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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28. 1975 Uffi TRIBUNAL AID PAGE B ... ASK ME ABOUT NATURE by Doris B. Kwaslkpal by Doris B. Kwasikpui Dear Mrs. K: How did the Catbird and the Mourning Dove get their names? Paul Lemmon Dear Paul: The Catbird was named from its call which is like a kitten’s meeow. The Mourning Dove was named from its sad call, oooah, coo, coo, cooo. Dear Mrs. K: Can an octopus be tamed? It seems as if 1 read somewhere that it can. Ms. L. White Dear Ms. White: Yes, octopuses can be easily tamed. They can be trained to take, food from your hand. Dear Mrs. K: I am starting a mineral collection. I want to know what is a halite? Where does it come from? Donald Sanders Dear Donald: A halite is common salt or sodium chloride (NaCl). It comes from the sea. Layers of rock salt are found in areas where seas dried up in ancient times. Dear Mrs. K: What can 1 feed the larvae of the Luna Moth? I plan to rear my own Luna Moths. Kitty L. Dock Dear Kitty: The larvae of Luna Moth feed on the leaves of Sweet Gum, hickory, walnut and persimmon trees. Good luck! Dear Mrs. K: How much does the Hippopotamus weigh? George T. Dear George: The average Hippopotamus weighs from 5000 to 8000 pounds. The largest Hippopotamus on record weighed 8,960 pounds. Dear Mrs. K: Why are porpoises called sea cowboys? Mr. J. Davids Dear Mr. Davids: Porpoises are called herd fish. ‘sea cowboys" because they To Study Abroad WINSTON-SALEM -Wil ma L. Lassiter, Head of Department of English and Foreign Languages, at Winston-Salem State Uni versity is the recipient of a all-expenses-paid grant to travel and study abroad this summer. The grant was provided by Piedmont University Center of North Carolina and Winston- Salem State University. Mrs. Lassiter has been admitted to the University of Birmingham, Birming ham, England for a six-week summer session in Drama and Theatre in the Age of Shakespeare to be held at Stratford-upon- Avon. She is one of seventy-five participants in the Stratford summer session. As described by the Institute of International Education, the session provides a unique oppor- Di-Gel RELIEVES 'Gasid Indigestion’ ...It’s those times you suffer acid indigestion and painful gas, too. DI-GEL* gives more com plete relief because it does what plain antacids can’t. It reduces excess acid; also contains Simethicone that gets rid of gas, too. Heartburn, painful gas go fast. Get DI-GEL. IT’S AMAaWSr Am ASiAd WOMAN SHOWS HCR RESPECT TOWARD A PERSON ' BY TVRNINO MER BACK WHEM eeiris spoken to.... I EDUCATION I Xw 192.9. A viR3iw\ft MM. FflMILV HEIRUjoM For a.TVEflRS WAS INSORtP FOR $10, OOO / -tHE ham is KtPT IN A fireproof sflFr; flpPLVlNG 30ME ftrrflSSiuM oNTiC Tip OF fil ClGSRSTfE.VOU CBN LKSH-T IT W\Trt OROlHflSV ICE! *75-^76 Lyceum Events Announced 2.i^f^£SY SRUSAGr EVER MADE' WEISHED 88S LBS. ANO V/AS MORE Ti-V^W MltE" LO/^S! Z \ IT WAS SPEciAuuy Prepared for DENMARK FARM FESrWAL'. On a FoK FPiRM IM LRWCBSWRf EMGLAIOt), TWHRE IS A v^nH HQgN>S uxH A CoW!!' President Ford Sends Letter SALISBURY - The 93rd annual Livingstone College baccalaureate services, held Sunday, May 18, featur^ two images - the graduates and the late and lamented Bishop W. J. Walls. Bishop Arthur Marshall, Jr., spoke to the graduates and President Gerald Ford ad- dressM himself to the passing of Bishop Walls. , The President's contribution was a letter sent to Mrs. Dorothy J. Walls, the widow of the prelate, from the White House, which not only mourned the loss of the renown churchman, but told Mrs. Walls that the contribution made by her husband should console her in her hours of ^ef, due to the fact that as long as there were people and history, he would live in the rich tradition of his great work. NCCU To Sponsor Conference DURHAM — Leading Amer ican and foreign scholars are expected to attend a 2-day conference on the Afro-Asian World to be sponsored July 15-16 by the Center for International Studies at North Carolina Central University. The conference will Ije sup ported by a $1,200 grant from the Mai7 Reynolds Balxock Foundation. Dr. Golam W. Choudhury, director of the center, said he expects to receive the assist ance of the Asia Foundation in recruiting Asian scholars for the conference, while the U.S. State Department’s Cultural Division will help arrange for African scholars to participate. Topics to be discussed at the conference include The Afro- Asian Worl4 Today, China and Japan, After the Vietnam War, Regional Tensions are Major Power Policies in South Asia, The Significance and Implica tions of Pan-Africanism, The U.S.A., The USSR, China and the African Countries, and The Middle East; Peace or War? Dr. Choudhury, who is director of the newly-estab lished Center for International Studies and the chief planner for the conference, is a former member of the cabinet of Pakistan. He has been profes sor of political science at NCCU for 2 years. Bishop Marshall warned the graduates to not rely upon their degrees, their fraternities or their jobs to be a success. He told them that wherever they were going would be determin ed by their conception of God. He told them that they would not be able to fulfill the dreams of their parents, the college or the AME Zion Church, all of whom made possible to reach graduation, if they did not take God with ^em. “You cannot make it alone. You cannot choose Him as general God. You must take Him as your personal God." He ended by telling them that shortcuts to success had almost ruined America and the world. He was mindful of the fact that there would be no peace unless it was dictated by the mandates of the Prince of Peace. He alluded to the fact that too many people had become waste in their haste to arrive. The commencement exer cises began May 16 and ended May 20 when both earned and honorary degrees were award ed by P*resident F. George Shipman. Attorney Arthur F. Edely, executive director, Unit^ Negro College Fund, was the speaker. WINSTON-SALEM Mr. H.E. Picl^ard. Chairman of the Winston-Salem State University Lyceum Com mittee has announced the Lyceum Events-Performing Arts & Lecture Series for 1975-1976. SCHEDULE - September 28, 1975, Congresswoman Yvonne Braithwaite Burke (Founders Day - 4:00 p.m. No Admission) October 7, 1975 - Eve Lynn Joan Reeve, Harpsi- cord. November 18, 1975 - Chuck Davis Dancers. Febniarv 3, 1976 - The National Theater. Drama February 17. 1976 Mamon Morrison. Pianist March 9 - 15, 1976 - University Fine Arts Festi val (NO ADMISSION) March 16, 1976 - Duke Ellington’s Orchestra, Di rected by Mercer Ellington, A Sacred Concert - The Majesty of God, Accom panied by the WSSU Combined Choirs. All programs will be held in the Kenneth R. Williams Auditorium and arc sche duled to start at 8:15 P.M. unless otherwise indicated. THIS IS Your Paper USE IT P YOU BUY YOUR FOOD TRIBUNAL AID ADVERTISER ? Prospects Are Bright For ’75 College Grads ATLANTA, Ga. - Although the employment picture for 1975 college graduates looks fairly grim, the prospects for engineering graduates are very bright. For June grad uates. engineering offers the most available jobs at the highest salaries. Already graduated are 13 students in the dual degree engineering program in the Atlanta University Center. Numerous job offers have been received by all of the graduates with salaries up 1 to 13 percent over last year. Not only is there a demand for engineers, but the need and demand for minority engineers is critical. In 1973-74, only l percent of the college gradu ates in engineering were minorities. The National Academy of Engineering wants to bring about a 10-fold increase in minority engineering gradu ates within the next decade. One foundation has set its goal at increasing the number of minority freshmen enrolled in engineering in proportion to their representation in the population by 1982. The dual degree program in the Atlanta University Center was established because of the awareness of this need and demand. It is planned in conjunction with the Georgia Institute of Technology. Stu dents enroll at one of the undergraduate colleges in the AU Center - Clark, Morehouse, Morris Brown or Spelman for 3 tunity to study Shakes peare, Elizabethan drama, theatre and literature by a fusion of the academic and the practical. Register Now! to THE TRIBUNAL AID on your Second Aniversary P.O. Box 921 High Point, N.C. 27261 Address REALTOR pocKaooocxaoooooocxaooooooQO Subscribe To THE TRIBUNAL AID and have your paper delivered to your I door by mail every | Wednesday $5 for 52 issues THE TRIBUNAL AID Send me THE TRIBUNAL AID Enclosed Is $5 years. They then transfer to Georgia Tech for 2 years. Upon completion of this program, the student receives a bachelor | of arts degree from his respective institution and a bachelor of engineering from Georgia Tech. Boasting one of the largest enrollments in engineering among historically black col leges and universities, the AU Center reports 283 students enrolled for 1974-75. Particularly interesting is the fact that 40 percent of the freshman enrollment for this academic year are women. (20 percent of the total enrollment 18 female.) The program, under the direction of Dr. Charles I Merideth, offers scholarship aid for low-income students and special assistance for students whose knowledge and background in related areas might hinder their success in the program. According to Dr, Merideth. "The resources of the nation’s largest center of private black higher education combined with those of one of the world's finest technical universities provide a unique educational experience that broadens a student's social and cultural horizons while preparing him for entry into a profitable and rewarding profession " DRIVE SIIFEY CHICKEI^^ LEGS^ & THIGHS 10.LB. II.‘til CANNED MOHAWK OSCAR MAYER ALL MEAT FRANKS □ 89' SHENANDOAH TURKEY 6 -16 LBS. BREASTS 104.B. 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The Tribunal Aid (High Point, N.C.)
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May 28, 1975, edition 1
5
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