the carolina times (durham, n.c.) 1967-05-20 [p...
TRANSCRIPT
-THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1961
MUSICAL PROTESTORS?Co- succeeded in an 100r r boycottlumbia, S. C. Boycotters at of classes. The students areAllen University here furnish protesting the school board'sed entertainment as students
action which caused the schoolswhite dean to resign.
(UPI Photo)
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Second Lieutenant James C.DeShields. son of Mr. and Mrs.James C. DeShields of 1016 S.Second St.. Wilmington, hasbeen awarded silver wingsupon graduation from U. S.Air Force navigator training at
Mather AFB. Calif.
Lieutenant DeShields is be-ing assigned to PlattsburghAir Force Base. New York, forflying duty on KC-135 Strato-tanker aircraft with the Strate-gic Air Command. America'slong-range nuclear bomber andmissile force
The lieutenant, a 1962 grad
uate of Williston High School,
received his BA. degree in1966 from the Agricultural and
Technical College of N. C.His wife, Joyce, is the daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. WilHamBryant of 913 S. Seventh St.,Wilmington
Airman Jerry M Burrage,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle MBurrage; of 2631 Harvard Ave..Durham has been selected fortraining a' Chanute AFB, 111.,as an Air Force aircraft main-tenance specialist.
The airman, a 1966 graduate
of Durham High School, re-cently- completed basic trainingat Amarillo AFB Tex.TWIN WINNERS?Twins Caro-
lyn, left, and Marilyn Joneswere winners in the big bunnyhunt conducted by the off-campus women students at .V.C. College recently. The daugh-
i ters of Mr. and Mrs PaschalI Jones of Carrboro, sold the
I most umbrellas in a drive to
raise scholarship funds foi theI school, to win the pink bunny
i prize
' Airman First Class Linda SLineberger. whose mother. MrsKuby McCoy, lives on Rt. 4.Ourham. has arrived for duty
at Andrews AFB. MdAirman Lineberger. a per
=onnel specialist, previouslyserved at Amarillo AFB. TexHe is assigned to the 89th Mili-tary Airlift Wing, the special
Ai: Force unit which provides
air transportaton for the Presi-dent of the United States andother top government officials
The airman is a graduate ofi Durham High School.
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Airman Apprentice HubertCash. CSN. son of Mrs EdithCasii of 105 Hillside Ave.; Fire-man Apprentice Ronnie \V.Pearce. t'SN, son of Mr andMrs Alvin F Pearce of GuessRead. Seamon Apprentice WmD. Spearman, USN, son of Mrs.Mary F Spearman of 312 DowdSt . are off the coast of Viet-nam helping to launch airstrikes against the enemey as
crewmen aboard the attack car-rier USS Kitty Hawk.
YOU'RE OUT!!! That's the word from Vice Pivsi-("ont Hubert Humphrey as he imitates Emmett L. Ash--1 .i J, who is the first Negro umpire in the MajorLeagues. Mr. Ashford and his wife, Margaret, recentlyti! opoed by to see the Vice President, who is an ardentsnores fan. Ashford offered his services as a speakei tot ie Youth Opportunity Program, which the Vice Pr:si-»'jnt heads.
A* lot of enterprises, like a lotof people, look successful butaren't ,
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NCC StudentPrexy to AttendHarvard Univ.
Samuel V. Thomas, president
of North Carolina College'sStudent Government Associa-tion, has been admitted to theLaw School of Harvard Univer-sity, Cambridge, Mass.
Thomas, a resident of Brook-ly, N. Y., was the recipient offellowship offers from threeother schools for postgraduatestudies. These schools were
Haverford College, post-bacca-laureate fellowship; Universityof Illinois Law School; andUniversity of Wisconsin grad-uate school.
At NCC's annual Awards Day
recently, Thomas was namedrecipient of the James E. Shep-ard Hamilton Watch Award asthe outstanding student leaderfor 1967. He was elected byhis fellow students as the reci-pient of the award.
With Our Men in the Service.«v*
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HUBBARD
Second Lieutenant George C.Hubbard, son of Mr and Mrs.John Hubbard Sr.. of 512 E.End Ave., Durham, has beenawarded silver wings upongraduation from the U.S. AirForce navigator school at Mather AFB. Calif.
Lieutenant Hubbard is re-
maining at Mather for special-
ized aircrew training beforereporting to his first perma-nent unit for flying duty.
The lieutenant, a graduate ofMerrick-Moore High School,
received his B S M E degree in1966 from A and T College
He was commissioned thereupon completion of the AirForce Reserve Officers Training Corps program
His wife, Edith, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs James Autry Sr. of Rt 2, Chapel Hill.
Any wife can keep her hus-band happy if she'll treat himas he's treated at his club.
SET THE PACE- i
On Your Block With A Comoro
From HARRISS-CONNERS
OUR PACESETTER PRICE
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WE NEED YOUR TRADE-IN!OUR USED CAR LOT IS LOADED
WITH CLEAN "OK" USED CARS
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DOUG CLARK & BAND
Doug Clark and OrchestraSuffer Heavy Loss in Bus Fire
Doug Clark and the HotNuts, a local band, and present- Jly rated number three among jall college comedy attractions,.according to Bill Board Maga- |zine, suffered a $14,000.00 loss IMay 10th. The group had justreturned from a college tourof New York, Wisconsin, lowa,Nebraska, and Illinois and was
enroute to Greensboro, to playa night club date when theirbus caught on fire about 8miles east of Greensboro, on1-85 Highway. After unsuccess-ful attempts to extinguish the jblaze the fire department was jcalled but by the time it ar- Jrived extensive damage had jbeen done. All of the groups juniforms and several instru-1ments, along with over $3,000.- j00 in records and personal be-;longing had gone up in flames, j
They were fortunate in thatthey were able to save almost jall of their instruments. After-1wards, they were able to com-1plete their last big college trip |of the season which carried jthem back to Illinois. The aggregation now consists of elev- jen members several of whomare from out of state Doug
is already negotiating for an-
ther bus so that the group canbegin their summer tours:
DUKE U. GETS$38,752 FORCANCER STUDY
WASHINGTON Fifth Dis-'trict Congressman Nick Gali-fianakis today announced a
538,725 grant from the U. S.Dept. of Health, Education andWelfare to the Duke UniversitySchool of Medicine for studiesin chemotherapy of canceragents.
Principal investigator for theproject is Dr.- Charles Brad-sher. The grant is the seventhin an 11-year program of re-seasch.
LONG INSPIRATIONKichard Deacon, who spent
five years on TV as the baldtelevision producer on "TheDick Van Dyke Show," plays »
pirate leader in "Th« King'«Pirate." For his role, they gavehim a head of hair that hangsto his shoulders. "Unfortunate-ly." says Deacon, "I think thehair style was inspired byPhyllis Diller."
JP WHAT'S NEW \i> *
kM\ ... *3 "r'-n jINW SCIENCE? © :
A doctor is now able to seea three-dimertsional view of a
patient's internal organs in a
normally lighted hospital ex-amination room ?thanks toan X-ray unit called a
"Stereo Fluoricon," a new de-velopment in X-ray tech-nology.
Developed at General Elec-tric's X-ray Department, theunit is expected to be of greatvalue in heart studies andsuch surgical procedures aspinning bones and locatingforeign objects.
In transportation, air CUSJITion vehicles, one of the newestmodes of travel, can skimover land or sea on a cushionof air. At its Flight Propul-
sion Division, GE has devel-oped 1000-horsepower marinegas turbine engines thatpower a large fan lifting thesevehicles into the air, allowing
them to skim over any flatsurface. Already in use onSift Fratifcisco Bay, "jet-skimmers" carry 15 passen-gers and travel at speeds upto 70 m.p.h.
But medicine and transpor-tation are only two areas
already witnessing tremen-dous changes. Nuclear poweris rapidly becoming one of theworld's great energy sources.By the end of this decade,boiling water nuclear reac-tors, made by GE, will havegenerated enough kilowatthours of electricity to supplya city of two million people,with electricity for six years.
It's not unlikely that one
day we'll heat our homes withnuclear energy, but whileMother Nature makes wintercold, industrial scientists canmake it colder. Nature's best(or worst) efforts have sel-dom exceeded minus 100° F.,but scientists at GE's Re-search and DevelopmentCenter have come within onedegree of "absolute zero"?abone-chilling minus 460°F.Strange things happen atthese extremely low tempera-tures; rubber smashes likeglass, and lifeprocesses virtu-ally come to a halt.
Innovations in these andmany other areas of advancedwork are being undertaken inmore than 50 major labora-tories at General Electric.
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