Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / May 3, 1975, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
_ Page 2 ATTENTION PARENTS! !1 SUMMER TYPING_ CLASSES (SIX WEEKS) REGISTRATION SATURDAY JUNE 7 ?- ? IjOO p.m. calltuit"? ~ complete 1 j information MCLEAN'S - stenographic ? and ~ ~ tutoring service BRUCE BLDG., 216 E. 6th St. nTTAiin Irnunc: /zz-e/JZ 722-8278 1 I DUDI I Beauty Cen ft Featured Hairdo 9 Salon Special: PER ( 2500 N. Lil I- ? I I* | Call For An |^Phone: 724^684 | ! Introductory S I Gel i Our< *5011 I' No matter what your old ma or condition, you get at lei when you buy one of the Flip & Sew machines. FLIP & SEW Model 775-1 v chines in one! With the excH 2-way sewing surface neve >? tured in machines priced & so low. Just flip a panel >? tosewinthe-round.Top X stitch cuffs, inset waist? bands, easier than ever. ? Sew app I iques on legs jX * ; and sleeves without ' !;!; opening seams) Sickle Cell CnnHnniul iivtu * The disease orginated in Africa. Persons^born with the. disease were immuned a gainst malaria. In America, however, the problem of. malaria does not exist. The sickle cell clinic- was ~staTioner"Srfhe^SamT-fMTOS house' at North side chopping center last Saturday in recognition of Health Educa-. tion Week. A mobile unit was alert CI*- ? ? ??"jv oiHiiuiawu at nic JllUJjping Center taking high blood pressures. Tables were set up on the Sundial program, mental health,and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. More than 25 persons took the sickle cell test on the first day at the center. Persons taking the test are suppose to receive letters-within - two. JEY'S ter & Salon aturing All Major Lines Black Cosmetics: '"Ultra Sheen ^riflirnl VIgorol Revlon ; Dudley's Q+ * Fuller MS $15.95 >erty Street Appointment 7 or 724-6851 lAAAAAdiAAAd , peciaH Buy anew Elipi [Up IP I/O UsualThw tTheVerv 5INGEF 212 W. Fourth The Winston-Salem Chronicle Test Given weeks tellingthem the tests were either positive or negative. If the test is. positive the person is asked to come to Reynolds for counseling. The counseling services include a test and all other lab tests the doctor feels are necessary. rni ? ' " t Sew* machine,. | tibta te-la 'Least! J % c I X-XW:CvX-X-XfrX*X?OX*:rX^X<-X-?' i ne rate ot sickle cell is one out of 400. The three staffers at the center travel to churches, schools, and industries and will be going to Central Prison in Raleigh soon. More than * 10,000 persons were tested last year and before the contract year ends for theclinic another 10,000 will have to be tested. As Scott said, finding out about sickle cell can bring happiness or financial distress. ~She?related a case where both parents carried the _sickle cell trait The couplehad already had three children when they took the sickle cell test. After the positive result the coordinator said they begged the couple not to have a fourth child because it would be born with the disease. The fourth child was born and the parents waited a year before bringing the baby to the clinic. It died three months later. Editor's Quote Book We come into this world crying while all around us are smiling. May we so live that we go out of this world smiling while everybody around us is weeping. Persian Proverb hbf x |P^^B^* ?^??1!^***** I^MMpBjl vA y J^J Colin Stokes [left [, chairman of 1 and J. Paul Stlcht, president, ( annual stockholders* meeting ev corporation's headquarters city. RJR Indus New Headc Plans for a new corporate headquarters building in Winston-Salem were "announced recently at the first annual meeting R.J. Reynolds Indus- % tries, Inc., lias ever held in its hometown. Holding the annual meeting in Winston-Salem rather than its usual site of Wilmington, Del., was one of many observances ptanned by the company for its centennial year. The new building, to be available in late 1977, is one of the first major steps of the company's second century, Colin Stokes (Chairman) said. The new structure will be located in the company's Whitaker Park area of Winston-Salem and will house the staff of the parent company and headquarters staffs of two subsidiaries, RJR Archer, Inc., and RJR Foods, Inc. R.J.Reynolds Tobacco Co. will continue, to occupy the present headquarters building. a landmark in WinstonSalem for more than 45 years at Fourth and Main Streets. "An air of confidence about our future" exists throughout Reynolds Industries, Stokes said. That view was also expressed by J. Paul Sticht, president and chief operating officer, in his report on operations of Reynolds IndusI==P mm I Mr. Palmer _ ? . 535 r Yarbi PHONE: 723-37. 7Kt^ ipHH F* i t. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc., [reet stockholders at the first er held in Winston-Salem, the tries Plan juarters * ^ _ f 'f d ? tries suosiaianes in tobacco, containerized shipping, petroleumT convenience foods, and aluminum products and packaging. With reference to Reynolds Industries' growing international nature. Stokes said that about a third of the company's sales and revenues is derived from outside the United States. In addition, approximately a third of the company's employees live outside tliis country. Sticht pointed to increasing international potential for the company's tobacco business. "Reynolds' brands are now sold in 140 countries, with local manufacturing in 17 countries outside the U.S.," he said. "With this working base in the international a markets, we believe we can now move aggressively totake advantage of opportunities that are now open to us. The shareholders elected two new directors to the company's 17-member Board. They are Dr. Juanita M. Kreps, vice president of Duke University, Durham. N.C., and John Macomber, president of Celanese Corporation, New York. They succeed A.H. Galloway and S.A. Angotti, who are retiring from the Board. TiMrp^ci rAILOR I SHOP I has A I New Location I Libertv St. I , with orough Tailor 54 * . /
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 3, 1975, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75