Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / March 10, 1979, edition 1 / Page 13
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I ! J McLendon State in 19S4. The year State team was invited to before, after countless play in the NAIA prepetitions from black col- season invitational tourlege coaches, an plimi- n??w ?? v ? , ?- nvj in rvausa) vuy. nation tourney had been They came out as the set up and a berth given winners and new doors to the winner to compete t were opened to black in the NAIA playoffs. college teams. His first taste of na- In 1957 his team won tional competition came the NAIA crown and in '54 when his Tenn. followed with wins in '58 "" If - I '. ^ Robert Little (above] Is one of the alumni of the four former black high schools In Winston-Salem ? Anderson, Atkins, Carver and Paisley ? who wlfl be competing In a two-day basketball tournament betweect teams representing each school. There will be two games each on Friday and Saturday nights beginning at 6:30 at the Gaines Athletic Complex at WSSU. The event is being sponsored by the Atkins Class of 1951 and the Tiny Indians Boosters Club. Proceeds will go to benefit the Boys Club Midget Football team. Afbnisdos^ll for adults. ? , ~ 4 Blalock Named Shaw University golf his fellow committee memcoach Charles Blalock has bers, will be responsible for been chosen to serve on the making recommendations NCAA division 11 district from the district to the full . 111 golf selection committee for NCAA post pnmmitteg- season golf tourneys. ^ Blalock is in his second TMalock's committee's year as golf coach at Shaw district includes Virginia, University where he also Maryland, and the serves\as! the school's Carolinas. Sports Information Direc- "I'm very pleased to be tor. His team placed third named to this committee in division 11 of the NCAA and I look forward to last season. < helping select the best As a member of the teams in the area for post selection committee, he and season play," said Blalock. Bus F,om Pagej 0 , price of oil there's not much else we can do," Mrs. Ashley said. 1 The authority reviewed three proposals before deciding on the one with the lowest increase. Under this proposal, adult fares would be 40 cents, senior citizens fares would rise from 15 cents to , 20 cents. The reduced fare for senior citizens would only be in effect between j 9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Monthly passes will rise from $10 to $12.50 and the commuter pass will rise from $12 to $14. Transfers will remain 5-cents. A proposal to raise the senior citizens transfer to 5-cents was rejected, so they will remain free. The recommendation will have to go v to the Finance Committle of the Aldermen and the Board of Aldermen before the increase can go into effect. TO CONSUMERS p You may be able to avoid ding many colors. Sculpsome confusion the next tured carpets have many t, time you buy a carpet, if leveis and an almost limityou get down to learning a less selection of patterns, few key terms. LEVEL LOOP is just PLUSH is the most c.elei that?rows of looped yarn ? gant of all carpet types. It which give a flat surface. has a level surface o' cut r / / _ ~*\ ^ | __ yarn with a velvety feeling, ' I \ \' . /7 ^ a beautiful sweep of pure " " "y J , color and can act as a ?y showcase for yoi.r fine j\\ N furniture. A/1 h TWISTS are the classic ' v V Jj J'can-take-it" carpet. They T/? /V vfl "have an even pile with yarns I wisieu IU give a nuuuy X'/ lv / 1 i? i ?7 yi look. Twists dorft show -~ <JJ \ ^ ^ I fj footsteps, are easy-to-care HFRP'Q A PI OQP IIP r?4 for, don't soil easily and HERE s A CLOSE-UP of give long service. a random-sheared carpet. TWEEDS combine yams Sptils, stains and crumbs of several colors. They are will stay on the surface. It is rvery practical because the generally used in commerbreak-up of color hides cial installations. most soiling, lint and You can learn more about crumbs. special carpet terms and just 'SAXONY is the up-to- about "Everything You've date version of the shag, Always Wanted to Know with shorter, denser yarn. About Carpet" from a free ' TIP OR RANDOM b-tfoklet of that name, SHEARED are carpets in available from Bigelow, which the yarn is looped, which makes carpets based then the tops of some of the on research of consumer loops are snipped off. The preferences. Write to result is a partial plus effect. Bigelow-Sanford, Inc., Dept. " SCULPTURED a mar- of Consumer Information, velous way to addi pattern P O Box 3089, Greenville, to your room without ad- S C.-29602. 4 From P and '59 making him the team in '59 when his first coach ever to win Cleveland Pipers of the three consecutive NAIA National Industrial titles. His teams won 16 League won the league straight NAIA tourna- title. ment games (a record at He went with that club that time). to the American BasketAfter having con- ball League and requered that challenge he turned to college moved on to become the coaching in '63 as the first black coach of a pro head man at Kentucky HltMIIIIUIIMIIIIHflHHIItllllHtlltHtHIIHHHIIIIIIIIIIMKtHlltttlllfltttlltltltllttltlttttttttttttt More I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Reader Rememb \ Dear Editor: Lockland Avenue, which I have thoroughly en- was then only a block inside joyed the current series on the city limits, and the "Roots of Black Winston- black settlement was a half Salem" in your paper, but mile or so outside the city your story titled "Black limits. Madison Avenue Communities Emerge" on was only a dirt tract beyond Page 13 of your February the city limits and it 24 edition really stirred changed- its course every some memories for me. I few months depending on i _? t . - fifc" lciiicniucT very-cieany se- wnere tne latest mill' pudveral of the black neighbor- dies in it were and which hoodsr* such as - "Silver- way the wagons had to go Hill" and "Five Rows" to dodge them. (which no longer exists), The period I am remembut I also remember a bering was the mid 1930's couple of others which were and early 40's. 1 was a not mentioned in the story, young teenager then, and 1 have the strongest re- used to hunt rabbits and collections of a small black squirrels in the woods and neighborhood (which does fields beyond this black still exist,-I believe) at the settlement. The easiest end of Mriison Avenue in route home from these Ardmore. 1 grew up not far outings was up the road away in the 800 block of. through-the" settlement. Local Youth He Rath Wilson and Felicia Roger, two members of th^ Winston-Salem/70001 Program, won honors Friday, February 9, 1979 at the Third Annual Youth Employment Seminar held by the 70001 Career Association. The awards were presented at a Washington, D.C. luncheon climaxing the five day seminar in which nearly 200 youth from 15 states competed in events based upon vocationally _related skills such as job interview, cashiering and selling. Judges were scores of Washington-area volunteers from business government, education, industry, civic and youth organizations. The local winners, and events in which they participated were Ruth Wilsop, Employment Inverview^ HumarrRelations Decision Making ami-Felicia Kogcr, 'WORD for ? cWORD I ? That is might be Little-Known Facts About fulfilled which was Tran?latinn Th? Rihlo ~ Spoken by E'SS I3S i a 1 the prophet, sayBy Dr. Eugene A. Nida jng, Q. What does the American Bible Society really do in The people which terms of translation work? sat jn darkness Saw A. First of all, we help great |ight; ancf t0 people with language prob- ,hem wh|ch sat jn lems-somet.mes even de- d h veloping an alphabet in a , . *u language never before written. dOW OT death light HThen we orga- IS Sprung up. nize transla- Matthew 4:14. 16 tion groups to do the work, f training them in seminars. _ And we pub- H f HI ^ Dr. Nida lish helpful 1 U J V books on t^ans- ^ MB' J lation. At this very moment we have several hundred local translators at work -around the world, and a large number of translations consultants supervising the work. R It's notmrr policy to drum m I up enthusiasm for translation S work, but primarily to respond intelligently to the concerns which people in the various churches express. When I first came to the Bible Society some 30 years ago, most of the translators were foreign missionaries. But they were inevitably handi- '/ _ n capped in th^ task of translating into a language which was / not their mdfner tongue. Now about 80 percent of these Bible translators come I from the local churches, and many of them are well trained. In a number oT cases missionaries continue to lend assistance, but the real re- BP a I iTiri sponsibility rests with nation- BfcAU I li \ alf^This. is a. s[gn. of true life I. aid rnuniti wnnin ine cnurcn ^ ~ " ",n *? miMypn " I * P?wer Steeri ?IW I ttt . stock #8823 OVERCOAT. I ^ ' ~~ I 9 pjm Don't Go Out Without It. ^ iq?q M'Hr' CiW* ? *ub?'<1 *'y o' A ? Hofv^Cc Bifhmn?<i V'-Q-* a ?3?Yl I rv age 13 State, was coach of employed. Cleveland State from 't>t> "Coaching has been a through '69. great experience for me. I only hope I have had He served as head some small effect on the coach of the Denver kids I have coached. Rockets briefly before That is why you coach to becoming a represen- try ahd help the kids find tative of the Converse themselves. Coaching is Rubber Company where one of the purest forms he is presently of teaching." tntHHIIttllHfiiHIIIIHIHIIIIIIUIIIIIllllUllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll pft D V"C - i-W 11V- I J BMBBaaMwy ww HK t1 ?a 111M111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111u11111111111111 ers Communities I've often thought in later dist Church now stands on years that the sight of a South Hawthorne Road, white 13-year-old with a and had relocated when rifle walking past your door that property was acquired could be 3 little upsetting by the church. The houses nowadays, but then there were ? or are, I should say was never any problem or ? much better than the trouble. "shotgun" Jypes men- If this settlement ever tioned in your story, and had a name of its own, I've are now closely surrounded never heard it. It was quite by post-World War II resir rural, isolated from any dential development. other development bv at I look forward to mor* of least half a mile, and had the Chronicle's stories on its own church and ceme- the little known black histery, and although the resi- tory of Winston-Salem, and dents raised a good deal of hope one of them might tell corn, vegetables, pigs, me more about the village chickens, etc., 1 imagine at the end of Madison most of them had occupa- Avenue "extension." 1 tions other than farming. wonder if the same folks 4 believe 1 iiave heard are still living there? that this little village had - 1 ftMrmfrr previously been located Thomaa D. Wharton where the Ardmore Metho- [Werten. Electric] )nored In O. G Employment. They also attended various workshops and events. Ruth Wilson, GED graduate of the local program, participated in the First National Qiaduation? Ceremony held by National 70001 Ltd. Two 70001 support groups. Business and Congressinal Associates ot 7UUU1 Ltd. held their annual meeting during the seminar and served as judges during the contest finals. The associates were joined at the luncheon by representatives Louis March and Debbie Yelverton of Senator Jesse Helms' office and Alan Pollard of Senator Robert Morgan's office. Prior to the luncheon, the associates spent time talking with Congressman Stephen Neal. VAII tff AIM MIT CA TA A MimCT FAfi A U1BC1IT ? ?v ww wvmfh ? wv ?? * ? ?? ? ? ? ? M. WW GOTO A KPUTME1T STORE F0? A BATTERY? . COME |QV V "TK UT1UY FlOfU QP FACTORY OUTUT ?Ml Fanlpw Cm; TmIu. Lama also aitbhutob, cbrato*, st Am sanrn JAR VIS BATTERY CO. JNcl ?&uMmn. v" ?now mil nx. MB 7244201 MMItli ^hunderbir^j JLLY EQUIPPED 1 ONING * Wire Wheel Covers ng and Brakes Radial Tires Prict exriwdtt lai, tit*, dtoltr prip I - 131 MiHer St 724-7441 I ?' , i The Chronicle, Saturday March 10, 1979- Page 13 >5995 TRUCKs l hui fu" ^5 I ODCE J6995 I ' "'o 4495 oodci 6295 I MUSTANG $3795 V, Sc00c 72 Sl^QC CMIV | DATSUN 78 SCOOC FORD XLT J77J P7,?TO s3195 .Vnchho j5195 I vVCA 2795 av >4995 I MUSTANG s2795 ? S-QQ_ I 75 SOIOC CMIV H77J I PINTO w.ig A17 J t i* iiicn /HP s4495 TOYOTA lUV j6 S4?a. 1 I 70 SIAqn FORO c 4jVj I B CAMARO IUJU ... c m *%*% p m I 70 sonn chiv^o 4295 1 MUSTANG OUV 7J .A I ?< ? ? ? J4T541,6'~J4^*A50 ford 3295 1 I ?GRD aji, 400 FORD , I CHEVROLET $350 FORD p.up ? s2495 I KttTSHBBM s300 FORD p up 2495 1 IJiMjOMJljlll ksft'aivJi IIp H 1/1\ iwjn rm TvrtrB I Open All Day Saturday 8:30-5:00 1 Phone 714-S911 NCL07D3 [ F chevy I leaders '78 CAMARO V-8, Radio, Automatic. Power steering & Brakes. *5195 '78 Olds Cutlass Supreme AM-FM Radio. AIR. Automatic. Power Steering and Brakes CCQQC Bucket Seats. Vmyl Top w '7 ft Pontiac Grand Prix 2-dr. V-8. AIR. Automatic. Power Brakes. Bucket Seats. Cruise AC Control. Vinyl Top. CLEAN' I %/ Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2-Dr.^Hardtop. AM-FM Radio.? Automatic. Power steering ?nd Brakes. AIR, Vinyl top tfc.5/0 impala s1395 ma bu s4695 i 4-Df V fl Bad<o Automatic 4,0r \j. g Automatic PowPo?Pf Stee-ng SBdKOS AiR Mpertng & q,^ A(R ? Cust 2 1 one Paint 1 B hova 77 ..... 4-D. V-8 Rah.o Au.o- CAPRICE 41?5 mauC Alrt- /.f>r v 0 Automatic %m10 J'owe' vear ? g ^ d'a*es AiR A caprice j1195 y "-' Station Wayim V-8 Radio 1 C* , I Automatic Po*ni steer.ng 4 n,utDA 'finQ S B'dots air Pu*i" Dm;' LAmAnU v V* ?r Luggaqe Rac * /, ,>8 AM-FM 'ape Auioo-,|t,c , , Po*ci siee'-oq & B'dKes AiR VEGA * 1295 78 $4iQC Stat'O" Wagon Rafl'O Auto- NO A- 4J7J n-dtu , AID f .fa va'P i n, h l v, UKje Rd0t0 Au,p. ij "alio Ro**?f st??e"'iy & B'?*es MALIBU 2295 .?uMll Classic? v-8 IHOIM? (P )OC Raom A.iiom.ii.c Po^i.f ' J J ~ ~ 'Tfr BraRHlZA!H~vinyl topJL Rafl.p ? Autnmiit^ PTwer vee"ng & B'BKH* AiR *3195 .7,? sc4qc G'anana (?r- rt > n. w a LAMAnlJ JtTy Automatic Pow?i S'eernij S V 8 R?ld 10 Automatic Powei ft'afces AiR Vmyi top steering 4 Brakes AiR jes* 5.0.n ^ IMPALA 5195 ll fool AUTOMATA po*?f Ste*^ - ? 4 O' AM fM Rad'O Au'Orr>at-C inq & B'dKes AiR Pow?' sie?"nq & Brakes aim > ?? uniirr bU^efltontroi Vinyl lop ca5hlmoonte s3495 76 Lanflau AMfM $t?'e^ Au|0-_ IMPAIA ZDV Jn^alic flower stee'ng & b'a?es imrntn ^0 m AiR cower windows UOA ?*.' Vv^qon *-8 Automatic Powuf door ipc?s speed control in' -'''e,rg B'?<?e>4 air vnyi 'op maijdit*2295 *5595 OTALIdU **7^ 2 D' Beige v 8 AM'FM Radm Classic 4D' v -8 AMFM Automatic Powe' iteennq * Ste'en win lap? Automatic B'uxes AiR Power windows Powe' ve**' "g K B'a??><, AiR Power Door loc?? 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Blue V-8 Automatic Powe' An , , jteef'na & B'anes AM FM ?-o.o 75 $<)10C 77 rA1Ar FORD IllPftl A A1W J 'e <?L'?i.arfltofc White v.nyl IWt NLA W *oo' V b Automatic Po?er 4-0' 6 Cy> G'eer AUTO- .,g s Brakes AlP AM/FM WATIC Po*f ?<*?'.cg A Sie-eo SO-SO f'ont Seat B^axes aip low mueag* jL. s?895 wic* *1995 NUVA W & LeSaCre 4-0' Harotop Rldo 4.0' f> C1 ?ac o Avon*a' c A^.omat.c Powr Ste?' ng 4 Po*?' s'te'^g e'a?es a h 8 a?es AiR vmyi too OPEN TIL 8 P.M. WEEKDAYS Let us help you with your choice: Gpproe Boa1' Claries Porc^e Mvt'ry nd'''i d'" MtW0WMiHey C'vCl^ Tw V xeHolDfOOk Konry Harris G?.-^rQ(; Harc,or Leon Tuttle Chuck Whitley I we're the Jj Lchevy leader^L 3* ?
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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March 10, 1979, edition 1
13
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