Monday, October 12, 2015

Baaa! Baaaa! Baaaaaaaaaaa!




JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 1:20 AM Tuesday, April 28, 2009 - http://hvom.blogspot.com/2009/04/bawk-bawk-bawk-bawk.html


Bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk

You tell me.

Is that chicken talk or just gibberish to a chicken?

You're the expert. Chicken.

Either way you are just a goddamned chicken.

You have always been a goddamned chicken and you will always be a goddamned chicken.

Punk.

Bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk

Worthless goddamned chicken punk.

Bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk bawk


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 28 April 2009 excerpt ends]



































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http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2003-01-22/news/0301220186_1_gery-chico-sen-barack-obama-peter-fitzgerald

Chicago Tribune


Legislator in race to unseat Fitzgerald

Democrat seeks 2004 nomination for U.S. Senate

January 22, 2003 By Rick Pearson and John Chase, Tribune staff reporters.

Democratic state Sen. Barack Obama of Chicago formally announced his candidacy for the U.S. Senate on Tuesday










http://www.nytimes.com/1991/06/26/world/kgb-aide-tells-of-defector-who-was-kim-philby-s-handler.html

The New York Times


K.G.B. Aide Tells of Defector Who Was Kim Philby's Handler

By DAVID BINDER,

Published: June 26, 1991

WASHINGTON, June 25— The deputy spokesman of the K.G.B. said today that a top Soviet intelligence officer who controlled the Philby-Burgess-Maclean spy ring was in the United States as a defector when they came under suspicion.

The spokesman, Oleg Tsarev, said at a news conference here that he was collaborating on a book about the Soviet intelligence officer, Aleksandr Orlov, who defected in 1938 to the United States after serving as control officer of Kim Philby, Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean.

Orlov, though a defector, did not reveal the true nature of these Britons, Mr. Tsarev said. "He defected but he was not a traitor," the K.G.B. man added.

The three Britons were members of what was called the Cambridge spy ring, a group that started to disintegrate when two of the men fled to the Soviet Union in 1951. Recruited by N.K.V.D.

The three were among a group of men with left-wing sympathies at Cambridge University who were recruited in the early 1930's by the N.K.V.D., the state security apparatus that was the predecessor of the K.G.B. Later, Philby and Burgess, as officials in the British Secret Intelligence Service, and Maclean, in the Foreign Office, acquired highly sensitive information that they passed to Soviet control officers. All three worked in Washington in the late 1940's.

"Orlov personally ran Philby, Maclean and Burgess," Mr. Tsarev said, describing the Soviet officer's work as an illegal operative in Britain in the 1930's. He added that Orlov, with the rank of "special major," was sent as the N.K.V.D.'s chief clandestine field officer to Spain in 1936 during that country's civil war, an assignment Orlov later acknowledged.

Mr. Tsarev said Orlov was also in touch there with Philby, who worked as a correspondent of The Times of London covering the Franco side in 1937.

Mr. Tsarev asserted that the Federal Bureau of Investigation interrogated Orlov twice without learning that he had worked with the Cambridge network in the 1930's. "The F.B.I. interrogated him pretty hard one time," Mr. Tsarev said with a thin smile. No Comment From F.B.I.

A bureau spokesman said the F.B.I. had no comment on the assertion at this time. A 1958 newspaper report quotes an assistant United States Attorney, Herbert C. Kantor, as saying that the F.B.I. questioned Orlov four years earlier in connection with an espionage case.

As a result of decoded N.K.V.D. messages, American counterintelligence officials had become extremely suspicious of Maclean and Burgess well before they escaped from Britain and made their way to the Soviet Union in 1951. Thereafter, suspicions focused on Philby, who waited 12 more years before escaping to Moscow. Published Book on Stalin

Orlov, who died in 1973, he said, was known to have been an officer of the N.K.V.D., but nothing in contemporary espionage literature indicates his connection with the Cambridge ring.

In 1953, Orlov published a book, "The Secret History of Stalin's Crimes," followed a decade later by a "Handbook" on intelligence. But neither touched directly on his activities as a clandestine operative. Orlov also testified before a Senate intelligence committee in 1957.

Mr. Tsarev came to Washington, he said, as a guest of the privately run National Intelligence Study Center. He accompanied John Costello, the British author of the newly published "Ten Days to Destiny," which is about the flight of Hitler's deputy, Rudolf Hess, from Germany to Scotland in 1941.

Mr. Costello said that Mr. Tsarev had obtained original documents on the Hess case for him from Moscow intelligence archives. In several documents, Mr. Tsarev pointed out, Philby appears under a N.K.V.D. code name, Sohnchen, which means "little son" in German.

Mr. Tsarev said the K.G.B. had opened its files on Orlov to him and Mr. Costello, and that they would disclose details of the N.K.V.D.'s involvement in other spectacular espionage events. The spokesman said he was working on the new book in his spare time.

In a two-part series last December in Trud, the Soviet trade union paper, Mr. Tsarev lifted a corner of the blanket of secrecy covering the N.K.V.D. spymaster. Mr. Tsarev wrote that Aleksandr M. Orlov was born in 1896 and went to work for the Soviet intelligence service in 1926, when it was called the O.G.P.U.

He was sent almost immediately to France, where he remained until 1930. Then, after three years in Moscow, he served a short stint as the chief underground intelligence officer in Vienna, followed by London. According to the Tsarev account he would have taken over the Cambridge ring about 1934.










https://www.sa.sc.edu/omsa/living-the-dream/

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA


Living the Dream: The African- American Presence at University of South Carolina


Civil Rights Era: 1906-1969

The Reintegration of the University of South Carolina

The 1960’s were a time of turmoil, change and expansion. It was also a time in which African-Americans were again seeking equity in higher education through integration. One of the major impulses to integrate institutions of higher education was the limited curricular offering in most black colleges. In 1955 most of the black colleges concentrated on vocational training to the exclusion of professional training. As a result of segregation, blacks for the most part, had to go outside of the South for professional training. Most white colleges barred blacks. However, from 1826, when the first black graduated from Bowdoin and Amherst Colleges to 1890 about eighty blacks graduated from Northern white colleges. As the twentieth century progressed, some northern universities dropped their ban against admitting black students but controlled the number of blacks admitted by requiring a photograph with all applications. Once blacks were admitted, a standard practice in many white colleges was to provide segregated living arrangements, and institute quotas on the number of blacks who could participate in collegiate sport or join bands. Black students, upon entering the classroom on predominately white campuses, sometimes faced prejudiced teachers and racially demeaning books. One widely used book was William A. Dunning’s Reconstruction: Political and Economic (1907). According to Dunning, Reconstruction was a period “dominated by a mass of barbarous freedmen.” Despite many obstacles, black students tried to adjust.

The Struggle to Reintegrate USC

The University remained an all-white institution until the forced 1963 admission of Henri Dobbins Monteith, Robert G. Anderson, and James L. Solomon, Jr. However, blacks made numerous efforts from 1937 to 1960 to gain entrance to the University. In 1937 Charles Bruce Bailey, grandson of Paris Simkins, USC Law School, class of 1876, sought and was denied admission to USC Law School. In June 1946, John H. Wrighten, a senior at the Colored Normal, Industrial, Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina (now South Carolina State University) applied to the University’s Law School and was denied admission because of his race. Wrighten sued the state of South Carolina on the basis that the University had violated the principle of “separate but equal” since the state at that time did not provide a law school for black students. The South Carolina General Assembly responded by appropriating sixty thousand dollars for the establishment of a graduate and law school for blacks to be located at the all-black state college in Orangeburg. Wrighten entered the law school at State College in the fall of 1949 and graduated in June 1952.

In 1958, eleven black students from Allen University in Columbia including Thelma McClain, Mary Haton, James Jones, Cornell F. Mitchell and Loretta Jenkins attempted to gain admission to USC. Many factors militated against these students gaining admission but perhaps the most important factor, was a South Carolina law which authorized the legislative to close the State College in Orangeburg in the event that any black students were admitted to a white college or university in the state. However, despite this threat, in 1960 Lloyd and Raymond Westin, two SC State College students applied for admission but were denied.

In May 1962, Henri Monteith applied to the University and was denied admission. She went on to attend Notre Dame College in Maryland and filed suit against USC in October 1962 to gain entrance as a transfer student. The University admitted that Monteith was denied admission in May 1962 based on race, but in her application as a transfer student, her denial was based on the fact that she had failed to send the University a transcript or submit to a physical examination. After nine months of legal maneuvering, on July 10 1963, Judge J. Robert Martin of Greenville ordered USC to admit Monteith in the fall term, beginning September 1963.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 1:44 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Monday 12 October 2015