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Mrs. Uabelle B. Halrsto
Adam T. Halrston, Dorii
W. Halrston, Mazella H
Mrs. Ha
^Jrs Isabelle Brown
liairston on her 83rd birth
fwas held recently at the
k Place Restaurant in
Sawtooth Center for
ual Design.
i
^Approximately 85
relatives and guests attended
the party given by Mrs.
Sirston's children, Mrs.
armin Mauney, who
served as mistress of
ceremonies, and Adam
Hairston of WinstonS$lem,
John Hairston of
jj
Down-f
i TV just there to be s
disturbs me that a lo
w *?tertfCu wTtTi ptitrnTg t
heels.
441 put on my old ra
fortable," Jones says,
X loafers. 44I have to h
f up. I'm just an cvcryc
Savannah, Ga., who^
5 appearance."
> tl:. :_ t r:_-a i
i iw> is juncb nrsi i
of the~peirand pad j
making history in Sa>
her is just like havinj
with a girlfriend.
Her warmth and fri
bably the result of he
"This is just like i
that's how I try to do
"People will talk to )
authoritatively.
"Convincing peop
everyday person is oi
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C2ZJ27GZSH
A $10,000 Shopping Spree
.The chance to win a?
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
awaits all who enter a
new sweepstakes. Fifty
grand prizes?each a '
$10,000 shopping spree at
Zales, the Diamond Store?
will be awarded in this exciting
sweepstakes.
1-1 1- _ 1 *
rjniry Dianxs can De iouna
in special "Diamond Royale"
sweepstakes displays at
participating Revlon retailers
where Flex shampoo,
conditioner and hair spray
are sold. To enter the contest,
however, no purchase
is necessary.
A half million dollars worth
of jewelry will go to winners
in a new sweepstakes.
Sweepstakes boxes for
complete entries are in the
eight hundred Zales stores.
Participants should deposit
the sweepstakes forms before
October 31. Special instructions
for mailing in entries
appear on each entry
form.
Random drawings will be
held on December 31, to
pick one winner from each
of the 48 contiguous United
States and two from the national
mail-in entries.
Each winner can select
$10,000 in merchandise
from the exciting collection
in Zales jewelry stores. Merchandise
ranges from popularly-priced
to extremely expe
nsi ve j ewelry and
watches.
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n, center, recently celebn
? H. Batiste, Charmin H. b
. Anderson and John W. 1
lirston H<
Washington, ~D.Ct,^ Mrs.
Mazella Anderson of Springfield,
Mass., Roger
Hairston, Mrs. Doris
Batiste and Robert
?
Hairston of Los Angeles.
Highlights of the program
were tributes from
Mrs. Hairston's sons, John
and Roaer. anri h#?r oran
daughter, Sylvia, a special
rendition of "Precious
Lord" by her daughter,
Doris, and the song
"Mother" sung by all the
children. The Rev. Kelly
lome Jouri
een," she says, "and (it)
t of them are more conm
stnt^and 'wearirtg high
ggedy shoes and I'm com,
pointing down at her tan
3ok good from the waist
Iny, girl frnm
s trying to sell ability, not
nterview on the other side
iince she was a teen-ager
/annah. And talking with
I an early morning break
endly personality are pror
Southern upbringing.
talking to somebody and
my interviews," she says,
/ou if you don't come off
>le that you're just an
le of the hardest parts of
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"
ited her 83rd birthday. 1
launey, Robert G. Hairs
Hairston.
onored A
O.P. Goodwins-Was -tH<
speaker for the occasior
and Mrs. Flora Alexander,
accompanied by Mrs
Elizabeth Speight, was
soloist. The invocation was
given by the Rev. Ira McCullough.
Out-of-town guests in
eluded Mrs. Doroth;
Hunter of Detroit, Mrs
MarV Woods. Mr anH Mrc
William Grogan Sr., Mr
and Mrs. Napolean Bailey
Ms. Laura Bailey, Mrs
Joyce Simmons anc
William Gorgan Jr. oi
nalist From PL
this job," she says. "I cj
or the mall without peop
they are^hocked" wher
reporters thrive off that
me, not an ego trip, and
change, just mature. I i
Jones."
Sinc.e. she covers the Wi
makes her home in Kern*
impressed with the Triad
"The Triad is much m<
_ mingham. I really faugh
"North Carolina is a plac
iagc, gCl a wnne picKei
children. There's no i
here."
Jones is a down-hom
about people is just as r
personality. And if ther
about her, they're proba
right' where she left the
wanted autographs,
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Love a! first sif
n. The mixahk one. Mack
V
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;. & TM
' H
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Pictured, left to right, are
ton, Mrs. Hairston, Roger
it Party
F=RoS!R5lwrVa7rMsT^ohhsie
i Redd of Hyattsville, Md.,
, Marvin Hairston of Capitol
Heights Md., John
? Hairston and Mr. and Mrs.
; Davrd Hairston of
. Washington, D.C., Mr. and
Mrs. Adam Hairston, Jr. of
Fort Seal, Okla., Mr. and
- Mrs. DeEdward Watson of
y Durham, Mr. and Mrs.
. Stokes?Hairston, Mr. and
. Mrs. Clarence Hairston and
. Mrs. Verona Bell of Lex,
ington.
Mrs. Hairston has 22
i granchildren and 22 greatf
grandchildren.
ige A 7
in't even go to church
>le recognizing*me sr\d <* 1
I speak. A lot of
. This is just a job to
1 don't think I'll ever
vill always be Davida
Lnston area. Jones now
ersville and says she is
i
are laid back than Birit
there,'* says JonesT
e where you buy a cott
fence and raise 2.5
leed for viciousness
e girl whose concern
eal as her off-camera
e are any ill feelings
bly still in Savannah,
! dreamers who only
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' in Puerto Rico.
I
The Chi
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Food Lion From Page A J 11
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numbers, we will be forced to boycott," Hairston said.
44Black people need to know this and they need to support
our efforts to get things changed."
Locally, there are seven Food Lion stores. The one
most heavily used by black patrons is located in the East
Winston Shopping Center. "If the boycott works (in
Winston-Salem), we can tell it by that store,' Hairston
said.
Eugene McKinley, vice president of personnel for Food
Lion Inc. in Salisbury, said in a telephone interview Monday
that the plans for a boycott of Food Lion stores is
news to the company and that the fact sheet is in error. I
44l am surprised of the fact sheet because they certainly
don't have the facts," McKinley said."And I don't know
where they got their facts from."
He added that Food Lion executives met with Fair
Share representatives from the NAACP about a year ago
and "studied their requests in great detail."
But, McKinley said, "I'm disappointed with a propos- f
ed fact sheet that does not have the facts. We have not K
had correspondence with the NAACP with regard to this J
flnrl I am ciirnripfl^ . U ? ? "
. ?... ouipn3cu nicy pui oui a iact sneet without
discussing it with us."
McKinley called the report a "one-sided approach" to I
solving what the NAACP perceives as a problem.
Food Lion, formerly known as Food Town, operates I
stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, H
Georgia and Tennessee. Food Lion stores stock 8,000 II
items and had 39,577,863 customers in 1982 with an II
average of $15.16 spent by each customer. H
Ralph Ketner serves as the chain's president, but it is H
owned and controlled by Delhaize LeLoin, a foreign cor- M
poration headquartered in Brussels, Belgium, which H
owns 52.8 percent of the issued and outstanding stock.?
for the future.
Did \ou ever hear of returning a
Savings Bond because someone h.id
too many? No. that's something vou'll
never hear.
There's never a problem on )
Christmas mominp h u
ttto of the same thing. Lven the third.
fourth. or fifth Savings Bond is as
welcome as the first.
v . So don't give someone sou love their L
third chafing dish. This tfe^tma^^ _ fc
^ , gi\e a present lor the future. Give
U.S. Sa\ ings Bonds.
11 LOT II Main Shot
'81 Camaro 20.000 Miles. T-Tods. m
P windows, Cruise, An Eye Full $8995 |
I '84 Cutlass 4,000 Miles, Supreme
Coupe, Slip seats, Super slick SAVE
I
I '80 Mark V - 30,000 Miles,
Signature Edition, Full power,
an Exceptionally Nice car $12,900
Lfcorg/?
79 Ford Granada Full equipped,
BLocal one ownar Groat Rnv
'82 Ford Pickup - Auto, Air, AM&FM
Camper top, Low Mileage $7995
177 Mercury Bobcat 4-spd, AM&FM.
Local one owner, Good & Cheap $1895 |
I )
II '76 Cadillac Sedan Deville 60,000
I Miles, Fully equipped, Local one
I owner, Like New $3695
I Callor coma
I
on tele, Thursday, December 15, 1983-Page A9
^}eCfc'
SHOP DAILY 10 A.M. - 10 P.M.
SUN. 1 - 6 P.M.
^Shristmas ^
SALE
KXTT^TIX
v^WfcS^fc*
Knit hat and scarf sets
6.99 ,__ _
Reg. 10.00 to 12.00. Put the wraps on winter with
100% acrylic knit hats and scarves. Bright solids and
fancy textures liven up these warm sets that make great
gifts.
ACCESSORIES WINSTON-SALEM HANES MALL
WINSTON-SALEM: HANES MALL 768-9200
CALL 1-800-432^6190 TODAY TQ
APPLY FOR A BELK CHARGE
?i?-?
rt'MM 1
vroom E??fim?] I
81 Cutlass - 30,000 Miles, I
Brougham Edition, White/Blue,
Full power, S!ick $8995 A
83 Cadillac - 13,000 Miles,
Soupe Absolutely Immaculate,
.ocally owned $AV? ? ?
80 Aspen - Special Edition, 4*Dr,
3urgandy/Burgandy $5695
93 Escort 7,000 Miles, Auto,
Carolina Blue, Like New $6295 |
ie street
'79 Buick Estate Wagon Fully
equipped, One of a Kind, Low
mileage $5995 U
78 Dodge Magnum Fully equipped
Local trade-in, Like New, Low
mileage $3295
r ?
o i rora uranada hully equipped
A/hite, Red interior, Clean family _ ? _.
Jntodayl 1
*4