I-TKICAS311A TIKES SAT. JANUARY 31. 1SS1 Program Slated For Su ;'" " S-"'" IT ,Jt r --r --. . J-v ; i i "' f' fist ":- LVk I . ' v w-r i life" v 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. Subscribe To The Carolina Times Call Today W-29J3 . I Alexander Completes GRI si - f',''V I. jip j i nil iuMl mi in i Stanback Stanback GXTCIO C3C3CQAbS Join The NAACP fc tf $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 ' KHAt5 HAtPEtUXG IN YOUR COUMUNITY IS KSPOBTANTI WITH A SUBSCRIPTION TO TE3 CABQLCtA TC23 YOU GET PLENTY OP CLUUUNITY NEWS. NEWS OP EVENTS AND , iur?n:z.,3S war are important to you and your family, you can stay in- tUitV W KHA I 9 tWrtNlNU AKUUNU YUU WITHIN YOUR COMMUNITY. U CAN GET UP-TO-DATE.. CHURCH NEWS GLU3 AND SOCIALS XQZUUNTY ISSUES I ENTERTAINUENT SECTION LOCAL SPORTS NEWS OF NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL UNIVERSITY AND STATE AND NATIONAL NEWS OF INTEREST TO YOU AiiO YOUR COmSUUNITY Co Informed cf VJh ot'o Goto on fa Tho Cnacnlfy Deed . .... L A , ' "-L - 4 'fc, K , V.J 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" J AND HAVE THS CAEOUNA TWE1 MAILED TO YOU EACH VSEX PLEASE ENTER UY SUBSCRIPTION FOR. I I 1ysar-$1Z43(OutofStMt$1Z00) I I 6tBa-S79 (0utofStat-$7.60) UruUn.,LU.m AdAm V: State Zip Code ( J aim. a 1 1 1 1 1 i'i a o ri) m rsvAi &nm) uMmuWLm. Mmmtt w w. m m mm urn. ll ll t J l - J era I cm 3V V Bft . If flit 10 a - ?f" on (tR ff3'

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