Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / May 5, 1983, edition 1 / Page 11
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amusemen STARSCOPE WEEK OF: MAY 5. 1983 AQUARIUS ? January 21-February 19 Surprise news gets week off to an unpredictable start. Don't reveal confidences to someone you barely know, your perception is not as sharp as you think Romance improves. s PISCES - February 20-March 20 Unhappy acquaintances try their hardest to bring you down to their level; best to mingle with cheerful types Boredom at work turns to excitement and you're in the heart of the activity. ARIES - March 21-April 20 Social gathering can bring you in touch with a useful business contact. A mora liberated approach proves helpful at work. Old debts should be collected promptly TAURUS - April 21-May 22 Accent is on verbal communication. Cancer and Virgo figure in week's enjoyment. Good time to launch financial projects, conclude creative tasks. Weekend is a lucky period. GEMINI - May 23-June 21 Weekend includes some coincidences, and long-awaited career announcement comes by Wednesday. You find yourself involved in the domestic disputes of others; remain detached. CANCER - June 22-July 22 Accent creativity in all realms of life, especially in your work environment. Trouble brewing among friends should not affect you If you're careful. Intimate parties favored on weekend. LEO ? July 23-Auguat 22 Craft projects and hobbies involving collections are favored. Painfully critical friend may need a candid statement from you. Prudence is accented in new financial ventures. VIRGO ? August 23-Stpttmber 22 Loved one Is uncommonly empathetlc and understands your motives and dreams Behind-the-scenes maneuvers will positively affect your llfestvle. Dramatic events scattered thrnuah th? LIBRA September 23-Octob?f 22 Explain any difficult situations before you'ra hopelessly entangled Rewards for hard work are yours at last Do your batt to relieve a relative's stress. SCORPIO - October 23-November 21 Relatives play Increasingly time-consuming role; ensure that you have time for yourself. Unexpected correspondence arrives after the weekend. Loved one is in a mood for fun. SAGITTARIUS - November 22-December 22 Minor financial setbacks are somewhat offset by gains In prestige and reputation. In relationships, it's tempting to oversimplify what's taking place. Digging deep Is the key. CAPRICORN - December 23-January 20 Be wary of opportunists, and avoid any sort of reckless activity. New friendships are enhanced now, but old alliances cannot be Ignored. Travel plans are solidified. FINDIT! # Your mom docs a lot for you Find 16 things thai she docs Words run across down or diagonally in any direction Word list below G E F H C A E T C A S I S H 0 P LRRRXA?PL ENODULWB A V U D E N O U NSNHENRR TESCOOKC M W E V I R D S Word list Clean, cook, drive, dust. earn, fix, garden, help, mend, nurse, sew, scrub, shop. teach, wash, work Leftover letters give you one more things mothers do Broadway Is My iimmiiiuiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiminiimmiMtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMtmmmiiMMmamiMHNiMNMnm York's Upper Eastside, where she had become a familiar figure. Billed as a 4iOui World Exclusive: Greta Garbo Uncovered!" the sex magazine describes the star's steamy lesbian love affair with Spanish-born scriptwriter Mercedes de Acosta, and claims that the photographs were taken at a tiny island love nest that they shared in the Sierra Nevadas. The magazine claims the topless photographs were taken by de Acosta during a vacation where Garbo was 26. The pictures were found in a trunk once owned by dc Acosta, who died seven years ago. There were also ''bundles of love letters" between Garbo and de Acosta, which the magazine did not publish. "Any claims that fte two women were not lovers are answered in the letters they exchanged," the magazine notes. ... The U.S. government maintained a 30-year surveillance on the late, controversial actor-singer Paul Robeson ? including a series of wiretaps, house baggings and mail interceptions ? because it believed he was a threat to national security, according to official documents unearthed yesterday. In a secret report of more than 3,000 pages compiled by the TV/Radio From Page 10 tMIM?MIMIHIHIWWIIW?WMH?NIM?tWtt?ttnmmWW??WMWIMH?WIMIIIHtltl#HfWWWIIIIIIIIIIII| when in 1910 William Foster produced the first of a series of black-cast comedies,'* says Dr. Henry T. Sampson, author of "Blacks in Black and White: A Source Book on Black Films" (Scarecrow Press), and a guest on the program. Also documenting the history of blacks in film will be Dr. Thomas Cripps, author of "Slow Fade to White" (Oxford University Press) and "Black Film as Genre" (Indiana University Press). Although Foster's contributions were highly significant, America's perception of the Negro as a submissive, child-like character or a stupid buffoon t Comics, Puz2 Book Oub From Page 8 celebrated its 43 anniver- printed on the program sary on Saturday, April 30, sheet. Dr. Williams then with guests at a dinner in o?v* th* ? ? o?' ???V UVilVUiVllUll. the green room at Kenneth R. Williams Auditorium at Other members attending Winston-Salem State ^ere Modesta Ear , Irma University Gadson, Maybelle Hedgely, y* ? Annie Kennedy, Wilma Mrs. Selena Nichols, an- Lassiter, Dr. Lillian Lewis, niversary chairman, began Ivy* Nelle McDaniel, Dr. the program with prayer, Barbara Phillips, Edna which was followed with a Revels and Louise Smith. soprano solo by Mrs. Vi- . o i_. k; ... . . Other guests were the v.en Bright. Mrs Nichols Rey B F DanieUi Thomaj then mvued everyone to the p Harfi Mfs M buffet dinner. Follow,ng poweU, Mrs. Gloria Ooore. the dinner Mrs. Bronn.e ^ Ha2d ? Daniels club president. Shir, Manigault> A.K. brought greetings and gave Se?er$ Walter Farabee< a special recognition to Mrs. Edythe Williams, Miss Mrs. Gwendolyn Ashley L Hooper, Mrs. and Dr. Kenneth R. Margaret Speas, Mrs. Tille, Williams, whose mothers , ff Mrs ^ Ren. were two of the club nick> Mfs E,$ie McKoy oun ers. ^rs QCOrgja Moore. Mrs, Miss Wanda Lee Starkes, . Carolyn Boyd, Mrs. Addi< a guest, entertained the Hymes, William Brown; group with a piano solo. Mr and Mr$ Walte) The club members Biackmon, Mrs. Geneva presented "Reflections" In Hillt Dr. ^ Mrs> Ray. the style of the television mond olim> dr k.O.P. I. Is Your Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs. Life." Mrs. Barbara Hayes T C> TilIman( the Rev. ^ was mistress of ceremomes, Mrs Konnie Robin,oni and Mrs Evelyn Sellers Roland HayeS( Mr. tnd pUyedto role_oLJook Mrs. Unkfell Halrston, Club of Today. Mrs Mfldred Poindexter, All other club members Mrs? Mary Hopkins, Mrs, participated as television Vir?inia wis man. Charle* guests coming to honor Ms. Gftdson, Miss Annie Book Club and remind her Wellman, Mrs. Ruth of the parts they had played Boonc' Dr ;David in her progress. Mrs. Evelena Clayborn, Mrs. Maxwell Grier, Mr, In a ceremony after the and Mrs. J.L. McKnight, skit, Mrs. Emmalene Good- W.J. Earl, Mr. and Mrs. win and Mrs. Marion Leroy Campbell of Wooten paid tribute to the Statesville, Mrs. Alma founders of the club. Mrs. Amos, Mrs. Mary Sawyer, Martha Atkins and Dr. Per- Mrs Geneva McClendon, milla Dunston played a Mrs. Junita Penn, Mrs. striking piano duet entitled Glennie Hall, the Rev. and 'Poet and Peasant." Mrs. B.J. Jessup, H.O. VI rc Haniale %m? * viwavu m? Drigm, ivir. sno Mrs. program by having all to Richard Archia, Harold read Grace Croweirs poem, Kennedy Jr., and Mr. and "Good Books," which was Mrs. William Andrews. , . W Beat From Page 10 iwifMiiitiwmwttiiwiwwiHmiiMiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiwiiHiwiiiwiiiniiininwiiiiii FBI, its former director, J. Edgar Hoover, concluded that Robeson was a member of the Communist Party. As a result, the FBI enlisted an army of agents and paid informants and, with the help of the State Department, the CIA, Army and Navy intelligence groups and U.S. consulates overseas, kept close tabs on Robeson and his wife, Eslanda. Between 1943 and 1967, Robeson was on the FBI's "custodial detention" list of persons to be detained within 24 hours in case of a national emergency. The papers were obtained by the Asbury Park Press in New Jersey through the Freedom of Information Act. In 1950, Robeson was denied a passport because he refused to sign a statement saying he was not a Communist. But in 1958, the Supreme Court struck down that requirement, and Robeson entered a self-imposed exile in London. He returned to the U.S. in 1963 after the FBI conceded it had no evidence Robeson was a party member. Robeson graduated from Rutgers in 1919. An All-America football player and Phi Beta Kappa member, he gained fame as an actor and baritone singer. He died in 1976 at age 77. prevailed in films. Five years after Foster made the first black-produced film, the industry spiraled into a new era when a white filmmaker named D.W. Griffith produced "Birth of a Nation.** Griffith's sentimental three-hour portrayal of the pre-Civil War South revolutionized the industry but, at the same time, became a landmark epic of racial hatred. The movie not only ignited the black community in protest, but also had a profound impact on American society and created a criteria by which all films ? and blackr^-'would be judged for years to come. :les. Horoscope LUTHER rP*VoOB UNae HAS I that's WHaF\ T \ULCEBS, HARDCORE^-/ the doctor I , I / THE POST OFFICE \?r ] L MUST Be OfJ STOvrtJ- I I > K J *m ISiB ^B3 Kw/< ^ if ^ ^1 I r^ fm ^ iv y^^H 1 11 . - i I WE NEED JOBS ANI I We'll MOW haul dirt GRASS clean parking I GIVEUSACHANC I Committee To Save The Children 722-8724 A THE PATTERSON AVENUE YMCA NEEDS YOUR PLEDGE TO DA I 1,000 gifts from our community are the new YMCA to be built near Win: show your support for the P, Fill in the pledge card below and ma AVENUE YMCA, WAAA RADIO or t SUPPORT THE PATTE Name (Address Phone# To heJp improve progroms and (a/virac r>t fha viir a m V4v vi iv I I?, VJI IU If 1 considerotfon of the gifts of others. I I /we subscribe: Totoi pledge Pod Herewith CVatonce . ISignoture Dote Now mok? ch*clu p< ^ P.O. Box 3154, Wlntti * I The Chronicle, Thursday, May S, 1983-Page 11 By Brumsic Brandon, Jr. [7 I THOOSHT ULCERS V THII4K HE'D^v V CAME FROM 6EIM? Jm I SET A SKOrtD) \5UCC?SSFUL' / | OPtNIOM / ^y I fip ^9 i 9^ js ill ! /^e MAVENfT . ^ ( CbOTT^sl AfctLL ?/M&L POCTV4R6E *Jt TELL, JHg, / CWNsO^SMO^/ * DO | ) WE WORK CHEAP! 1 make flower beds ots and many other tasks! E ... CALL TODAY! WE FURNISH QUR_QWN_EaU!PM?NT AND HAVE BEEN TRAINED IN EQUIPMENT SAFETY. WE'RE EAGER TO WORK AND WE'LL DO THE JOB RIGHT! ?I \burYS Commitment w F?\MILy* FITNESS RVITH needed to insure the completion of >ton Lake. This is an opportunity to ATTERSON AVENUE YMCA. il it or drop it off at the PATTERSON he WINSTON-SALEM CHRONICLE. RSON AVENUE YMCA Community Ovwor Winston-Salem Chronicle VoKjor##? Patterson Avenue _7_ Payment Sch+duft* Beginning 19 over 36 months (four tax years). monthly quorterty semi-onnuolly r?^ lj annuoiry other jyob*# to YMCA Compo*gn J )n-Salem, N.C. 27102 J
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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May 5, 1983, edition 1
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