i10 THE CAROLINA TIMES :rn SAT., NOVEMBER 15.1980 (Vh of km advartlaad Rama it raoulrad to ba readily avallabto tor sat below tha advartlaad pftea in each AP Stora, aicapt pacifically notad thla ad. ' PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. NOV. 15 AT MP N DURHAM rTCMS i OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER REtAIL dealers or wholesalers f ANN PAGE 2 MILK LOW FAT GALLON JUG 79 ood Only in u DURHAM EieaytiyO, Fisie PoreellaSin) China Diane THIS WEEK'S FEATURE ITEM CUP EACH ONLY fi-v -V WITH EACH 5 PURCHASE SAVE 50c WHEN YOU PURCHASE I I iCSO Diane China SALT AND PEPPER W SHAKER SET GOOD THRU SAT.. NOV. 15 AT ALL ASP'S IN N. CAR. AND S. C. EXCEPT AIKEN AND BEAUFORT, S t. I 667 AKA's IKDUCT TWENTY-ONE MEMBERS Alpha Chi Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., the NCCU campus chater, recently initiated twenty-one new members. The new members hail from several cities in North and South Carolina as well as the District of Col umbia. During their period of indoctrination the new members assisted in bake saies with Alpha Chi Chapter; promoted their own Talent Show for the public; held a movie presentation for the campus on Family Planning by the Durham Public Health Community Outreach section; collected for UNICEF on Hallo ween among the dormitories and assisted in the national Alpha Kappa Alpha Voter Blitz held on November 2 across the nation. Dr. Caroline Lattimore was the local co-ordlnator for the Voter Blitz in which the new members par ticipated. Misses Arnette Cowan and Philathea Dixon served as Dean and Co-Dean of Mice ShRila Wnrmar.k is nrnsident of Aloha Chi Charter. Seated from left to right in the photo are Sorors Rita Miller, Geraldine Thorne, Marilyn Williams, Denise McCormick, Rubetta Shackleford, Michelle Coaxum and Vickie Gates. STANDING from left to right are Sorors Ellen Hec tor, Karen Stevens, Beverly DeBerry, Myra Moore, Lori Ann Grier, Cynthia Ward, Lillie Newsome, Rosalind Blount, Valita Holmes, Wanda Little, Freda Bailey, Pamela Lewis, Margie Parker and Karen Langford. Photo by GARNER Shaw Homecoming Celebration Begins Friday Black Voting ma my $1,000.00 WINNER $1000.00 WINNER $I85,282 IN CASH PRIZES 94,484 CASH WINNERS WARREN K. GATTHER JACKSONVILLE, N.C. PAMELA ALLEN LUMBERTON, N.C. It's easy to play Pick up FREE Old Fashioned Bingo concealad tick at on ovary visit to MP Match straight row of 5 n unbars vwticaUy, horizontally or diagonally on any on of tha 4 Rama on ma star card, o purchase nacassary to parttdpata. Sh gama card for eomplato ruias. v, as wSftTOnw! $100.00 WINNER BARBARA CHAVEZ ROXBORO, N.C. 1100.00WINNER W. CHEVIS YOUNG SUMTER, S C. gn chakt inccTim oomuai M mm vit visits visits 11000 tl I B ? SCO 1 M II 6M t t t M7 100 300 I ni 21 I m t ttf I m MO S 10 3 100 I m 1 404 1 M 100 t M 15 ' i i i i v tt war i u ii 4 i 7 Tola mini 04 404 j la 46 la ii In in Khnll4KMtrilAllo(4 w RALEIGH Shaw University's three-day Homecoming 1980 celebration will begin at 1 1 a.m. Friday, November 14, when Brigadier General Guthrie L. Turner, Jr., MD, will deliver the convocation address at the Founders Day Service in the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. Dr. George C. Debnam, a prominent local physi cian, Dr. Charles "A" Lyons, chancellor of Fayetteville State Univer sity, and General Turner, all Shaw1 University graduates, will receive Honorary Doctorate degrees during the service in recognition of outstan ding achievement in their respective fields of endeavor. Many area civic leaders, as well as visiting dignitaries from across the nation, are expected to at tend and the public is cor dially invited to join in the festivities. Other Homecoming 1980 events . include crowning of Miss Shaw University in the Raleigh Civic Center at 7 o'clock Thursday evening, the an- A&P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF WHOLE BONELESS BOTTOMS A&P QUALITY CORN-FED FRESH PORK CHOPS CENTER CUT RIB LOIN LB.$-89 bslicedfree mmmm INTO ROAST C AND STEAKS I I 18 TO 24 LB. LB. Lj4 LB. l mmtmmmJ MARGARETS MARKET BASKET byiMargaret Happel - Authorof Butterick PublisliiS! J't If SAVER Cookbooks and Director of . Consumer Affairs for Nabisco lit U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER BOX-0 CHICKEN LIMIT 2 LB. IPKGS. TALMADGE FARM FRANECS OR SLICED BOLOGNA 12 OZ. PKG. r ANN PAGE MAYONNAISE 1 LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON. ' fffl i GOOD THRU SAT, NOV. 15 AT At QUART JAR 1 664 A&P IN DURHAM Q. My husband is a garlic fan and wants a simple gar lic sauce for basting meats when he cooks on our gas outdoor grill (his favorite of our wedding gifts). Garlic wasn't used in my home but I'm learning to use (and enjoy) it. L.B. Annapolis, Md. A. This Garlic Basting Sauce from my Saver Series Cool Cooking Cookbook couldn't be simpler: 12 cup oil 14 cup vinegar 1 clove garlic, crushed 12 teaspoon dry mustard Salt and pepper to taste Combine ingredients in screwtop jar. Shake well. Let stand an hour or more. Shake often when using. Makes 34 cup. (Use for basting or mar inating meats, poultry and seafood.) Q. So many main dishes really cry out for a simple light fruit dessert. Please suggest some. I have run out of ideas, I.S. Cleveland, Ohio. A. You are so right. Try one of these: (1) Sliced fresh pineapple, peaches, apricots I or nectarines with light rum or cranberry cocktail poured' l" I I I J over them. (2) Diced banana and drained canned mandarin oranges with a dab of frozen grape juice concentrate. (3) Applesauce blended with grated orange rind. Top with whole cranberry sauce. (4) Sliced mangoes, papaya or kiwi with lime juice. (5) Cut any melon in cubes and top with colorful isherbet. (6) Poached fresh pears are deli cious. This easy recipe is from my Something Special Cookbook. Poached Pears 3 large, firm but ripe pears 8 cups water 1 tablespoon lemon juice 12 cup sugar Peel, halve and core pears. Drop into 4 cups cold water with lemon juice added. Bring remaining 4 cups water and sugar to boil. Drain pears and add to boiling syrup. Reduce heat. Simmer 10 minutes or until tender. Chill. Serve with some syrup. Serves 3. (For a nice touch, sprinkle with chopped crystalized ginger.) Please address your food questions, tips or comments to Margaret Happel co Butterick Publishing, 708 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10017. nual Shaw University Homecoming Parade, beginning at 11:30 Satur day morning, the Homecoming Soccer Game between St. Augustine's College and Shaw University on Enloe High School Athletic Field at 2 p.m. that day, and a basketball game between great Shaw University alumni and the current "Mighty Super Bears". That 6 p.m. contest will be held in Spaulding Gym nasium on the campus Saturday. In keeping with the deep religious principles on which the institution was founded, Homecoming 1980 will officially end after worship services at 11 a.m. Sunday in the iipsityhapel. The Shaw University Homecoming Parade, which will include many area bands, drill teams, twirling groups, floats and various other forms of entertainment, will assem ble at the lower end of Blount Street, adjacent to the campus. The parade will proceed north on Blount Street, turn right on East Hargett for one block east to Person Street, then south on Per son Street to Smith field Street ending at the original assembly area. (Continued from Front) in Atlanta and at volunteers who directly lf$A mct! ' Intercity buses serve some 15,000 American communi ties. All but about a thou . sand of them have no other ' form of public transportation. puses Howard University." "Additionally," Madison said, "reports from selected precincts in black communities throughout the country in dicate a 75 turnout among registered black voters in Miami, an 82 turnout in, Detroit, and 84 turnout in Chat tanooga, an 80 turnout in Atlanta, a 70 turnout in Washington, D.C., and an 83 turnout in New York City. All of the preliminary reports and' Findings were the work of the NAACP Election Watch head quarters, established for the first time to chart and assess ithe election, and the ftACP Yjrter Education department. The complex network of field represen tatives and volunteers monitoring the polling booths and key NAACP officials in precincts throughout the country providing inter views to newspapers, radio and television sta tions according to the media proved to be an in valuable service. MadisOn said the work of the Election Watch was made easier through the efforts of technical con sultants, field coor dinators, volunteers man ning telephone banks, transportation coor dinators getting senior citizens to the polls and the continuing neighborhood get out the vote canvassers. These ac tivities . represented the final phase of the NAACP's massive RegistrationGet Out The Vote campaign which im pacted upon over eleven million black voters. Other efforts in this NAACP half-million dollar campaign included field coordinators and registered 49,000 in New York, 40,000 in North Carolina, 40,000 in Ten nessee, 43,000 in Indiana, 65,000 in Illinois as well as thousands of others in many other states. "The NAACP effort, combined with Operation Big Vote, the National Urban League and other organizations, made this the most successful black registration campaign ever undertaken," announced Hooks. In addition, local NAACP branches in Ten nessee registered hundreds of prison inmates, who . gained the right through a court order less than two : week? iwfore.the registrflr lion deadline; ': Former Congressman Charles Diggs, presently in carcerated in an Alabama prison himself, was the chairman of the NAACP Inmate Registration Pro gram, and played a larg-. role in placing registration booths in prison waiting . rooms. "You can count on me, can we count on you?", the slogan adopted during the RegistrationGet Out The Vote campaign, became a familiar phra:'' among many household in both black and while communities. Radio and television stations fed a steady diet of NAACP public service an nouncements on voting, in over 100 cities across the country months before the election. The entertainers used in the campaign, such as Aretha Franklin, Delia Reese . and Alex Haley, "were varied enough to appeal to all segments of the American ' popula tion," concluded Hooks, "and we owe each one of them a great debt of gratitude." DONALD DUCK ORANGE JUICE Vi GAL. CARTON i&MlJmm LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON. ,, . V-f "l - J GOOD THRU SAT., NOV. IS AT A&P IN DURHAM 1 I I Home Foreclosure Victims Need Good Counseling I I 665 1 .-J sir !S2 CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES EIGHT O'CLOCK INSTANT COFFEE 1 LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON. GOOD THRU SAT.,'wvriVAT"AP IN DURHAM iSlssiSSsas I I JAR 666 1 J The price of housing in Los Angeles as elsewhere in the nation, has risen dramatical ly in the past few years. Inflation has played a major role in the sky-rocketing prices, and even in low-income neighborhoods prices have zoomed upward. For example, the median value of homes in South Central Los Angeles increased 72 per cent from 1970 to 1977. This figure is even higher today. Not many South Central residents are aware of this fact, and herein lies an incredulously sad story. Under some , very peculiar circumstances, low-income home owners all over Lbs Angeles, are fin ding out that they've lost their homes to so meone called a "home loan counselor, a "foreclosure counselor." savior," or a "default FLORIDA SWEET ft JUICY 0a . eo oa WHrr Wft4iHblwViMsk VEU.OW onions 'vou CMOtcsr LSSS THAN NORTH CAROLINA GROWN TART ROME APPLES r 1 a These operators offer home refinancing assistance to individuals whose homes are in foreclosure. Nervous at the prospect of los ing their homes, and unaware of how to ob tain professional assistance, these' homeowners panic, and accept the help of these operators. , at The operators promise to find new mor tgage money, and get the homeowner out of debt if the homeowner will just sign a few; papers. When the homeowner signs these papers in belief that the home will be saved, about three things occur all in favor of the .counselor: A power of attorney is given to the counselor, so that the counselor can sup posedly seek a homeowners refinancing package. The fee is around $500, and generally no refinancing is ever secured. A grant deed is signed over to the counselor by the homeowner; the counselor records the deed, and apparently may be the legal owner of the property, of which the homeowner is unaware. , A leaseback contract is signed, by the homeowner, which allows him to "rent" back his home from the counselor. The "rent" is high higher than the mortgage, which means the homeowner will surely not be able to meet this new obligation. This failure to overcome a second default, then allows the counselor to seize the homeowner's home, and evict ' the homeowner. None of this kind of activity could ever take place, if the homeowner were to seek proper assistance, and would not panic. First of all, even if a homeowner does receive a default notice, upon the filing of the notice of default there is a period of time which the homeowner can bring the payments current. Other grace periods are available, relative to defaults and foreclosure. But here again the homeowner ' must avail himself of the opportunity to ob tain'expert and relevant advice from those , By Congressman Augustus F. Hawkins knowledgeable about these matters. Whatever the case, the homeowner threatened with foreclosure should seek pro fessional assistance. If the home was purchased under a government insured loan, the homeowner is eligible for special assistance, from the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). If the homeowner is a veteran, then assistance should be sought from the Veteran's Ad ministration. The. homeowner should also discuss the situation with the lending institution which provided the loan; the homeowner may be eligible to refinance the loan, or seek another kind of loan package. Other assistance can be sought from city or county consumer credit offices; from city or county homeowner aid agencies; from legal aid societies; from the local HUD of fice; and even from local police, who often operate divisions which investigate fraudulent business practices. In any event, a simple admonition for homeowners who think they are in default: do not sign anything concerning your pro perty unless nd until you obtain profes sional guidance. This will not prevent so-called "home-loan counselors" from plying theif tre, but it will effectively keep their foot i out of most homeowners' doors. '-