r '
Page AlOThe Chronicle. Thursday, March 22, 1984
i n
// L_J i
OfT^cVo r O ?
r ? !?
trading nsF?' JHM
always fcr -csSKjflL -??i
Bh^r hamegajfr
Shante Blakes was the first-place winner in the
Blakes, a second-grade student at Latham Eler
Bethune." Blakes poem appears on page B9. Tl
in the next two issues (photo by James Parker).
Beta Alpha Chapter
The Beta Alpha Chapter the Delta Delta Chapter a
of Infa Phi 1 amKHa CnrAri. U/inctnn.Cilam C ? ~ #
^ w m m a a ^Ullli/UU UV/1 Ul I" I i 1 J I U U " U fl I ^ 1 1 I J I d I
ty Inc. traveled to Knox- University were Sandr,
ville, Tenn., to attend their Cox, Pamela Benton an<
47th Regional Conference, Mellin Parker,
held at the Holiday Inn- The auxiliary member
World's Fair on March attending were Mrs
9-11. The conference was Margaret Linton and Mrs
well-attended by Beta Thelma Barnette, an<
Alpha Chapter, the lambds Moses Small
undergraduate chapter and William Mason and Johi
their auxiliary chapters. E. Wright.
Undergraduate chapter The delegates attendini
members attending from were Ruth Medlock
Alta Vista Garden C
The Alta Vista Garden Routine business item:
Club recently held a dinner were completed and the neu
meeting at the home of business was sent to variou!
Mrc Cliiokfltli P one nr C J: '
1TII3, i_ i itauv v 11 vtasai, cuiiuuiiiccb iur UISCUSSIOT
Marvin Place, with Mrs. before being brought bacl
Beulah Hickerson as the co- to the club. After th
- hostess. business, club members e>
changed potted plants.
Mrs. Marion Wallace led Mrs. Oressa Hauser
the devotion and the club chairperson of the volur
theme song. After reading tary* service commission o
four versus from Psalms 27, A.A.R.P. Chapter No
the Lord's Prayer was said 1797, sent the club som
in unison. flower seeds to be plante<
What's new at the h
What's new at the East perience and of all ages.
W/inctnn Rranch I iKrornf/ "T*U^ L ? ?
iiauix/ii u> UUVII L?IUI ai J 1 lit LH&lltll I1VJW lld^ a
The library staff and the the books of the Old an
Friends of the East Winston New Testaments (Kin
Library at the corner of James version), narrated b
Cleveland Avenue and Alexander Scourby, o
Seventh Streets want the cassette tapes. Also, th
community to know that branch has a full set c
the branch now has a new "Martin Luther Kin
Apple II microcomputer, Speaks" cassette tapes pre
which can be used by people duced by the Souther
who have no computer ex- Leadership Conference.
mr T- m -w ?
Urban League reacr
Mr. Robert A. Emken, of SI5,000 and Kate E
chairman of the Challenge Reynolds Poor and Need
to Achieve Campaign, an- Trust has pledged $75,00
nmmoed that Marxk ? tipOit the?cat*
15, the campaign has reach- paign successfully meetin
ed 75 percent of its goal its goal of $550,000,
through generous pledges reported Emken.
from foundations, corpora- "Gifts have been receive
tions and individuals. from Duke Power Co., Ir
4<The Winston-Slaem tegon Foundation, Piec
Foundation has made a gift rnont Federal Savings an
Special edition of 'Ji
to highlight John 7
Mid-Atlantic Communica- scene in the late 1950s, t
tions will present a special chairman of the Texa
editon of "Just Friends" Southern University ai
March 24 at 11 p.m. on department and finally <
WJTM-TV-^5 highlighting world renowned an
Dr. JohnJT/Bigggers, noted respected muralist an
educ^KSr and artist. black American art author
"Dr. John T. Biggers: A ty. He has authored and i
Man and His Work" will lustrated several books.
profile the North Carolina
native's development from The 30-minute speci
a plumbing student at will also focus on Benne
Hampton Institute in the College, whose artis
1940* io his rise as an artist lecture series is resonsib
on the black American for Biggers' visit to tl
It
r
MpM
*WjjsS^^^^^R ;ti*- -. V *-' H
! Chronicle's Black History Month Poetry Contest,
nentary, won $25 for a poem titled "Mary McLeod
le second- and third-place winners will be pictured
attends^ conference
V
t chapter president; Harriet The Beta Alpha Chapter
e Tobe and Virginia Wright, was honroed to have
a southern regional jour-* Virginia Wright re-elected
i nalist. and installed as Southern
Other members attendinc Recional InnrnalUt for a
s were Ethel Brim, Ernestine fourth term. They were also
Cathcart, Daisy Durrah, delighted that Pamela Ben.
Nannie Kiser, Ericsteen ton, Delta Delta Chapter,
i Lash, Evelyn McDuffie, was the recepient of a $500
, Mary Mason, Juanita scholarship from the
i Penn, Evelyn Phillips, Southern Region.
Thelma Small, national The 48th Southern
I dean-of-pledges; Mary Region will be held in Tam,
Wheeler and Arrie Wright, pa, Fla., in March 1985.
^Ci m .
iud Holds meeting
j- in a flower ganlen that will Mrs. Elibabeth Caesar, ;
i be kept and watered. When Mrs. Beulah Hickerson,
5 the plants are developed, a Mrs. Louise King, Mrs.
I picture will be taken of the Teretha Milliner, Mrs.
< garden. Odessa Perry, reporter;
e The following members Mrs. Maggie S. Rucker,
l- attended the meeting: Mrs. Mrs. Willa Truesdale, Mrs.
Janie Thomas, president; Cordilia Turner, Mrs.
, Mrs. Mae Fields, vice presi- Marion Wallace and Mrs.
i- dent; Mrs. Eva Mae Harris, Marie Dotson. Mrs.
f recording secretary; Mrs. Virginia Jefferson was a
i. estella Cropps, assistant visitor,
e secretary; Mrs. Juanita After the meeting, dinner
d Penn, financial secretary, was served.
last Winston Library?
Adults with library cards sonal computing
II may borrow tapes or they magazines, The Wall Street
d may be used in the library. Journal and the Black
g Also available are the Resource Guide to name
y General Statutes of North just a few items,
n Carolina, the Washington The Friends of East
e Post, the Raleigh News and Winston Library are thriv>f
Observer, the Sunday New ing and helping to make the
g York Times, black branch strong.
>- newspapers from major For more information
n North Carolina cities, call the East Winston
Atlanta and New York, per- Branch at 727-2202.
ies 75% of campaign
* c?
I. Loan Association, Pied- The Challenge to Achieve
y mont Publishing Co., Campaign seeks to raise
0 Southern Bcfl, Summit * $550,000 to fund renova
Oo mm u n
g Watkins Interiors. League's buildings at Fifth
Thomas J. Elijah Jr. said and Trade Streets,
he is delighted with the pro- After renovations are
d gress to date of the cam- completed, the Urban
i- paign. "The hard work of League will move its offices
i- our campaign," he said, "is and training facilities to the
d very gratifying." new location.
ist Friends'
: Diggers NOTJUST
AbNUrr,
o school. Bennett College has ^ "
is long established itself as a IT \ AN
^1 school that instills an 3p* a a^a aapa a^aa aa^B
is preciation for aesthetics W tN I UlCte
d and culture in its student
d body.
iil
This special edition of
"Just Friends" will feature irv*mi
some of the murals created KFjQjlfc^J
al by Biggers during his 34
'tt years as an educator, his
t- lecture on the Bennett camle
pus and his private collec- _
tion of African art. [
a
' ^
^jP* . C;.*
HE KNOWS Bl
ARBf
BLACK Al
^^HHggi Tb Tbny Brown, the issues
facing Black America are
NNNB far too complex to be seen
JjMMi as simply Black and White.
Good or Bad. Because
when Tbny Brown tackles an issue, he
goes past the obvious, the superficialHe's
looking for the truth.
Tbny Brown exposes issues with a piercing
insight that asks not just Who and
What, but Why. No candy-coated journalism
or happy ending outlooks. He wants
tne trutn. All or it.
That's what has earned Tbny Brown
the respect and praise of some
of this country's most influential
journalists. And what has made Tony
Brown's Journal the most watched
Black Affairs program in television
history.
r ? \
I BLACK GOLD MINE I
I The nation's longest-running, top-ranked, Black- I
| Affairs television series has Its own mag- |
I azine. Not Available qh Newsstands! For the
latest special issue of Tony Brown's Journal
Mags sine, send $3.00 to:
Tony Brown Productions
I.. 1501 Broadway. Suite 2014 I
| New York, NY 10036 |
k. _j
?. . .. * ^ **-' * . W ' *
_ ^m|
Now we can take a b
strikes terror in the hearts of
^^^th an NC^IB IR
you're a working couple,you1
The new IRA at N
1>V/^ r* 1 JT> ? v? ^ w>/\M/>r\M V-v i r?4- /-x w r ,
uicoivd in r-unciicoii niMuiy
Come see us. But dc
* taxes. So that you can get st
the first of your many happy
Working individuals can contribute as much as
of $2000 ($4000 total for working couples)
All depositors insured
%
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
A '
mowh,
LACK AFFAIRS
TJUST
ID WHITE.
Tbny Brown dares to ask the questions
no one else will ask. Like when he investigated
the social phenomenon of Blackon-Black
crime, in "Crisis: Blacks Killing
Each Other" Or when he posed the
question, "'Black Revolt in the 80's: is it
coming?" ^
Tbugh questions, sure. But to Tbny
Dr/Mim V% ? 4 V% 4 .i 1 ' ? ? ^11
uiuwu, uiai 3 Wiidi JUU1 iiaiisitl id dil
about. And as PBS brings Tbny Brown's
Journal into its 14th year of hard-hitting
reporting, Tbny Brown continues to
demand answers that are straight,
honest, and complete.
So while many around him are content to
present Black issues by just reporting,
Tbny Brown insists on understanding. Because
to Tbny Brown, the truth
is more than Black and White. ipepsiI
Presented by Pepsi Cola Company.
WUNL-TV - Ch. 26
SUNDAY, MARCH 25,
6:30 PM
PEPSI and PEPSI COLA are Registered Trademarks of Pepsico. Ine
I
I
I
V
I
'
v.: ?\+ . i r^uw'.#'MM
??. 1 i
?
I
I
I
I
it of the edge off that date that
American taxpayers.
A you can ease your taxes by:
1 .Contributing now or
ifore April 15, and taking your 1
eduction in either 1983or 1984,
2. Avoiding taxes on the
terest your IRA earns every
jar, until you start withdrawing
toney from your account.
And , even people who I
. i i
ive a pension plan where they
ork can also invest up to $2000
year in an IRA wit n us. (If
can also invest up to $4000.)
fCNB. One of the biggest tax
is right in your neighborhood.
) it before you file your 1983
artedon NfNn !
' returns. 1^ 1^ aw
/ 00% of I heir salary or wages, up to a maximum
. SubstantiaI interest penalty for early withdrawal,
to $100.000 by FDIC. i