I-TKICAS311A TIKES
SAT. JANUARY 31. 1SS1
Program
Slated For Su
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I BARNES
. ' Lenzie 0. "Barnes,
retired member of the
U.S. Board of Civil Ser
vice Examine" and local
building contractor, will
be the Founder' Day
Speaker on Sunday r
February J, at a program
tonunemorating the 70th
anniversary of the foun
ding of Kappa Alpha Psi1
Fraternity. The program
will be held at Russell
Memorial Methodist:
Church, 703 South Alston
Avenue, 4 p.m.
Barnes is a native of
Durham, but he lived in
Washington, D.C, for,
more than twenty years.:
.He returned to Durham ini
'1972 after he retired as a'
member of the Board of
U.S, Civil Service Ex
aminers with the U.S.
SULLIVAN
Postal Service. He receiv
ed his B.S. degree from
North Carolina Central
University. In 1976, he
was the Republican can
didate representing the
Fourth Congressional
District of Durham,
Chatham, Wake, and
Randolph counties. He is
a Life Member of Kappa
Alpha Psi Fraternity.
Also on the program,
Dewitt Sullivan, president
Garrett, Sullivan & Co.,
CPA firm, will receive the
Kappaman Achievement
Award; Mrs. Claronell K.
Brown, supervisor of
Mathematics and Science
for the Durham City
Schools and Mrs. Vivian
A. Edmonds, editor of
The Carolina Tunes, will
receive Community Ser
vice, awards.
Magician To Be Featured At Pageant
The Durham Business end Professional Chain will host its
annual Us. Durban Business and Professional Chain
Pageant, February 1, at 6 p.m. Robert the Magician win be
featured at the affair. The show, featuring the magnificent
magical artistry of Robert Smith, will be held at Studio D's
.located at 602 N. Mangum Street.
Smith has appeared on five different television stations and
win soon appear on the Johnny Carson Show. He baa per
formed in Georgia, Colorado, Texas, Louisiana, Virginia,
North and South Carolina, and in Panama.
Also on the program will be Ms. Beverly Burke of WTVD-TV
as mistress of ceremonies.
The Pageant will include some of the area's most beautiful
ladies competing for the title of Ms. Durham Business and
Professional Chain.
Your Independent Insurance Agent
is trained to handle allot your
: Insurance needs v
fUt Health Homeowners Renters
j 'Auto : Business ..
To solve your Insurance problems, call or visit ydur In
dependent hsurann Agent today ! , h
h Bob Wallace, your
j p UnlM Insurance and Realty Co. representative
2515 Apax Highway (NCHwv 55) Durham
596410$ 5964103 Nights 688-5389 f
i
StanbackS
Stanback:
In New Firm
Ms. Pamela L, Stan-'
back, a 1980 graduate of
.North Carolina Central
Law School has joined her
1 brother, A. Leon Stan
back, Jr. in the practice of
Law under the name of
Stanback and Stanback
Attorneys.
Ms. Stanback earned
her undergraduate degree
in Economics from Duke
University in 1977 and
while in law school served
on the Board of Directors
of North Carolina
Prisoner Legal services In
corporated, and was a
member of the Trial Ad
vocacy Team. She receiv
ed the American
Jurisprudence Award for
excellence in the Uniform
Commercial Code and
served during the summer
of 1979 as Paralegal
Specialist with the United
States Attorney's Office
for the Middle District of
North Carolina in
Greensboro.
A. Leon Stnback, Jr.,
also a graduate of NCCU
Law School has practiced
law in Greensboro for
twelve years and is a
i former member of the i
Guilford County District
Attorney's Office. They
are both members of
several associations in
cluding the North
Carolina Academy of
Trial Lawyers, the N. C.
Asociation of Black
Lawyers and the
Greensboro Bar Associa
tion. The partners of the new
law firm with offices at
107 N. Murrow
, Boulevard, Greensboro,
are the son and daughter
of Mrs. Catherine C.
Stanback and the late
A.L. Stanback, Sr. of
Durham.
NCCU
UUOUI VGO
Black
History
With A Month Full Of Activities
North Carolina Central
University is observing
Black History Month,
February 1-28. The na
tional theme provided by
the Association for the
Study of Afro-American
Life andHistory is "Black
' History: A Role Model for
Youth."
The program includes
exhibits, lectures, panel
discussions, films, plays
and music recitals.
The Black History
Month celebration is made
possibly by grants from
Chancellor Albert N.
Whiting's office, the
Forum Committee, Stu
dent Union, Student Af
fairs office, and Student
Government. It is being
coordinated by the
History and Social Science
Department. v
Exhibits will include a
portrait display of black
Americans in the James E.
Shepard Memorial
Library; art works of
NCCU alumni, Dan Eur
banks and Walt Davis in
the Alfonso Elder Student
Union; and selections
from the Afro-American
Collection, First Gallery,
Museum of Art, all on the
NCCU campus.
An almost daily
schedule of speakers has
been assembled. Among
them are Mrs. Rosa
Parks, "Mother of the
Civil Rights Movement";
Bishop Alfred G.
Dunston, presiding prelate
of the Second Episcopal
District, AME Zion
Church; and, Gerald Gill,
'i noted author.
' Mrs. Parks will appear
in B.N. Duke Auditorium
. on Tuesday, February 10,
at '7:30 p.m. In 1955Mrs.
Parks refused to move to
. the back of the bus spark
ing the Montgomery,
Alabama bus boycott. :
History has recorded the
Montgomery bus boycott
as the beginning of the
civil rights movement or
'second reconstruction'.
Mrs; Parks remains an ac
tive and viable figure in
the struggle for human
rights.
Bishop Dunston's
district includes West Cen
tral North Carolina, New
England, New Jersey and
the Virgin Islands. He is a
member of the Board of
Trustees of Livingstone
College, Salisbury. He has
contributed broadly to the
: study and understanding
of the black experience in
; this country and abroad,
having also taught black
history and narrated
television documentaries.
Bishop Dunston's book,
The Black Man In The
Old Testament and Its
World reflects the depth
and breadth of his
knowledge of theology.
He will speak on
"Fulfilling the American
Promise" in the Student
Union on February 12 at 7
p.m.
Gerald Gill's observa
tions of the political scene
in America are treated in
his book , Meanness
Mania (1980). He at
tributes
'meanness
mama" to a country pre
occupied with self, na-.
, tionality, inflation, etc.
Gill,: a sensitive and con
cerned ' Afro-American,
presently teaches at Tufts
University. He will speak
on "Black Historians and
Public Policy: ; The
Historian as Advocate."
in the Student Union
Rooms 146-146-A on
February 20 at 11 a.m.
The public is invited to
attend and participate in
these and other activities.
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I
Alexander Completes GRI
si -
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Stanback
Stanback
GXTCIO
C3C3CQAbS
Join The NAACP
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$TB0tS0FTEiin
Redditt ' Alexander,
Peresident of Alexander &
Associates Realty Com
pany, Inc., 511 Grant St.,
has successfully completed
,the necessary re
quirements for the i
designation of GRI by at
tending the Graduate ,
Realtors Institute at the
lUniversity of Chapel Hill.
Mr. Alexander is an act
tive member , of the
Realtors, North Carolina
Association of Realtors
and the National Associa
tion of Realtors.
He is also the treasurer
of the Durham Branch of
the , NAACP, a life
member and Keeper of
Records of the Kappa
Alpha Psi Fraternity.
Mr. Alexander is the
husband of Ida L. Alex
ander, they ' have one
dailghtejclSadyBlg!
I.O. FUNDERBURG, :
president of Citizens Trust
Bank, Atlanta, Ga., wUI .
be the main speaker for :
the Durham Business and ' .
Professional Chain's An
nual Business Awards
Banquet, February 6, at
the Durham Civic Center,
marking the organiza
tion's 43rd anniversary.
Funderburg was con
nected with Mechanics & -Farmers
Bank, Durham, -
'lli r.n ! several , t i x'
capacities,,. v.vj 3fM r!.;,(l w
Boeing Completes 500th 747
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Co Informed cf VJh ot'o Goto on
fa Tho Cnacnlfy Deed . ....
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More than 8.000 Boeine emnlovpps nnrf miMfa ationAaA
out of the 500th 747 from the huge Everett Division factory. First of the superiete was
rolled from the same factory on September 30, 1968. The big 747s now have carried
more than 300 million i passengers, have been in the air for some nine million revenue
flight hours and have flown more than four billion miles. Boeing President Malcolm
Stamper remarked that "just as the 500th is better than the first, the 1 000th will be
better than the 500th." Continuing advances in technology, have made' today's 747s
more versatile and economical than the original 747s, he said. From the 710000 nounds
Kiof "(."J?" y'8 747she maximum takeoff we$te of
up to 833,000 pounds and Freighter versions regularly carry as much as 250000
pounds of payload. Some 747s used in domestic Japanese service seat up to 550 toR
sengers, and the SP (Special Performance) Version flies the world's longest non-ston
airline routes, such as New York to Tokyo. This 500th 747 will be delivered to Scan
dinavian Airlines System (SAS). SAS Executive Vice President Bjorn TomblomSn
resented his company at the special ceremony. m rep"
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