With Our Area Men in the Service
H M j Mif
' aiSit
INSCOE ,
Airman Harry G. Inscoe, Jr.
son of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. In
scoe of 1124 Raynor St., Dur
ham, has completed basic train
ing at Lackland AFB, Te*. He
is remaining at the Air Force
Technical Training Center for
specialized schooling as a com
munications-electronics special
ist. Airman Inscoe is a 1066
graduate of Durham High
School.
Pittsboro Man Named Project
Supervisor in Maryland County
ROCKVILLE, Maryland—We
are pleased to announce the
appointment of the Reverend
Kermit J. DeGraffenreidt to
the position of Project Super-
Visor for the ( Montgomery
County Community Action Com
mittee. Rev, DeGraffenreidt,
formerly a Senior Neighbor
hood Worker, was promoted to
the position of Project Super
visor effective December 18,
1967.
He began his work with the
county in November 1966 as a
Neighborhood Worker in the
pilot project with the United
Planning Organization. In Feb
ruary 1967 he was promoted to
Senior Neighborhood Worker.
In July 1967 the county gov
ernment took on the responsi
bility of operating the poverty
program, absorbing the em
ployees of U. P. O. During this
interim Rev. DeGraffenreidt
was Acting Program Develop
ment Specialist and Project
Director.
In this new capacity Rev.
DeGraffenreidt will be re-
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MASSENBURO
Airman Alexander Massen
burg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jas.
O. Massenburg of 436 N. Allen
St., Wake Forest, has complet
ed basic training at Lackland
AFB, Tex., for specialined
schooling as an administrative
specialist. Airman Massenburg
ig. a 1966 graduate of Dußois
High School.
sponsible for receiving and in
vestigating suggestions for
services needed by groups or
individuals, preparing periodic
reports on the status of pro
grams, recruiting and selecting
program staff, providing liai
son between neighborhood
workers and community action
po'icy body, meeting with
neighborhood workers to assist
in problem solving and main
tain personal contact with pro
grams, supervising the
work of all neighborhood work
ers.
Rev. DeGraffenreidt is a na
tive of Pittsboro, where he was
raised by his grandparents, the
Reverend and Mrs. L. W. Ellis.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jessie DeGraffenreidt of Ra
leigh.
He is married to the former
Miss Guytanna Horton, also of
Pittsboro. They are the proud
parents of one daughter, Kei
sha Clintnett.
A 1960 graduate of North
CaroH"' College at Durham,
he received a B.A. degree in
' PPF* T
- '« '
H BHW
MITCHELL
U. S. Air Force Technical
Sergeant James F. Mitchell, son
of Mr. and Mrs. George W.
Mitchell of Supply, has been
named Outstanding Airman of
the Year for his unit at Ed
wards AFB. Calif.
Sergeant Mitchell, non-com
missioned officer in charge of
administration of the Air Force
Rock Propulsion Laboratory
(AFRPL) at Edwards, was se
lected in competition among
nominees in his unit.
Airman Franklin D. Driver,
son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.. Driv
er of 306 S. Guthrie Ave., Dur
ham, has been graduated from
a U. S. Air Force technical
school at Keesler AFB, Miss.
He was trained as an aircraft
mechanic.
The airman attended Durham
High School.
Staff Sergeant Floyd Watson,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Watson, Sr. of 814 Plum Street,
Durham, has arrived for duty
at Clark AB, Philippines.
Sergeant Watson, a supply
inventory specialist, is assigned
to a unit of the Pacific Air
Forces.
He previously served with an
Air Force unit at Wilmington,
North Carolina.
The sprfloant, a graduate of
Hillside High School, attended
North Carolina College.
His wife, Rita, is the daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Edwards of 702 Buchannan
Blvd., Durham.
Cadet Walter E. Garrard Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Gar
rard of 3240 Rose of Sharon
Road, Durham, has been named
an element sergeant with the
rank of cadet technical sergeant
at the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Cadet Garrard,member of
the c!ass of '69, was selected
for the position in recognition
of his leadership abilities and
excellence in academic and
military performance.
He will be commissioned a
second lieutenant and awarded
a B.S. degree upon his gradu
ation from the academy
Sociology with a minor a music.
Also, he is a 1963 graduate of
Hood Theological Seminary in
Salisbury, with a B.D. degree.
He has engaged in post-gradu
ate studies at Wesley Theolo
gical Seminary of American
University in Washington, D.
C. He continued his studies in
Music with voice training under
the late Professor Harold R.
Yarroll.
Since June 1983 he has been
pastor of the Clinton A.M.E.
Zion Church in Rockville, Md.
Along with his pastorate he has
been actively engaged In com
munity affairs.
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UNCF Head is Founder's Day
Speaker at Livingstone College
SALISBURY—The 1 President
of the United States Negro Col
lege Fund last Thursday orged
Negroes to use the ballot to
"remove undesirables from of
fice."'
In his address at the Found
er's Day observance at Living
stone College, Dr. Stephen J.
Wright said, The answer to our
problems still lies within the
legal bounds of the American
way of life. There is enough
legal resource in the American
way to assure the Negro of full
citizenship if properly used."
Highlight of the annual
Founder's Day observance at
the church-related college was
the presentation of financial
reports of the Board of Bish
ops of the A.M.E. Zion Church
which indicated that the de
nomination had exceeded its
goal of $200,000 in « special 2-
Year Tri-College Campaign for
three of its institutions.
Two years ago the leaders of
the church initiated a campaign
to secure additional funds to
be used as incentive money for
strengthening three of its
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Carrboro • Crcedmoor • Hillsborough • Oxford • Pi/tsboro • Roxboro • Siler City
schools, Clinton
Rock Hill, Bm«
non Junior
Ala. The reports in
two annual
the formula for distribution,
Livingstone receives SIOO,OOO,
and the other colleges $90,000
each.
Dr. Wright, who was intro
duced by President S. E. Dun
can, spoke on the subject:
"Knocking on the Doors of
Absolutely Equality—The Task
of the Negro Youth Today."
Relating his speech to the
current Negro revolution, Dr.
Wright said the vogue today is
the great talk about Negro
identity. "However," he com
mented, "Negroes everywhere
should seek to gain confidence
and respectability through
achievement rather than
through the search for exotic
gratification."
When a man says he does not
care for the society of women,
you know that he has tried
and faild.
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Br
1 ;9j Hr ffl mmA I
■ A I
FOUNDER'S DAY PRINCIPALS
Shown left to right are the
principals in the annual observ-
of Founder's Day at Liv
ingstone College here last
week, Dr. Stephen J. Wright,
President of the United Negro
SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1988 THE CAROLINA TIMES—
College Fund, New York City,
who gave address; Miss Sylvia
Saunders, student representa
tive on program; Bishop W. J.
Walls, Chicago, 111., chairman
of the college's Board of Trus
tees; Dr. S. V. Moreland, presi
dent of Clinton Junior College,
Rock Hill, S. C.; and Dr. S. E.
Duncan, Livingstone President.
More than SIOO,OOO was report
ed by the A. M. E. Zion Church
in a special effort.
3B