I PAGE 8 S « I THE TRIBUNAL AID YOUTH, WHAT’S HAPPENING AT... WEDNESUAY, AUGUST 6,1975 1 "Rap” Lexington by MaLeah Hargrave Friends And RelativBs In The Military I find that Shakespeare was one of the best writers of all times. Some people may think his writings are “too old timey” to dig when the world has changed so much since he wrote and lived. I feel that the things he wrott are as true today as they were in his lifetime. Here are some lines from some of Shakespeare’s plays. Check them out and you will see that they are as modem as heart transplants. “How far that little candle throws its beams! So shines a good deed in a naughty world.” (This comes from Tfte Merchant of Venice.) In Julius Caesar you would find these words. “Cowards die many times before their deaths; The val iant never taste of death but once. Of all the wonders that I yet have heard, It seems to me most strange, that man should fear; Seeing that death, a necessary end. Will come when it will come.” In Measure for Measure you will find these words: “O! It is excellent to have Black Piblishers Developes Fair Housing Directory The National News paper Publishers Asso ciation (NNPA), repre senting the Black Press of -America, has been awarded a government contract to compile a nation-wide directory of private fair housing groups and organiza tions. Funded by a con tract from the Depart ment of Housing and Urban Development, Research and Demon stration Division, the seven-month project will be implementeid in its management and technical aspects by Naomi Gray Associates, minority-owned San Francisco consulting firm. The registry will serve as an aid to im proved communications and cooperative action between private fair housing groups and governmental entities on all levels. Carlton B. Goodlett, Ph.D., M.D., president of the NNPA, on signing the contract, expressed the belief that the regis try would open many a giant’s strength; but it is tyrannous to use it like a giant.” The line I like best comes from As You Like It: “And this our life, exempt from public haunt, Find ton gues in trees, books in the running of brooks, Sermons in stones, and good in every thing.” SAN ANTONIA — Air- Airman Allen graduated man Chaiies E. Allen, son of from Reynolds Senior Hi(h Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt M. Allen, Sr., of 5200 Sunrise Terrace, Winston-Salem, N. C., has been selected for technical training in the U.S. Air Force munitions and weapons maint enance field at Lowry AFB., Colo. The airman recently com pleted basic training at Lack land AFB, Tex., where he studied the Air Force mission, organization and customs and received special instruction in human relations. Black American History Highlighted In Tour American blacks who made major - but frequently little-known - contributions to the development of the country are featured in an Eastern Airlines Bicentennial tour of Washington, D.C. A black cultural program, in conjunction with Soul Journey Tours, is the highlight of a seven day, 5ix-night package that includes use of a car with unlimited mileage. Accomodations are at a selection of 85 Holiday Inns in Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and the District of Columbia, and one or two children under 12 may share a room with their parents at no extra charge. A guidebook is included with the tour and covers major attractions in the region and provides numerous discount coupons. Price of the package is $135.90 per person, double occupancy. In Washington, the black cultural tour starts every Saturday morning at 10 a.m. Its. first stop is at Benjamin Banneker Circle, named in honor of the black mathematician who was part of the team of three men who designed the physical layout of the District of Columbia in the late 1700's. Guides, referred to as “historians” on this tour, not only explain the significance of specifically black monuments, but also explain the contributions of black people to other parts of the nation’s capital. They inform visitors, for example, that the Tidal Basin bridge and sea wall were designed by a black engineer, Archie A. Alexander. And the Lincoln Memorial, which almost always has an atmosphere of hushed awe, was the backdrop for a concert by Marian Anderson in 1939, after she was refused the use of Constitution Hall. The tour also visits another monument to Abraham Lincoln, the Freedom Memorial Statue, which depicts the former President standing by a slave as he breaks from his chains. Funds, design, and execution of the statue were all the result of black effort, culminating in the unveiling in 1876. In another part of this park there is a monument to Mary McLeod Bethune, black educator and humanitarian. The daughter of slaves, Mrs. Bethune's life accomplishments included the opening of a Negro girls’ school, serving as an advisor to four U.S. Presidents, and founding the National Council of Negro Women. Other points along the tour include Howard University, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library, the Museum of African Art, and the Frederick Douglass National Shrine. The tour concludes at one of the city's black-operated restaurants. Eastern’s tour highlighting the contributions of Black people to America's foundations is just one of many Bicentennial tours the airline offers. Further information can be obtained through a travel agent or by calling Eastern Airlines. School in 1^73 and attended Winston-Salem State Univer- sitv. MONTGOMERY, Ala. Barbra F. Watson, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David D. Wat son of 512 O’Connor Street, Greensboro, N. C., is taking part in a U.S. Air Force Re serve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC) field training en campment at Maxwell AFB, Ala. During the six-week prog ram, AFROTC cadets will participate in a wide range of activities designed to re veal and develop leadership, as well as provide an intro- duction to military opera tions and life. Cadet Watson is among ap proximately 3,900 young men and women involved in the special training at 13 Air Force bases ibis summer. The cadet is a member of the AFROTC unit at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State Univer sity. Cadet Watson is a 1972 graduate of J. B. Dudley Senior Hi^ Scliool. SAN ANTONIO -Wan da K. Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen H. Johnson of 1908 Weyland Drive Greensboro, N.C., is taking part in a U.S. Air Force Re serve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC) field training en campment at Lackland AFB, Tex. During the six-week pro gram, AFROTC cadets will participate in a wide range of activities designed to re veal and develop leadership, as well as provide an intro duction to military operations and life. Cadet Johnson is among approximately 3,900 young men and women involved in the special training at 13 Air Force bases this summer. The cadet is a member of the AFROTC unit at North Carolina A&T State Univers- i(:v Cadet Johnson is a 1972 graduate of Dudley High school. DENVER—Airman Bev erly. S. Monnett, daughter of Mrs. Marie G. Smith of 2816 Randleman Road, Greens boro, N.C., has graduated at Lowry AFB, Colo., from the U.S. Air Force supply inven tory specialist course con ducted by the Air Training TH/S IS USE IT Command. The airman, trained to inventory supplies by use of electronic data processing machines, is being assigned to Griffiss AFB, N.Y., for duty Take pity on the dog with ticks, with a unit of the Air Force how uncomfortable you „ . j. c . .would be with a tick stuck to uour Communications oervice. leg, clinging to t/our back, buri^ Airman Monnett is a 1971 ear- Relieve your pet's j 1 » r -1» j m U • suffering with Sergeant s* Tick TICKS MAKE PETS SUFFER. graduate of Guilford Techni' cal Institute, Jamestown, N.C. Her father, John W. Herndon, lives on Rt. 1, Trinity, N. C. Killer. No namby pamby bug spray, Tick Killer is specially formulated to kill ticks—even faster and more effectively than collars. Get Tick Killer today. From Sergeant’s line of over 200 carefully^ tested products. Kiddies- Can -Do-li t/ncie CohhShinn MacW An apple is a very easy thing to draw, yet wlien we try to add tiie leaves most of us set in trouble. Now just try making tiiis drawing on tlie larger squares. You will find it is easy to do. In fact it is so easy to do that you will try making it on another piece of paper. In the drawing you make on your/own paper, make the squares in pencil. Then when your drawing is complete you may erase tile squares. doors to effective com munication among groups working in the field of fair housing. “This planned direc tory of fair housing groups”. Dr. Goodlett said, “can be an invalu able resource for the establishment of a net- wfork of commimication among various fair housing groups and be tween such groups and the governmental agen cies working ^to elimi nate discriminatory housing practices. Summer “75” Continued from Page 2 Ing, karate and yoga classes that several of the students have organized. “One of our major concerns has been just to get the young people inter ested in reading,” says one of the student organizers, in add ition, “karate and yoga in structions have encouraged the young community parti cipants to cultivate self- discipline.” "Summer ’75” has been a learning experience for these students of various fields at Cornell; hopefully encouraging them to channel their academically f ’quired skills into constructive means of meeting community needs. The “Summer ’75” pro gram was initiated by the Cor nell Black Agriculaturists of Ithaca, New York; “We are al so working with the Federa tion of Southern Coopera tives, headquartered in Epes, Alabama and the Black Itha ca Food Development Project, other organizations very con cerned with helping Black people improve their condi tions,” said Makaza Kumanyi- da, project coordinator. Support for this innovative project has been received from several sources including Dr. J. Archie Hargraves, Presi dent of Shaw University; Howard Quander, director of the Community Action and Human Development Council of the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church and sev eral facets of Cornell Univers ity. Time has gone by quickly. The students concluded Aug ust 2nd. However, “Summer ’75” has been a model for action. “There is a serious need for students right here in the Raleigh area to pick up and continue the pro grams; they shouldn’t have to end with the summer,” ex pressed Olaiya Duvall, assist ant director of the Biltmore Hill Center. Beulah McDonald, administrative assistant of the UNIA chapter stated, “ Stu dents are our future...perhaps this experience vrill influence the directions of their lives and affect a change in the lives of many other Black people.” This is a real possibility, based on the activities gener ated this “Summer ’75”. 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