Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 25, 1969, edition 1 / Page 15
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! Will lb kmm liffkas { VIETNAM - fe'nfiß«nr.fca end Cls * * Larry J e Dtnninf, USN, ton of Mr*. Pauline D«nn i»t of 811 Peace Ter., Raleigh, ; h«us arrived in Vietnam and has ’ been assigned as an adviser is a Vietnamese Navy COMtti Group. Before entering the service in July 1860, Petty Office Denning attended Angler High School in Angler. * * * WICHITA FALLS, Tex.-Air man Douglas W. Fowler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Loomis B, Fowler, 1310 Downing Road, Raleigh, has been graduated at Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the training course for U. S. Air Force aircraft mechanics. Airman Fowler, a 1968 gradu ate of Val de n Whitley High School, Wendell, is being as signed to Pope AFB, for duty with the Tactical Air Command. * * + •VIETNAM - Airman First Class Charles T. Couch, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Couch, 1319 Mordecai Drive, Raleigh, is on duty at Phan Range AB, Vietnam. Airman Couch, a supply in ventory specialist, is a member f of the Pacific Air Forces. The airman, a 1964 graduate , of Needham B. Broughton High School, attended Hard Barger's Business College. * * * WICHITA FALLS, Tex.-Air man Thomas P, Gleen Jr., son of Mrs. Pearl Moore, 624 Ed munds St., Raleigh, has been graduated at Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the training course for U. S. Air Force helicopter mechanics. Airman Glenn, a 1968 gradu ate of Southeast High School, Pleasant Garden, is remaining at Sheppard for duty with the Air Training Command, * * * GOLDS BOROUGH - Sonar Technician Third class Donald C. Poole, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. 0. G. Poole of 2812 Bar mettlan, Raleigh and Navy Lletenant Thomas B.Hines,son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas I.Hines of Route 6, Leesvllle Bayleaf Road and husband of the former Miss Elizabeth C. Cheek of Pen sacola, Fla. are serving aboard 1 the guided missile destroyer USS Goldsborough at sea of the coast of Vietnam. * * * HONOLULU - Staff Sergeant Tracy C. Faulkner, son of Mrs. Vera P. Curtis of 1104 Berkeley St., Durham, is a member ofthe 61st Military Airlift Wing that lias earned the U. S. Air Force Outstanding Unit Award. Sergeant Faulkner, a naviga tion equipment repairman at Hickam AFB, Hawaii, with a unit of tjie 61st, will wear the dis tinctive ribbon as a permanent decoration. The sergeant is a graduate of Hillside High School. * * * HONOLULU - Airman First Class Ronald J, Burrows, son of Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeD. Bur rows of 3300 Brlarcliff Dr., Raleigh, has helped the 61st Military Airlift Wing earn the U. S, Air Force Outstanding Unit Award. Airman Burrow, and admini strative specialist atTachlkawa / AB, Japan, with a unit of the 61st, will wear the distinctive ribbon as a permanent decora tion. * * * HONOLULU - Airman First Class Gerlad E. Collins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Burnle F.Collins 3r. of 409 Glascock St., Raleigh, ras helped the 61st Military Air lift Wing earn the U. S. Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, The airman, a graduate of W,G, Enloe High School, at tended North Carolina Uni versity. * * * THAILAND - Airman First Class Warrte Evans Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Warrle Evans Sr., 1211 l/2 S. Person St., Raleigh, is on duty at U-Tapao Airfield, Thailand. Airman Evans, a fuel specialist, is a member of the Pacific Air Forces. The airman attended J. W. Ligon High School. * * * J NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C.- sergeant James W. Wilkerson, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Wilkerson of 621 Brighton Road, Raleigh, has arrived for duty at Charleston AFB, S.C. Sergeant Wilkerson, an air craft mechanic, Is assigned to a unit of the Military Airlift Command. He previously served at Phan Rang AB, Viet nam. The sergeant, a 1963 graduate of Needham B. Broughton High School, attended North Carolina State University at Raleigh, * * * HONOLULU - Airman First Class Wlndrice C. O'Neal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper O'Neal of Rt. 1, of the 61st Military Airlift Wing that has earned the U. S, Air Force Outstanding Unit Award. The airman is a graduate of James E, Shepard High School, Zebulou. * * * VIETNAM-Airman First Class John L. Breedlove u, f whose wife, Molly, is the daughter of Mrs. James E. Best, §ll Wayne Drive, Raleigh, is on duty at Cam Ranh AB, Vietnam. Airman Breodlove, a vehicle operator, is a member of the Military Alrllfe Command in •import 91 the Pacific Air Forces. He previously served At Scott AFB, ns. The airman attended New Hanover High School, Wilming ton. • * * HONOLULU - Airman First Class Donald E„ Hughes, son of F S W, Hughes Jr. of 2486 Ridge Road, Raleigh, is a member of the olst Military Airlift Wing that has earned the U,S. Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, The airman, & graduate of Broughton High School, attend ed North Carolina State Uni versity, . * * * SAN ANTONIO- Airman Betty B. Bell, daughter of Mrs, No - vella B. Wiles, 921 N. Caldwell St., Charlotte, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. She has been assigned to. Keesler AFB, i Miss, for train-i ing in the air traffic control & BELL fleid. Airman Bell is a 1966 graduate of S e c o n d Ward High School. * * * WICHITA FALLS, Tex. - Air man Paul Brlerley, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Brierley, El BRIERLEY 4404 Susanj Drive, Raleigh, has been gradu ated with honors at Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the training] course for U. S. Air Force medl-l cal specialists. Airman Brierley, a 1986 graduate of Garner High School, will remain at Sheppard for further training. The airman attended Camp bell College, Buies Creek. N.C. * * * SAN ANTIONIO-Airman Lyn wood L. Andrews, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira L. Andrews of 3805 Boddie Dr. Raleigh, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for 9 ANDREWS training In the wire main tenance field. Airman Andrews is a graduate of Millbrook High School. * * * FT. CAMPELL, Ky. - Airman First Class Benjamin F.Gallo way, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pleas S. Galloway of 1716 W. Trade Street, Charlotte, has entered specialized training at Ft. Campbell, Ky., for Air Force combat security policemen. Airman Galloway, a graduate of Carver Senior High School, Spartanburg, S.C., attended Johnson C. Smith College Negro History BAFFLERS BY NEGRO PRESS INTERNA TIONAL In today’s Baffler, tell what’s wrong with each st at e m ent, which purports to be a Negro history fact. Scorings 8-10: excellent; 6-7; good; 4-5; fair; 0-3; poor. Bonus Question counts two points. Other questions count one point each. Here’s the quiz: 1. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel, "Uncle Tom’s Chil dren,” aroused anti-slavery sentiment that helped provoke the Civil War. 2. As early as the 19305, Negroes made noteworthy ac complishments in the U.S. Air Force, winning Presidential citations for their bravery. 3. Among the exceptional writers who contributed to the Harlem Renaissance during the 1920 s and the 1930 s were Countee Cullen, Claude, McKay, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Jean Toomer, and Langston Hughes. 4. Marcus A. Garvey, who sought to lead Black people back to Africa, was acclaimed by federal officials for his ef forts to "resolve the Negro question.” 5. The late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., led a 382-day bus boycott in 1955 and 1966 in Birminghan, Ala. His first major protest action, the boy cott set the stage for the dis mantling of Southern segrega tion. 6. As U.S. Senator during the Reconstruction era, Frede rick Douglass helped promote the only civil-rights legisla tion passed until 1957. 7. President Abraham Lin coln's Emancipation Proclama tion set the slaves free in all areas of the country which re mained loyal to the Union dur ing the Civil War. 8. Toussaint L’Ouverture is remembered as one of the out standing military heroes of the French revolution. ANSWERS: 1. She wrote “Uncle Torn’s Cabin”; "Uncle Tom’s Children” was written by Richard Wright. 2, Negroes were not allowed in the nation's air force until a Negro pursuit squadron was established at Tuskegse institute during World War 11. 3, Dunbar doss not belong in the list, he died in 1906. 4. On the contrary, he was imprisoned in 1925 for using the U.S. mails to defraud in connection with the sale of stock in his Mack Star line and was later deported from the U.S. LEAVE HALL AT BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY - Waltham, Mass.: Some of the sixty-four black students at Brandeis University file down a rear stair way of Ford Hall the building they had occupied for 11 days. The students lett the building January 18, with a grant of amnesty but their original de mands still unsatisfied. Many of these students carry books and other be longings as they pass another barricaded door (R). The occupation ended without violence. (UPI). .. ?* .GjjjJJj-wwTOV ' 1j WWmxJSam rt. • *4HPB A STAGE COUNTER-INAUGURAL PARADE ~ Washington: Anti-war organizers January 19 staged a “Counter-Inaugural” --the first time in the Nation’s history that a Presidential in auguration was confronted by a large-scale demonstration. Here, the protestors march up Pennsylvania Ave. the route of President elect Richard Nixon’s inaugural parade, to .ward the Capitol. (UPI). English Is Undergoing language Explosion 1 The English language seems to be undergoing what might be called a “language explo sion.” Dictionary editors are hard pressed to keep up with It. For instance, the 1969 edition of World Book Dictionary con tains 14,000 words and phrases that were not in the 1968 edition. Editors had to add 150 pages to jam in all the new words. But where do the new words come from? How could editors find 14,000 new entries? Do that many new w'ords develop tn such a short time? It seems as though forming new words Is everybody’s busi ness -- the politician, the sci entist, the economist, the fashion designer, the man on the street, and of course, the teen-ager. What new words or express ions have the politicians given us recently? Well, there’s con spiracy of silence, which means "a conspiring to keep some thing wrong, damaging, etc., from being divulged.” And then there’s gaposis, meaning “any conspicuous or abnormal gap, deficiency, etc.” Now' when you read about the credibility gap, you'll under stand gaposis. Here is a handful of the new words and phrases added to the World Book Dictionary for 1969, How many can you identify? -- aerial jeep, Alateen, ball hawk, beat man, beefcake, body check, brain-picking, British English, campy, car jockey, center-left, chicken colonel, clifihang,Colonel Bogey, cutesy. --Dawn patrol, day mare, deep six, defang, dldact, diplo ma mill, disadvantaged, dodo ball, ducky, dysphemism, earthshaker, easy money, end run, Eseoffier, eye-popper, familygram, fifth estate, file 13, 5. The bus boycott was con ducted in Montgomery, Ala., not Birmingham. 6. Douglass never served in Congress, 7. The proclamation freed the slaves only In areas not under Union contol. 8. Re was a hero of the Haitian revolution, not the French revolution. flab, flappable, freedom walk, funk, ghost surgery, glass cloth, goodie, gramophile, groupthink, gucky. -- Headstart, hobbit, In-joke, inner space, instant replay, I- Thou. Jane Q„ Public, let bus. knuckleballer, l&chrymtst, lot usland, make-do, Medicaid, roegaclty, meshuga, Mitty, neb bish, NFL, nudnik, off-hour, old-shoes, order pair, plain ■Tane. -- R and R, read-in, rice Chris tai n, Yoadeo, schlepp, schlock, sheila, shook-up, ski bum, slanguage, space gun, squaw winter, suitcase farmer, swingback, Synanon, tele phones, ten-percenter, tin god, tin pants, underground film, video recorder, Vietnik, wail ing wall, yoo-hoo. Some of these words and phrases have been around for a long time, of course, as slang or argot. But now that they’re In the dictionary they're official. No fair asking anybody. Look them up! 11th Science Institute Set At Bennett GREENSBORO - Through the assistance of a s2l, 705 grant from the National Science Foundation, Bennett College will conduct its 11th consecutive six-week summer institute for 65 high ability 11th and i2th grade students in mathematics and the sciences, June 16-July 25. Dr. J. Henry Sayles, chair man of the science division at the college will again direct the institute whos primary pur pose is to provide subject mat ter enrichment, and the ability to perform and interpret la boratory experiments and re sults. The core of the program will be courses in mathematics, biology, chemistry, and physics, with each supple mented by tutorial conferences. Field trips to places of scien tific interest are also planned. Application forms may be CURRENT EVENTS BAFFLERS BY NEGRO PRESS INTERNA TIONAL In today’s Baffler, choose the correct endings that go with each new's item. Scoring; 8-10: excellent; 6-7; good; 4-5: fair; 0-3: poor. Bonus question counts two point. Other questions count one point each. Here’s the quiz: 1. Mrs. Elizabeth D. Koontz, 49, the National Education As sociation's first Black presi dent, now has another first to her credit. She’s the,.... 2. A mainly-Indian-led group calling itself the “Black People’s Alliance” has planned a march of African, Asian and Caribbean immigrants through London,... 3. In Chicago’s Black com munity, a controversy is brew ing over Joh n Cardinal Cody's 4. Asked whether he planned to act any differently, after being reinstated in the U.S. House of Representatives at the cost of a $25,000 fine and loss of his seniority, Rep. Adam Clayton Powell retorted: 5. As the Johnson adminis tration went out of office, Black unemployment 6. The NAACP has reacted to Black students' demands for Black-only dormitories and “autonomous” Black studies programs by 7. The Rev. Ralph David Aber nathy, SCLC president, has re sponded to President Richard M. Nixon’s call for “Black capitalism” by 8. Plans for a new Black owned town in rural Warren county, North Carolina, as an alternative to life in urban ghettos have been announced by Endings: (Some don’t go with any statement) A. ...dropped to its lowest, point in 15 years, 6.7 per cent. B. ...to demand that a Black only studies program be set up at Cambridge university. C. ...Roy Wilkins, NAACP executive director. D. ...first (and, so far, only) Black person named to a sub cabinet position by President Richard M. Nixon; she’ll be director of the U.S. Labor de partment’s women’s bureau. E. ...proposing “Black so cialism” instead. F. ...filling law suits on the students’ behalf. G. .. “That’s like asking me if I plan to stop beating my wife.” H. ...Floyd B. McKissick, former CORE leader. I. ...failure to desegregate the Catholic school system, K. ...“This time, I’m going to cool it in Congress.” L. ...first Black director of the U.S. Office of Education. M. ...failure to appoint a Black priest, the Rev, George Clements, as pastor of St. Dorothy’s Catholic church. N. ...rose substantially as a result of decreased emphasis on domestic spending. O. ...to protect racial dis crimination in Britain. P. ...vowing to fight the stu dents' segregrationlsts demands in court. BONUS QUESTION: (This question has two parts, each counting one point.) A. Name President Nixon’s special assistant for the pro blems of the ghettos. B. What position is now held by Robert C, Weaver, former secretary of housing and urban development? • ANSWERS: 1. D; 2. O; 3. M; 4. G; 5. A; 6. P; 7, E; 8. H. BONUS ANSWERS: A. Robert J. Brown of High Ppint, N.C.; B. President of Bernard Baruch College, New York, obtained, and further informa tion received from the director. Completed forms should be re turned by April I,' 1968. Write to: Dr. J, Henry Sayles, Di rector, N. S, F. Summer Science Institute, Bennett Col lege. Greensboro, North Caro line 27420. nui, whits or cold wati* ARROW M DETERGENT SAVE ill. AAt box J6s m Quality Rights Reserved Prices Good Thru \ a , . i SAVt 45( THRIFTY MAID SLICED OR HALVES iSSt.. U PEACHES f THRIFTY MAID CALIFORNIA TOMATOES 6 Vo HAM SAli tyjfr TENDER SMOKED HAMS i m portion MmM wKF* 68 IBS - lb. *9 drJP Butt Portion 5-7 Lbs., Lb.-19c ' . Thick Center W. D. BRAND U.S. CHOICE BEEF $ fl 19 CTlfcillf MONi SIRLOIN li J I EMU PORTERHOUSE L B Ig SAVE3O( BFIIISH JUICY FLORIDA ORANGES 1 SAVE 30C CiINKLi CUT FROZEN ' m POTATOES « 59‘ N C SATURDAY JANUARY 35 10««S
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Jan. 25, 1969, edition 1
15
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