Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 23, 1989, edition 1 / Page 36
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Dr. Bass Delivers Message At St. Aug’s Convocation The potential for excellence can be found in each of you, was the message from Saint Augustine’s College board chairman, Dr. Marshall Bass, differently from the average mind. Even though true genius is so rare, so unearthly that the person that poaaeaaes it is seen tive is and remain a part of it in do. To learn to i effec tive member of society and the world of work,” said Bass, that’s the road to “Great their losses. They don’t grieve over failures, they look around the corner toward the good things that await them,” Bass said. There is probably no greater #00 pie. Marshall Bam has com manded infantry troops in com bat and was wounded twice. Hej served as a military attache in West Africa, and commanded! one of the northernmost brigades in the DMZ daring the | m a military aide to the vice of the US. He was responsible for personal poncics in i wonowioe cor poration (RJR Nabisco), degree of excellence already instilled in the campus environ “ Never for a moment did I believe that I would be directly airecuy accouniaDie ior neip ing to charter the future of Saint Augustine’s for years to come,” be added. “Saint Augustine’s is truly a unique place. The environment provides the opportunity for learning. We are hlresed to have as our wwjjgl a man who sets himself apart from his peers when it somes to manag ing an institution. He has for die past quarter of a century small*porte^evvatsT ne total of all of those acts will be Chemical Engineers Command Big Bucks BY RICHARD E. MOORE GREENSBORO—A hand the basement of McNair Hall at AAT State Unhreraity detergent*, household To I The fact that atarting at roughly MMM Dr. Franklin King, of the antvenity's Department of Chemical to time whom they hire.’ King helped to begin AATs chemical engineering major in the fall of IMS with aix etndenta. Currently, there are nearly 100 students in the pro “Thinga are going very well,” said Kh«. “hi terms of student stra«th, we think that we have an SAT average as high m any iwgiiiiwr. iag school in the nation. Our T» that we want more __ AAT graduated one student, Steven Coleman, in the program last Map. He is currently enrolled pro gram is due to the of the in the pro King. “We ted that if we get a student to eon we have a good chance of get o( the pngram is the fact that every Junior chemical major hi the in Oak HUP, He helped to monitor a i tadmntor uaed to be would love to work far the Na Klng mill ( meat opportunities ere available for the graduates with chemical, food,. phar Vaaity and futility equal total futility. * * • It is not as danger which front you from a known enemy, hot rather from a Jealous the friend. * v~ WORD WISE _ i __ scent and have done a lot of reading about World Warn. Can yon plenaa tell me why the Germans are called the Aryan race? A. It waa only in Nazi ideology that Aryan re ferred to Caucnsian gen tiles. ThU was a tramped and that’s what the Nazis believed themselves to be. Ironically, Aryan refers to Iwd^ and fader Bterded with the peoples of North
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Nov. 23, 1989, edition 1
36
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