Saturday, September 19,1970
Section B —6 Pages
YOUR PICTURE-NEWS WEEKLY
•; fl Hp
A /" T!l£ * •
/
f % I ' v
GREER
Airman Normandy J. Greer,
son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Greer
of 312 Lincoln Drive, Fayette
ville, lias completed basic train
ing at Lackland AFB, Tex. He
has been assigned to Keesler
AFB, Miss, for training in the
administrative field. Airman
Greer is a 1969 graduate of
E. E. Smith Sehior High
School.
BR ITT
U. S. Air Force Sergeant
Donald R. Britt, son of Mrs.
Dorothy M. Britt of 316 S.
JS-egson St., Durham, partici
pated in the recent United
States Air Forces in Europe
munitions loading competition
conducted at Ramstein AB,
Germany.
Sergeant Britt was a wea
pons specialist with the team
representing the 49th Tactical
Fighter Wing, Holloman AFB,
N. M. His unit is a part of the
Tactical Air Command which
provides combat units for air
support of U. S. ground forces.
The week-long meet was
designed to recognize out
standing loading crew perfor
mance and raise the overall
standards in munitions loading.
Loading crews provide the vital
link between assigned objec
tives and the aircrews' ability
to deliver the ordnance.
The sergeant is a 1968
graduate of Durham High
School.
BURNS
U. S. Air Force Staff Ser
geant Gale L. Burns, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Claude L. Burns of
700 E. Club Blvd., Durham!
has arrived for duty at Upper
Herford RAF Station, Eng
land.
Sergeant Burns, a weapons
mechanic, is assigned to the
55th Tactical Fighter Squad
ron, a unit of the U. S. Air
Forces in Europe, America's
overseas air arm assigned to
NATO.
The sergeant, who pre
viously served at Takhli Royal
Thai AFB, Thailand, graduated
in 1962 from Durham High
School.
His wife, Nancy, is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bris
tow of 3318 Guess Road, Dur
ham.
PARKER
Airman Wayne A. Parker,
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Parker Jr. of Rt. 3, Barbee
Road, Durham, has graduated
at LowTy AFB, Colo., from
the U. S. Air Force supply
inventory specialist course.
The Airman, trained to in
ventory supplies by use of
electronic data processing
machines, is being assigned to
Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, for
duty with the Alaskan Air
Command which guards the
Arctic air approaches to North
America.
He is a 1966 graduate of
Little River High School and
attended the Agricultural and
Technical State University at
Greensboro.
STAINBACK
Airman Brady T. Stainback
Jr., son of Mrs. Kathleen C.
Moses of 4010 Chapel Hill
Road, Durham, has completed
basic training at Lackland
AFB, Tex. He la remaining at
Lackland for training as a
security policeman. Airman
Stainback Is a 1970 graduate
of Southern Durham High
School. His father, Brady J.
Stainback Sr., resides at 1919
Hileman Road, Falls Church,
Va.
Carolinians in the Service
Vpyk / _
BARROW
SAN ANTONIO - Airman
Stephen T. Barrow, son of Mrs.
Ann B. Barrow of 114 South
erland basic training at Lack
land AFB, Tex. He has been
assigned to Keesler AFB, Miss.,
for training in the communica
tions field. Airman Barrow, a
1968 graduate of Durham High
School, attended Sandhill's
Community College. His fa
ther, William W. Barrow Jr.,
resides at 923'.a Dacian Ave.,
Durham.
HARRIS
U. S. Air Force Sergeant
Steve R. Harris, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thurman R. Harris of
1008 Iredell St., Durham, par
ticipated in the recent United
States Air Forces in Europe
(USAFE) Munitions loading
competition at Ramstein AB,
Germany.
Sergeant Harris was a wea
pons mechanic with the team
representing the 53rd Tactical
Fighter Squadron, Bitburg AB,
Germany. His unit is a part of
USAFE, America's overseas air
arm assigned to NATO.
The week-long meet was de
signed to recognize outstand
ing loading crew performance
and to raise the overall stan
dards l.n munitions loading.
Loading crews provide the vital
link between assigned objec
tives and the aircrews' ability
to deliver the ordnance.
The Sergeant, a 1966 grad
uate of Durham School,
attended North Carolina State
University.
EDGERTON
Captain Clyde C. Edgerton,
son of Mr. and Mrs. E. C.
Edgerton, 1210 Crafton St.,
Durham, has been awarded
U. S. Air Force silver pilot
wings upon graduation at Eglin
AFB, Fla.
Captain Edgerton is being
assigned to Cam Ranh Bay
AB, Vietnam, for flying duty
with the Pacific Air Forces,
headquarters for air operation!
in Southeast Asia, the Far East
and Pacific area.
A 1962 graduate of South
ern High School, the captain
earned ai\ A. B. degree In
1966 from the University 6t
North Carolina where he was
commissioned through the Air
Force Reserve Officers Train*
ing Corps program.
Coman Lumber Co.
Promotes Leonders
Horton to Sales P
The Conun Company of
911 Ramseur St. is pleased to
announce the promotion of
Leonders Horton to the pro
motion of sales representative.
Horton has been employed by
us for some four years and has
attained a great deal of know
ledge about the retailing of
building materials, "said W. T.
Coman, vice president. "He la
most capable of helping people
with problems relating to re
modling."
A native of Durham he is
married to the former Mias
Curley M. Bankston and is the
father of five children. He at
tended the Durham CUy
Schools and N. C. C. U. A
three year Veteran of the U. 8.
Marine Corps. He is also a
member of the West Durham
Baptist Church and the Dur
ham Business and Professional
Chain.
A resident of 19-A Slma
St he welcomes his many
friends to call on him far his
services in building and re
modeling.
€ht Catjjpla Ctmrs
J®!
jr
■.*4o''""
JUDD
Airman Wades Judd, son of
Verta J. Judd of 821 Cotton
St., Raleigh, has completed
basic training at Lackland
AFB. Tex. He is remaining at
Lackland for training as a secu
rity policeman. Airman Judd is
a 1968 graduate of Fuquay
Consolidated High School,
Fuquay Springs.
MISS PORTER
SAN ANTONIO Airman
Connie C. Porter, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Claiborne I.
Collier of 2889 Glovgr Road,
Durham, has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB, Tex.
She has been assigned to Kees
ler AFB, Miss., for training as
a personnel specialist. Airman
Porter is a 1970 graduate of
Southern High School.
IP
NIW GRADUATI DIAN—Dr.
Albert W. Spruill, 43, was
named last Thursday as dean
of the Graduate School at A&T
State University. Spruill holds
degrees from A&T, lowa State
University and Cornell Univer
sity.
■limw Monroe, a former presi
dent, died on July 4, 1831.
v «bJB 18 M w m \
wift^^m r ■ %
BP ' lB !I; JV I
flp \ Nft» IS I v if m
i* ifm I■l ' Mfc :»
H ffijk. I S | w|« OH
sKi 1 nH B Hfm
Hf ..,. m !f l a I * H
,:^K x . t : I tK w
— X f •: W : |
I
A W
-**>• HHSf ™||ll
m 1 OF *$
- . ... i®|| p :
I 1 BUf IJ
SL ■ H
,| || '; I
Hi |
K.
RSCBIVIS AWARD—GuD Oil
Corporation secretary Sandra
Farrar accepts the Secretary
of the Year award from Talk
Magazine publisher Luther J.
Sewell. Miss Farrar was pre-
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
The LORD'S SUPPER
By DONALD LOVE
I wonder how much about
the Lord's supper do most of
us know? How it began, and
why we observe it? The story
is a long one and is as impor
tant now as ever.
The story goes back as far
as Abram when God told him
to leave his relatives and go
into a strange area - just he and
his family. God made a pro
mise to Abram that He would
bless him, that his family
would be numerous and that
He would renew the covenant
or promise with his off
springs. After a long span of
time the Israelites came into
being.
Through good intention,
the Israelites went into Egypt
and later became slaves in this
strange land.
They were in slavery around
400 years before God moved
in their direction to relieve
or show any signs as far as
help was concerned.
God sent Moses into Egypt
to begin the task of having
their burdens lightened and
finally bringing them out as a
free people. The government
of Egypt would not listen to
Moses as he pleaded for his
people's release. It so hap
pened that the government in
creased their burdens rather
than letting them go free.
Not all of the Israelites
cried unto God for His devine
help, but enough for God to
confess. He had heard their
cries.
God had ten plagues He
used on Egypt for them to
release the Israelites into the
hands of Moses, and they re
fused nine of them. The tenth
and final plague, God made all
plans and passed them to
Moses. Moses did according
to God's instructions. Moses
■tressed upon the people to do
as he told them because God
was taking over.
The tenth and last plague
was named and called, "the
pass-over". This was the plague
that brought them out of
Egypt but not without a fight.
They fought and rebelled
against God down as far as
the Red Sea.
These Israelites who were
involved, who went through
this agony and these hardships
by the hands of Egypt, knew
by means of experience
scnted fhe award during a ca
baret Sponsored by Talk for
the benefit of the United Ne
gro College Fund. She joined
Gulf in 1664 as a junior steao
grapher in Gulf's public rela
what they came through. God
reminded them of these facta
and warned them to never for
get what plague gave them
their freedom • "The Paaa-
Over.
The Israelites were ordered
by God to use this time they
were freed as a time of remem
grance and each year to ob
serve it as the day of the
pass-over. They were to teach
their children, teach generation
after generation about this
great day.
This day was observed by
the Israelites through the
coming of Christ, and Christ
observed it up to His Crucifix
tion.
Christ had been attending
all public sessions of the Pass
overs save one and that one
was the last. At his last Pass
over, He had a private one.
The invited guests were His
diciples known at that time
as apostles. He explained to
them the true meaning of the
Pass-over. He stated that He
was the Pass-over. The bread
used represented His body and
the wine, His blood.
As we have studied the his
tory of Christ, we learned how
modest, meek and humble He
was. He wanted no credit nor
praise for any of the things
or miracles He had done. God,
My Heavenly Father did all
through Me, without Him, I
could do nothing. He warned
them, sU things done through
Me, do not observe any of
them in remembrance of Me.
I want you to remember Me
only when you do this; the
Lord's supper, do so in remem
brance of Me. As you eat the
unlevel bread, let it be remem
bered, it is my flesh and as you
drink of the Wine, let it be
remembered, it is My blood
that I shed for you.
Christ knowing that He was
to die on the Cross instituted
the Lord's supper as a picture
of His broken body and spilt
blood on the Cross, which He
gave freely that every man who
believes can have eternal life.
Reds Ban Coffins
HONG KONG - Com
munist Chinese officials in Can
ton have ordered that bodies be
cremated or buried without cof
fins in an effort to conserve
wood, Chinese travelers report-
tions department in Pittsburgh.
She advanced from that job
to her present position as sec
retary to Gulfs Administrator
of Equal Employment Oppor
tunity, Daniel G. Kean.
M mßkjaTm L?*-. -W&
m V Hb i jtt
\2k*s
TAKIS TOP HONORS —John
V. Norris, Jr. (left), an Army
Private stationed at Fort Dlx,
N. J., receives an art scholar
ship from Benjamin J. Henley, i
Acting Superintendent of th« ,
Washington District School* j
(right). Pvt. Norris took top (
honors in an art exhibition y
sponsored by the Mount Holy- ]
Ban on De Facto Segregation
Likely, Research Project Shows
School segregation by law?
No. The U. S. Supreme Court
struck that down in 1954.
School segregation in fact?
Yes, but it's days are num
bered, a Raleigh educator con
cludes after a study conducted
at Duke University.
The same judicial thought
that led to outlawing of dual
school systems will be applied
to outlaw de facto segregation
and its neighborhood-school
concept, Dr. William P. Freitag
feels. "The Supreme Court of
the United States will even
tually rule that de facto school
segregation is unconstitution
al," he said.
Freitag, the Raleigh school
system's assistant superinten
dent for personnel, based his
forecast on a study of various
federal court opinions handed
down since the landmark 1954
decision of the Supreme
Court. The study served as
Freitag's dissertation for the
Master of Rlucation degree
received from Duke last year.
The Freitag research points
to the upcoming fall-winter
session of the Supreme Court.
The court agreed recently to
hear a group of cases bearing
on de facto segregation, the
neighborhood school concept
and the device of busing to
achieve racial balance. In
cluded is the much-publicized
legal battle over integration of
the Charlotte -Mecklenburg
County schools.
The 1954 decision against
de jure (by law) segregation
primarily affected the South,
where laws requiring dual
school systems were in force,
De facto segregation, arising
from place of residence and
housing patterns, had been
mainly a Northern problem
but is becoming a factor in
the South as urbanization
Washington Journalism Center
To Award Fellowships to Blacks
WASHINGTON, D. C. -
The Washington Journalism
Center will award 8 fellow
ships to young Negroes in
terested in journalism for its
Spring, 1971 session, it was
announced today.
Each fellowship will include
a $2,500 stipend to cover
living expenses while the
Fellow is in Washington for
the 15-week program, accord
ing to Julius Duscha, Director
of the Center.
The Spring session begins
February 8, 1971 and ends
May 20, 1971. The deadline
for submission of applications
for the fellowships in Novem
ber 15, 1970. The winners
will be snnounced in Decem
ber.
Candidates for the fellow-
Local, State mud National
News of Interest to All
oke Club of Washington, D. C.
for his painting "Self Portrait"
(upper left). His painting was
namedl "Best of Show" from
among 157 entries displayed
June 2 through July 0 at the
main Corcoran Art Gallery by
a panel of judges. Pvt. Norris,
who entered the Army on July
1, represents Washington's Car
By RUSSELL CLAY
increases.
Freitag noted that de facto
segregation "results in part
from the administrative con
cept of the neighborhood
school, which fosters racial
segregation in fact but which
is not necessarily deliberate."
He said his study of opinions
in various school cases shows
that the courts "are showing
impatience with racially segre
gated schools regardless of
cause, and are placing empha
sis on social integration em
sis on social Integration for
America's school children."
YA Launches Job Market For
Vietnam Vets in Boston, Mass.
WASHINGTON, D. C. -
New England Vietnam vete
rans are in for a windfall of
jobs when the Veterans Ad
ministration launches the larg
est Job Mart in the nation
on Wednesday and Thursday,
September 16 and 17.
The two-day event, being
co-sponsored by the Boston
Globe, will be held in the
Paddock Club of Suffolk
Downs in East Boston from
9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and is ex
pected to attract upwards of
15,000 veterans.
Thousands of jobs have
been made available by 300
business firms.
The National Tool, Die &
Precision Machining Associa
tion in Washington, D. C., also
has requested space along with
a Cincinnati, Ohio, show firm,
according to Project Director
Francis A. Hunt of Boston's
VA staff.
Hunt said that the heaviest
concentrations of available
jobs are in law enforcement
and hospitals and paramedical
ships should have majored in
such areas of college study as
political science, history, eco
nomics, sociology, education
of English and should have
indicated an interest in journa
lism by working on school or
community newspapers or in
discussions with their curricu
lum advisers.
The purpose of the Center's
program is to help journalists
and prospective journalists
develop a better understanding
of public affairs. In Washing
ton the Fellows will meet in
daily seminars with Members
of Congress, top officials of
the Federal government and
members of the Washington
preas corps as they study the
government and Its relation
ship to the media.
PRICE : 20c
dozo High School la the "Art
and Youth" exhibit organized
by the Corcoran Gallery of
Art, the Mount Holyoke Club
of Washington, and the Art
Department of the District
schools. Before his induction.
Pvt. Norris lived with his fam
ily at 1002 Park Roar, N. W„
Washington. D. C.
Opinion is building among
federal jurists that Negro
schools, however created or
maintained, are "inherently
unequal," Freitag said. He
wrote: "One of the most im
portant findings of this re
search is that in 15 of the 17
cases offering judicial opinion
on the proposition that Negro
schools, regardless of cause,
are inherently unequal, the
charge is found to be valid.
This fact leads the writer to
believe that the Supreme
Court of the United States will
eventually rule that de facto
school segregation is unconsti
tutional.
The Japanese Grand Kabuki
Theatre fuses elements of music,
dance and drama with pictorial
art. _
fields.
The FBI, Massachusetts
State Police, Massachusetts
Association of Police Chiefs,
Metropolitan Washington, D.
C. Police Department, U. S.
and State Civil Service Com
missions and the U. S. Depart
ment of Labor all will have
space at the job mart.
There also is a big demand
for prison guards. Hunt said,
pointing out that all of these
jobs in law enforcement are
Civil Service protected.
New England's largest de
partment store chain will hire
300 veterans for work in its
new warehouse, with an hour
ly starting wage of $3.17, Hunt
pointed out, and space has
been requested by the New
England Association of Fire
fighters.
The Boston Council of
AFL-CIO, which is cooperating
in the Job Mart, reports that
there are numerous job offer
ings in the building and con
struction trades.
Qualified veterans also will
be interviewed for jobs with
insurance companies, banks,
food chains, restaurants, air
lines, bridge attendants, dental
laboratories, telephone com
pany and many others, accord
ing to Hunt.
The Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, Vermont, New Hamp
shire and Maine Congressional
delegations have been invited
to the official opening at
9 a.m. September 16 by VA
Administrator Donald E.
Johnson. Governor Francis W.
Sargent of Massachusetts also
has been invited.
"While finding jobs for
veterans is not a responsibility
of the Veterans Administra
tion,'* Johnson add, "we have
implemented our very success
ful 'Outreach* program to And
jobs for our returning veterans
in line with President Nixon's
concern for them."
To mend • pot cov«r that hu
lost its knob, push a stainless
steel screw up from the bot
tom, attach a cork on top. and
you have a Mediterranean pot
cover!