Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / April 1, 1978, edition 1 / Page 5
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1 , 1 The Anci _ of W< In olden days, in the big West African cities like Benin or Kano, the market was likely to be near the physical center 01 town, even as it was a focal point for much of the economic and rv.nL'Jn! l;fa oLthruuetoK converged' on such a" | cuy, continuing I. through the gates to large square in ' the middle of town. Along these avenues were residences, frequently operi-faced in the forest community but in the savanna cities turning their black facades of' sun-dried clay toward daily traffic. At the square might be found the mosque and probably as well thepalace of local ruler or highly placed official. The large urban market operated daily and was an established in stitution in every town. Stalls were often located outside palace walls or near a palace en = trance^ There you might find blue batik Coop 1 ?^ For 10 The Federal Govern merit18 cooperative education program for associate-degree students has been expanded to provide increased opportunities for a Federal career for co-op students in 10 specific occupations. Under guidelines recently announced by the U.S. Civil Service Commission, students at junior collegescommunity colleges and 2-year technical institutes may now enter into career Federal jobs in 10 occupatiosn on the basis of their experience in co-op programs combining work in Federal agencies and related classroom training. According to Commission Chairman Alan K. Campbell, the decision to i permit applicants to enter the career service on the i i /? . i oasis oi on-tne-joD per- ] formance and classroom j experience is part of an , increased emphasis upon selecting Federal emplo- < SECCA 1 Exhibitii The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) will open three new exhibitions in March, 1978. The shows will be i open to the public March i 25 through April 21, and ] there will be a Members 1 Only opening reception on 1 Friday, March 24 from 7 < . to 9 p.m. ! "Three Sculptors," which will be on exhibition in SECCA s Main Gallery, < will feature work by Ralph 1 Coxx, Larry Millard, and i William Norris. Coxx, of 1 Athens, Ga., works pri- 1 marily in metal, and .Mil-. ] lard, also from Athens, ] and Norris, of New York 1 City, utilize a variety of < materials in their work. < According to Mackey Bane, SECCA's Curator, < each artist represents a ] < diverce direction in sculpture. "Millard uses the ' "TT7 Xi^rTVS \frican ? ient Mark ?st Africa style Yoruba cottons, Hausa blankets made of narrow woven strips stitched together in parallel. fine kente cloth from Ashanti (Ghana ) and many other regional fabrics. Nearby the -htaiiipywiiiiYwV . mp VrT'iyr ur-f j,f> Thfrffl makers ot straw mats, while across the square the horse traders were along with? the saddle makers and, dealers in other forms of livestock. The butchers had a large display at a distance to ^he right of the nftosque, and there could be heard the characteristic rhythm of their drummer announcing that meat had been freshly slaughtered that day. There were many oth- ers, barbers, and potters, ironworkers, tailors, scribes! wome n selling hdt food and others selling uncooked^ yams, millet, Tice, or _ greens, some hawking animal skins or. kola nuts, other offering the makings of magicalcharms with their mon- _ ul Progr Technici f yees on the basis of merit through means other than" testing. The new program is liiliited to those a&Upations for which Federal agencies have a large, widespread, and continuing need for applicants at the GS-4 level ($8,902 a year). Under the new guidelines, agencies which have a co-op program in one ot these 10' occupations will have the option to convert students who successfully complete the program to career service positions. Cooperative education students employed by Federal agencies do not have career appointments. The occupations included in the new program aire primarily technician positions including engineering technician, accounting ? i tecnnician, contact representative, biological and physical science technicians, and high-level se? To Open ms In Mi linear element to define and incorporate space with minimal material. Norris' central theme is tension, resulting from the manner of combining manufactured hardware. Coxx works with the combination of angular and curcilinear geometric Form Recent work by Ben Berns, a faculty member of the art department at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, will be shown on the Sculpture Porch. The pieces will be available in plaster, as shown, or may be cast in bronze. In the Overlook Gallery, Jim Crable, an artist from Harrisonburg, Va., will Bxhibit seven of his large photo-collages. The public may also view, at thi? time, "Pho Spotlight ets key skulls, vulture heads, certain kinds of 1 bones, bits of leopard pelt', dried herbs, or special pieces of iron. Women played the most crucial role in market politics then ah fhl'T (iff. B."W| .J . All- r.tt>Ufe--and..-.tUs~. Zi ^^STaVs- werenSTTT!r?rTT^rTT'*,~? highly portable for they would be packed up | ?and tfvken away at day*s? end; spre?<X~oiiI,'" the establishments v were ] tightly crowded along narrow paths through wyeB^rogpective buy'ers were forced slowly to pick their wayT These" were not the only pedestrians, for along the thoroughfares moved small bands of musi- j . cians, their drums and gongs delighting - by- ?, standers and stimulat- , ing an occasional im- , promptu dance step, itinerant peddlers~balancing their wares expertly on wide calabash trays carried upon their heads, groups of young men preoccupied with jcushecL_of children at 'am Expa, lan Occuf cretaries. Also included u ~~ are inbv ^vurVi nu iTmriionl J ? ? V machine technicians and d health technicians, in i which there is a safety risk Washing Busiest, Carl Mo The congenial, capable a and highly respected bar- o rister everybody affectio- n nately calIed"CarTJ for ~t three decades is now, in A reality, Washington's bu- a siest judge. As national executive director of Ome- bi ga Psi Phi Fraternity foi cc iweniy years ine natin b< knew Carl Moultrie also as le a staunch member and fe officer of the Presbyterian ti< Church, a moving force in le the OIC of DC, a NAACP R< life member and exceptio- 01 nal activist in that body, New e M W irch tographs by David Gray, which will hang until March 26, and the "SECCA Traveling Show" through April 9. There will be sculpture on SECCA's grounds by North Carolina artists, r?l r>?i: kjkcvcn ui ouriington, Jimm Galluci of Greensboro, Richard Gottlieb of Winston-Salem, Roxanne Reep of Greenville, and Frank Smullin of Durham. The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art is located at 750 Marguerite Drive and it is open to the public, free of charge. SECCA hours are: Tuesday - Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. SECCA will be closed to the public on March 26 and 27 for the Easter holidays. 5" jfra v:' ai'wT a 7?pti<?y? ao ^ inTUi 11 I liTTOQgri^1'" ng about underfoot in search of scraps of garbage. ind desert cities like Kumbi and Awdaghost, Agades and Gao, Jenne ind Timbuktu, these markets catered to an international? trade, their size and importance keeping them busy almost constantly, crowded and busy at all hours. Here the caravans arrived; here the large export-import houses thrived; here the major shipments of gold, salt, horses, and other valuables changed hands wholesale aLong_with more_modest everyday commercial exchanges. Robena Egemonyended >atioris~ inless the employee he /Ofteing expeiience in a< lition to classroom trail ng. rton "s Judge uItrie nd board member of sue utstanding service orgE izations as America ting Association and th jnerican Heart Associ tion. The local and nationa ir associations in th< >untry claim his mem srship, as well as the gal fraternities. His pro 3sional faculty participa 3n at the National Col ge of State Judiciary ir eno, Nevada, has beer itstanding. On January of this year rashington Magazine id the Downtown (DC! lycees, selected Judge oultrie as distinguishec rashingtonian of The ear. W w S Sin f\ C.rtrt V V>? v I w Loca Down toivr, Clemmom Rural Hal Telephone (OUAl MOUSMG LINOIft I / Sowi Once a dirt farmer said. "The law of the harvest, is to reap more than you sow." In that wise observation lies the secret of success, if there is any secret, of every person or business. Sowing takes work. The M ground has to be prepared. i he seeu nas to be s ' qwpwjqpaww WBBBBC ^Ihe^tl^rhents^oT nature do their work. The ^Vowing, corn or wheat or any other ? ?-.M-mfvmust nopbe allowed to be stifled by weeds. Of course, it is true, no metaphor holds " true throughout. Still, we may say in business, our customers represent the ground on which service sows the seeds of knowledge and skill. Customers differ widely, and the Andre Aide j David R. Andrews has been named Legal Counj sel and Special Assistant to the Deputy Administra to* of the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, D.C. As Legal Counsel to Deputy Administrator Barbara Blum, Andrews will provide legal advice ~on all FormaT proceedings such as adjudications, regulations and petitions as well as Congressional statements and testimony. Andrews will also be responsible for coordinating an urban policy and an Indian policy for EPA. "Dave's experience in" the California Regional Counsel Office will be a tremendous help to me," Blum said. "We have a lot of work to do at EPA in implementing the recent amendments to the Clean Air Act, the Federal Wak ter Pollution Control Act {_ and other statutes. I will - rely heavily on Dave's e sound legal advice in hel1 M Because you need it,. V 3 an/4 11/A mint */? ? ?Kw wv. wain iu SCI VC I you, we offer... I Saturday I Banking! 'I 9:00 AM-1:00 PM . I UNITED >1 (2Si CITIZENS II (3oBANK---^ 2250 Silas Creek 1 I Parkway ! 723-9441 M Winston I alem avings ce 1889 I venient tions i Thruway i Kernersville 11 Old T FSUC i ng The S Bv Naomi C. M service manager needs to know them intimately, so that he ,can adapt his "sowing to their capacities. The manager of a business waters the seed, so to speak, and the customers make it spring up into life and action by repeated trips foi tuiitiiiued services. - ^fcnjWfryi'ujhTis fcne oyVitt' I rim lliJU lTTfftm rtTT of business go round. Back of every movement which has left its mark on "human thin In of every enterprise which contributes to the wellbeing of mankind, you will find an enthusiastic person or a group of enthusiastic pprsnrLS-peopli^ who have nourished and cherished an idea, slept with it, lived and sacrificed for it. If a person in ws Nai Fo EPa ping me with these matters." j Andrews was the Regional Counsel and principal legal advisor in EPA's Region IX from 1975 to 1977. He was responsible for the resolution of all legal problems within that region, insuring legal adequacy of State and territorial environmental statutes and regulations. Before joining EPA Andrews was an attorney with the law firm of Mc Cutcheh, Doyle, Brown and Enersen in San Francisco from 1971 to 1975. From January 1974 to August 1974 Andrews was a visiting Professor of Law and Max Planck Fellow in International Law at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and Internaitonal Law, at the University of Heidelberg, West Germany. At the University, he conducted a seminar on U.S. Constitutional Law and carried out research on the Act of State and Sovereign Immunity doctrines^ He also worked with the Vice-President of the European Court of Human Rights on developing new procedural safeguards for appearances before the Council of Europe. He received a Bachelor ot Arts in Economics at the University of CaliforThe R J\| / c c* v -JLtJ'lWlM 11 J.fJULPjB JLLUAJ UJJ "fgiy .^.-m ? rm t ~?jiiw * 'Vj IHt IHKONK LK N*?'uni eed cLean Business Writer business wants to succeed in a more than ordinary way, cultivate enthusiasm. People will like you better: you will escape the dull routine of a machinelike existence.' anu you will make headway. Put your whole soul into your \K-arl< Not only will you finr) vnnr umrl/ trtrvfo rxlna. AAAAVA y VUl Tf VI n 111V1 piv u TOWf^upi'jULinj liuL-ynTw^li. of your'enthusiasm:'11 1'! - Generally speaking, whether business, church. , wr brrynrhm our horizon and add another dimension to our lives when we engage in work "for our delight" - community work, professional work for example; Get*? tainly, we have certain work to do for our bread, and that work is to be done strenuously; we have ned Le [ Depu David A nia at Berkeley in 196? and a Juris Doctor in 1971 from the ^U.C. Berkeley School oF Lawi^oalt HaUf,? He was an editor of the i California Law Review. He is a member of the State Bar of California, the San Francisco Bar Association, the American Bar Association, the ABA inwo rvn M r. t, i ? o 1 T? ^ sources and International \ Law and the University of < California Black Law Stu- \ c dents Association. t Thins \ tfq * For* ; t lav \p?il 1 I \\,_ t. . ; ' ;* other work to do for our delight, and that work is to be done heartily; neither is to be done by halves or shifts, but with a will; and what is not worth this effort is not to be done at all. Doing daily tasks-s with our customers in mind, ' giving the best services 'puss!ule with"" di'r '"'jA't;a" reap more than we sow besides it will be easier to sav ~ a 'wuy; ' this world but once. If, therefore, there be any kindness I can show or any good I can do. let me do it now; let me not defer it or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again." Legend has it that emeralds onai nafp in n r i f f i n r? o C ? ... I Ml O J | ? gal ty / k9 ] uurews Andrews is married, has. two children, and resides in Chevy Chase, HELPFUL HINTS * ABOUT INFANTS ; Q. Cow's milk or formula? That's all my sister and I have Deen talking about these Jays. You see, we're both jxpecting within the month rnd we stilt haven't resolved :he question. Can you help? wntown On The de St. Mall) rial I? rh n f/i I va AiCKfU'l iucing Formal ar For Your mvenience... 4 Styles Choose From p Store That The C.hange Sec Steve:
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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April 1, 1978, edition 1
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