday News
6:15 PM—Saturday Edition
6:30 PM—Alvin and the Chipmunks
7:00 PM—Hazel
7:30 PM—Wells Fargo
8:30 PM—Tall Man
9:00 PM—Lawrence Welk
10:00 PM—Detectives
11:00 PM—Outlaws
12:00 M —Sign Off
Schedule Subject to Last Minute
Changes and Corrections.
THE HANDY FAMILY
BY LLOYD BIRMINGHAM
X /V\ &CXN& TO MAKE
SOME TOOL HAN&ERS
FROM THESE COAT,
JUNIOR MAPE TOOL HANGERS
BV CUTTIN& THE COAT ^AN^ERS
IN LENGTHS AND BENDING THEM
INTO THESE
SHAPES...
FOR
WRENCHES! I
; PCrvERS, ; i
l FILES. ETC., {
j i
TANKS A LOT . . . Workmen carefully elevate 17-ton aluminum
sphere to be used for storing 90,000 gallons of liquid hydrogen
rocket fuel at Douglas Aircraft, Sacramento, Calif.
AMERICANA College Notebook
The University of Buffalo
“1 thought the joke you just told was stale, poo.iy told and in bad
taste—and I’ve found a better paying job.”
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
PUZZLE NO. 682
ACROSS
1 Slope
0 Separated
11 Core for
fashioning
metal objects
14 Diner
15 More wan
16 Arabic
consonant
17 Child’s marble
18 Worthless
matter
(slang)
19 High card
20 Pouch
22 River of
England
S3 Former
Russian ruler
24 Goddess (L.)
27 Beetle
29 American
Indians
31 Bettered
34 Once around
track
35 Climbing plant
36 French painter
38 U.S. sailor
slang
41 Anglo-Saxon
slave
42 Yearned
43 Sandarac tree
44 As it stands
(mus.)
45 Bird ipl.)
46 Lasso
47 Twitching
48 Was left alone
and destitute
50 Makes series of
notches in
54 Juice of plant
55 Abstract being
56 College officim
57 American
Indian
59 Wire measure
61 Make mistake
62 Negotiate
64 Kind of dye
63 Hall
69 Pass a rope
through
70 Path
71 French plural
article
72 Summed up
73 Pro golfer
DOWN
1 Body of water
2 Fall behind
3 Indonesian of
Mindanao
4 Seines
5 Foot lever
which moves
machine
6 Suitable
7 Chum (slang)
8 Foreigner
9 Revoked
10 Cornish prefix:
town
11 Floating in the
water
12 Island S.E.
China
13 Widemouthed
jugs
21 Pass between
mountain peaks
23 Faucet
24 Removes
25 To live
26 West Indian
tree
28 Forgive
30 Large tub
32 Compass point
33 Natives of
Denmark
37 Bird’s home
(pi.)
38 Class
39 Of a cereal
grain
40 Kind of nail
tpl.)
42 Depicted
43 Scotch for own
45 Relatives
46 Kind of sword
(pl.)
47 A number
49 Male sheep
50 Utopian
51 Audacity
52 Challenges
53 Spirited horse
58 Overhanging
roof edge
60 Bird
62 Malay pewter
coin
63 Spread for
drying
65 Bring legal
action
66 City of
Paraguay
67 Man’s
nickname
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Answer to puzzle No. 661
S N
SNIPE
The University of Buffalo, one of the country’s leading urban in
stitutions dedicated to leadership and contributions through research,
education and public service, is located on a 178-acre campus in the
northern part of Buffalo, N.Y.
Founded as a medical school in 1846, the University throughout its
history has been a privately-supported institution, while fulfilling in
recent years the role of a major State university in Western New York.
As Buffalo has become the na
tion’s fourteenth largest metro
politan .area with a population of
1,300,000, the University has kept
pace in becoming the largest edu
cational institution in Western
New York, with fourteen Divi
sions, an enrollment of 12,500 and
a physical plant of over 30 build
ings valued at $36-million.
The University of Buffalo had
an auspicious beginning, enjoying
the services of Millard Fillmore
as its first Chancellor while he
concurrently served as the na
tion’s thirteenth President. UB be
came unified on one campus under
the direction of Chancellor Samuel
P. Capen, and under its present
Chancellor, Dr. Clifford C. Furnas,
a noted engineer, researcher and
one-time Assistant Secretary of
Defense, it has enjoyed its period
of greatest growth.
The Divisions of the University,
with their date of founding, in
clude the School of Medicine
(1C46), School of Pharmacy (1886),
School of Law (1887), School of
Dentistry (1892), College of Arts
and Sciences (1913), Summer Ses
sion (1915), Millard Fillmore Col
lege (evening division) (1923),
School of Business Administration
(1927), School of Education (1931),
School of Social Work (1936),
Graduate School of Arts and Sci
ences (1939), School of Nursing
(1940), School of Engineering
(1946), and University College
(first two years) (1958).
In the last decade significant
physical expansion has included
an $8,000,000 Health Sciences com
plex, with integrated facilities for
the School of Medicine, School of
Dentistry, Medical Research,
School of Pharmacy, School of
Nursing and the Department of
Biology; six residence halls, in
cluding the 11-story Tower Resi
dence Hall for Men and the 10-
story Ella Conger Goodyear Resi
dence Hall for Women; the
$2,000,000 Acheson Hall for Chem
istry; a new music building, and
the $2,200,000 Western New York
Nuclear Research Center, Inc.
Twenty-six degrees are granted
by the various divisions of the
University.
From An Old Timer, Louisville,
Ky.: I remember my childhood
days in South Mississippi, and*
how little it took to keep boys
occupied and off the streets.
In the Spring, one didn’t have
to go far to find a game of mar
bles. When this grew tiring, it
was time to take off for the little
creek that coursed its way
through the rolling fields. Catch
ing crayfish and frogs was a
most pleasant way to spend an
hour or two and it made a fellow
really appreciate a refreshing
swim • y the time he reached the
“big hole" where the railroad
trestle spanned the creek.
There were plenty of games to
be played—-cowboys and Indians,
pirates, soldiers, and so on.
There was time, too, for a fel
low to be alone. He could take his
trusty air rifle and walk through
the nearby woods, searching for
bears and bobcats and alligators.
Strangely, though, these fearsome
creatures always seemed to know
enough to stay out of sight.
Sure, there was baseball to be
played then. But it wasn’t on a
graded field or in fancy uniforms.
Somebody said, “Hey, Joe, let’s
get up a game,” and everybody
came running. Someone brought
a bat and a ball and those lucky
enough to have gloves brought
them along. Empty sacks or
pieces of board were u^ed tc
I mark the bases in a cornfield and
the game was on!
There were jobs to be done, too,
like bringing in wood for the
cook atove, keeping shrubbery
trimmed, mowing grass, and help
ing in the family garden.
Cars were only for the rich.
The most exciting time of the
year was when the circus came
to town—or when a picnic was
held on the church grounds.
(Send contributions to this column
to The Old Timer, Community Press
Service, rtox .»!>. Franktort. tventucky.)
CIVIL DEFENSE siren at Win
ston-Salem, N. C., is Installed by
a fire department electrician on
the Wake Forest College campus
with the assistance and technical
advice of Edmund P. Sullivan
(on ladder), new city-county
deputy CD director. Sullivan’s
salary is paid 50-50 by Federal
and local governments as part
of a nation-wide program to
strengthen State and local civil
defense units. iocdm Photo)
Dress Pattern No. 3234—Double In
demnity—This reversible sheath gives
you two dresses in one; for travel it's
the perfect capsule wardrobe. No. 3234
comes in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size
14 takes 2 J /j yards of 35-inch fabric for
each side.
Needlework Pattern No. 716. No. 716
provides cutting pattern and hot iron
transfers to make romper for a little tot
of 1-2 years. Complete easy-to-follow
instructions will enable you to complete
the garment in short order.
Send 35c for each dress pattern, 25c
for each needlework pattern (add JQc
for each pattern for first class mailing)
to AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Box 149C.
New York 1, New York.
Once upon a time, there was a
mouse called Funnyfoot. He was
given that name because his
hind legs dragged. He had
muscular dystrophy. Now
Funnyfoot and his brothers and
sisters are helping scientists find
the cure for this crippling
sickness. Won’t you help, too?
You can do so by contributing
what you can to the
MARCH FOR
MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY
MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY
ASSOCIATIONS OF AMERICA, Inc.
1790 Broadway, N. Y. 19. N. Y.
1
-USUIS’
0
A
««I»d gay he was rather brave about it, wouldn’t you, doctor?
COMMUNICATIONS CENTER at
N. C., combines a round-the-clock civil
nerve center with a unified radio service for local
police, fire and sheriff’s departments. Used for
this dual purpose, the equipment is kept in top-
notch condition at aD times to meet emergencies.
At the radio is Waldo J. Stroud, one of three oper
ators hired by the local CD unit under a program
in which Federal and local governments share the
oesta of new etvfi defense employee. Raymond H.
Northcutt (right), Wadesboro-Anson County CD
director, explains his radio setup to Herman J.
Sisk, Area E director for the North Carolina Civil
Defense Agency and one of five area directors
hired under the same cost-sharing law to help
build up CD at the local lew* .or-nw Photo'
Santa says.. .
“ITS NICE TO KNOW THAT
YOUR “SANTA CLAUS" CAN
BE ALL PAID FOR . . .
Thanks to a —
Christinas Club Check
FROM THE
Newberry County
Bank
Members of our 1961 Christmas Club who have received
their checks will be able to do their Christmas shopping* with
out the worry of financial pressure. If you did not belong to our
Christmas Club this year . . .
Look ahead NOW to Christmas, 1962! Plan to make it even more
prosperous and merry next year!!
Join our 1962 Christmas Club which is open now. Save 50c,
$1.00, $2.00, $5.00 or $10.00 per week.
The Newberry County Bank not only offers this special savings pro
gram, but also offers complete banking Facilities — and you will find
this friendly bank helpful at all seasons of the year.
Newberry County Bank
Newberry, South Carolina
Joanna, South Carolina