2B -TOE CABOLTWA TOOK SATURDAY. JAN. 16, 1871 Orders Appointment of Asst. for Minority Affairs WASHINGTON, D. C. HM Ctataf of Naval Opera tions, Admiral B. R. Zum walt, Jr., ordered all com manding offlMt* to appoint a special assistant for minority tffaks teat weak. In a massage aant to all Navy fleet and above person nel, Admiral Zumwalt, the Navy's top officer, said that "This officer or petty officer should have direct access to tbe commanding officer and will be consulted on all matters Involving minority ▼ by Sieve Sherlock *1 V HOW TO TAKE A LESSON Professional ski instruction is as essential to your ski safety and your on-the-slope enjoyment as your skis Most areas maintain a pro fessional ski school offering a variety of classes and individual instruction to skiers ranging from beginner to expert. Infor mation on which classes are available, when and where they meet and their costs is avail ble at the ski school desk. If you're planning to take a les son, go there first and the ski school director will assign you to the class best suited for your ability. Before your lesson, be sure all equipment is working well especially your release bindings If they need adjustment, have the ski shop fix them Some bindings, like the Marker heel toe combinations are designed for the skier to make his own adjustments while he's on the hill Once you 're in class, expect to get a good lesson. Don't hesi tate to ask questions and don't be afraid to try anythii.g your instructor shows you. If you feel that your class is too slow or too advanced for your ability, inform the instruc tor so a change can be made. Remember, you're spending your money therefore spend it wisely. Some classes, such as those at the beginner levels, move more slowly than those for in termediate or advanced skiers. For a slow-moving class, dress warmly, the slow-paced hour or two on the slopes can chill even the coldest-blooded sportsmen H f I H M I HHHHHHiHR ' I yj ill 9 I s H sbH a 1 ■ 9ra^HH > I I I ■1 I E 11 1 H H 1 11 fill Werwant clean air, too. personnel." Tbe DMMfei, known m "Z NAVOP 66," it tbe latest In a series of mwsaagas from tbe 50-year old CNO to all Navy personnel and responds to Navy Secretary John H. Chafee's recent directive ordering a renewed effort for tbe Navy in making equal opportunity- a reality. Since July this year, when Admiral Zumwalt became the youngest Navy Admiral to be come Chief of Naval Opera tions, his personal orders. Following your lesson, prac tice what you have learned. The purpose of the lesson is to pro vide you with the elements of technique and style for good skiing. How well you are able to use those elements will be determined by how much you practice. If you have difficulty learn ing, it may be caused by your equipment. Ski construction thas a great effect on your skiing performance and learning ability. Your ski shop or instructor can help you evaluate your ability and Sherlock then recommend a suitable ski. Some skis, such as those in the Fischer line, come in a complete range of materials and styles for all levels from beginner to expert and professional. The right boots help im measurably in your ability to learn. IdeaWy, your boots will provide you with the import ant combination of comfort and support, while relaying bodily movements to your skis. Most boots today feature a plastic construction like the Coverite used in the Humanic line. In addition to the sup port it offers, plastic is more easily maintained than the lea ther used in boots years ago. Learning to ski is an excit ing, fun-filled experience. Each level of learning has its own slopes, and trails, its own equip ment and its own ski school classes. But each level of learning to ski also has one thing in common with all ski ing and that's fun! known throughout tbe Navy as "Z-Grams," have es tablished new leave . pMWw for fleet personnel, new uni form regulations, and ex panded benefits for service personnel and their depend ents. In this latest maasage, titled "Equal Opportunity in tbe Navy," Admiral Sumwalt said: / "Last month, Secretary Chafee and I, along with other senior officials of .the Navy Department, met on one oc casion with representative black Navy officers and their wives and later with a repre sentative group of black en listed men and their wives. "Prior to these meetings, I was convinced that, compared with the civilian community, we had relatively few racial problems in the Navy. How ever, after exploring the matter in some depth with these two groups, I have dis covered that I was wrong - we do have problems, and it is my intention and that of Secretary Chafee to take prompt steps toward their solution. "What struck me more than anything else was the depth of feeling of our black personnel that there is signi ficant discrimination in the Navy. Prkrt to these meetings, I sincerely believed that I was philosophically prepared to understand the problems of our black Naveymen and their families, and until we dis cussed them at length, 1 did not realize the extent and deep significance of many of these matters. "There are two keys to the problem. First, we must open up new avenues of communi cation with not only our black personnel, but also with ail minority groups in the Navy so that we may learn what and where the areas of A Lesson In Volunteer Leadership IVL . y, MBWrafr MM M } >mk HI wm: OR. WALTER WASHINGTON, President of Alcorn A & M. Lorman, Miss., and March of Dimes Volunteer Leader. Dr. Walter Washington, pres ident of Alcorn A & M, Lor man, Miss., has been a staunch energetic March of Dimes vol unteer leader for more than a quarter of a century. His community service has spanned a generation that brought victory over epidemic polio and the beginning of progress against birth defects. Like most young people in 1944, Dr. Washington had seen the crippling force of polio. In those days, he recalls, the dis ease was a menace to every community in America. To help overcome this threat, he orga nized a student drive at Parris High School in Hazlehurst, Miss., to support research and treatment conducted by the March of Dimes. Man of Action Throughout his college ca reer, he continued to give time and service although he was carrying the demanding sched ule of a sociology major with a minor in economics. After graduation he embarked upon a teaching career and assumed greater positions of chapter volunteer leadership. Presently, he is state chair man of the Steering Commit tee, a post he has held for some five years. Mississippi chapters have been extremely active ini public health education aimed at prenatal care and rubella immunization. They also help support a Birth Defects Center at the University of Mississippi friction are.-Second, all of us in the Navy must develop a far greater sensitivity to the problems of all our minority groups so that we may more effectively go about solving them. Our meetings hare in Washington were a beginning, but 11® more than that. Much remains to be done. "For example, I am parti- Medical Center in Jackson. He has stimulated widespread interest in March of Dimes pro grams among young people in high schools and colleges. While he was president of Uti ca Junior College, he worked closely on projects with stu dents, including record-break ing fund-raising appeals. Dr. Washington attributes much of the success of these programs to Mettezzee Harris, then Jeanes Supervisor of Hinds County Schools, chairman then of the March of Dimes Hinds County Chapter. The Southern educator has varying reasons for his life long commitment to the pub lic health field. Grows On You "Here is an opportunity to extend yourself to a group of people who really need help," he explains. "Birth defects strike some quarter of a mil lion newborn babies every year in the United States. Partici pation in activities aimed at prevention and treatment of congenital disease has a ten dency to grow on you. "At the end of each cam paign, there is always the temptation to say, that's it, I've had my last one," he adds laughingly. "But I invariably find myself back at work." Dr. Washington also has kind words for the volunteers he has met over the years. They are service-oriented men and women who find fulfillment in helping others. cularly distressed by the num erous examples of discrimina tion black Navy families ftUT experience in attempting to locate housing for their fami lies. This situation and others like it are indicative in some cases of less than full team work being brought to bear by the whole Navy team on behalf of some of our mem HI ml n ■ni mimMmM ■ ■■ ? Kkl mn||^Hn ■I! H HHraiHHHI H 9 1 1 Ik IB t: -;- -H : r ?, %|f MMMHWBH^^^B Look what we're doing about it. > Each stack requires its own electrostotic precipitator such os these The massive precipitators at the left are in operation, removing 99 percent o( the flyash. The ones ot the right are under construction. Sigmas Elect Dr. Parlefle Moore President NEW YORK - The seven hundred and fifty Delegates who journeyed acroaa the United Statea and the Virgin Islands to meet in the Robert E. Lee Hotel of "Wlnatf' Salem, from December 26 through 20, 1970 for the 56th Anniversary Conclave of the Phi Beta Sigma Fratsnity, Incorporated, elected Dr. Par lett L. Moore, the recently re tired President of Coppins State College of Baltimore, its new National President. The Phi Beta Sigma Fra ternity, Incorporated is one of the eight nationally mem ber ed greek-lettered collegiate societies among Black college trained men. The organiza tion was founded at Howard University in 1914; his 40,000 members operating through 200 undergraduate and graduate chapters located on college campuses, cities and towns and urban centers in the United States, the Vir gin Islands, and the contin ent of America. The Fraternity sponsors national programs in Educa tion, Bigger and Better Busi ness, Political and Social Ac tions. The Delegates were in spired towards conducting four days of programming the future aims of the Fraternity after listening to an enthusi astic speech delivered by Bro ther Gilchrist Francis, a Civil Rights specialist in the Dept. of HEW, who keynoted the meeting by asking the as semblage to work for uplift ing and advancing progress among Black grassroots; a resounding "State of the Fra ternity" speech delivered by outgoing President Dr. Alvin J. McNeil who called for change and progress coming from within the ranks of the Fraternity itself; Brother bers and failure to use exist ing authority and directives to enforce their rights. In some places, housing personnel are tactily contributing to (In crimination in housing. We re getting rid of the smoke at every one of our coal-burning plants. It's going to take a couple of years, but then our stacks will be 99% clean. Our problem is flyash —those tiny, nontoxic particles that rise from our stacks when we burn coal. The giant flyash collectors we installed years ago can't remove enough of the flyash produced by today's low-quality coal. So now we're putting in new, highly effective systems—called "electrostatic precipitators" that remove 99% of the flyash. Marshall Ban, Manager of Corporate Personnel Develop ment of the R. «L Reynolds Industries, who, in speaking at the Undergraduate Lunch eon, asked undergraduate col lege men assembled to* be personally accountable for the future of the country and par ticularly how Black Ameri cans will participate in the health and well being of your community, your your nation; Brother Robert Decorating Tips A By Rhonda Racx Home Decor Director Hardwood Institute RING MARKS NO MARRIAGE TO FURNITURE DISASTER Most people I know tend to treat their wood furniture with kid glove care. Naturally, I can't say that I blame them. After all, they've made a big investment in their furniture and they want it to last as long as possible. And the same goes for people with children. So many couples delay in buying good furniture until their offspring grow old enough to treat their interior surroundings with some degree of respect. I suppose they feel that childish energy mixes with fine furniture like oil does with water. Certainly both attitudes are, to a large degree, quite valid. But what most people fail to realize when they buy a piece of hardwood fur niture is that they are not only purchasing furniture with great style and beauty, but they've also invested in outstanding durability. \ Genuine hardwood furnP" ture, unlike cheaper imita tion wood or plastic sub stitutes, is virtually inde structible. Of course,- chop ping it to pieces with an axe, or using it for kindling wood won't help to preserve its life. But normal house hold abuse is never really a problem. Periodic waxing, say two or three times a year, and daily dusting is all the upkeep a piece of hardwood furniture ever needs. As we all know, even with the most tender loving care, sometimes accidents will occur. But when they do, there's really no cause for panic. Here hardwood furni ture has the advantage over other types of materials. Minor scrapes, stains and bruises can always be re paired. In fact, you can make repairs yourself, right in your living room. For example, one of the most common household acci dents to befall wood pieces is the tell-tale white ring blemish which often results from leaving a wet glass or You can see the result in the un retouched photo of an operating stack (above, right). The precipitators are huge, and very complicated. They have to be custom-engineered, built and installed. When the job is finish ed in 1973, we will have spent $43 million to practically elimi nate flyash from the air. It's a big job. But it needs to be done to make our area a better place to live. Duke Power Making life a little better Booker, a member of the Tennessee State Legislature who said, "most youth, the unsilent generation are honest and sincere in calling atten tion to what they call an un desirable system flT' and State Representative Brother Benja min D. Brown, of the Georgia Assembly, who said he felt Extremism is creeping into the Nixon-Agnew administra tion. vase on a wood surface for too long. I asked experts at Guardsman Chemical Coat ings just what to do in that eventuality. Here's what they told me, and I'm happy to pass this information a long to you: • Dampen a cloth pad with ethyl alcohol until the pad Hsi moist, but not wet. the pad over the using quick back - and - forth strokes, working in the same direc tion as the grain of the wood. Keep the pad moving over the entire area lieing repaired, neyer allowing your pad to stop too long on the surface since \it might damage the furniture finish. • The application of al cohol will undoubtedly leave a shiny spot. This ; sheen can be uniformed j quite simply by rubbing the area with an extra-fine grade of steel wool, working in the direction of the wood grain. • Wax the entire piece of furniture and you'll be sur prised to see how the ring blemish completely dis appears! *•••* Any questions on wood? Write to Rhonda Racz, Hard wood Institute, Suite 1422, 551 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017.