Lunats mDDcn'inoi By Bob Johnson NOVA LIGHT PARTY...Joe and Minnie Alii, son, two very congenial people, hosted an impromptu party at their lovely home recently. The party started at a bewitching hour and lasted until a time that would have sent dracula scurring for this casket. _ However, in between, Joe and Minnie enter tained friends amid the different, darkling co lors and designs produc ed by a recently acquir ed Nova Light, what ever that is. Anyway, I do know that it added a totally new dimension to the party as can be at tested by people like Dwight and Chocolate Sullivan, Patricia Wil stn, Bill and Edna Johnson, Steve and Edwina Hayes, Kitt Massi, Ulyses Ford, Richard and Madge Hopkins, Vinson and Patricia Thompson from Orangeburg, S.C., Cliff and Joyce Johnson, Charles and Vickie Owens, Frank and Christine Gadsden, and Cheryl Williams Now Joe, about that multi colored light.... QUEEN CITY OPEN...Early last Saturday morning Dean Hart left his apartment on Tom Hunter Rd., and spent the major portion of the next two days at the Holiday Inn on Tryon St. participating in his first chess tournament. The tournament sponsored by Leland Fuerst man lasted for two days, May 1st and 2nd, was broken down into two sections pro and ameteur, and boasted over $1,000 in cash prizes and trophies. Dean, playing in the amateur section, conjured up all of his knowledge and skills of the game to emerge Sunday afternoon with a trophy and some cash, as a result of winning four out of a possible five games. Gary Carpenter, a brother who attends the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, also participated in this event. Even though he didn’t win any of the prizes, his 13 years experience and 1675 rating put him in the professional category with the masters and experts. COOL JAZZ TRIP...The Westside Five Social Club is sponsoring a jazz excursion to the Atlanta Kool Jazz Festival. The fesival featuring such stars as The Crusaders, The Temptations, Do nald Bryd, B.B. King and many others will be held in Atlanta, Ga., June 25 and 26. Persons interested in the excursion should contact Jack Hill at 377-9854 or Jimmy Redic at 376-1780 on or before May 19. Tickets - Hotel and transportation included. KAPPA DISCO...The Zeta Delta Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity at UNCC held a Disco-Connection in the John Paul Lucas room on the campus of the University last Friday night from 10 until 1. The Disco Connection featured Dave Wilson of WGIV who provided the sounds for the grand occasion, a final party of the year for several 49ers and guests. Exams started this week. Seen grooving and getting down to the sounds of Parliament, B.T. Express, and the tops in disco-music were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves, Kevin Smith, Michael Crawford, Marconi Buc hanan, Horace Drumming, Robert Terry, Deb bie Hearst, Evadne Jones, Teresa Graves, James Cuthbertson, Jimmy Davidson, Joyce Walker, Richard Wright, Mamie Webb, Carolyn Walker, Hal Sugars, Michael McDowell, Lewis Woodley, Devera Pearson, Cora Pearson, Clyde Deforest Ray, Anthony Allen, Dave Richards and a host of people out of the city who came out to do-a-thing with the Kappas. FACULTY-ALUMNI AWARDS BANQUET... The Black Student Union of UNCC always keeping in step with progress sponsored an awards banquet recently at the Cone University Center. Clara Lowry WBTV personality won the Mary McLeod Bethune Outstanding Citizen’s Award, while Brenda Glenn, Brenda Hogue, Fred Dilla hunt, Kenneth Foster, Paul Hemphill, David Sanders, Dr. Victor Pollack, Dr. Newton Bar nette, Dr. R. J. Mundt, Dr. Sherman Burson, Jean Parrish, Rev. David Frye, Donald Pearce, Sheldon Shipman, Coach Lee Rose, and Coach Everette Bass were recipients of other awards. Councilman Harvey Gantt was the guest speaker as Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Mack Stedman, Winnie Mac Neely, Elaine Nichols, Roberta Duff, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dew, Zachariah Springs, Terry Smith, Greg Davis, Herman Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Harper, Dr. Ann Carver, Rodney Page, Annette Johnson, Avis Huston, Dee Jones, Maudine McFadden, Fern Springs, Deborah Springs and Sheryl Westmorland looked on while dining on broiled chicken, roast beef, steamed corn, but tered white potatoes, tossed salad, mixed veget ables, fruit salad, buttered rolls, ice tea and cherry tots. 1 I tf.c. Mutual NATIONAL INSURANCE WEEK uriV- t0 Thoma* E- Moore, agent; Cashier, Joanne Dawkins, Secretary-Clerk william C. Forney, Staff Manager; Virginia and Thomas Porter, agent. Stepteau, Cashier; Lelar Caldwell, Assistant mock companies “National Insurance Week” Will Be Observed May 10-15 me 42nd annual National Insurance Week, with a goal of $100,000,000 in new business, and sponsored by the National Insurance Association, (NLA), will be observed May 10-15, 1976. NI Week is a national sales campaign in which a gents acquaint families with the investment and protection roles of life insurance and urge them to increase their financial security through planned purchases of insur ance. During this week span, more than 8,000 agents of 37 Black owned and managed life insur ance companies, members of NIA, will remind the public that like insurance itself, they are "Always Needed; Always Ready,” to serve. “The theme of NI Week this year emphasizes the role of the Black life agent and the role of insurance,” says NI Week Chairman Donald Solo man of Birmingham, “Both are always needed. Both are always ready to do their job. “Life insurance, as people in the industry know,” he con tinued, “offers a more impor tant economic underpinning Queen College’s Pre-College Students To Present Recital The final recital of pre-col lege-adult division music stu dents of Queens College will be presented on May 7 at 7:30 p.m. in the Suzanne Little Recital Hall of the E. H. Little FineArts^enter^^^^^^^ for the stability of low income minority families than does any other form of thrift. The theme, ‘Always Needed; Al ways Ready,’ is intended to help raise the level of aware ness of minority people of this great social invention.” In their joint announcement, NIA President Edward D. Da vis, president, Central Life Insurance Company of Flori da, and Soloman, who is vice president and agency direc tor, Booker T. Washington In surance Company, slated that in addition to seeking $100,000, 000 in new business during the national sales drive, "A pri mary concern is strengthen ing the economic base of the people who make up the majo rity of our present and poten tial policyholders so that when the twin misfortunes of death or disability strikes, the fami ly structure will not disinte grate because of financial in- \ stability.” J To inspire the field force to 1 go all out in its effort to reach j the $100,000,000 goal, special 1 prepared promotion materi- I als, imprinted with the NI J Week theme, will be used by I agents in 34 states and the' J District of Columbia. In addi- 1 tion, local insurance associa- J tions and individual compa- 1 nies are launching NI Week i with their own special pro- ] grams, rallies and activities. I First held in 1935, NI Week ] is designed to call attention to I the important roles Black life - J firms play in strengthening -4 the economic welfare of, not i only their clients, but the en- *] tire Black community. Collec- j tively, these firms assets a-' ■M ■ mi mount to nearly 1600,000,000. Insurance in force is over S8 billion. I riLOJJLK?) ruMKAMTSTUDIO |] FIRST._ For Fine Photography 2224 Beatties Ford Rd. Charlotte, N. C. 392-2028 or 392-0945 ♦ Wedding*^. | k Natural Color ♦ Cap & Gown Photon ' * it New* Photograph' ♦ Group Function* ♦ Restoration it Portrait* ♦ Copies Martin To Head Wachovia Bank Southern Board James H. Martin, Jr. has been elected to the Southern Regional Board of Wachovia Bank & Trust Co., N.A., in Charlotte. Martin, President of Tex tiles-incorporated graduated from Auburn University with a B.S.Degree in Textiles and from the University of North Carolina’s Executive pro gram. He was employed with Dixie Yarns and American Efird Company prior to his association with Piedmont Processing, a subsidiary of Textiles, Inc., as Executive Vice President in 1954. Currently President of the North Carolina Textile Foun dation, Martin served five years as a member of Gaston Memorial Hospital's Board of Trustees. He has served as a member of the Board of Trustees of Charlotte Country Day School, Director of the Gaston County YMCA, head of Belmont’s United Fund, and active service with the Red Cross program. .[ Keep your out-of-town friends informed on what's happening in Charlotte by sending them a copy of the Charlotte Poet each week. The ( coat is only $9.00, plus tax per fmr. _ - irinruns UAI sirHAJAL 10 GAL AQUARIUM SET ne. $1549 My$8m Price Includes-lAU glass Aquarium Air Pump-Filter Tubing-Filter Carbon Filter Floss-Food Check our weekly fish specials ALTEE’S AQUARIUM Freedom Drive Mall 392-1071 It seems to me that it's about time for Black people to start putting on the brakes To sit down. Settle back. And take a good, hard look at where we've been. And where we're going. In the 60 s. we all talked a good deal about the impor tance of Black history and Black culture. It is important to know about our heritage. Our self-image. And our sense of accomplishment. Important, because we aren’t looking for patronizing approval from white America, to our demands for equality of opportunity and justice. Why should we? We've been an important contribu tor to the growth of America, through cultural, scientific, industrial, and patriotic efforts. So we marched. We shouted. We boycotted. We sang. We've had riots. And we've made some strong, meaningful socio-economic gains. Our family median income has doubled. More of our young people are attending colleges And more of us own our own homes. But. is that all there is? Shouldn't nearly two decades of social revolution lead to something more ? Something called social responsibility. It seems to me that some of our gains are drawing dividing lines, in the Black community. And I'm not taiKing about haves and have-nots. I'm addressing this to the middle and upper class Blacks who are stepping on the fingers of their Brothers, who are simply trying to climb the same ladder. Greed and envy are bad companions. And they're beginning to make Black America a leaderless, self destructive community. What's happened to respect? And unity? Where are the heroes we need for our young people to follow? The helping hands? If the better educated, higher income-earning Blacks are too busy looking to their own selfish interests, and not taking time to give a boost to a Brother who wants to come up—then we're all in big trouble. Maybe it’s time for some of us to look back a little. And get back in touch a lot. • | Joe'&hck Vice President The Greyhound Corporation HOUSE OF WALLPAPEM _"• m Pftount Win, And ommi .k free coffee & donuts • ? PFhal a JHM, JFiM, IF1LD weekend! :C !■ Open Monday - Saturday 9 a. nu to 9 p. nu Sunday 1 to 6 p. m. F