350 Stiident8 Match Wits In “High-Q” ___ C V. r Tournament KEEP INFORMED WITH A SUBSCRIPTION TO THE CHARLOTTE POST Charlotte’s High-Q tour nament, the contest that matches brains instead of brawn, will begin when over 360 high school scho lars match wits in the qua lifying round February 5 at Central Piedmont Com munity College. Teams from 53 high schools in 30 counties will participate in this opening round, Super Saturday, sponsored by CPCC, WBTV, and North Carolina National Bank. Single elimination con tests will pare the number of teams to two finalists for the April 17 championship. The winners will earn a silver trophy and $2,000 in scholarships for their school; the runner-up will win $1,000 for scholarships. High-Q begins with com munity volunteers - many of them from Charlotte’s Junior League • posing identical questions to each of the Super Saturday teams. The sixteen teams with the highest scores ad vance to the second round February 19, in which they each face an opposing team for the first time. Eight “Charlotte’s Black Neighborhoods” Mint’s Free Side Lecture The Mint Museum of Hi story cordially invites the public to a free slide lec ture on “Charlotte’s Black Neighborhoods” on Sun day, February 13, at 3 p.m. This lecture by Mr. Thom as Hanchett, is being re peated by popular demand. His first lecture, January 9, was given to a standing room only audience. Mr. Hanchett, who works with the Charlotte-Meek lenburg Historic Proper ues commission will give this slide talk on five Charlotte neighborhoods, tracing- changes in this city’s black residential pat terns over the last ISO years. The neighborhoods to be examined will be First and Second Wards in the Center City, BidcDeville near Johnson C. Smith Uni versity, Cherry next to Myers Park, and Washing ton Heights near Northwest Junior High. These neigh borhoods Illustrate and the lecture will address the many changes from slavery days before the Civil War, through the era of Mack capitalism in the 1910s, to the communities of the present. Mr. Hanchett is current ly the director of the Charlotte Neighborhood Survey, a three-year pro ject that is cataloging Charlotte’s architectural and historic resources throughout the city. Mr. Hanchett holds a Bachelors Degree in History from Cornell University and is completing a Master’s Degree from the Univers ity of Chicago. Come and share your memories of Charlotte’s black neighborhoods. For A Subscription To The POST CALL 376-0496 ■ - “ Coupon Must Be Presented" " ", Mammavs |-DAY SERVICE j 50% OFF Drycleaning ■ Mon .-Wed. Only 1 15% OFF Thurs., Fri., &Sat. J *4.00 Mininum After Discount j We Dye Leathers 11 1 We Clean Suedes 11 , ' Expert Alterations Available. | 2133 Beatties Ford Rd. , 1 (university Park Shopping Center.) ■ 392-4092 ! ------ Expires 2-15-83“ - - - - - teams emerge to compete in seven televised matches broadcast by WBTV on consecutive Sundays - Fe bruary 27 - April 10th. High-Q is a race against the clock as well as against opposing teams, with con testants rushing to sound their buzzers - sometimes before all of a question has been read - to earn a I 1 chance to answer and field a bonus question. Hie contest is modeled after “College Bowl,” with questions supplied by “Reader’s Digest.” Contestants try out for their teams in early fall and spend from then until February studying current events, sports, history, sci _ence, the Bible, music, politics, geography and more. Last year Statesville High School won over East Lincoln of Denver, NC in the championship. Teachers coaching High Q teams praise the con test as one that encourages scholarship and upholds the image of area public schools. _