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GHLij^.ouu; ><J , ijo?iC JBRAtiYf ^.n 2HHBF A ?ppjv | C-reepnboro Public ~ ^Ih t future fl^Dok Keep Up With The Times ? Read The Future Outlook! VOL. 26, NO. 52 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1967 PRICE 10 CENTS Funeral Services' Held For Mrs. Frances J. Jones Mrs. Frances J. Jones of Ja maica, Long Island, New York and formerly of 518 Muir's Chapel Road, died Sunday mor ning, October 15th in a New York hospital. Funeral services will be held Sunday, October 22nd, at 2:00 p.m. at Persimmons Grove A. M. E. Church. Rev. M. L. John son, pastor, will officiate. She is survived by: her hus band, Mr. Andrew Jones of the home; two daughters, Miss An drea Jones and Miss Etelle Jones both of Los Angeles, Calif.; two sons, Ricky and Michael Jones, both of the home; her mother. Mrs. Viola M. Jones of Greens boro; two brothers, Paul Jones, jr. of Greensboro and Carl Jones ofNewark, N. J.; three sisters. Mrs. Eertha Miller of Greens boro, Mrs. Lois Johnson and Mrs. Alice Rogers, both of New ark, N. J.; her maternal grand father, Mr. George H. Morehead of Greensboro; a host of other relatives and friends. ?1W1 ? MRS. FRANCES J. JONES The family will meet their friends at Hargett's Memorial Chapel Saturday night from 7 to 9. HARGETT FUNERAL SER VICE IN CHARGE OF ALL ARRANGEMENTS. DEATHS AND FUNERALS DR. GIBBS WIFE DIES AT HOME | Mrs. Marece Jones Gibbs, 1000 Robs Avenue, wife of Dr. W*r moth T. Gibbs, president emeri ' tus of A&T State University, died Friday at her home. Fune ral service was held Monday, October lffth, 4:00 p.m. at the Church of The Redeemer. Rev. C. O. Morales, priest in charge officiated. Burial followed in Piedmont Memorial Park. A resident of Greensboro since 1926 when her husband came to teach at A&T, Mrs. Gibbs was a native of Boston, Mass. She was a graduate of Cambridge Latin School. Mrs. Gibbs was a member of the Church of The Redeemer and the Ladies' Faculty Club of A&T. Besides her husband, she is survived by two sons, Warmoth T. Gibbs, Jr., an assistant pro fessor of English at A&T, and Dr. Chandler Gibbs, physician in Poughkeepsie, N. Y-; a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth G. Moore, of Detroit, Michigan; a brother, Alexander Jones of New York City; a sister, Mrs. Francis Perkins of Boston. BROWN'S FUNERAL DI RECTORS IN CHARGE OF ARRANGEMENTS. MRS. PERRINNA TOLBERT Mrs. Perrinna Tolbert of 501 S. Booker Street died at L. Richardson Memorial Hospital Wednesday, October 11th fol lowing several months illness. - Funeral service was held Sun day, October 15th, 2:00 p. m., New Light Baptist Church. Rev S. G. Griffies, pastor, officiated. Burial followed in Piedmont Memorial Park. The body remained at Brown's Funeral Home until the hour of service. Survivors include several nieces and nephews. BROWN'S FUNERAL DI RECTORS IN CHARGE OF ARRANGEMENTS. MRS. RUBY LONG WILLIAMSON Mrs. Ruby L. Williamson, age 34, of 604 Warren Street died (Continued on Page 8) Maryland State Downs A&T 25 To 14 By Richard E. Moore Maryland State piled up 322 yards rushing and scored twice in each half to down fired-up A&T State University, 25-14 be fore 10,000 Aggie Homecoming fans here Saturday afternoon. The Hawks won the duel of powerful offenses on the strength of a 93-yard run by freshman quarterback Willie Belton and a 68-yard touchdown screen pass from senior quarter back Jim Duncan to fullback Roy Kirksey. The underdog Aggies, who have yet to win a game this season, matched the Hawks for more than three quarters, clos ing the gap to 19-14 midway the third period on a brilliant 79 yard touchdown run by the Ag gies' Willie Pearson. But Moses Benson's five-yard touchdown run for the Hawks, with 13:06 left in the game sewed up the win for Maryland State, now 2-1 in CIAA play. A&T is 0-3 for the season, the Aggies having tied Johnson C. Smith. Maryland State's first touch down came on a three-yard run by 'Duncan with 31 seconds left in the first period. The Hawks had nailed A&T's kicker Warren Frye on the Aggies' 6-yard line to set up the touchdown. Ervin Williams' kick was wide and the Hawks led, 6-0. The Hawks stretched their margin to 13-0 with 2:10 re maining in the half when Belton took a short pitchout from Dun ( Continued on Page S) Nutrition Professor Says Field Is Open For Men And Women DURHAM, N. C. ? United j States astronauts on recent long space flights ate meals which cost $634 each. Edward Ramsey, Jr., a new faculty member in North Caro lina College's Department of Home Economics, says that the specially packaged foods for the astronauts cost that much to de velop and prepare. The nutrition expert cited the figure to illus trate the new frontiers of food preparation and research. "The field is a rewarding one. in remuneration and in personal satisfaction," Ramsey said. Hi> said he is engaged in an effort to attract more students to the field. Although in most areas, nu trition is normally studied by women students, Ramsey does not feel there will be any diffi culty attracting men to the pro fession. For one thing, he said, there is the attraction of direct commissions in the armed ser vices. Pood scientists, certified by the American Dietetic Associa tion, can be commissioned di-. rectly as second lieutenants. Food in the armed services is no longer solely the province of the mess sergeants, he said. i The Air Force, particularly, has changed the image of the men responsible for food prepa ration. "The wash-outs used to be assigned to the quartermaster corps as cooks," he said. The space age has changed things. The new assistant professor's father is a nutrition expert at Tuskegee Institute. The son studied under his father as an. undergraduate and as a candi date for his Master of Science degree, so that nutrition has al ways been a man's field to him. Food science is full of oppor tunity, Ramsey said. He de scribed some of the recent dis coveries in the field. "Within the past three weeks, a process for making proteins from petroleum has been dis covered. A strain of bacteria has been bred which feeds on the petroleum and converts it into essential proteins," he said. "Until recently, wheat has lacked some of the essential pro teins. New strains have been de veloped which have all oi the necessary amino acids," Ramsey noted. Other recent developments in clude the development of the first synthetic carbohydrates and the discovery of a flavor agent which makes the various non animal proteins taste like meat, he said. "The soy-bean proteins can be spun out in fibers, just like textiles, to duplicate the texture of any meat. Then a wild yeast, which as a meaty flavor, can be added, and you have a product which looks, feels, and tastes like meat, with all the food values of meat, but really isn't meat at alii" Synthetic proteins and other foods are part of the United States' concerted effort to de velop answers to the world's pressing food problems, but other developments can change and are changing the eating habits of the nation's affluent citizens. "I predict that soon you will be able to go to the store and buy a six-pack of breakfast, lunch and dinner," Ramsey said. He said the new packaging processes have made food easier to store, prepare and served. . "I studied under a man at Michigan State University who helped to develop the processes by which such foods as beef (Continued on Page 5) NOT FUNNY? U.S. Senator Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) gets first-hand information from rat-bite victim, Joseph Winbush (left) during a recent rat inspection tour in Pittsburgh, Pa. Senator Scott has introduced a bill to provide $40 million for rat control. 9 St. Matthews Methodist Church - Fall Revival St. Matthews Meth odist Church, 609 South Ashe Street, will conduct its Annual Revival November 5-10. The Reverend Dr. Joseph E. Lowery, Minister of St. Paul Methodist Church. Rirmingham, Alabama will be the Evangelist. Dr. Lowery ia one of the well known ministers in Methodism and is one of the great preachers of this modern era. Aside from his outstanding work in the church, he is a great civic leader of his City and State. The Reverend James C. Pe ters, Pastor of St. Matthews Methodist Church, is extending an invitation to the entire City of Greensboro to attend thes* special services. Each service will begin at 7:30 P. M.
The Future Outlook (Greensboro, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1967, edition 1
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