Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Feb. 4, 1982, edition 1 / Page 5
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NAOMI W!^"One job at a time" and "learn the right way" are important factoVs for success in life. It is disconcerting tc see and deal with people who tffy to do ^erything at one time, yet never accomplish one thing, and then go tc another. Mind set determines everything. The difficulty arises when thinking is not done properly and time not used wisely. Learning the right way to do anything is the direct way, and gets results without undue loss of time. ^ The wrong way doesn't do anything but bring confusion, and a confused mind is dangerous. Another important factor concerning success is tc discipline ourselves not to put off until tomorrow whai we can do today. When we keep a schedule and go by it, we end the day with a feeling of genuine accomplishment. A schedule should be planned, and then worked by . It is the lack of order and system that produces a disord^riv mind, resulting in haphazard actions. When we organize our thinking, it is easy for us to organize our acting. Attitude counts most concerning life; it is what we are rather than what we know which determines the kind of contribution we make to society as a whole, and above all, attitude reveals character. It is out of the right attitude that we build the morale that means so much in daily living. The key to real living is constant progress; people who are rolling stones, drifting from this to that, are never satisfied because they gather little moss. When they learn to avoid the negative and accentuate the positive in thought and action, to have stickability, to work cooperatively with people, to be honest and not deceitful in actions, their lives will be happier and worth living. The chief difficulty is that so many people go through life without facing up to situations, without arriving at conclusions, and without putting decisions into action N Naturally they live haphazard and frustrated lives. One of the marks of the successful person in any endeavor is the ability he has developed to concentrate his attention over a long period of time on the problem bfcfore him. Life is a series of experiences, and from those experiences we learn that glamour is not greatness,sbut doing one job at a time, learning the right way, planning properly, thinking properly, being thoughful and cons wivimvsus. oiicKaDiiuy cnaoies a person to live a happy life. Brown From Page 4 Latinos who faced this tape out of circulation foreclosures and their abili- prides himself on dirts ty to read lien-sale con- jokes and Jewish jokes and tracts: he added, "I'm Jewish." J M You bet your ass they are As 1 said, that reall; hard to^read,'* and added makes what he did ai fWu^Wp,J tklW'' ytfti're rt'ciWhg *>61^ affaffr' A'n< them over the watermelon If he's truly not a bigot, h< or tacos." will confront me on televi It is reported that sion and prove it. witnesses recalled that ?Wallace "thumped a desk.- TONY?BROWN'S with his hand" and "smirk- JOURNAL, the televi ed." sion series, will premiere I'd like to hear the master on public television Tue of the ambush explain that. Feb, 9, on Channel 26 ai Wallace, who tried to keep 7:30 p.m. mnimiiHHmiwuHHHuiiiimraimiimMmimiiiimnmiiiiiiiMinimiiiMiiMfnnimiii Raspberry From Page 4 mrnimtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm The King's Birthday ter who brought you to the Bounce, which has dancers ball. who thought Martin Luther The. Gypsy Moth King a nonviolent wimp, Mazurka, same as above, while he lived, now except you do it backward, threatening violence to get The Supply-Side Strut, in his birthday declared an of- which you keep doing the ficial holiday. same steps no matter how The ERA Holdout, in often the music changes, which grim-faced dancers The IRS Arson, in which keep moving their feet long you first smash the fire exafter the ball is over and the tinguishers because you musicians departed. don't like the way they were The Bob Jones Jerk, in designed, then submit a which any dancers who proposal for new ones after stray across the color line the house is on fire, arc religiously jerked back The Predecessor Point, in to reality. which you claim personal The Let-'Em-Eat-Cake credit for all the good news Walk, in which rich dancers while blaming the guy who agree not to apologize for preceded you for all the being rich if poor dancers bad. promise not to apologize The Civil Rights Reverse, for being poor. in which the dancers are The Boll Weevil Wiggle, in kept busy competing for which you dance with the prizes they thought they handsome stranger, no mat- had won 20 vears aco. Lucky Plate f The owner of the car W,U Increase to ?30 an. with this license piste ??'? feature anothe will receive 120 from the license plate. Ou Chronicle If he or she^p- J?ckpot will Increas. pears In our offlce( by weekly by tlO until i 5:30 p.m. on Monday, winner claims his or he Feb. 8. If not. the Jackpot prlae. Keep an eye out! I ^ t> k . / f ?? w Reflecting On Our I f ~ ^ , AfrwAmerican History process made "history" Month. Black History Mon- himself, th.' A time set aside to Through his work with the > honor the contributions of Society for the Study and ? black people to America preservation of Afro? and the world!! American Life and History, * The idea that an observan- Dr. Woodson encouraged ce of this nature was neces- his collegues to research . sary was the brainchild of and^ publish treatises to noted historian Dr. Carter refute the lies, distortions G. Woodson. and omissions regarding Dr. Woodson-- in his wis- African and Afro-American > dom -- believed that tor too history that were permeatlone African and Afrn. k:*. ? ? ?? ? nig tins uanuii a cuutttiion* American history had been al system. ?distorted and/or ignored by Through his own writings i Caucasian "scholars." In- - notably, "The Miseducar deed, as the pun goes, tion of the Negro" - Dr. : social science books reflect- Woodson presented concise ed only HIS-STORY: a analyses of how the Afro"lily-white" view of the American (and Caucasian) world which glorified minds had been warped by "European" civilization the "mis-educational" syand debased that of African stem of this country. He and Asiatic peoples. cited politicians, schools, Dr. Woodson set out to churches and so-called aca, alter this unsavory, immor- demicians as the primary al practice, and in the culprits for the perpetua i I I i N F I B M^>'v,; ^k >" '?' fy>U '.'V'-"-^-, nHBPB;'.[ ;v. r ? v .^0U'^,^ HK|\(^^H ^B|L ' ' ?"?*' "L ^ .?A1. li\ A, m.^fetes H ?fl BBK?8fpSwftfeiBK5MMH{^,f ^B ?j>S^^TM^KSjiiMEv ^B s f'/'fy*. A** c< ^v^SfWJ.^ * Bi-;.-;P:'. ^>VijV. V%iK||?^^'''v ?^3Bl: ^Kv,. :i--: ~.y,.... '.x-"?. a ifmLi?.\~j'<&"> JBsSKSi^it -. V iBii inr^8T^^'' ^BF ..< .> ^jgyj^djijgQ^^^eei^^u^KK^SSBlE^; <''L^MK(M E *y. * - iHHBHBAHdKL /C^bW Mi^l *?MHA' - r s ? ' M 9 mg. "tar", 0.7 mg. nicotine a v. per cigarette by FTC method. * ^ 'ast...And Future tion of institutionalized ig- year!! Further, 1 agree that norance!! there must be a compreBecause of his untiring hensive integration of Afrisacrifice and commitment can and Afro-American to truth, Carter G. Wood- contributions into every son is proclaimed as the field of study presently "Father of Black History", taught in America s educa- i and is credited with the tional system - from pre- , fbunding of Afro-American school to post-graduate! History Month. Needless to say, this task i And while there may have wiM take time, hard work < been other Afro-American and a thorough re-educahistorians, perhaps more fi?n ?f mis-educators. \ scholarly (e.g. W.E.B. Du- But, clearly, it must be , bois), or reknowed (e.g^done. Benjamin Quarles, Lerone However,?in?the?mean Bennett), no one can deny time, it is our individual ' the depth of the contribu- and collective responsibility ' tion to enlightment made to to educate ourselves and 1 our people (and this coun- our children about the glotry) by Dr. Carter G. Wood- rious past and heroic strug- , son... gles of our ancestors. Yes, I concur with those We would also do well to critics who argue that Afro- take advantage of the numAmerican History should erous Black History pro- ' be taught/celebrated year- grams being offered round, and not confined to throughout February by the the shortest month of the East Winston Library, I ' -"' -' Sfy'.'. wv/ ^ 2;i<E>'.?* ><?? "Vi*ia5txA : v<c fv.V.tr ^^SiW^b?>^fflBxcBgWlM8^^^^^^^^^^^^yii2jFv?TBgSM " ' __tkgtjlgm_i^'' * wi-^ ;JrTS*BlT?TrT^MrTrTf!I^^^^^^^^^^^^BPK 1>v' '''nM^iT'^B The Chronicle, Thursday, February 4, 1982*- Page 5 % CLIFTON EB GRAVES |?j| Winston-Salem State Uni- Truth and Harriet Tubman, /ersity, Wake Forest Uni- Martin Delany and Marcus yersity, the School of the Garvey, physicians, Daniel Arts, and various churches Hale Williams and Charles and civic groups in our Drew, Langston Hughes :ommunity. and Gwendolyn Brooks, For his part, this writer, Booker T. Washington and For the next several weeks, Mary M. Bethune, the Rev. will profile selected figures Henry Highland Garnet . , . , A _ . and the Rev. Adam Clayton in African/Afro-American ? ,, _ . . roweii. ur. Martin King history whose very lives Jr and Ma)colm x as have made a difference in , L, .. . . well as the countless others the way we live today. . who have contributed to Thus, as you celebrate this African-American achievespecial month in your ment, excellence and prohomes, schools, churches gress. and organizations, remem? We owe nothing less to ber Chaka the Zulu and ourselves than to appreciToussaint L'Ouverture, ate our past; for without W.E.B. Dubois and Frede- that, we surely cannot efrick Douglass, Sojourner fectively chart our future.... Warning:iThe Surgeon General Has determined I That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. I i 20 MENTHOL CIGARETTES | I I Salem IN >L- vttt J- .. "W^iV .ffi '.147 MS > ^' PP ___ i . - ? BHBl v mi i'' ? F" shi^^v I'lB^Hi ! I h MHEfl wma 47 a. ^ hbi ; SMOOTH LOW TAR 100s \ B?fnfijiiP?11 IhI | f?| ii H ML. C 1??2 N.J Nf V*IOLOS TOOACCO CO. f ? ! " i <
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1982, edition 1
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