Alex Hale) The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, or SECCA, will present a special program by renowned author Alex Haley at 8 p*m. on Tuesday, Sept. 16. In a lecture titled 4'Roots: A Saga of Black History," Haley will discuss his research and experience in writing "Roots,'* the best-seller which traces 200 years and six generations of his family. Haley's "Roots" is the biggest best-seller in the history of U.S. publishing and, with translations in 37 languages, its worldwide sales have topped 20 million. When "Roots" was made into a 12-hour television miniseries in 1977. it attracted th* , - - - - - ? ?' ? ^WV/lAVt ~ highest program audience in television history, with more than 130 million viewers. Haley was born in 1921 in Ithaca, N.Y., and was reared in Henning, Tenn. The eldest of three sons of a college professor and a grammar school teacher, Haley finished high school at age 15. He attended two years of college before joining the U.S. Coast Guard as a messboy. During his 20 military years, Dr. Ernest Wade, the new direc Forest, hopes to help minority s . of college life. WFU names new mil ; Wake Forest University has named Dr. Ernest Wade its new director of minojcityjaffairs. Wade, formerly the director of the Student Development Center at the University of Arkansas, succeeds Dr. Herman Eure, who has returned to full-time teaching duties in Wake Forest's department of biology. Wade says his major responsibility will be in a 4 'supportive role. Although a minority student who has been accepted at a school like Wake Forest should not feel intimidated by other students, sometimes they need a little help to get over the 'rough spots.' I will try to help them get involved in extracurricular activities, become student leaders and feel they are making a contribution to the university." 1 Wade also will recruit and help with retention of minority and disadvantaged students. : Wade received his bachelor of science degree at Johnson C. >. . \ . The Law Firm Of Announce Tht MICHAEL R BACKGROUND: Born ? Canton, Noi j Education ? B.A. Wak M.A. Ed. - V Law Degree Automobile Accident (and Workers' Compensation Traffic Offenses Custody & Divorce Evenino and W BOWDEN & G 107 N. Murrc P.O. GREENSBORO. N< : ,(9iq: , I \ r to present Alex Haley Haley wrote constantly and assisted with Coast Uuard public relations. In 1952, the Coast Guard created a new rating for Haley, making him chief journalist. Upon retirement from the service, Haley published his first book, "The Autobiography of Malcolm X," which is now required reading in most U.S. high schools and colleges. ^ * > * ? tor of minority affairs at Wake tudents over the "rough spots" a lority affairs director Smith University and his master of science, in counseling degree at the University of Wisconsin. He received his doctorate at Michigan State University. Wade was also a post-doctoral fellow in clinical psychology in the department of psychiatry at Memorial Hospital of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. At the University of Arkansas, Wade also was the director of the Northwest Arkansas Upward Bound project and was responsible for special services and testing in the Student Development Center. Wade has taught graduatelevel courses in educational psychology at the University of Wisconsin and developed a counselor training program on the graduate level which led to the increase in the number of minority counselors in the Milwaukee public school system. Wade is married and is the father of three children. Bowden & Gray > Addition Of: ~ I. PARRISH t ih Carolina Forest University Vake Forest University i - Washington & Lee University I other Personal injury Cases) Mkend Appointments RAY, ATTORNEYS >w Blvd., Suit* 204 Box 20186 ORTH CAROLINA 27420 | 373-0981 lecture at Haley next entered the long, intensive and challenging ordeal of researching the maternal side of his family, tracing back to his fourth great-grandfather, Kunta Kinte, who was kidnapped in West Africa and brought to the U.S. as a slave in 1767. The resulting book, "Roots," earned Haley both the Pulitzer Prize. and the National Book District Garden Co\ The executive council of the Fourth District of the Federation of Garden Clubs of North Carolina met at thehome of Catherine Franklin Sept.' 6 to plan the monthly agenda for the year 1986*87. Mrs. Franklin is the incoming president and a member of Within the Picket Fence Flower Club. Roberta Cook is the district director. Active flower and garden clubs for the coming year are Along the Garden Path, Aha Vista, Best Yet, Flora Buffs, Flower Niche, Prince's Feather, Rake and Spade, Romelia Mason and' Within the Picket Fence. Other council officers are Katherine Walker, vice president; Elsie C. Blackman, corresponding secretary; Mildred Poindex* maline H. Goodwin, assistant secretary; Mary B. Hopkins, financial secretary; Iveynell 4 8 ? i I W v-. tV S^;-; K. . TJ .'-:5?l/ - ':-::;;:I^B^?rifl I SURGEON GENEF H Causes Lung C H Emphysema, And I i # SECCAAward. Time magazine called Haley "a folk hero" and his ' book "a cultural landmark." He is currently working on a major c new book, 44Henning.M Tickets for the Sept. 16 lecture are $2 for SECCA members, students and senior citizens and $3 for the general public. Seating is limited, and the public is urged to purchase tickets in advance at SECCA. unci I holds meeting ivicuaniei, chaplain, and Acie McGhee Jr., reporter. Mrs. Franklin opened the meeting with prayer and presided over a discussion qf key events . for the year, including the flower show and a year-end social affair. . Other non-officers attending were Frances Bowen, Ella Belle Tillman, Alberta B. Singleton, Mary B. Hopkins and William McKoy Sr. Seven members of the Fourth District attended the 51st annual convention, held in Charlotte, from Aug. 3 to 5. Mrs. Cook was honored for many years of service at the convention. She was directly responsible for the first black all-male garden club in the state, Prince's Feather. The regular meeting date -for? the district is the second Wednesday night of each month at the East Winston Library. ^ J ri $ ^3 HL. . ^:lli^BBi Hv.; ::;x>>.-x' i;!'4^fijM wfS&btiMtL*'* ' il&P^ ''f&k J ^1 Kii iAL'S WARNING-. Smoking ancer, Heart Disease, Way Complicate Pregnancy. 4* , 1 The Chronicle, Thursday, September 11, 1986-Page A7 For the past three decades Black people have been shouting and inferring that we gained increased pride in our heritage and culture. But is that fact? Or is it just talk for shew? You see, way bade when a college education was almost an Impossibility for Black people, they gained hope when Cheyney opened its doors in 1839. And Lincoln University offered educational opportunities in 1854. In 1865, the churches recognized the need for ex-slaves to learn readin', riting and ciphering, and with the help of The Freedmenfe Bureau, they founded Howard University, risk University. Ibugaloo College, St. Augustine College and Morgan College, to name a few institutions of higherjaarning. ltfe 5lact! When Black folks needed them, the Black colleges \WpWvmf?H thpm anH rfatm i ia mornr ?? J A w. --- uawan uiiu guw uo ituuijf va uui ^iCtll UULIUT8? SClClllISLSi lawyers and educators. But as the saying goes... how soon we forget. Tbday, when many of these Black schools need the support of Black Americans we arc giving them Hlip" service rather than the financial support that they need. My friends, many of these Blade institutions of higher learning are facing extinction. Black America is not a welfare state; we have annual gross spendable income in excess of $130 billion. That is a definite indication that we can and must help our own community and its centers of education and culture. But too many of us are busy doing our cwn thing: young flacks have accepted the fallacious belief that you can't learn anything in .a Black college except how to party or play ball; while middle and upper income class Black families seem to have adopted the attitude of "I got mine, shame on them if they don't have theirs." Wfe have arrived at the time when we must replace rhetoric with money. Each graduate from a Black college or university should mail a minimum of twenty-five dollars($25.00) to their alma mater each year. Mxi know, the school that we save may be your own. v ?_ _ JoeTZfack ^ -tv, Vice President The Greyhound Corporation ' t what It takes. Share the spirit. ^ Share the refreshment MM W fl Bjf^ I Hr w& Bl B.g^:*^a?M?*i::f:-::,:::?a^r ffi/'. ..ro^H H^. ^mm*, ii^H ^uExj&lSS^^^K ?> ;i. ? H - '^ft fl my S V i *tis^y^z'-i' * v ^^Kk+ ?^B REFRESH^"" | . V