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Thirty-eight
The other 4X100 relay teams to
qualify were the Youth Girls
team and the Intermediate Boys
team.
Teams qualifying in the 4X400
relay were the Bantam, Midget
and Youth Boys and the Midget
Girls.
At the Rpoinn lit * ~ u ~
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held at North Carolina State also,
only the two top finishers in each
event and only those competing
in the Intermediate and Young
Men's and Women's divisions
may advance to the National
TAC Junior Olympic Championships,
set for July 20-22 on the
^ campus of Louisiana State
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Break danc
classes. Though he enjoys breaking
and teaches others to enjoy it
as well, Ernest stresses to his
students the dangers of the
dance. t
"I see a lot of kids doing the
head spin," he says. "That's_
dangerous. I know how to do it,
but I don't make a practice of doing
it.
"You dudes should never try
to do the head spin by
yourselves," he warns his
students.
Military News
Airman Pe
Airman Byron C. Penn, USAF
Academy Colorado Springs,
Colo., was promoted to senior
airman June b
Penn is the son of Mrs. Annie
Mickle Penn and the late Harold
M. Penn Sr.
Marine Cpl. Reginald E. Sligh,
son of Flossie M. Sligh and
George Frison Jr., both of 1632
Marble St., has re-enlisted for
three years while serving as First
Marine Brigade, Kaneone Bay,
Hawaii.
Marine Sgt. Timothy D. Coleman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. B.O.
Coleman of 1311 Locust Ave.,
recently completed the
journeyman engineer equipment
mechanic course.
students received instruction in
maintenance management,
familiarization with the operation
of engineer equipment and
extensive training in
troubleshooting and repairing
gasoline and diesel engines.
The five-month course was
taught at Camp Lejeune in North
Carolina.
Marine Staff Sgt. Beauford W.
Wagner, son of Lillie I. Brooks
of 1016 William Drive, has
reported for duty at Marine
Corps Air Ground Combat
Center, Twenty-nine Palms,
Califs
Navy Hospitalman James E.
Bean Jr., son of James E. and
mms%!zs'
MARSHALL W.TIAJOR"
TAYLOR
AT THE TURN OF
THE CENTURy HE
SAINED FAME ANP
DOMINATED THE SPORT
OF
A. TRACK ANP FIELD
9. LACROSSE
C. PICVCLE KPSC1N?
ANSWER
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qualify From Fa
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University in Baton Rouge.
Simpson said he likes Jones'
chances in all three of his events.
"We think Randy can qualify in
at least two of his events," Simpson
said earlier this week.
Simpson also gives Sonya Love
a chance at moving on to the nationals
in the 400-meter hurdles.
And he added that, while he will
have to work hard, Rodney
A _ ?
^uuper can quaniy in tne long
jump as well.
But the coach feels his club's
best shot rests with his relay
teams. "We have a lot of good
snrinters and,all of then^Mfi f,Q
iiuumnuunnuuitmnimiiiiiwmwww? mmmmm
ing From Page B'
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While Ernest Mclntyre III is in
town, Winston popper and
breaker Richard "Richie" Scales
has to take a back seat to the
L.A. breaker.
"Richie, he's good," says
Ernest. "I teach him the moves I
don't do anymore. I'm sure if he
was out in L.A., he'd get
discovered. You have to be at the
right place at the right time."
Popping was popularized on
the televsion show "Soul Train"
when Ernest was iiict a
- - v?. ? JUJI W IUUU1V1 |
nn promoted to
Betty B. Bean of 1220 Bradley
Drive, has reported for duty at
W fl
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ge B2
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run the relay," he said, "so that
makes us strong in the relay
events."
Only one Road Runner relay
team failed to qualify for the
Region 111 meet in state competition.
While a number of them can
not advance past the Region III
meet because of age restrictions,
Simpson said, he feels a number
of Road Runner relay teams can
take first-place finishes in the
region meet, which wi^l include
athletes from North Carolina,
South Carolina, Virginia, West
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I
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but he maintains he's just as good
as the originators. Breaking.is
tnore than an art, he says. The
airplane, the handcuff and the
helicopter are all part of a sport,
he says, a sport that is being
perfected for competition.
"1 think break dancing might
be an Olympic event one day,"
says Ernest.
"I think break dancing started
in China. Ever see a karate movie
and all the stuff they do? That's
break dancing."
senior airman
Naval Hospital, Naval Medical
Command, Bethesda, Md.
VISIT
Hflv'* a
**' S
>^Sjr^S9SuKS?SSmKSMSB^^
ISTHIED DRY GUI DlSTlLEC FROM GRAJN
I
Patterson Y's Fiti
From Page B1
through weight training first, then an hour of the
vigorous aerobics.
"There's a need for aerobics classes," she says,
"because if you walk down Patterson Avenue,
you'll see people that need to be in this class.
"I think maybe with the new building more people
will come," she says.
Daisy Baldwin, who also volunteers her free
time to teach others fitness, teaches the morning
class. Most of the students in the early morning
class are second- and third-shift employees at R.J.
Reynolds Tobacco Co. Baldwin is also a Reynolds
employee.
Like the evening class, the morning students go
through tone up routines and work out individual
diets. The Patterson Y also offers to members and
non-members an individual weight and training
program if they do not prefer the company of a
cia>M uuiu. sciung.
""" BaidwTn fias been teaching the six-weeR class fbr
four months now and she, too, has devoted her
life to keeping fit and healthy.
"I think the Patterson Y's program is better
than the spas because I take an individual interest
in the people," she says. "And the classes aren't
so large that I can't get on a one-to-one basis with
them."
WHERE: NC
Display Tables WHEN: JU
Metal Racks COST: $ic
Cash Registers rn
Glass Shelves WEARsJA
Mannequins
See Mr. Farmer ##lkarn da
ANN'S GIFTS ^
448 N. Liberty St.
n. -00 - ritual dan<
Phone 723-0775
syth co. pal
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V
The Chronicle, Thursday, July 5, 1984-Page B5
ness Center
Baldwin also says that some of the women in
her class had lost money in the highly commercialized
spas.
"They went once or twice," she says, "and then
they stopped. Money gone down the drain.
"But they come here," says Baldwin, "and they
can't stop. They're motivated. They see me - this
52-year-old woman - and think: 'If she can do it,
I can, too.'"
Nathaniel Bowman, an R.J. Reynolds secondshifter
in the morning class, took the advice of his
on/J ic f U U a ,4 1 A U
uuviwi aiici is pi^astu men nc UlU, lie 5>uy>.
44I had tendonitis in my shoulder," he says.
*44My doctor told me to start exercises, so I took
this aerobics class and now it's gone."
Not only is Bowman, who is not a member of
the Y, sold on the idea of aerobics, but on the Patterson
Y as well.
nut uwauwiMT''" "ami it's ?
cheaper. You got the same equipment you have
anywhere else. You can work out at your convenience."
The aerobics and slimnastic classes are offered
to both men and women. The aerobics classes,
with weight training and diet control included,
costs $20 for non-members and $10 for members.
Slimnastics is offered to anyone for a fee of $9.
ETHNIC DANCE
FOR MEN AND WOMEN ?
>RTHWEST JR. HIGH
LY 14-25 MON. AMD WED.
X> - 9:00 P.M. BV
l.OO (CASH OR CHECK THE II IV
(ST NIGHT OF CLASS) I ^S? I
22, BALLET OR TENNIS SHOES
OTHES THAT ARB COMFORBT
V tin A n
BBBrDKnunraur
NCI FORMS OF THE WEST AFRICAN REGION. LEARN
tGE OF THE DRUM. CEREMONIAL, TRIBUNAL, AND
7E TAUGHT. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL THE FORMES
AND RECREATION DEPT. AT 727-2946"
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