Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / April 7, 1979, edition 1 / Page 20
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20-THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT.. APRIL 7, 1979 CALENDAR SATURDAY, APRIL 7 SENIOR RECITAL - Bill Dclvaux. organ, Duke Chapel at 4 p.m. OURREACH PROGRAM Tuc Civic Cuiinnitttee of the Durham Committeee on the Affairs of Black People will present the Second Outreich Program Saturday, April 7, at the Faith Hope Church, Comer of Lyon and Walker Streets at 10:30 KM. This Outreach Program is open to all resi dents of Edgemont and Few Garden communities. Persons representing the following Committees will give information on the Education, Health, Civic, Economic, Housing and Political Committees. Mrs. Barbara Foskey is the Coordinator for this Program. Attorney Charles Daye is the Chairperson of the Civic Committee. Immediately fol lowing the Outreach Program the Voter Registration Com mittee invites all persons who have not registered, to part icipate in Voter Registration. The registration book will be open. HOLY WEEK SERVICES TO BE HELD AT ST. MARK , AME ZION CHURCH Holy Week services will be held April 7-1 3th at Saint Mark AME Zion under the sponsorship of the Youth De partment. The Theme for the week of services will be "Youth Seeking Christ, Serving the Present, Challenging thp Future" Sneakers for the week-long observance will be: Monday Dr. Larry Johnson-The Modern Black Mass Choir (Duke Univ.); Tuesday, Rev. Yvonne Beasley-The Mt Calvary Baptist Church Young Adult Choir and the Penecostal Fellowship Choir (NCCU); Wednesday, Rev. William Turner-The Fisher Memorial United Holy Church Youth Choir; Thursday, Rev. Donald Fozard The Mount Zion Young Adult Choir and The New Hope Baptist Young Adult Choir; Friday, Rev. Dr. William Freeman-The Kyles Temple AME Zion Young Adult Choir and the St. Mark AME Zion Young Adult Choir. THE BLACK CHILD IN NORTH CAROLINA will serve as the topic for a mini-conference to be held at St. Augustine's College Saturday April 7th. Sponsored by the North Carolina Association for the Education of Young Children Minority Caucus and NC-AEYC, the mini conference will be a conglomeration of workshops that are of vital importance to the development of the Black Child , in North Carolina. Some of the Workshops to be held are: The Role of the Black Church in Child Development; Health Implications Speaker for the Conference will be Howard Lee - Secretary for the North Carolina Depart ment of Natural and Economic Resources and Community Development. Registration for the conference will be $5.00 plus $2.50-Luncheon and for student registration $ 1 .50 plus $2.50 for the Luncheon. YMCA YARD AND BAKE SALE - 9 a m. to 5 p.m. at the YWCA, 809 Proctor Street. Same hours on Friday, April 6 also. CAROLINAS' PSYCHOLOGY CONFERENCE, which will hold registration on Friday, April 6, will on Saturday present undergraduate papers and films at 8:15 a.m. and 1 p.m.; an address by Dr. Jerome Singer, Social Psycholo gist, on "Stress, Control, and Coping", at 10:30 a.m.; and panel discussions from 3-6 pjn., on the campus of N.C. State University in Raleigh. SUNDAY, APRIL 8 KENNETH CASSIUS will present his Senior Honors Recital at 4 p.m., in B.N. Duke Auditorium at Faytteville Street near the intersection with Lawson Street. Admis sion is free and the public is invited to attend. ' A native of St. Croix, Virgin Islands, and a graduate of St. Croix High School, Cassius will play flute as well as well as alto and tenor saxophone. He will be accompanied by Benjamin Keaton of the NCCU Music De partment faculty. He studies flute with Dr. Paul Koepke and will perform works by CPE Bach, Debussy, Dr. Koepke and others. He studies saxophone with William Moon, director of the NCCU Stage Band, and will play works by Ibert, Beethovan, Bonnard and others. MONDAY, APRIL 9 THE HILLSIDE PARK HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 1932 will hold its monthly meeting at the home of Miss Hattie White, 1021 Cornell Street, at 7 p.m. All class mem bers are urged to. attend the meeting as plans are still be ing made for the annual reunion. BREAKFAST WITH YOUR LEGISLATORS - Have breakfast with your representatives and find out what is going on in the North Carolina General Assembly. The Durham League of Women Voters .is sponsoring .this second of three Dutch Treat breakfasts in the cafeteria of the North Carolina Mutual building, corner or Duke arid West Chapel Hill Streets, 7:30-8:30 a.m. Please park in the lot behind Home Security Life enter from Jackson Street. Senate representatives are Kenneth C. Royall, Jr.. and Willis P. Whichard. House representatives are George W. Miller, Jr., W. Paul Pulley, Jr.. and Kenneth B. Spaulding. PERFORMING ARTS AND COMMUNICATIONS SYMPOSIUM - Shaw University will present its Second annual Collegiate Performing Arts and Communications Symposium, beginning at 9 a.m., in Spaulding Gym featuring Thalmus Rasulala, Pam, Grier, Louis Gossett, Ji., Beah Richards. Lavar Burton and others. The featured speaker will be Bernard Shaw of ABC News, Miami, Florida, from 2-3 p.m. Other activities including workings in acting, dance, and communicating are scheduled through 5 pjn. This year's Festival will be held during the University's First Annual Heritage Festival. TUESDAY, APRIL 10 REPORT FROM SOUTHERN AFRICA - Maceo Dixon, a black rights' activist, who has recently returned from a tour of Southern Africa will give a talk entitled "Report From Southern Africa: The struggle of liberation; what Americans can do to support it," at 8 p.m., in Manning Hall Auditorium on the University of North Carolina campus at Chapel Hill. The talk and discussion following are sponsored by the Carolina Union. For more information, call 967-7137. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11 SLIDE SHOW AND LECTURE - Maceo Dixon (see (see above) will present a slide show and lecture on his recently seven-nation tour of Africa, 7:30 p.m., at the YMCA, 600 South Bloodworth St., Raleigh. Sponsored by the Socialist Workers Party. For more information, call 833-9440. Marks Anniversary v On Saturday. April 7th. the ilth anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., public television will . air 'Who Killed King?," a one-hour program based on 20 days of hearings by the U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on Assassinations last August and November.1 "Who Killed King?" a production of WETA26, Washington, D.C. -will be transmitted nationally by the Public Broadcasting Ser vice (PBS) at 9 pjn. ET. "(Check local listings.) It will be aired by WETA 26 April 7 at 9 p.m. and April 8 at 1 1 a.m. The program will con sist of edited highlights from the committee hearings, looking to the final report of the commit tee which will be made Eublic in late April or early , lay Widely regarded as the most influential black leader ' of this century, Dr. King's theories of non-violent re sistance to discrimination were the inspiration of most of the civil rights legisla-. tion of the 1960's. His murder sparked the worst riots of the century. Dr. King was killed by a single bullet as he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Mem phis, Tenn,, where he was preparing to lead a se cond march in support of striking sanitation work ers. After having led marches in Selma, Montgomery and throughout the South for desegregation of lunch counters and buses and for rights, King his attention survival and the war in other civil now turned to economic attacks on Vietnam. Evidence at the scene indicated that the shooting had been done by James Earl Ray, a petty criminal escapted from Missouri State Penitentiary, Ray fled and embarked on a long adventure of escape. Fin ally captured in England and brought back, he pled guilty. The question of who killed King remained, how ever. Critics pointed to the fact that security had been removed from King's hotel room, that the FBI had systematically persecuted and discredited him. There were charges of Justice Department and CIA com plicity in his murder, and even suspicion of his own group. Evidence presented to the House Select Committee included three days of testimony by James Earl Ray and tesimony by representatives of the FBI, the CIA, the Department of Justice and others. Denise Baker Coleman of WETA is the reporter for "Who Killed King?" Producer of the program is Flvera Rubv. "Who Killed King?" is made possible by grants from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Ford Foundation. You don't have to borrow your neighbor's copy of THE CAROLINA TIMES Call Today 682-2913 W Daily 7:0030 tMiyizliiM Sat. & SunS 'V 6$?'U00A 1:40:40.7:4040 i 8 .V' SUPERMAN is o hit..." , I f'F 111 MARLON BRANDO J I 1 I 1 I J 1 1 X g GENE HACKMAN ilA,AJLl -J J g rD8ily 7:30-9:30 Sat. ft Sun.' TMily 7:15-9:15 Sat. ft Sun. X i ao-K -M- M3tK 1:15-3:15-5:16-7J6 S? rot EVERYTHING BETWEEN . THE TWO OF YOU SEEMS J NATIONAL WRONG? Fall in love. I lampoon's i A I 1 AtJDtdALL twikm ? liiiifelJHlllllllUlllimilUHJU HL A. (Js'haa AKLL'amj AtttAAlt r& PS g . g s i i . g i g g . g i i fell Kit Clu QmtBtrw NEW 1490 24 HOURS DISCO CONTEMPORARY JAZZ x. x ! . Ttaajl tfmmmm mmtStmm SV ONLY FULL TIME 24-HOUR SERVICE LOCAL & NATIONAL NEWS ABC CONTEMPORARY NETWORK ft X PC -J I YOU1 NEW RADIO STATION in WDUR 00WDURWDUR i ft 9S S g o ft PjS o - g i - g i g i s i i PS o s WDUR WDUR0WDUR00WDUR WDUR0WDUR WDUR WDUR0WDUR 0000WDUR 0000WDUR 0000WDVR 0000WDVR 0000WDUR 0000WDUR ft g g
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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April 7, 1979, edition 1
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