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THh: trirttnai. aid
If We All Were One Color
Joseph A. Bailey
And they would have to train their young,
And make provisions for their health,
And make some laws to regulate
Relationships and keep the peace.
If all the folk on planet earth
Were red, or brown, or in-between.
There are some problems they would face
To meet their needs and stay alive.
They all would need some place to live.
And all would need some food to eat.
And all would need some clothes to wear.
And language to communicate.
And they would have to train their young.
And make provisions for their health.
And make some laws to regulate
Relationships and keep the peace.
So if they all should look alike
Solutions would be difficult.
And why should colors complicate
The problems that all folks must face?
July 20, 1974
If all the folk on planet earth
Were snowy white and six feet tall,
Ther are some problems they would face
To meet their needs and stay alive.
They all would need some place to live.
And all would need some food to eat.
And all would need some clothes to wear.
And language to communicate.
And they would have to train their young.
And make provisions for their health.
And make some laws to regulate
Relationships and keep the peace.
If all the folk on planet earth
Were dark, or black, and six feet tall.
There are some problems they would face
To meet their needs and stay alive.
They all would need some place to live.
And all would need some food to eat.
And all would need some clothes to wear.
And language to communicate.
ARE ALL OF YOUR BANKING
NEEDS MET?
Is your savings, checking, and borrowing
established at your home town bank?
See the people at:
100 NORTH MAIN
CAU 882-2576
t
*
! ve never ^
*
* ‘ The Volare
*
* and Cordoba
*
*
* really made
*
* a believer
★
^ out of me
driven any-^
thing su pe-*
•*
nor to The *
*
New Yorker ^
and Cordoba *
BOB WHITE
Sales Representative
IT'S THE TALK OF THE TOWN
SEE IT NOW ... .AT
HIGH POINT
CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH
IT'S THE AU NEW
PLYMOUTH
Cal
m
the
Year
Motor Trsnd, the leading magazine in the field, says "We feel that Volare has
made the most significant contribution to the automotive world for 1976. The
Plymouth Volare is tuned to the economy-minded consumer shopping for big car
qualities In a small, sensible and stylish transportation package."
Prices start at $3534
OVER T 00 FACTORY-FRESH CHRYSLERS AND PlYMOUTHS IN STOCK
and here's “The aincheri'
TRY OUR All-NEW
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
New factory-trained technicians, new
equipment . . . ond o new crttltudc
toward serving you. Our slogan is,
"Our service Is better than it to be."
flrtt 12 moAths um,
My ChryHr Motors Coryorotlow
^•lor mm fis, wttHo«ft ohortf* for
parts or lobpr, Ofiy »«rt of o«r 197C
WiigT ear* wm Mippty (oieopt tiros)
wHMi provos dofootlvo In normal mss,
ro^ordltss of wllso9s.
WANTED!
GOOD U$ED CARS
We need several ^od uMd cars to
complete our invtfrtf^^. Bring y0urs in .
. paid for or not. Well maktyo0fl gr^ot
trade-in offer ... or buy it/or coth. Top
dollar. .
ASK FOR WHEAT MlilgH OR DAVE^WAN
HIGH POINT
OHRVSlBi / PlYMOUTH
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAkY 4,1976
A-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k
? THE TRIBUNAL AID J
* PRINCE HALL MASONIC CORNER ^
by; C. M. Winchester 33 Degree Major S. High 33 Degree
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Mary Douglass,
Assistant Vice President of B & C
Associates, Inc., [center] presented the
second “Johnson Wax Mary McLeod
Bethune Award” to Mrs. Marion H.
Jackson, outstanding civic, business, and
social leader of Washington, D.C.
Looking on from the left is Miss Dorothy
Height, President of the National Council
of Negro Women, the organization whicl,
chooses the Johnson Wax recipient who
best exemplifies the life and work of the
late Mrs. Bethune. Mrs. Mabel Keaton
Staupers of New Haven, Connecticut,
was the first recipient of the award. Both
women also received S500 cash awards
which were promptly donated to their
favorite organization, NCNW.
••••••••••••••>•«•••••••••••••••••••••••«
I SADIE’S CORNER I
• :
? (lips To The Ladies)
Dear Sadie,
1 have been dating this boy who is a senior at college
and discovered that he was dating another girl also in
the same dorm that I am on campus. It didn’t bother me
to see him date other girls, but it bothers her to see him
date me. She has made threatening remarks toward
me. Should I continue to date him?
College Senior
Dear Senior,
You have a right to continue to date him if you wish to
do so, since the other girl has no legal hold on him. But
I would advise you to inform him that you feel like it is
not a healthy situation and he should take care of the
hostile attitude from the other girl, if he wishes to have
a relationship with you.
Sadie
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"t the State of North Carolina.
Illustrious Harold L. Kenyear, 518 First Avenue,
New Bern, North Carolina 28560, is District Deputy
Grand Master of the Third District of the North
Carolina Prince Hall Grand Lodge. He is a member
and Past Master of George B. Willis Lodge #433; a
member of New Bern Consistory #30 and Arabian
Shrine Temple #42, all of New Bern, North Carolina.
In the year 1866 our first Grand Master, James W.
Hood, established in New Bern the first Prince Hall
Grand Lodge in North Carolina. The City of New
Bern during this period was perhaps the leading city
in the State and it has special historical meaning to
the Prince Hall Masons and to the State. It not only
has been the birthplace of Prince Hall Masonry in
North Carolina, but also the base of many other
outstanding Black leaders of North Carolina. Our
history shows that at one period Past Grand Master
George H. White, who later became a Congressman,
lived in this City as well as Past Grand Master Louis
Rhodes Randolph and P.W. Moore, Founder of
Elizabeth City State University.
Brother Kenyear is married to Mrs. Janie M.
Kenyear and they are the parents of two children.
He is Past President of West Street Elementary
111.
Harold L. Kenyear
District Deputy
Grand Master
Third District
Prince Hall Grand
Lodge of
North Carolina
School PTA and
Past j
Committee Chairman of the Boy Scouts. He is active in other activities of the J
community and he has given loyal and dedicated service to his church and the
Prince Hall Masonic Order. In the great tradition of the past, Brother Kenyear J
continues to make his District and New Bern one of the leading jurisdictions in J
The Prince Hall Grand Lodge of North Carolina salutes New Bern, Brother J
J Kenyear and all the Brothers in District Three of this Jurisdiction. The J
Jf
Jf
great
all
-k continued support of this District is necessary for our enduring success.
(Last Week’s Question: Who was Reverend Absalom Jones?
Answer to Last Week’s Question: Brother Absalom Jones was
set up by Prince Hall who also became the First Grand Master of Pennsylvania.) i
QUESTION: WHEN DID THE PRESENT GRAND LODGE SYSTEM J
DEVELOP? ^
X-
)♦-
*
>♦-
Black History Week, And Month
Agonizing Pain
From Ingrown Toenail?
Get OutgrO For Fast Relief high POINT-A salute ton street and Southside Black Centerinial and at
Outgro gives you fast temporary relief to Black History will be Branches of the High Point Southside, Black Omni-
enT irXted'sTn"%ate"s beginning next Public Library.
reduces swelling without week and for the rest of At Washington Street the Special exhibits of books,
shape, growth, or position of the nail. o
Stop ingrown nail pain ast with Outgro, February at the Washing- library will observe “The photographs and posters
& Fuller ProductsQ/'i
DUDLEY S (J
hAOlSTUf^l^'
With
I
I
Shop And Save
un At The Foil
owing :
3131 Campbellton Rd. S.W.
Atlanta, Ga.
344-8530
698 Nostrand Ave.
Brooklyn, N.Y.
774-7700
2313 LaSalle St
Charlott te, N.C.
392-4580
2020 N. Graham St.
Charlotte, N.C.
333-1586
3030 Fayetteville St.
Durham, N.C.
688-0369
717 E. Market St.
Greensboro, N.C.
275-3069
2008 Phillips Ave.
Greensboro, N.C.
274-5494
510 S. Main St.
Greenville, S.C.
233-3406
1240 Montlieu Ave.
High Point, N.C.
888-4210
19 E. Broad St.
Richmond, Va.
648-5514
2 5 00 N. Liberty St.
Winston-Salem, N.C.
724-6851
EAUTY COLLEGE, 2291^4
s.Elm Street, Greensbi
oro, N.C. 2740
901 S. MAIN ST.
* 'k
Phone 275—4287
will emphasize the many
contributions to America by
Afro-Americans. The Ne
gro National Anthem by
James Weldon Johnson will
be prominently displayed.
Books by and about
blacks will spen every field
of competition and concern-
art, literature, drama,
films, poetry, music,
sports, science, politics,
religion, economics, educa
tion, and much more.
Special programs on
black history begin Feb. 9,
with daily showings of films
and filmstrips. Feature
films will be held every
afternoon at both libraries
at 3 p.m., open to the
public.
Filmstrips at the Wash
ington Street Branch,
scheduled every morning at
10 a.m., cover significant
events of black history. The
programs, also open to the
public are;
Feb. 9-“From Africa to
America”
Feb. 10-“Slavery in a
House Divided”
Feb. ll-“Slavery in the
Young American Republic-
The Negro in Civil War and
Reconstruction”
Feb. 12-“The Negro in
the Gilded Age--The
Threshhold of Equality”
Feb. 13--“The Negro
Faces the Twentieth Cen-
tury-The Negro Fights for
the Four Freedoms”
Feature films will be
held every Monday, Wed
nesday and Friday after
noon at 3p.m., beginning
Feb. 16, at the Southside
Branch.
Before all shows music
will be played on records by
the great blacks of jazz,
opera, country western,
soul, etc., giving everyone
a chance to hear their
favorites-'Mahalia Jackson,
Jackson Five, Aretha Fran
klin, Charlie Pride, Gladys
Knight, and others.
To learn more details
about these month-long
black history events, call
the Washington Street
Branch Library, corner of
4th and Washington
Streets, 886-4015, and
Southside Branch Library,
40l Taylor Street,
885-0310.