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PARTY FAVOR. BOXES , NEEDED The
i Volunteer Services Unit at John Umstead Hospital
is in need of party favor boxes for ward parties.
Boxes should consist of plates, napkins, cups; party
favors, candy, cookies, and Kool-Ade. There are 36
patients per ward. Decorations should be in a holi
day theme and can include simple wall cutouts, if
available. Boxes may be taken to Volunteer Services
or to the Mental Health Association office at 212
Albemarle St. For further information, call
tf-l a. - ty ! L S ' WW ' .
yuiumccr services at- jonn Ajmsieaa Hospital,
575-7217 or Mentar Health Association, 683-2052.
FUN AT THE YWCA (children 8-11 years old)
Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. games, crafts,
outdoor games, etc. Call 6884396 for more infor
mation. Come Join in the fun; '
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED td provide enter
tainment at a talent extravaganza for residents of a
health care facility. Persons interested in singing,
dancing, playing a musical instrument, or perform
ing an act in the show; also a 79 year old lady who
lives alone and is partially sighted needs a shopping
aide twice a month. For more, information, call the
Volunteer Services Bureau at 688-8977 or 688-9049,
weekdays, 9 a.m. -4 p.m
DAISY AUTOMATIC SCHEDULE DAISY
is a 24 hour telephonetape service provided by
Durham Technical Institute. During the hours 1-9
p.m. Monday-Thursday and 1-5 p.m. on Friday,
any tape in the DAISY program is available by call
ing the DAISY Operator at 596-0611. When the
DAISY Operator is not on duty, ten tapes are
available. Dial the phone number listed and the tape
will play automatically.
April 5 -12
596-0610 Top Ten Records
596-061 1 DAISY: Weekly Automatic Schedule
596-0612 Job Service: Openings Available Thru
Employment Security Commission
596-06 1 3 V IT A (Volunteer Income Tax
. Assistance
596-0614 High Blood Pressure
596-0615 Home Security Starts At
Your Door
596-0616 Edward R. Murrow: 1945-1948
596-0617 Things To Do And Places
To Go In Durham
596-0618 Opportunities In The Peace Corps
596-0619 Laurel and Hardy
For a brochure that lists approximately 500 tapes,
send a self-addressed, stamped, regular business
envelope to DAISY, Durham Technical Institute,
P.O. Box 1 1307, Durham, NC 27703.
WHEELBARROW NEEDED for children's play
therapy at John Umstead Hospital. Medium size,
with two inch wide front wheel. If you can supply a
wheelbarrow, call Volunteer Services at John
Umstead Hospital, 575-7217 or the Mental Health
Association at 683-2052.
CRAFTSMEN TO TELL "HOW-TO"
Authentic early American crafts as practiced in Col
onial Williamsburg wilt be demonstrated in Raleigh
and Durham this spring;
Four Colonial Williamburg craftsmen will pre
sent a series of lectures and crafts demonstrations
through June 14 at Durham's Stagville Preservation
Center with identical sessions in, the Ar
chivesLibrary Buildingn Raleigh.
.A eunsmuhracabinetmaker. a woodwricht and a -
bookbinder will demonstrate their specialties and
offer lectures on the subjects during an eight-part
series sponsored by Stagville Preservation Center
and the Department of Cultural Resources' ar
chaeology and historic preservation section. The
programs are free of charge and open to the public
and interested professionals.
ROSE SHOW Plans for the twelfth annual
Rose Show, sponsored by the Chapel Hill Rose
Society are underway. The show will open to the
public Friday and Saturday, May 22-23, in the west
court of Chapel Hill's University Mall.
All show exhibit? and competition will be open to
home rose growers and arrangers who desire to par
ticipate in categories including sixteen divisions of
horticulture, plus divisions of miniature, old
fashioned roses, and artistic (floral arrangements).
Awards in all categories will be at the discretion of
accredited judges from outside of the Chapel Hill
Ci'tY-WIDE TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT
Finals at Edison Johnson Recreation Center,
Saturday, April 11.
MUSEUM ACTIVITIES The N.C. Museum
of Life and Science, 433 Murray Avenue, Durham;
is offering a variety of classes and workshops for all
ages this spring. Offerings include "Animal
Storytime," "Dinosaurs,," "Photography,"
"Scientoyfic," and "Rocks and Minerals." Call
477-0431 for complete information and registra
tion. "CATS: ENDANGERED SPECIES",
photographs of rare and endangered cats by free
lance photographer Rod Farb, will be on display
through April 19 at the Museum of Life and
Science, 433 Murray Avenue.
DURHAM CITY SCHOOLS MENUS, April
6-10: Breakfast: Mon. Cheese toast or Cereal,
juice or Vi c. fresh fruit, milk; Tues. Fruit muf
fins or cereal, juice or V cup fresh fruit, milk;
Wed. Peanut butter bun or cereal, juice or Vi c.
fresh fruit, milk; Thurs. Egg biscuit or cereal,
juice or c. of fresh fruit, milk; Fri. Cinnamon
bun or cereal, juice or Vi c of fresh fruit, milk.
Lunch: Mon. Fish bun, slice of cheese, Mexican
corn, congrealed salad or fresh fruit, choice of
milk; Tues. Beefaroni wcheese, steamed cabbage
or collards, Harvard beets, fresh or canned fruit,
choice of milk; Wed. Pizza, yellow corn, choice
of fruit, roll, choice of milk;
Thurs. Spaghettimeat sauce, tossed salad, fresh
or canned fruit, French bread, choice of .milk;
, Fri. Chicken rice soup, cheese sandwich, steamed
collards, fresh fruit, choice of milk.
FREE INCOME TAX PREPARATION
Mount Gilead Baptist Church, 404 Dowd St.,
Saturday, April 4, 10-12 o'clock.
WORLD MUTUAL SERVICE SUPPER
Durham YWCA, 809 Proctor St., Sunday, April 5,
5:30-7:30 p.m. A complete Chinese dinner will be
served. Mrs. Chun Mei You, a graduate student in
the Department of Education at Duke University,
will speak on Education in the Peoples Republlic of
China.
Ticket price is $4. Child care available. Call
688-4396 for ticket.
CHARTERED TRIP TO DURHAMITES AF
FAIR Interested in a chartered bus trip to D.C.
Memorial Day weekend? The Hillside "47 Club"
will be making its annual trip to attend the
"Durhamites Affair" that weekend in Washington.
If you would like ot join us, please, call Roosevelt
Lipscomb at 682-4040 or Ms. Louise Prince at
682-7455 anytime after 6 p.m. for further informa
tion. TAKE BACK THE NIGHT The Orange
County Rape Crisis Center is sponsoring the second
"Annual Take Back The Night March" Saturday,
May 2, to protest violence against women.
The day will begin at 1 p.m. with workshops.
March wiu form at the UNC Bell Tower parking lot
atfj.mv-and end with-a ralty at Cart Mill MalMn -Carrboro.
For more information, call 968-4646.
COURSE REGISTRATION The Durham Ci
ty Community Education Program is now taking
registratibn for a course in Career Development and
Resume Preparation. For further information, call '
682-5786.
LEARNING OPPORTUNITY Self-defense
workshop is scheduled at the YWCA, 809 Proctor
St., Monday, April 6, 7-9 p.m. Call 688-4396 to
register.
More Announcements
Entertainment Section
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ATLANTA Sixty-five brothers from local chapters of Omega Psi Phi and Kappa Alpha Psi participated in an all night vigil on
the steps of Atlanta's City Hall. The fraternity brothers assembled to symbolize the unity and dedication necessary for people to
work together with law enforcement agencies and overcome these tragic times. UPI PHoto
Fayetteville
Happenings
By Mrs. T.H.Kinney
Did you "greet the robin?" We think of the robin as
the traditional first sign of spring.
Members of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity and their
guests enjoy p ' a "Purple and Gold Ball" on Friday
evening at th. :akeview Country Club.
The Curr jerland County Bookkeepers Association
met at the Jumberland County Office building on U.S.
301 North on Tuesday evening.
.
The American Association of Retired Persons met
Wednesday at the United Methodist Church on Fort
Bragg Road.
Women's Day was observed at John Wesley United
Methodist Church on Sunday morning. Rev. Cynthia L.
Hale, a native of Roanoke, Virginia, was the guest
speaker. Rev. Hale is chaplain at the Federal Correc
tional Institution at Butner.
She is a 1975 graduate of Hollins College, Hollins,
Virginia, with a B.A. degree in music and she received
her Master of Divinity degree' from Duke Divinity
-School in 197-9. She is a member pf tbatiojoalGowcl,;
of Churches Governing Board, Board of Directors,
Greenwood Cemetery Company, Nashville, Tenn.,
Board of Trustees, National Convention Christian
Church and the Council on Church Unity of the Chris
tian Disciples of Christ. She resides in Durham.
Theme for the occasion was "Love Is Something You
Do." The program was dedicated to Mrs. Ernestine
Caldwell Peoples.
A festively prepared repast was enjoyed by all. At
1:30 p.m., a concert was presented by the Methodist
College Black Student Movement.
ft DitEAD-tr&X
DOME
f
You are invited to the new free series on health topics sponsored by
Duke University Medical Center. Monthly, one-hour programs will be held
in the Duke North Amphitheater on special health topics. Bring your family
and friends Cometoone.comd to all. and come away with information bound
to be of use and interest. All programs begin at 7:30 p.m. Parking nearby.
Cancer OJitilale 1 .
April 7 Dr. William Shingleton
' ' "v
IVItUIUAL
JOURNAL
ft
a
More than 12 percent of
all pregnancies end in mis
carriage, according to a recent
radio broadcast sponsored by
the Columbia-Presbyterian
Medical Center and the
Prudential Insurance Co.
Dr. Anthony Labrum,
Associate Professor of Obste
trics, Gynecology, and Psy
chiatry at the University of
Rochester Medical School,
says miscarriages often have
serious psychological effects
on women.
Dr. Labrum explains,
"Many women agonize over
what they did to produce
a miscarriage. They think of
all the things they've done
medicines they've taken,
reaching up, exercising."
Dr. Labrum says it's nearly
impossible to disrupt a
normal, healthy pregnancy
through physical exertion or
trauma. Most miscarriages that
occur during the first three
months of pregnancy are, in
fact, due to genetic irregular
ities or defects in the fetus.
, Dr. Labrum says, "About
60 percent of miscarried
babies we see under the micro
scope have abnormal chromosomes.
Cameras
Televisions
Typewriters
Component Sets
'We Loan The Most
Sam's
Pawn
Shop
Phone 682-2573
122 East Main Street
Durham, N. C.
Think. When possible, take a bus instead of your car;
walk, if it is at all possible. You'll save money and you'll
improve your health when you walk. The weather will
be getting better, honest. Walking will help you, honest.
This is according to our health experts.
Did you realize that kids clothes are more
sophisticated, designer labels and higher prices are mov
ing in on this market.
Many enjoyed Expo '81 during the weekend at the
County Arena.
The Rev. John D. Fuller, his choir and congregation
of Lewis Chapel Missionary Baptist Church conducted
a service at Community Baptist Church recently.
The Soul Singers of Mount Sinai Baptist Church
celebrated their ninth anniversary on Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hawkins of Richmond, Va.,
spent the weekend in Fayetteville visiting their many
friends.
Youth Day was observed at First Baptist Church Sun
day based on the theme, "With Christ, Youth Can
Determine Their Future." The speaker was Rev. Howze
Percell of Rocky Mount. A play, "Our God and Our
Country," climaxed the observance.
The Golden Leaf Circle of Haymont Presbyterian
Church sponsored a mock wedding Sunday afternoon in
the Rankin Building.
,
Miss Cynthia Maria Wyatt and John A. James, both
of Fayetteville, were married Saturday afternoon,
March 28, in the Main Post Chapel at Fort Bragg with
Chaplain Nicholas Campbell officiating.
The bride is the daughter of Retired Sgt. Maj. and
Mrs. Bass Wyatt of Fayetteville. The bridegroom is the
son of Mrs. Mattie Jones of Montgomery, Alabama.
A reception was held in the Pope Air Force Base Of
ficers' Club. The bride's parents and Ms. Maudella
Ward and Ms. Sheila Trent were hosts.
The bride is a graduate of Methodist College and is
employed with Army Air Force Exchange System at
Fort Bragg. The bridegroom is a graduate of Tuskegee
Institute and is a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army sta
tioned at Fort Bragg. The couple will live in Fayetteville.
The undergraduate Zetas and Sigmas worshipped at
the Main Post Chapel and dined at the Officers' Club-;
t ort Bragg, on Sunday.
Members of the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., held
their regular monthly meeting at. Emily's Restaurant,
Rosemary St., on Saturday afternoon. Refreshments
were served immediately following the business session.
Soror G.T. Hollingworth presided, made , an
nouncements and the meeting was adjourned.
The primary and junior high 'fellowships of College
Heights Presbyterian Church plan to have a Spring Car
nival on April 4 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Baked goods,
plants, crafts and games will be offered for all ages.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Currie; relatives, and friends said
"So Long" "Good-Bye" "See You Later" to
their daughter, Mrs. Del Tricia Smith, and children on
Thursday. She is on tour with her husband and family in
Korea.
.
Several groups and organizations are planning to at
tend the Azalea Festival in Wilmington April 9-12. They
expect to see Miss Sharon Wright, "Miss Black
America" of Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Darius Johnson announce the engage
ment of their daughter, Jan Darice Johnson, to Lennox
Philbert Jobe of Fort Bragg, son of Mrs. Isa Alberta
Francis of Gainesville, Florida. A July 18 wedding is
planned at Second Baptist Church.
The bride-elect is a 1980 graduate of Hampton In
stitute and is employed with the Cumberland County
School System. The prospective bridegroom is a
graduate of St. Andrew's High School and is a sergeant
in military intelligence at Fort Bragg.
Ms. Kasandra Y. Wyche and Reginald Crawford,
both of Fayyetteville, were married Saturday afternoon,
March 28, in Lewis Chapel Baptist Church with the .
Rev. John Fuller officiating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe
Wyche of Anchorage, Alaska. The bridegroom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Crawford of Fayetteville.
A reception was held at the Main NCO Club at Fort
Bragg.
The bride is a graduate of North Carolina A&T State
University. She is a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army.
The bridegroom is a graduate of North Carolina A&T
State University with a degree in music education. He is
7 AAh4 I rati on - Sm fiJll:T Q Armv
The couple will live in Korea.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Farmer announce the engage
ment of their daughter, Lydia Faynette Farmer of
Charlotte, to William James Crutchfield of Charlotte,
son of Mrs. Thelma Crutchfield of Washington, D.C. A
June 27 wedding is planned in Charlotte.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Winston-Salem State
"University and Barbizon Modeling School. She is a
registered nurse with Charlotte Memorial Hospital. The
prospective bridegroom is a graduate of Johnson C.
Smith University. He is a recruiter consultant at Hat-
chett and Cunningham Associates of Charlotte.
The Black Gospel Choir of the University of North
Carolina-Greensboro presented a concert on Sunday
afternoon at Mattock's Memorial AME Zion Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Carey Alfred Ruffin announce the
engagement of their daughter, Velvet Denise Ruffin of
Fayetteville, to Richard Benjamin Corley of Fort Bragg,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John N. Corley of Columbia, S.C.
A May 30 wedding is planned at First Cosmopolitan
Baptist Church.
The bride-elect is a graduate of North Carolina A&T
State University and the University of Wisconsin. She is
a social worker with the Cumberland County Depart
ment of Social Services, the prospective bridegroom is a
graduate of South Carolina State College and is a cap
tain in the U.S. Army stationed at Fort Bragg.
Beauticians Meet Here
The annual meeting of the Junior Executive Board of
the North Carolina State Beautician and Cosmetologist
Association, Inc., was held in Durham Saturday, March
21, at the Ramada Inn. Board meetings are held one
month prior to the State Convention hosted by a
member in hisher home town. This year the hostess for
the affair was Mrs. Wilhelmina J. Foster of Durham,
assisted by Mrs. Iris Crum, and Mrs. Dorothea Johnson
of Raleigh. The members were entertained with a lovely
dinner, followed by a business meeting and exchanging
of gifts from their Secret Pals.
The Junior Executive Board of the NCSBCA was
organized by Mrs. Lillian L. Snipes, state president, for
the purpose of raising money for scholarship funds for
privately owned black . colleges and universities
throughout North Carolina.
The Lillian L. Snipes' Scholarship fund has donated
money to Livingstone, St. Augustine's Durham College,
Shaw University and Barber-Scotia, totaling over
$4,000 in the short period of its existence.
For the past three years, the Board has been function
ing under the chairmanship of Mrs. Iris Crum of
Raleigh who is also a member of the Executive Board.
jtased on her outstanding services rendered lo the
Board, Mrs. Wilhelmina Foster was crowned Ms. Jr.
Executive Board in Asheville at the 1980 convention.
' The next annual convention will be held in Fayet-
i teville. Aoril 25-28.
' .iimiinii th annual mHfino were Mrs.
mituiutia aiiviiuu's
Lillian L. Snipes of Greensboro, state president; Mrs.
Iris Crum, Raleigh, chairman; Mrs. Willie Mae
Williams, Charlotte, advisor; Mrs. Pamela Bowman,
Asheville; Mrs. Bernetta Davis, Goldsboro; Mrs. Hattie,
Jordan and Mrs. Clara Hudson, Rocky Mount; Mrs,
Marie Graham, Fayetteville; Mrs. Mary Lois Hill, .
Greensboro; Mrs. Dorothea . Johnson, Raleigh; Mrs. i