Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / March 27, 1982, edition 1 / Page 3
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MTUSSAT. BMCH V. ISM-IKE CMKKTKJ 74th Annual Stockholders Electing . of Mechanics and Farmers Bank ill ; " : tips ;.. .:;!.. .:4..:f.:, ;v : irID ,7" :. ; 41 ill ?..;va Y0 ?V The Stockholders meeting of Mechanics and Farmers Bank was held at its Main Office located in Durham at U4rll6 West Parrish Street on March , 8. In addition to the Main Office, the bank' operates eight branches in four North Carolina cities7: Durham;' Raleigh, Charlotte and Winston Salem, v ; Reports given to the stockholders by the! vaiiK 9 . jjicmucui aiiu j Annual vended 1980. Deposits grew by 5l,814,UU0 or 4.22 The total operating in come for 1981 was $5,646,372 compared to ! $4,434,842 for 1980, an j increase of $1,21 1,530 or ; 27.32 over 1980. Total I net income reflected an 11.13 increase for 1981 ' Over 1980 or $444,462 , compared to $400,119 in ; 1980. It was reported that ' the new branch of the ; bank, which opened t .. Who t knows what creativity swirls in the ' I -minds of enthusiastic, young college people? ,-. ' Members of Shaw 'University.'s honorary . broadcasting society have a good idea and .. they have planned a mini-media conference. Alpha Epsilon Rho will conduct its. first an nual conference on, Saturday, April 3 on the campus of Shaw Univer-" Csity. I ; will focus on 1 "Media, Minorities, and the Eighties". Topics of 'discussion will cover! 'Minority Ownership:. Where is it Headed?",! "Blacks and Journalism: . Being Objective in a: Whitt Society "Advertising and the Black Community: Where Do We Stand?" and "The Role of Blacks ' in New Technologies.'". The program structure will include panelists from national and local media facilities who will ' share ideas on issues in . Board for twelve years The following! relation to their occupa- and Joseph W. Goodloe, employees were .tional experiences. Durham, who had served presented service pins for Scheduled to appear on the Board for. sixteen five or more years of are Ms. Beverly Burke, years and as chairman of loyal service: J. B. Eleven-Together, the Board for two years. Anglin Jr .-twenty years, WTVD; David Honig, Ms. JoAnn Drayton.; National Black Media Ms. Lenora Thorpe and ' Coalition; and Gil No Ms. Marlehe Montague- ble, commentator of five years. The bank's staff continued in 1981 to participate in SlmTAIpha Epsilon Rho Plans Conference ili ,n i- r i I 'Ik i 1 1 J. I , m.? ' SHAW'S ALPHA EPSILON RHO: Standing - Dr. Bishetta Merritt, Associati Professor and Coordinator of Radio-TV-Film. Students seated left to right: Reginald Edwards. Michelle Sneed. William Waller, Jeffrey Lloyd and Faith Jones. So the city is planning to grow, and annexation appears to be a major growth tool. it also "I don't anticipate us bridges the gap between moving to annex large . largely undeveloped land "chunksof land necessari- Planning; (Continued from Front) terview. "And it also chief executive officer, J. i operations in Winston J. Sansom Jr. and the ex- Salem on September 19, ecutive vice president; had over $1 million in! and chief operating of-1 deposits at year end. ficer, J. B. Anglin Jr.,: Special recognition! revealed that the bank's !, was given to the retiring i assets increased by i directors, Malachi L. ' $2,364,000 or 4.97 at Greene of Charlotte, ; year end 1981 over year who had served on the ; Greene and Goodloe will serve on the Advisory Board of the Board of Directors. v j The stockholders; elected the following; directors to serve on the! Board for 1982: Jesse B. Anglin Jr., Jerry C. Gilmore Jr., William J. Kennedy III, Lem Long Jr., J. Raymond Oliver Jr., Benjamin S. Ruffin, James J. Sansom Jr., John C. Scarborough III, Maceo K. Sloan, Charles C. Spaulding Jr., Mrs. Julia W. Taylor, Walter S. Tucker and John W. Winters Sr. contiguous to the city limits, and developed land that leapfrogged barriers close to the city." Like It Zj.WABC, New York. Noble will be the jly," Del Castilho said, "but we will have a more regular program of an nexation in the future." According! to the city manager, this orderly the number of people who,Pr . f t- cu.1.. I management, i.e., the keynote speaker for the T k7- urban growth policy, 9:30 plenty session. H. . and growth, S " i "regular annexation" program, responds numerous civic and com 1 .u- Attnrniiu anil Cnn- OXIQ between the ank and 1 gressional candidate for "P1 by one 25 years. Today, more than1 in live nousenolds is,' citizens in the com-; munities it serves. Sansom said that the bank will continue to provide the same courteous and depen dable service in the future as it has done in the past. We Welcome Your Church News r News about happenings at your church should be in our office not later than Monday at 5 p.m. of the week of publication- You might sent us a church bulletin that would indicate noteworthy, news of church activities. . the Second District, will address the luncheon. . Registration for the ; mini-media conference ! will begin at 8 a.m. in the lobby of the Learning Resource Center. General registration is $5 and $3 for Shaw students and high school students with valid identification. . All persons interested in the future of telecom munications and com municating more effec tively are urged to at 1 tend. positively to Durham's exciting growth poten tials. "Durham is poised," ' he said. "Things are; happening here, and , ' Durham is ready to move to take advantage of these things." Vv- And so the question of ' annexation, dirty word and all, will continue to ; 'face Durham's citizens ' for the ' immediate : future. Urban residents, outside the city will soon have to face the question of costs versus services. . City residents, especially blacks will soon have to decide if an expanded tax base is worth a smaller . percentage of the vote. Black Social Workers Hold National Confab In Triangle mho 404 DOWD STREET 1 DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA 7TH ' - . v SUNDAY, MARCH 28,1982 l:C0 A.M. 1:33 A.M. Morning Worship Church School 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship ';" . '?:- '"'' '-y .'. ' . TRANSPORTATlCf 1$ PROVIDED TO Ml V SERVICES ' " CaH 6834Sj2 or tS2-84S4 or 32-I60 Community Meeting Place I By Donald Alderman I I I I i ML (Ealtrani MnUth (Elptrrii of (tthrtat I 1715 ATHENS STREET DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA 27707 TELEPHONE: 688-5068 On the Move lor God " Rev. J. Cecil Cheek, B.Th.. M OW. Minister f SUNDAY, MARCH 28. 1982 9.3Q A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship , WEDNESDAY 6:30 P.M. Mid-Week Service meeting place for com munity groups in Durham m for almost any type of small gather ing except a party. The place is the old Harriett Tubman "Y": building at 312 East Umstead , Street. The building is currently owned by the United Ho ly Church of America, Inc., and is used primari ly as the church's na- tional headquarters. According to church officials, because they want to serve the com munity, especially the immediate neighborhood, they've opened the building to community , functions. The building is well equipped. It includes a kitchen and dining room that community -groups or in dividuals can use, for ex ample, to have small banquets and dinners. The dining room can also be used as a meeting place or classroom for arts and crafts, among others. It seats a max imum of 100 persons. A smaller room, which seats fifteen to twenty persons and the base ment, which seats up to fifty persons can also be used as a meeting place or classroom. Fees are $15 and $25 for events requiring up to fifty and 100 seats, ex cluding $10 for kitchen use. Currently, the top floor of the three-story building serves as a boar ding house for college students and other young . people in need of hous ing. Christian education courses are taught on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ministers and Christian workers of all denominations can ob tain a certificate in Christian Education. "We'd like for the building to be utilized; it's here," said Elder Elroy Lewis, pastor of Fisher Memorial United By Donald Alderman Area members of a black social work group who will attend the group's national conven tion in Chicago will go there with somewhat of a special mission. "It's much like a na tional presidential cam paign, except you don't ,yAayetthe primaries,'! said , jLeonard Duns ton, presi---dent of the N. C; Association of Black Social Workers. "Each national affiliate chapter i i .. Holv Church "We'd ,K,S u,,c VU4C ",u us UIJ lu ' to benefit from the ser- PP01,1, for ,ts can" Sdin8?" f th1 Dunston and members The thirteen convoca-' ? he Jria5kS tional district church, p Bnk Jochaj founded in Raleigh in hS, nf t isbjc ;c hA . seven affiliates ot the i?,aLT from state organization, will quarters . from . CMu tn hrino th. elude lodging. For more information contact Dunston at 471-6559 after 5 p.m., or Marshall Harvey in Raleigh at 781-9468. The five-day con ference will feature over 75 workshops, including an international workshop on the strug gles, pf Namibia,, South, and Future," featuring some of the most promi nent black scholars in the U.S. Among them are: Dr. Joseph Ben Jochannan, a noted Egyptologist, Dr. John Hendrick, Clarke, chair man of the Black and Puerto Rican Studies Department, Hunter ;e, New York; ana Philadelphia to Durham j in th WMtprn Nnrth Cnapier Carolina district headed by Bishop Jesse Jones of Durham. Interested persons or groups should contact Rev. Jereline Crews at 682-1819. Elder Lewis said it was through the leadership of the late Bishop A.W. Lawson, Sr. ; . that the church acquired the building. The building was built in 1954 to house the Har riett, Tubman Branch of the YWCA which operated various pro grams there until 1977 oil iV" wiicii - an luvai i Dresidencv of the 140 National Association of Black Social Workers back to North Carolina when the group's annual confab gets underway at the Chicago Marriott April 6 through 10. More than 2000 people are expected to attend. They'll rally support for Durham resident Dr. Audreye Johnson, an associate professor in the School of Social Work, UNC-CH and NABSW vice-president, who'll vie with William Merritt of New Jersey for the top post. . The North Carolina discussions of the Hai tian refugee situation. Other workshops will feature . prominent speakers on, among other topics, criminal justice, mental health', the aged, public welfare andlack family life. Also slated is a special fundraising concert featuring recording artist Jerry "Ice Man" Butler. Dunston will moderate a special symposium en titled "The African American: Past, Present pastor. Black Detroit, Shrine' of Madonna in Keynote speakers in clude Lerone Bennett Jr., Senior editor, Ebony magazine; Rev. Jesse Jackson, president, Operation PUSH, Ms. Michele v Tingling, an energy and environmen tal specialist and Ms. Sonia Sanchez, a poet and associate professor at Temple University, Philadelphia. operations moved into fJP IrK one building at 809 Proc- an J85 T "V "P tvf? tor St" package that does not in- ADJACENT TO RTP 3 mins. RTP 7 mins. Durham- 12mins. Duke " Century Oaks Apartments IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 2. 3 Bedrooms Fireplaces in Townhouse Energy Efficient Features Up to Vh Baths Jogging Trail 10 Apt. Designed (or the Handicapped Draperies WasherDryer Connections Pool ft Club House Private Pitta Balcony Tot Lots -Indoor Handball flacquetbaa Facilities . Model Open Daily Monday-Friday M Saturday 12-4 4701 E, Cor nwiOls Road Phone 544-1781 Today! Km Sftrvica for Church Sunday School and Mor-' k ning worsnip services, cveryurw n h.uiuo iw lcomo and join us in all services. jj Smmanurl fkntmustal 1200 W. Club Blvd. WaDtown School Auditorium Ourhant. N. C. Fe aced in ParkiiH ON 0le St. m (ear ol kttm S UolungFerACIiwtfPrM laJveaa4Eacui e1"B""iBW ' Karton XtoS& Pistor Sundy- 10:C3 AU 6:33 PM WodMftflV-7'30 Ptt . Fridiy-- 1:00 Ptl Cocld, be the most iepcrtait letters in your future. Get tfcsf&cU .on Indiyidaal Retirecient Accounts, as vell as our cttcr bsnld&g services, frcn the back Vhere Yoa're Somebody Spedall . FARMERS 116 West Parrish Street 615 Fayottevme Street 411 E. Chapel HIU Street MECHANICS & BANK 2 . . m h. b a -aw ei m fef fcix -nn it.-. a - v
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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March 27, 1982, edition 1
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