Sat.. July 107.5 THE CAROLINA
4B- THE CAROLINA TIMES Btt, Hfr tt, 1W
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"SOIL AT TflE CENTER"
RETURNS ,T0 LINCOLN
CENTER ifH" The highly
acclaimed "Scrtl at the Center"
presented Mt summer by
Lincoln Cenf ;(New York) as
a celebratiOoef Black theatre,
dance, poetry find music, will
return to Alice Tully and
Philharmonic Halls for two
weeks beginning August 4th.
The announcement was made
today by John W. Mazzola,
Managing Director of Lincoln
Center. This year the festival
wif present six performances
in Philharmonic Hall featuring
eighteen of the top Black
entertainers of the day, plus
sixteen performances in Alice
Tully Hall highlighted by three
church services, and special
programs devoted to rhythm
and blues, Black theatre, a
"monttir" concert, a
folk-opera, dance, gospel,
nostalgia, "new soul", Latin
music, folk singers, poetry,
film and jazz. There will also
be a special children's
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by The Electric Company of
the Children's Television
Workshop.
(Clockwise) Artists
appearing in "Soul at the
Center '73" will include the
"sexy-soul" sound of JERRY
BUTLER (August 11), soul
singer LEA ROBERTS (August
19), the mellow-soul sound of
THE MAIN INGREDIENT
(August 4), and the earthy
sound of MARGIE JOSEPHS
(August 16).
Black Teenage Beauty Pageant Mated for Jul. 27
NEW YORK, NY - Girls
age 1 3 through 16
representing 34 states and the
Virgin Islands will compete in
the 1973 third annual Tftat
Jackson's Miss Black Teenage
America Beauty Pageant and
U. S. Teen Revue at the
Broadway Theatre, 53rd
Street and Broadway, Friday
evening, July 27. The theatre
Is being made available
through the cooperation of
the Shubert Organization.
Th' pageant will be taped
for an internationally
syndicated hour-long color
TV special.
Hal Jackson will be
executive producer and host
for the pageant and . TV
Gail Monroe to
ionored
Pageant Guest
DANVILLE, VA. Miss
Gail Monroe, Miss Black
Teenage America and an
Hampton Institute student of
Springfield, Mass., will be the
Special Honored Guest during
the Miss Black Teenage World
Pageant scheduled for
Birmingham, Alabama,
August 11th thru 18th. Miss
Monroe won the title last
year and vith it a full
scholarshi to Hampton
Institute. During her
freshman year she was quite
active in dramatics and was a
member of the famous
Hampton Institute Touring
Players.....Miss Monroe will
have an active role in the
upcoming Pageant, serving as
Official Hostess and she will
perform during the Finals as
well as crown the First Miss
Black Teenage World.
Pageants Unlimited Inc., the
non-profit sponsoring
organization, will present
each of the top 15 Finalists
College Scholarships touting
$50,000.
Ronald Charity, President
and Founder said, "Over the
past 2 years we have
presented over $75,000 in
College Scholarships to
teenagers who ray not have
otherwise been mto to afford
jFfoUege education We are
indeed grateful to the colleges
Mil Universities who are
working with our program.
W feel that at this particular
time in history college
exposure is most important
to our teenagers for not only
must Hack Be Beautiful we
fed that Black Must Be
Productive." The Pageant
Preliminaries will be held
Wednesday, August 15th and
Thursday, August 16th ticket
. -mMiotu an $2 per night
with the World Finals set for
Friday, August 17th.
Donations are $3; $4 . $5.
special. His Wire, Alice
Jackson, is producer-coordin-ator,
Hal Grego will
choreograph, Robert Fournie
will stage the production and
Fred Norman will be musical
director.
Cynthia Lewis, 1972 Miss
Black Teenage America, is
hostess. Singer-actor Adam
Wade is a featured performer.
"This is the fust time an
event of this type has been
held right on Broadway and it
should be a thrilling
experience for the young
people," Jackson says.
"We know that a
Broadway appearance has
been the dream of many of
our, contestants. It will be
gratifying for us to see it '
come true.'
Poise, performance and
personality will determine the
winner of the coveted Miss
Black Teenage Americi
crown. Most of the girls
appearing in New York are
the winners of home-state
contests.
In addition to the U. S.
contestants, the pageant will
take on an international
flavor this year with special
teen guests expected from
Canada, Trinidad, Jamaica,
Antigua and Bermuda. These
young ladies will join in an
exciting production number
entitled, "The Magic of
Broadway...Our Way".
Judges for the 1973 Miss
Black Teenage America
Beauty Pageant include Mrs.
Louis Armstrong, widow of
the late great musician;
Naomi Simms, on of the
world's highest paid models
and Don Cornelius, president
of Don Cornelius Productions
and host of the TV series,
. . - , v i mil A IXI
SUUL TKA1IN.
Also serving as judges
are: Sheila King, New York
City's 1973 Summer Festival
Queen; Rev. W. Sterling Cary,
president, National Council
of Churches; Sylvia
Robinson, composer writer
and record producer; Lillian
Benbow, national president
of Delta Sigma Theta, Inc., a
public service sorority; Alisa
Greer, president of the
American Legion Auxiliary
Girls Nation; Robert E.
Kingsley, manager of urban
affairs, Exxon Corporation;
Jacquie Anderson, human
relations consultant, National
Girl Scouts of the United
States of America; Bob
Logan, vice president of sales
for Posner Laboratories, Inc.,
Billy Rowe, national
syndicated columnist and
The WIN II Program,
administered jointly by the U.
S. Department of Labor and
Health, Education, and
Welfare, seeks to reduce
dependency by referring
persons receiving Aid to
Families With Dependent
Children to jobs.
president oi Louisitowe
Enterprises; G. Fitz Bartley,
columnist for the newspaper,
SOUL; JU, S. Cojff uais((isM,
Barbara Jordan, 1 8th District,
Texas and Earl G. Fraves,
publisher of Black Enterprise
Magazine.
Prizes for the 1973 winner
include a $1500 scholarship
award by the Armour-Dial
Co., a subsidiary of the
Greyhound Corporation; a
vacation in the Virgin Islands
at Bluebeard's Castle Hotel
via Eastern Airlines and a trip
to Hollywood to appear on
an MGM TV series, courtesy
Posner Custom Blen
Cosmetics and Hair Care
Products.
Trophies for the winner
and runner-up are designed
hv Tiffanv Hi Cnmnanv. The
"J c r
winner's crown has been
designed by Celebrity
Jewelers.
The New York Sheraton is
the headquarters hotel for the
Miss Black Teenage America
contestants.
T om Til iit ions Soar to
Top With Several
New Hit Numbers
HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. -The
Motown sound is
wedded to a musical
philosophy of "going on two
legs;" the principle is to keep
one foot in the world of
'rhythm and blues' ana tne
other in the wider (or
narrower) world of 'pop' and
Li lu... l ,..'
neairicai show uuaiucaa
music. More in than out are the
Temptations. Naturally
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perfection with ease...a string
of hits longer than an arm. .a
mad dash of five high stepping
young men exemplifying the
finer things in life and bringing
back glamour to the world of
show business.
During the current trend in
glamourized rock idols
complete wiui gnwei anu ui
the gimmicks, the Temptations
wear custom tailored, silken
white inhlnt shirts and Preen
niii.v - t.
tuxedoes. The group with its
extraordinary, versatile five
lead vocalist and clock work
precision dance routines,
always stayed two steps ahead
of the pack.
Otis Williams, Melvin
Franklin, Dennis Edwards,
Richard Street, and Damon
Harris comprise me
Temptations in 1973. After
various incarnations with its
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group meuiuvta, urc puunv
not been tempted to forget
who they are and what they
hiva anonmnlishpd.
"My Girl," "Ain't Too
Proud to Beg," "Beauty's Only
Skin Deeo." "Get Ready." "I
Wish it Would Rain," and
countless others helped solidify
the group's position at the top
of the soul charts. ,
FILMING ENDS
ON JIM BROWN'S
LATEST MOVIB i
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. -Principal
photography was
completed Monday (9) on
Penelope Productions' action
drama "The Slams,'' starring
Jim Brown. The film was
produced by Gene Corman and
directed by Jonathan Kaplan
on location in Los Angeles.
Judy Pace and Frank
DeKova co-star in the Richard
L Adams screenplay, which
follows the exploits of a
convict's daring escape from
prison to recover ,i
million-and-a-half dollai
stolen underworld money.
"The Slams," also features
Bob Harris, Ted Cassidy,
Wendell Tucker, Paul Harris
and Frenchia Guizon in major
roles.
A Fresh Sty
Stone Hits the
U. S. Highways
In 1973, Sly Stone reads
F-R-E-S-H. Fresh is the name
of Sly Stone's latest Epic
recording and there's more
than good reason for it
First off, the music is
"fresh," it's new, sparkling,
vigorous and shows a complete
new side of the enigma that is
Sly Stone. Tunes like
"Thankful and Thoughtful,"
"Skin I'm In" and "Frisky"
reflect a changing of and with
the times. Sly has definitely
opened up and cleared out his
head this time around.
"Lyrically, Sly's personal
evolution remains the most
important topic on the LP.
Songs like "In Time" and
"Skin I'm In" lay down,
messages we can all relate to.
Another tune "I Don't Know
(Satisfaction") talks more
specifically about the isolation
all of us, even stars, can go
through. The lyrics move in
subtly changing couplets.
"All we need is interaction
If it's only just a fraction."
Sly's evolving head is going
rhrmmh some nrettv hlD
changes lately as well. With all
the assonea ups ana aowns in
his more than illustrious career,
Of The
Entertainment World
Barefoot in the Park Being Staged at the Village uirmer ineaire
One of the most
spectacularly successful
comedies in American stage
history-BAREFOOT IN THE
PARK -is being presented at
the Village Dinner Theatre for
four weeks beginning July 17
through August 12.
BAREFOOT IN THE PARK
has been generally
acknowledged one of the
funniest and one of the most
successful stage comedies of
our time. For at least the first
two years of its run in New
York, beginning Oct. 23, 1963,
when it was greeted with an
overwhelming critical acclaim,
it drove audiences to frantic
efforts to get tickets to it, with
an ardor unseen since the first
months of the fabulous run of
MY FAIR LADY.
By the mid-sixties, Neil
Simon was recognized as the
funniest man writing for the
American stage. It was a
reputation achieved with six
magnificent Broadway hits in a
row, in this order: COME
BLOW YOUR HORN; LITTLE
ME; BAREFOOT IN THE
PARK; THE ODD COUPLE;
SWEET CHARITY; and THE
STAR SPANGLED GIRL. Neil
Simon wrote the book, Burt
Bacharach the music and Hal
David the lyrics for
PROMISES, PROMISES, a
smash musical adapted from
the Billy Wilder Academy
Award winning movie THE
APARTMENT, marking the
eighth hit out of eight times
that Simon has been
represented on the stage since
COME BLOW YOUR HORN in
1960, and led critics to
comment that Broadway was a
Neil Simon Festival.
At least one Nell Simon
"E G O" has spiraled to a
creative perspective. Word
from the Sly camp is "it's a
whole new show. Sty is alright
and anyway most of that other
jive was just that- jive,"
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play has been current on
Broadway every week-night
since 1961, except for one 3V4
month gap in 1963 and four
months late in 1967, and
usually there were two, and
often three --as in the first half
of 1967 when BAREFOOT IN
THE PARK, THE ODD
COUPLE, THE STAR
SPANGED GIRL, and SWEET
CHARITY were running
concurrently, and in the first
nine months of 1970, when
PLAZA SUITE, PROMISES,
PROMISES, and THE LAST
OF THE RED HOT LOVERS
were running concurrently.
Now Simon has THE
PRISONER OF SECOND
AVENUE, opened Nov. 11,
1971, and THE SUNSHINE
BOYS running on Broadway.
Even then reviewers noted
that the comedy piled "laughs
on top of toughs." The only
important change from the
try-out to the Broadway
opening six-months later was
to turn the title from the
negative-sounding NOBODY
LOVES ME to the more
provocation BAREFOOT IN
THE PARK, a title derived
from the heroine's insistence
that to walk shoeless through
February snow is a test of
whether her young, rather
proper bridegroom is
sufficiently a free, eccentric
character to deserve her as a
bride.
Neil Simon is a droll fellow
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BAREFOOT IN THE PARK
into a bubbling, rib-tickling
comedy but he has also
brought off the neat trick of a
running gag about walking.
Not ordinary walking, you
understand-climbing.
everyone in hub uu& wum
one time or another walk up a
stoop and five flights of stairs
to reach the door of the
skylight pad of a pair of
newlyweds.
A man who has come to
install the telephone is
gaspingly astonished but
resigned, like a man who
knows he must ioiiow nis
vocation wherever it calls; a
delivery man just writhes in
pain, drops his packages and
oozes out without a word.
The young husband
improves on the short breath
and staggers with each try. His
mother-in-law dodders in with
afnnnori uronrinpss The VOUna
bride floats in, but she's just
enjoyed a party. And a worldly
neighbor has several debonair
entrances, the last with a stick
and broken big toe. The
smasher is the one in which the
young husband carries in his
mnthor.in.lnw after the hie
bash and they both collapse
..a . 'J.M . i
UKe veterans oi iwo nma.
It is Mr. Simon's
manipulation of his plot
materials that makes his
comedy funny, and the plot
goes like this: After six days of
marriage, husband loves bride
though bride is a happy kookie
... . ..a m a -,. a.
who tmnKs it's run to warn
barefoot in the park when it's
snowing and who's leased this
uncomfortable aerie at an
exorbitant rent; and bride is
smoochingly enamored of
husband.
After ten days of wedded
bliss bride ana nrtaegroom
have a noisy falling-out and, of
course, on the eleventh day the
. - t
live happily ever after. For also
there is the mother-in-law, a
careful middle-aged woman
who lives alone and sleeps on a
board, and the charming
deadbeat of a neighbor of the
couple who sleeps on a rug, is a
connoisseur of a rare appetizer
like knichi and a special drink
like ouzo and knows of a
remarkable Albanian restaurant
on Staten Island.
Lee Hendry (Mrs. Banks),
Who was here In
BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE
and PLAZA SUITE will be
seen at the Village Dinner
Theatre as the young bride's
mother, a lady of unshatterable
propriety which gets
uproariously shattered by her
daughter's improbable
domestic arrangements. Susan
Carroll-the young girl in
BUTTERFLIES ARE FKB1S
and Glenn James (Corie and
Pual Bratter) will be portraying
the flighty young bride and her
earnestly trying-to-cope young
groom, and veteran actor
Frank Richmond (Victor
Velasco) an aging but
stlll-on-the-prowl upstairs
neighbor with an Inclination
toward exotic food and drink.
Jack O'Brien (the Telephone
Man) completes the cast who
are being rehearsed under the
direction of Michael Davidson.
BAREFOOT IN THE PARK
opens at the Village Dinner
Theatre on July 17 for a four
week run through August 12,
the buffet opens at 6:45 PM
and the show starts at 8:30
PM.
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DO YOUR OWN THING... with
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A DURHAM PRODUCT
Dilard's Bar-B-Q Sauce
tastes good on everything.
Mr. Bar-B-Q
says thank you
for buying our
product.
FREE RECIPES ON BACK
OF EACH BOTTLE
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SPORTS SCENE
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LISTEN TO RULES - Lett:
Nelson Hathcock, a student
from Lenoir Rhyne College,
and coach for this group of
participants, points out rules
and regulations in connection
with the Capital City
Basketball School, now being
conducted at Saint Augustine's
College. The students are
Kenneth Morgan, age 13,
Nathan Wilkins, 12, Leonard
Alston, 13, Gilbert Rivers, 12
and Arthur Vines, Raleigh.
SPORTS
CAPSULE
Rod Milburn, last year's
Olympic gold medalist in the
110-meter hurdles at Munich,
recently set a world record in
that same event in Switerland
with a time of 13.1 seconds,
one-tenth of a second better
than the old mark which he
shared with three other
Americans. The 23-year-old
Milburn, from Southern
University, also holds the
world record of 13.0 for the
120-yard event.
Saying that he did not
have jurisdiction in the case,
U.S. District Judge Ralph
jfcftftman recently dismissed a
sM filecf on "hehalf of a
12-year-old Ypsllantic, Mich,
girl challenging the legality of
the Little League's rule
barring f emaes.
However, he said he agreed
with the argument of defense
lawyers that participation in
Lucas In Net
Tourney Win
WASHINGTON - Durham's
John Lucas, the Maryland bas
ketball and tennis star, de
feated Fred Drilling of Wash
ington, D.C., -2, 7-5; in the
opening stadium match Satur
day of the Washington Star
News International tennis
championships.
This was one of the 20 matches
involving players trying to
qualify for one of the last 10
places in the 64-man main draw
of the tournament.
Lucas meets Freddy DeJcsus
of Santurce, Puerto Rico, in his
next match Sunday.
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contact sports such as
baseball could jeopardize the
physical well-being of the girt,
Carolyn King.
Little League attorneys
had contended that the
difference in the physical
composition of boys and girls
would hamper "the goal of
safety" of the Little League.
Ms King, who will be
ineligible to play in league
competition next year
because of her age, was the
center fielder of the Ypsilanti
Orioles before the
organization's national office
threatened to suspend the
Ysilanti chapter for having a
female piayf;',w
Despite a bad cold, Kenys's
Ben Jipcho last week
continued to make lines by
winning the 3,000-meter race
in 7 minutes 55 seconds at an
international track meet in
Copenhagen. Just two weeks
ago, Jipcho ran the third
fastest mile (3 minutes 52
seconds) in history during an
international track and field
meet in Stockholm
A week earlier, the world's
No. 1 steeplechaser had
knocked more than five
seconds off the world record
for the 3,000-meter
steeDlechase with a time of
8:14.0
Rumors have been
around recently about the
bad trade the Baltimore
Orioles made to get catcher
Earl Williams. The former
Atlanta Braves star had a .259
batting average, knocked in
30 home runs, and batted in
87 runs during his last two
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, Eighteen-yenr-old Robert Winborn of Atlanta
poses with Atlanta Braves slugger Hnk Aaron
and $700 in silver dollars after he caughts
Aaron's 700th career home run ball. The $700
was a reward from the Braves for the person
recovering the ball.
years.
However, halfway through
his season with the unoies,
Williams' figures read .233,
11, and 36 respectively. In
addition, Williams and
manager Earl Weaver have
had a few words ever since
the big catcher arrived, not to
mention the fact that he has
received some "anti" mail
some of which contains racial
epithets similar to those
received by his former
teammate Hank Aaron.
Ron Mix, executive
counsel for the San Deigo
Chargers announced last week
that he has reached an
agreement with Duane
Thomas agent, Abner
Haynes, on a new contract
for the temperamental
running back who was traded
by the Dallas Cowboys-last
year. tr--i rf swo
Last year, the 25-year-old
Thomas made a few false
starts at Dallas and San Diego
training camps, but not being
able to get the kind of salary
he wanted, the Cowboys No.
1 draft pick from West Texas
State in 1970 parted
company with the Chargers.
Hammerin
Henry Hits 700th
ATLANTA - The
countdown for Henry Aarons
begins in earnest now. The
magic number is 14.
The Atlanta Braves' slugging
superstar connected for his
700th career home run
Saturday night in his quest to
surpass Babe Ruth's all-time
record of 714.
t wanted to hit No. 700
before the AO-Star break,"
Aaron said to a packed
audience of newsmen,
photographers and television
cameras after drilling his 27th
home run of the 1973 baseball
season off Philadelphia
left-handler Ken Brett in the
third inning at Atlanta
Stadium
"That sounds a little better,
only 14 to go," said the
19-year-old Aaron. "I don't
feel any special thrill. It's just a
number. The only real one is
THE one."
Aaron's two-run, 400-foot
blast into the left-center field
stands came in the third inning
on a 1-1 pitch, putting the
Braves ahead 4-2. However the
Phillies rallied for an 8-4
victory.
"It was a fast ball, down
and In," Aaron said of his
memorable homer as
champagne was passed around
to his teammates in a steamy
dressing room"
The crowd of 16,236 gave
Aaron a two-minute standing
ovation and he had to emerge
from the Braves' dugout twice
before the crowd quieted
A Division of Negro
Economics, directed by Dr.
George E. Haynes, was
established in the U. S.
Department of Labor on May
1, 1918.
1 mfelt it was going out," he
aafd. "After hitting some 600,
you kind of know when
they're going."
On July 21, 1934, hum s
next-to-last season, he had 701
home runs but added his
702nd the folowed day.
The homer was Aaron's
1,372nd extra-base bit, leaving
him only five behind Stan
Musial's all-time record in that
category.
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Aaroa had staglad m ta
flat Inning to extend Ms
hitting streak to aas games
during which be baa hit six
home runs sad driven in 14
runs.
Aaron was only five months
old when Ruth smached hit
700th home run on Jury 13,
Homer
19off Tommy Bridges in
sad kit has fbaal
year for tat Boston
25, 1935 at Pittsburgh.
There It Goes...
Aaron Watches Another Milestone Roach The Soata
1070
86 PROOF
6 if"
years rei
OLD Sfl
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975
12 GaL
90 PROOF
The shortage of labor in
northern industries was the
direct cause of increase Negro
migration during World War I;
the U.S. Department of Labor
estimated this migration at
from 400,000 to 500,000.
Defensive Gem Helps
Robinson Gain Stature
ATLANTA Bill Rob
inson, once hilled as the black
Mickey Mantle, is now living
up to the potential that led the
New York Yankees to acquire
him from the Atlanta Brave
for Clete Boyer.
Floundering with the Yanks
fori three pressure-packed
years, he was finally sent to
the minors after the 1969 sea
son. He eventually migrated to
the Philadelphia organization,
and hit .2S9 as a Phils spare
last year.
But this year, starting In
right and center fields, the
39 - year - old native of
McKeesport, Pa., is one of the
National League's top five hit
ters and has been a valuable
leadoff batter.
But Friday night, in the
Phils 6-4 victory over the
Braves, Robinson made his
"best catch ever" by bounding
against the right field bullpen
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TAMPA, FLA.: Heavy-weight Nathan Gates. In a fourth the fight, a towel was used as a I U W
fighter John Lee Carter (right) round a Gates punch doubled patch. The boxers fought to a
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gate to rob. Dusty Baker of
what looked like a sure game
tying two-run homer.
Hank Aaron had walked with
two outs and Baker, a right
handed pull hitter, sliced a
drive that looked like it might
not even make the barrier.
Robinson leaped high on the
seven-foot gate, which broke a
hinge as it gave way, and he
pulled down Baker's blast.
"I've made a lot of catches
but that's the best ever," the
Philadelphia outfielder said.
Atlanta Manager Eddie Math-
and Danny Ozark, his
Philadelphia counterpart,
agreed they had never seen
anything like the catch.
"I don't know how he got up
so high and reached so far for
the ball," said the admiring
Mathews. "I also don't know
how be kept from falling into
the bullpen."
Me