4B THE CAROLINA TIMES Set. Pec. 8, lfT8 Ui ' k-a)
Junior Missionaries Of St. Josspb's A. M. E. Cnnrcn Honor Porents WitB
Mrs. A Edgerston
Junior Adviser
The Junior Missionaries of
$L Joseph's AME Church
honored their parents on
November 30 with a festive
formal Appreciation Dinner at
the HJton Hotel Red Room
Ms. Audrey Edgerston serves
us their adviser.
As the Junior Missionaries
entered the Christmas
appointed room, dressed in
lovely long and short formal
An Appreciation Dinner At Hilton Inn
attire, with their parents in
atmilar attire, they were led to
the banquet style table, which
was also arranged with
Christmas decor.
Toast Mistress was Miss
Michelle DeJarmon, president
of the Junior Missionaries, who
welcomed the guests as several
other Junior Missionaries
pinned corsages on the special
guests. Miss Machelle Chavis
gave the occasion for the
celebration. Inspirational
were given by Rev. P.R.
Cousin, minister! He
encouraged the young ladies to
continue the fine job they have
been doing; to seek more
outreach in the community
which has been the custom of
the A.M.E. Church as they
move up the ladder in
missionary work and
endeavors.
The response for the parents
was given by Atty. LeMarquis
DeJarmon. He challenged the
wonderful heritage; not to
forget those who had gone
before and to always be
cognizant of their duty to
coming generations or those
who would follow; and above
all to remember that one's
reach must always exceed his
grasp.
Special guests included
Sonia George, Little Miss
Missionary, Dr. and Mrs.
Charles George and daughter,
Yvette; Rev. and Mrs. P.R.
Cousin, Mrs. Truemilla Smith,
On Friday Evening
President of the Carolina
Barnes Missionary Society;
Mrs. Joan Martin, 1st Vice
President, Mary C. Evans
Missionary Circle, Mrs. Sarach
Horry Jones, Dean of the
Missionary Institute and James
Edgerston, husband of Mrs.
Audrey Edgerston.
The Junior Missionaries of
St. Joseph's A.M.E. Church are
a part of the Young People's
Department of the Minnie S.
Pearson area which include the
fnilnwine officers from St.
Joseph's, Miss Tami Bolden,
President, Miss Cheryl Gilmer,
Secretary, Miss Angela Austin,
Chairman, Planning Committee
and Miss Tami Williams,
Chairman, Devoti on
Committee.
Parents and daughters
present at the dinner included:
Mr. and Mrs. Lodius Austin
and Miss Angela Austin; Mrs.
Roberta McNeil and Miss
Pamela Blake; Mrs. Ruby
Bolden and Miss Mavis Bolden;
Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Bolden and
Miss Tami Bolden; Mr. and
Mrs. Alton Buie and Miss
Sherrie Buie; Mrs. Sophine
Chavis and Miss Machelle
Chavis; Dr. and Mrs. R. E.
Dawson and Miss Melanie
Dawson, Atty. and Mrs.
LeMarquis DeJarmon and Miss
Michelle DeJarmon; Mrs.
Evelyn Gilmer and Miss Cheryl
Gilmer, Mrs. Margaret Hayes
and Misses Marcia, Anise and
Effle Hayes; Mr. and Mrs, J.W.
Hill and Miss Althea Hill; Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Hunter and Miss
Deborah Hunter; Dr. and Mrs.
Charles Watts, and Miss
Winifred Watts; Mrs. Ella Mae
Williams and Miss Tami
Williams and Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Woodward and Miss
Arlette Woodward.
Junior Missionaries not
present include Misses Hope
Brown. Pamela Stanback and
Karen Moore,
commitment to
activities would not
them to participate
occasion.
Prior
school
permit
in this
long and short formal greetings and timely remarks young ladies to remember their ' ' ' I 1 - mma
Scenes From The Parents Appreciation Dinner Given By The Junior Missionaries Of St. Josephs .AME Church
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Dr. Arden Miller
Is Elected
To APHA
CHAPEL HILL-Dr. C'
Arden Miller of the University
of North Carolina School of
Publk Health here ban bean
elected president-elect of Ike
50,000- member American
Public Health Association
(APHA).
Dr. Miller was elected by
the governing council at the
Association's annual meeting in
San Francisco.
A professor of maternal and
child health, Dr. Miller is
former vice chancellor for
health sciences at the
University of North Carolina in
Chapel Hill. He is also a
pediatrician and former dean
and provost of the University
of Kansas Medical Center.
Dr. Miller is the second
national president to come
from the UNC School of Public
Health in the last two years.
Dr. Margaret Do lan, former
professor and chairman of the
department of public health
nursing, was president in
1972-73.
Dr. Miller is currently
chairman of the APHA's
Action Board, "the activist
division of the organization
that puts motion into the
group's new policies and
programs."
"The APHA is not now the
potent force that this nation's
public health picture requires,"
Dr. Miller said. "This Is a
regrettable circumstance! But
we intend to bring about a
change in this situation.
"In recent years this nation
has done great things in the
area of improved personal
health services but very little in
the broad areas of Improved
housing, working conditions
and nutrition. Though this
kind of emphasis has done a
great deal toward relieving
suffering, it has done little
toward increasing the overall
health and security of our dally
lives.
"Our country desperately
needs a public health
orientation even though
current national emphasis
tends to deny it," Dr. MiUer
ssld. "I believe economic
necessity will force us in time
to turn from orientation
toward MraonsJ health services
toward oittirtoeastngly geared
to community and preventive
health services.
"Right now we live with s
national administrative and
economic philosophy that is
committed to the view that
private and voluntary agencies
can provide everything the
population requires in terms of
essential services. It is a miracle
to me we ever acquired free
public schools and a federal
highway system. Today, if
these issues were posed, they
probably would be denied.
Nevertheless, they are valid.
"It is equally valid that
there are important aspects of
health that are a public
responsibility beyond the
provision of subsidies to private
and voluntary service agencies.
The setting of standards, the
monitoring of services and the
identification and provision of
essential services not otherwise
noted-these are all legitimate
public health concerns.
"I see personal health
services and the private and
voluntary provision of health
services as an important pert of
public health. I do not see
private and voluntary agencies,
no matter how generously
subsidized, as adquate
replacements for a public
commitment to health through
public agencies."
A health activist and leader
In social reform, Dr. Miller said
that only through hard-hitting
health actions now will future
generations of Americans enjoy
the good life. He said he has
proposed the APHA make a
national commitment to
improved health for all
Americans through various
action programs.
"A nation that has been
energetic and ingenious as this
one has been in devisin
methods for protecting
property values should have
title difficulty in finding ways
to implement a commitment to
protect human vahies," he said.
Dr. Miller Joined the UNC
faculty in 1966 when he
became vice chancellor. He
came here from the University
of Kansas. Author of scores of
scientific articles sn several
books, Dr. Miller has
specialized in a broad range of
fields from polio in children to
far-reaching health cnre
programs of all Americans.
The NC physician has long
been advocate of a national
LKFLECTI 06
FROM NCCU
Mary IfahttlMW,
He was an ex-boxer Jabbing at shadows because bis eyes had
been maimed. The shadows to him, had become a reality without
which he could not have survived. Walking the streets, he
intermittently cupped his hands over his eyes. To the passerby he
had become an oddity. They would watch him as be stopped at
every corner as if he were waiting for the bell to ring, then Into
the streets he would go tripping to escape the sbadows's fists. For
the most part the towns people knew him and the car drivers
eluded him in a kind of sympathetic gesture. Taxi cab drivers
swerved skillfully to avoid hitting the ex-boxer. They could not
cry for him, because in some relative way they too were boxing
shadowsshadows of the past and shadows of the future. The
present was too instantly gone and they had to deliver their
passengers as all of us have to do our jobs
VAIN ATTEMPT
Wrong Way
Detours
Curves
Yield
Stop Sign.
St, Dec 8, 1973
THE CAROLINA
Vanzell Woodard
INDIVIDUALITY
Brothers are we.
Different we shall always be.
We will Uve together.
The path is mutual understanding:
you are you
I am Me.
Gloria Harris
TREE
The stories you could tell!
The sounds that tease your seasoned ears:
Labored footsteps of janitors and maids
Discussions of the teams' successes and losses
Remarks about the cafeteria food
Fashion tips of jacket and jeer-clad girls
Jabbering of students
Whispers of lovers
Do you not hear the mumbled hopes, chanted desires
and unwanted fears?
I wonder. Katie J. Lawson
MY WIFE
' Only five foot-two and full of life,
Is only the beginning in describing my wife.
With big brown eyes sparkling bright,
Nothing ever seems to escape her sight.
She's full of talent and beautifully sings,
The birds In swe flutter their wings.
After working all day from eight to five.
She still looks good and that's no jive.
She's built compact, with everything just right,
She's sweeter than honey, even cherry wine,
But what I like best is,
SHE'S MINE ALL MINE!
By Ronald H. Harrison
AFTER iSCHOOL
Slam. The door shuts behind me as I dash intc
the house. "Mom," I call. No answer. "Mom! Mom, you home?"
Again no answer. Must be nobody's around. I slow my pace as I
enter the kitchen. I eye up the fridge door. "Um-dee-dah,
left-over roast, cooked carrots, milk, potatoes, rhubarb...Yecch!
Ain't there nothing good around? No peanut butter, no grape
jelly, not even any kool-ald! Sheesh."
Gotta be something somewhere. Hop over to the cookie jar
Rip the cover off. "Yahoo! Chocolate chip, my favorite -ami the
jar's plumb full!" Grab three. Clink, as I drop the cover back on.
Wolf down the cookies. "Mmmm, delicious!"
Quick, a drink of water; throat's dry. Let the faucet run till
the water's tingly cold. Take a lo-ong slurp. Gulp It down. Finish
off the glass, slosh the water round and round in my mouth. Play
with it Roll my tongue, get all the crumbs, lick the sides of my
mouth. Clean it out good.
Ready for more cookies. Two more. Then one. And another,
Drink some more water. Gargle it till its lukewarm. Then swallow.
Feels good. That's enough for now.
Whoa, can't forget to stash some for bedtime tonight. How
manv? Six. Clink. Don't be a pig. Put two back. Clink. Indecision.
What the heck, take two more. Clink. Make up your mind. OK,
mmnmmiae. Dufone back. Clink.
Scraping noise. The laundry room door opens and shuts with a
k... -i ..,.. Mom from the garden. Can't let her catch me with
.11 thMD cookies. Shell be mad and yell at me.
Quickly. One step end s jump over to the stairs. Grab the
railing and slide down. Careful, dont drop the cookies, I warn
myself as I charge pell-mell down the hallway to my bedroom.
Flip the door closed, rip open the bottom dresser drawer -my
drawer for stashing things- and slip the cookies beneath the pile
of underwear. Hastily I close the drawer, open me aoor ....... ..
down the hallway, heart pounding. To the TV room. Switch on
the set. . ., . .
Mom hearing me scurrying around cans, Mar, you
from school?" Silence then the sound of the TV coming on
"Yah!" I answer belatedly as 1 spread out on ine rioor ana
prop my head on a pillow.
' ' ' .. no W . ...!,..... .....;., it,.. M.ll.
"How was school soaayf mom , w -
to put some lettuce in it.
"OK I yawm, glancing lazuy ai unn.
"What have you been doing since you got home?"
"Nothing, Just watching TV." I sigh. .
"Oh I baked some cookies for you this afternoon-chocolate
chip There's some in the cookie Jar If you want 'em," she
informs me Just before she lifts up the cover and Inspects the
half-empty Jar.
"New. I'm not hungry right now. I reply.
A knowing smile briefly skirts across Mom s face but she says
nothing. I continue watching TV
Mark W. Kenas
weo
WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES
Important
for you
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health plan that would insure
imporved health care for
everyone. Currently, Dr. Miller
chairman of the executive
committee of the N.C.
Consortium on Health
Manpower. He is a former
Markle scholar In Medical
Science.
SkDktnQnaki
tUBMU earth-
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TRY SOME TODAY- AI.LGOOD
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PURE, WHITE VEGETABLE SHORTENING
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'SUPER-RIGHT" CORN FED HEAVY
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RUMP OR
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