Training acrosa -New Nationsnewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1965-08-28/ed-1/seq-14.p… ·...

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-THE CAROUNA IDOB SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1069

Our Area Men in the ServicePROJECT GEMINI V Ma-

chlnist'i Mate Fireman EddieA. Daniel, USN, aon of Mr.

and Mrs. Austin A Daniel of2810 Chapel Hill Road, Dor-ham ia one of more than 10,-000 men now on (tation aroundthe world in the Department ofDefense's recovery force forthe eight-day flight of astro-nauta L. Gordon Cooper andCharlea Conrad, Jr.

He is aboard the destroyerUSS Leonard F. Mason a unitof Taik Force 130, the Pacificrecovery force. Although themission has been programmed

to end in the Western Atlantic,the Pacific recovery force willbe- on station to assist the as-tronauts in the event that aPacific landing is implement-ed.

*

Task Force 130 is being di-rected by Rear Admiral HenryS. Persons from the PacificRecovery Center near PearlHarbor, Hawaii.

Since Mason's selection as a

recovery ship, her crew hasbeen undergoing extensivetraining in spacecraft recoverytechniques.

Normally operating out ofYokosuka, Japan, as part ofthe U. S. Seventh Fleet, Masonwill resume normal fleet op-erations following the mission.

? ? *

USS SAINT PAUL?Navy Lieu-tenant Angus M. Mcßryde, Jr.,Medical Corps, son of Dr. andMrs. A M. Mcßryde of 3406Westover Road, Hope Valley,Durham, is serving aboard theheavy cruiser USS Saint Paul.

Serving as Flagship for Com-mander First Fleet, Saint Pauloperates out of San Diego, Cali.fornia.

? ? ?

CHU LAI, VIET NAM?Ma-rine Staff Sergeant laaac R.Vaughan, grandson of Mrs.

Nancy B. Harris of 711 GrantSt., Durham, ia serving withHeadquarter* and MaintenanceSquadron 12 at Chu Lai, VietNam.

A unit of Marine AircraftGroup 12, which has been fly-

1n g daily combat missionsagainst the Viet Cong, thesquadron ia responsible for therepair and maintenance ofgroups jet aircraft

? ? ?

MILTON, Florida MarineAviation Cadet Daniel L Stew-art, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.Daniel L Stewart of Route 3,Fayetteville Road, Durham, isundergoing flight training withTraining Squadron Three atthe Whiting Field Naval Auxil-iary Air Station, Milton, Fla.

Here he will spend sixmonths training in the single-engine, propeller-driven NorthAmerican "Trojan" trainingaircraft. This will include over100 hours in "Trojan" transi-

tion precision and acrobaticflying, basic instrument, radioinstrument navigation and for-mation flying.

Additionally, Stewart willcomplete a 15-week groundschool course which covers suchsubjects aa aerodynamics engi-neering, meterology, naviga-tion, jet engines, weapons sys-tems, communications snd lead-ership.

Training Squadron Three,commanded by Commander G.W. Smith, is an intregal partof the Naval Training Com-mand and holds the honor ofhaving attained the longest re-

cord of accident free flighthours of any single-enginesquadron in the Navy.

Stewart attended Agricultu-ral and Technical College,Greensboro.

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Lincoln Gets GrantFor Study of

African LanguageLINCOLN University, Pa.?

Lincoln University is one ofthree colleges in the country

to receive a grant from theUnited States Office of Educa-

tion in African languages and

an undergraduate African Lan-guage and Area Center. Au-thorized under the languagedevelopment provision of theNational Defense EducationAct, the Center is designed toexpand and alrengthen instruc-tion in Africa nlanguages and

in other studies related to thatcontinent

Lincoln has for sometime of-fered courses in Swahili, thelanguage used in much of EastAfrica, as well as courses inAfrican history, ethnology, andpolitics. The grant will enablethe university to add a num-ber of subjects to the curricu-lum over the next academicyear. Currently planned arecourses in: Advanced Swabiliand African Linguistics to begiven by Mrs. Alice Grant:Language Specialist; Problemsof Development in Sub-SaharaAfrica given by Dr. GeorgeHenry, Assistant Professor ofEconomics; and Politics of NonIndependent Africa given by

Dr. John Marcum, Professor ofPolitical Science and Directorof the African Center Program.

ON THE N. C.HOME FRONT

HOUSING TOURRequests (or Extension house

plans continue to grow in Edge-

combe County. Mrs. Hazel Par-ker, home economics agent,says many families are also re-questing information on re-

modeling.Recently, several families

went on a tour of new homesto study the outstanding fea-tures in the house plans. Theyvisited the homes of Mr. andMrs. Fred Coley, Mr. and Mrs.Marvin Macklin, and Mrs. Doro-thy Mabrey.

STATI 100 COOKIRYWINNIR

Evelyn Little, Robersonville,Rt. 1, cooked her way into theegg cooking finals and was de-clared state winner.

"How To Keep Fit All DayThe Egg Protein Way" was thetopic for her demonstration.rMs. Vivian Morris, home eco-nomics agent, says the MartinCounty 4-H'ers has given thedemonstration before manygroups and also on television.

NUTRITION CLASSESHow do you like your vege-

tables? Mrs. Lottie Hairston,home economics agent, haabeen teaching the ForsythCounty homemakers to boil,fry, bake, steam, and pan theirvegetables.Mrs. Vivian Morris, home eco-

in serving the vegetables in avariety of ways butteredcreamed, scalloped, and glazed.The homemakers were intro-duced to many new vegetableswhich can add variety to themeals.

Disciples ofChrist Hold49!h N.Y. Meet

BROOKLYN, N. Y?Pointedglimpses at their own congre-gational needs and into nation-al and international problemsmarked the 49th annual assem-bly here this week of Negromembers of the ChristianChurches (Disciples of Christ).

More than 300 persons fromall over the nation who attend-ed the National Christian Mis-sionary Convention in theStuyvesant Heights ChristianChurch plunged into concen-trated courses to help them bebetter church leaders andmembers.

Aad in a vote of confidence,the assembly re-elected all of-fleers.

Eugene W. James Sr., pastorof the Third Christian Churchin Warren, Ohio, will againserve as president.

The assembly authorised theconvention's Committee on Pro-gram and Structure to discussways for total integration ofnational and state work withother agencies of the ChristianChurches?the United ChristianMissionary Society and the In-ternational Convention ofChristian Churches (Disciplesof Christ)?and report to the1000 assembly which will be

held in Chicago.Staff, program and services

of the NCMC were merged withthe UCMS In 1900, and theDisciples' national and Interna-tional agencies serve and actin behalf of all races. The com-munion has many interracialcongregations.

Chairman of the Programand Structure Committee is W.K. Pox, Jr., at East Orange,New Jersey.

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HIGH SCHOOL STUDINTLEADERS?Gathered hara be-

tween sessions. ? group of highschool laadart attending thaaighth annual Studant CouncilWorkshop at Shaw University

recently, discus* plant for or-ganiiation for tha coming yaar.

From laft to right, thoy ara:Gwendolyn Mormon,ham; Gurnay Brown, Rocky

Mt.; Milton Patterson, Durham;Alica Brooks, Charlotte; Dorvnia Hoovar, Charlotte; Dwlght

Barnas. Durham; and ParcyMurray of Swan Quarter.

2 SCHOOLS GET GRANTS TO AID CRIMINAL JUSTICENEW YORK Two universi-

ties?Georetown and Chicago*?will establish institutes design-ed to help improve criminaljustice under grants ot $1 mil-Iron each announced last weekby Ford Foundation.

Georgetown Unirersity's in-stitute, to be set up at its lawcenter, will conduct researchand demonstration projects inthe Washington, D. C. area. The

cases, and various problems oflegal representation in criminalcases.

"Recent decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court and othercourts have emphasized theneed for drastic changes in thecriminal-justice proeess," said

1 Paul N. Ylvisaker, director ofi the Foundation's Public Affairs

| program.

, University of Chicago'; law'? school will establish an insti-I tute to conduct a research-

oriented program in law en-forcement, corrections, and de-linquency.

In addition, the Foundationannounced a $680,000 grant tothe American Bar Foundation \u25a0for studies of the national cost Iof criminal-law administration, Ithe disposition of chronic-drunk |

Presbyterian CR Leader CitesReasons For Recent LA Riot

PHILADELPHIA A UnitedPresbyterian civil right* lead-er declared here this weekthat race riots in Los Angeles"were not basically anarchistic,wild, hysterical behavior, butstudied, deliberate, punitive ac-tion on the part of the Negropoor against the white peoplethey consider to be their ene-mies?white store owners and?white people who exercise eco-nomic control in the Wattsghetto."

The Rev. Dr. Gayraud S. Wil-more, Jr., New York, executivedirector of the United Presby-terian Commission on Religionand Race, further asserted thatthe five days of mass destruc-tion sprung from "unwise andimprudent police action anddelay on the pari of the whitepower structure in meeting thedemands of the grass-rootsleadership of the Negro ghet-to."

"The things going on in LosAngeles," the Negro ministersaid, "are really a systematicdestruction of whit e-ownedbusinesses in the Negro com-munity.munity. In essence, what theyarf demanding is economic con-

trol of their own neighbor-

hood."Dr. Wilmore has just return-

ed from Los Angeles, where hamet with Negro leaders of theriot-torn Watts area and con-cerned officials of the Presby-tery of Los Angeles. He madethese observations at a pressconference held in the Wither-spoon Building.

At the same time, be urged

"all news media to correctlyinterpret what is occurring 1BLos Angeles today in orderthat the white community

around the country can begin

to sense the depth and serious-ness of the problem of poverty

and deprivstion and injusticein Los Angeles and in manyother metropolitan areas acrosathe country.

-New NationsContinued from 4B

tion.""And wherever there is free-

dom of religion, there is free-dom of opportunity."

Chief Adebo called the Unit-ed Nations a great force forpeace in the world and a great

asset to the new nations.

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