University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 15, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 11, 1987 Page: 4 of 6
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UNIVERSITY PRESS November 11,1987*4
collegiate camouflage
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Can you find the hidden government terms?
BUNDESRAT
LOGROLLING
CABINET
MANDATE
DESPOTISM
MARXIST
DETENTE
MUCKRAKE
ELECT
MUGWUMP
HOME RULE
NEW DEAL
KNESSET
POLITICS
KREMLIN
RED TAPE
LEFT WING
TORY
LIBERAL
UNCLE SAM
LOBBY
WHIP
Answers to today’s puzzle
appear Friday.
SCRIBE
CLEVER
Answers to
Friday, Nov. 6, puzzle
ACTED
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Memorial
held Monday
for student
Memorial services were held Mon-
day at 2 p.m. in the Beeson
Technical Arts auditorium for
William Meighan, 40, of Nome.
Meighan, who was studying
welding, died Wednesday, Nov. 4,
from injuries sustained early that£
morning in an auto-truck accident at*
the intersection of Highway 365 and
FM 1406.
Regular services were held jp
Jonestown, Pa., Saturday at 1 p.nr.
at the Homestead United Methodist
Church. He was buried in Grand
View Cemetary in Jonestown.
Meighan is survived by his
mother, Juliet Meighan, and a
brother, John Edward Meighan,
both of New York.
Veterans.
Stick figures
Charlie Peek of Kirbyville puts up pieces of the
Beaumont Art Museum advertisement on a
Photo by Lyra Katena
Holland Advertising Company billboard on Car-
dinal Drive Friday.
Irish are not English
Lecture focuses on family
By Evelyn Hawn
UP news editor
Donna Birdwell-Pheasant, assis-
tant professor of sociology, will pre-
sent a lecture entitled “Why the
Irish are not English: Family Life in
the Early 20th Century,” today at
11:15 a.m. on the eighth floor of Gray
Library.
The lecture, part of the Lamar
University Lecture Series, will treat
some of the ongoing conflict between
Ireland and England.
“In the Republic of Ireland, you
can go back very far in time and see
the history of Ireland where you find
different values and family
organization which inhibit
understanding,” Birdwell-Pheasant
said.
Birdwell-Pheasant went to Ireland
in 1986 as a Fulbright Research
Scholar, conducting field research in
rural western Ireland. She also went
last summer with the National
Science Foundation to study the role
of non-marriage in rural Irish fami-
ly systems.
“The Irish are a unique people in
Europe in that they participated in
the populating of this country to a
great extent.... They also populated
Australia, South Africa and any
number of places,” Birdwell-
Pheasant said, “but they are always
Irish wherever they go.
“They maintain their ethnic iden-
tity even though they are English
speaking.”
Birdwell-Pheasant said that there
are few monolingual Irish-speaking
people left.
Part of their retention of their
ethnic identity comes from the fact
that Ireland was one of the few areas
not incorporated into the Roman em-
pire and native traditions continued
until the Irish kings were done away
with in the 16th century, Birdwell-
Pheasant said.
Birdwell-Pheasant’s fields of
specialization include the
theoretical fields of domestic
economy, history and social pro-
gress, agrarian anthropology,
economic anthropology, social
organization and the evolution of
family systems.
Since coming to Lamar from
Texas A&M University, Birdwell-
Pheasant has organized and chaired
two symposia.
Her articles have been published
in anthropological journals and she
has presented 10 papers at profes-
sional meetings.
Continued from page 1
“People don’t understand the
mental handicap they really come to
know,” Bateaste says.
Another ROTC officer, SGM Bob-
by Smith, feels the same way about
those movies.
“They show them as baby killers
and drug addicts,” Smith said.
“They’re very unrealistic in light of
my personal experience.
“It does the NCO and Officer:
Corps a disservice.”
Smith was in Vietnam from late
1965 to 1968. He was married when
he went to war, and he and his fami-
ly felt that it was inevitable that he
would go to war. —
Smith said he feels that those who'
stayed in the military after the
had fewer problems than those wtUK
left it completely.
“We have our own support
system,” Smith said. “People wfrfly
have nobody to associate with is thg^
major problem.”
“Politics was not our driving™
force,” Smith said. “Living througHJL
day to day was.”
Immediately after the war, Smith*«
went to recruiting school an«£»
brought up his three children witfL*
his wife. His two sons are in t($^,
military now.
“I went right on with my lifer1^ -
Smith said, “and have no menEaJT*,
scars from the war.” 'JLZ,
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A free Christian Science lecture by
Emily B. Wood, C.S.
A member of the Board of Lectureship of
The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist,
in Boston, Massachusetts.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 3 P.M.
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Ford, Steven. University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 15, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 11, 1987, newspaper, November 11, 1987; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth500433/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar University.