The Minority Voice, January 14-21, 1988


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]






What You See Is, Is What You Get, What You Read Is What You Know & Save " Eastern North CarolinaTs Minority Voice

GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 27834

THURSDAY JANUARY 14-21, 1988

Letter to the Editor

Ms. Margaret Hardee,
Supervisor

Pitt County Board of Elections
Post office Box 305

Greenville, N.C. 27835-0305

Dear Margaret:

I have been informed that the
United States Justice Depart-
ment has objected to the new
election plan for the Pitt County
Board of Commissioners which
was enacted by the 1987 General
Assembly. Because the six/three
plan has not been precleared as
required by Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act, it cannot be
implemented.

The current method of electing
the Board of Commissioners "
six members elected at-large but
required to reside in particular
districts " remains in effect. For
now, you should accept filing ac-
cording to that method of
election.

As you know, a lawsuit has
been filed under Section 2 of the
Voting Roghts Act seeking to in-
validate the current at-large
method of election. Until an order
is entered in that action,

however, it remains the valid

} ECOLORTYME.}

SREY



method of election. I will keep
you informed of develpments in
that matter.

Please let me know if you have
any questions.

Sincerely,

THARRINGTON, SMITH &
HARGROVE

Michael Crowell

Are you

addicted

to food?

If you are having a problem
with compulsive overeating and
wish to do something about it,
contact Overeaters Anonymous.
For more information call Joyce
at 830-5372 or Pat at 757-0401.
Overeaters Anonymous can help
you if you give them a chance!
No dues, No fees.

Meetings are held Mondays at
8 p.m., Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.,
and Saturdays at 9:30 p.m. at the
First Presbyterian Church, 14th
Street and Elm, in Greenville.

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NEW BROTHER IN TOWN .. . Shown outside of Colortyme is the
new store manager for Greenville, Bobby Pilgrim. Bobby urges
everybody to drop by for the deal you canTt refuse. Bobby and his
wife and two children fell in love with Greenville the first day they

got here.

Mini-grant projects announced
for Pitt County Schools

J. Beverly Congleton, former
Board of Education member
from Stokes, is funding a mini-
grant at Stokes Elementary
School. The grant project
~Dinosaurs�T was written by Lin-
da James, kindergarten teacher
of Stokes Elementary. The pro-
gram will include enrichment
materials such as computer pro-
grams, books, puzzles, bulletin
board sets, and workbooks about
dinosaurs. Ms. James noted that
it womuld be an ~extension of the
science unti on Animals-
Reptiles.�



Members of the North Pitt At-
tendance Area Mini-great Selec-
tion Committee had commended
the project plan and instructed
the committee chairman, Mrs.
Kathryn Lewis, to seek additional
funding for the project. Mrs.
Lewis pointed out the carry-over
potential of the Dinosaur project
noting that most of the materials
could be used by additional
kindergarten classes in future
years.

Please contact the office of
public information at 830-4258, for
additional information.

HEY DEMAND DISTRICTS ... Area Afro-Americans gathered last week at Norec
law suit filed by concern citiens to block the upco a8}
will never serve on the County Commissioners Board unless a new method of election is put in place
to assure Afro-Americans an equal chance of competing



ing county commissioners election, Afro-Amer

MAYORTS SECRETARY ... Elaine Holloway is shown working on
a busy schedule for Greenville mayor.

Holloway keeps busy
schedule in mayorTs office

Sarah Elaine Holloway was born
in Greenville, N.C. and attended
South Greenville and Eppes High
Schools. She left Greenville while
in the tenth grade and finished
her education in Queens, N.Y.
and graduated in 1966 from An-
drew Jackson High School. She
returned to Greenville in 1972 and
worked for the Board of Educa-
tion and also was the assistant
supervisor of Pitt County Data
Processing Keypunch Depart-
ment. She left there in 1979 and
she and her husband moved to
Tulsa where they attended
Calvery Temple Assembly of God
Church Bible School. While in
Tulsa, she worked for Manage-
ment Planning Systems, Inc.;
Oral Roberts Evangelistic
Assoc.; Kenneth HaganTs
Ministry and American Airlines.

She and her husband moved
back to Greenville in 1983 and she

was hired at the Pitt County
Board of Elections where she
worked for four years before ac-
cepting her cmurrent position as
the MayorTs secretary.

She is married to Rev. Bobby
Holloway and they are the
parents of four children, Darick,
Dawn, and twins; Bobby Jr. and
Robinette. Her husband is
employed by the Greenville
Housing Authority and also is
working toward his Pre-liberal
Arts Degree at PCC and looking
forward to getting his BA Degree
is Psychology with a minor in
Sociology ay ECU.

Together, they pastor the ven-
ture of faith fellowship located at
the Sheraton Hotel. They invite
you to come and worship with
them on Sunday mornings at
10:30 am and Sunday evenings at

wi) pm.

Without good teachers,
where would we be? by sim Rouse

If you can make a change,
balance the checkbook,
write a letter or read a
newspaper, you had a teacher
who cared! They have various
names, but they are very
dedicated, caring, and share an
infinite patience.

The great American take-home
question is aboutT the
deteriorating condition of our
public schools. The future of our
country depends on the success of
the public schools.

A study revealed that everyone
who is successful has one thing in
common: a school teacher who
cared.

A teacherTs dedication to
education and love for the

tt to discuss ti ue

in an election year. Pictured with area brothers

is Attorney Jones & Leslie Winners representing the law suit for the concern citizens and school board

member, Sister Mary Williams.

|

students has proven that quality
education is a product of the
heart, which brings us to this
point, are white and black
teachers teaching our children
the importance of who they are
and where they came from. Are
black students being taught that
they are from Africa and the pro-
ud heritage of their people in
Africa? African-American
children need teachers to include
heritage with reading, writing,
and numbers. It helps a little
oneTs self-esteem to balance a
checkbook, write a letter, and
also to know who you are and
from and how you are going to
spend the extra money in your
checkbook and record it, and tell
about it.

Editorial .. .

Municipal response
challenge; part IIT

In December, 1960, the Green-
ville Ministerial Association saw
the need for the establishment of
an organization to promote com-
munications between the Negro
and the white races. A Social Ac-
tion Committee was appointed to
establish such an organization.
During early 1961 attempts were
made by this Social Action Com-
mittee to create a new associa-
tion from the existing white and
Negro ones. However, the Negro
leadership felt that the existing
dual organization arrangement
better served the needs of the
community. The Negro associa-
tion was primarily interested in
educating the Negro clergy
through weekly discussions.

Late in 196] the Social Action
Committee decided to attempt to
establish an autonomous biracial
organization. First, the group
met with and exchanged ideas
with the Lenior Biracial Commit-
tee in Kinston. Next, each
member of the Social Action
Committee invited a layman to
meet with the group to further
discuss the creation of a biracial
organization. After several

meetings, a list of white people
was drawn up to comprise a
larger discussion group. In
February, 1962, a group of 22
white citizens accepted an invita-
tion for more discussions of the
idea. After two meetings in

February and March, 1962, it
seemed obvious that the white
community was willing to move
prudently in the area of race rela-
tions. Someone was appointed to
contact the Negroes and ask
them to compose a group which
would later merge into a biracial
organization. This person who
volunteered to contact the
Negroes failed in his undertaking
for almost a year; but in
February, 1963, the chairman of
the Social Action Committee call-
ed a meeting to hear a progress
report. The report was that the
Negro community was ready to
participate in a biracial organiza-
tion. Within two days, the Pitt
County Interracial Committee
was organized with ten Negroes
and ten white persons. This group
has been meeting reguarly since.

The Pitt County Interracial
Committee is entirely voluntary
and is not sponsored nor sanction-
ed by any agency. Ad hoc com-
mittees or subcommittees are ap-
pointed as situations or projects
warrant. Such committees are
composed of an equal number of
whites and Negroes.

Three subcommittees have had
long and active lives. One is a
subcommittee which has discuss-
ed desegregation with interested
businesses. The second subcom-
mittee is one working to establish
an annual human relations in-
stitute in the community. The

(Continued on page 10)



THE LEADERS ... (Shown in 1964 photo) two of AmericaTs most
powerful men are Martin Luther King and the brother who was work-

ing in the north, Bro. Malcolm X.

Most Blacks worked on
M. OL. King holiday sc.

How many of you worked on
January 18, 1988? That was the
day to recognize the birth of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. A holi-
day on the national level,
January 18 was more than a day
to recognize a man, it recogniz-
ed a movement, propelled by the
dream of Martin Luther King to
establish an American Society
where all men and women are
truly created equal.

January 18 was the culmina-
tion of a long, hard battle, one
where legislators and civil rights
activists with Mrs. Coretta
Scott King for recognition
of the civil rights movement and
the gains it brought for minorities
in thhis country.

For nearly 15 years, supporters
of a national holiday com-

memorating the birthday

oSp ehes lawmakers to pass a

Luther King, Jr. in every session
of congress after his assassina-
tion, members introduced

¢ the holiday.

Finally, on November 2, 1983
President Reagan signed the Bill
establishing the third Monday in
January as the King holiday,
beginning in 1986, Dr. King is on-
ly the second American to be
honored with a national legal
holiday.

After signing the bill, President
Reagan commented ~. . . traces of
bigotry still mar America. So
each year on Martin Luther
KingTs Day we not only should
becall Dr. King, but rededicate
ourselves to the commandments
he believed in and sought to live
every day.�

January 18, 1988 was a day of
recognition, celebration and
rededication to the visions of an
immortal leader.

Yet many of us worked on
January 18 (for a variety of
reasons); we eer be employed
by a company which not
to recognize Martin Luther
KingTs Birthday as a holiday and
will not pay us for our absence.
The holiday may be optional or
we may have to give up another
employee holiday in order to

have missed January 18.

Few men have done as much as
the late Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. but the prevalent attitude
towards the King Holiday shows
us that there is still a lot of work
left to do. A passive observance
of the King7s holiday is not suffi-
cient for the man or the move-
ment. If we didn7t take this day
to remember Dr. king and his
achievements and were thankful
for how er all benefitted, then the
long fight for recognition will not
have been in vain.

But if we succumb to the
disinterest of the majority of our
community"CorettaTs 15 year ef-
fort will become worthless.

If your employer doubted the
importance of Martin Luther
King, Jr. in your life, tell him. If
he/she needs justification for
your beliefs, show him/her. In-
vite them to go with you to an
observance ceremony at a
church or civic hall, But most of
all, if he is truly important to you,
stand up fro your right to

him. Stand up for
January 18, 1968.

Pa







TI EwVo



FREE

ICE

What You See Is, Is What You Get, What You Read Is What You Know & Save " Eastern North CarolinaTs Minority Voice

yee

GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 27834

THURSDAY JANUARY 14-21, 1988

Tony BrownTs Buy Freedom
campaign held first general
meeting on January 22nd

The Eastern North Carolina
Business Network, Greenville-
based member organization of
Tony BrownTs Buy Freedom
campaign, held its first general
meeting Friday, January 22 in
the Greenville Middle School
Cafeteria. But Freedom is a con-
cept originated and developed by
Tony Brown of ~Tony BrownTs
Journal�T for the purpose of en-
couraging their members, black
businesses, to patronize each
other.

~Focusing on Black Network-
ingTT was Friday nightTs theme,
and Muhammed Nubee, CEO and
Founder of Earth Fragrances of
Raleigh, was the highlight of the
evening. A Raleigh native, Nubee
gave the fifty member audience
his account of his companyTs
beginnings. From March 1984 to
December of that same year, this
multi-level marketing business
grossed over $1 million is sales
after starting with an initial in-
vestment of only $500. Nubee
recalled spending all his free
time while working for the state
(NC) full-time planning business
in his living room floor.

Nubee spoke of success as ~for-
ward progress that you want to
make.T He called the black
business Owners present ~suc-
cessful� because they had open-
ed their own business.

The purpose of NubeeTs presen-
tation was to forewarn en-
trepreneurs, both actual and
potential, of some of the pitfalls
entailed in strating a business.
Nubee warned us to anticipate
our companyTs growth, to have
plans to accomodate such, and
that failure to under-capitalize
can create problems as well. He
stressed the need to ~focusTT, and
the Need for a ~lot of persistence
and... preserverance.�T

Nubee mentioned how some
people say that you need to be an
MBA before you start a business.
~If your desire is big enough,
you'll learn everything you'll

need to knowTT, he encouraged.
He emphasized ~cultivating your
desireT to succeed and having
faith in your effort.

Attitude was also discussed.
The ~power of�T oneTs ~own think-
ingTT was explored. He continued,
~Meet each problem as a
challenge. Look for the oppor-
tunity in that situation (problem)
for growth. Every problem has a
solution.�

He advised that ~We all have
potential.TT We must ~learn to be
creative, imaginative . . . Let
yourself go! DonTt be afraid to
brainstorm. Come up with the
avenue to get you where you want
to be.�

And at last, Nubee concluded
by calling us, Afro-Americans
wealthy people. Looking at our
statistics on our buying power,
and recollecting our heritage, he
is right.

A question and answer period
followed discussing financing,
overcoming high and low periods
in your business, acquiring ap-
propriate professional services "
accounting, banks, attorneys "
on your companyTs level.

Members of the audience
represented many facets of black
businesses " computer and ac-
counting services, industrial
maintenance, day care, etc.; pro
fessionals from varied aspects ol!
Our cOmmunity as well as
knowledge seekers, and students
from Greenville, Farmville,
Kinston, Ayden and Bethel.
Refreshments were served and
door prizes given.

Applications for membership
are available with the ENCBN
for business owned and controll-
ed by blacks, and affiliate
memberships are welcome ~or
professionals and others.

For more information about
the ENCBN, please contact Jo-
Linda Sanders, Chairperson, at
830-0005 or Raymond Hyman,
Vice Chairman, at 830-0567.

e
Bos

BOBBY HARDY II

Hardy is top
student

TOP STUDENT ON DEANTS
LIST . . . Bobby Hardy II, son of
Bobby and Mary Hardy, owners
of Headline Family Salon &
Beauty Products located in The
Rivergate Shopping Center.
Young bobby has made the
DeanTs list at NCCU in Durham.
This is his first year of college
and he graduated from Rose
High in Greenville, 1987. He is
maintaining a 3.51 average and is
a recipient of Chapter
Cosmotologist 74 Scholarship
which is presented each year to
a deserving student. The ~mT�T
Voice salutes young Bobby Har-
dy II.

Rouse enters Pitt
County BOC race

My name is Jim Rouse and I
am running for Pitt County Board
of Commissioners.

As a small business man, I
represent new leadership and a
willingness to deal with old and
new problems that a County
Commissioner may encounter
Our most pressing problem here
in Pitt County are jobs and jobs
mean industry. I truly believe
that one needs to know who he is
before he can deal with life and
what positive efforts can be made
to make a difference and others
lives.

The majority of you know me
already from the Dispatch
Newspaper, a radio host, I have
worked with a major financial in-
stitution, served in the arm force
and have recently become an in-
dependent publisher and owmer cf
The ~m�T Voice Newspaper and
many other positive things that I
have projected since becoming a

PRESIDENTIAL HOPEFUL cee Presidential Candidate Tessedackson was in Greenville last week at

Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church Campaigning and focusing on the Red Tide, small farmers and
registering Afro-Americans. Rev. Jackson urges everyone to vote for the man who can help them and
nat the party. Shown is the Pastor of Cornerstone Baptist Church, Arlene Griffin.

Fundraising events sought for

88 ChildrenTs Telethon

Civic clubs, community and
church groups, businesses and
other organizations wishing to
sponsor a special event to raise
money for the 1988 ChildrenTs
Miracle Network Telethon are
now. being registered.

Groups raising $300 or more for
the telethon, which benefits the
ChildrenTs Hospital of Eastern
North Carolina, are entitled to
present the proceeds during the
live broadcast of the program
June 4-5 on WITN TV-7.

Eastern North Carolinians
pledged more than $107,000 to the
hospital during last yearTs
telethon. Besides personal and
corporate contributions, support
came from such diverse events
as'a male beauty pageant, a day

care. association ~bunny hop,TT
and a benefit dance sponsored by
a country and western band.

~Almost anything you can im-
agine could qualify as a telethon
special event,TT said Beth Nelson,
co-chairman of the special events
committee with Judy Sunder.

~A bake sale, walk-a-thon, pan-
cake breakfast, fish fry, auction
or raffle all come to mind as
possible ways to raise money for
childrenTs programs at the
hospital.�

Sunder said the committee is
hoping to register even more
youth-centered events this year.
Last year, for example, Rocky
MountTs Cub Scout Pack 628 col-
lected $263 for the telethon in a
neighborhood canvass.

~That was a great example of

healthy children doing something
for less fortunate children,� said
Sunder. ~We think that is impor-
tant.�

Nelson and Sunder, both
Greenville residents, are urging
groups to register their event as
soon as possible so air time can
be set aside on the telethon. If a
group wants to learn more about
how to hold a telethon special
event, a speaker can be provided.

For more information or to
register an event, contact Beth
Nelson at 551-4526 or Judy Sunder
at 355-5852.

The ChildrenTs Hospital of
Eastern North Carolina, a divi-
sion of Pitt County Memorial
Hospital, serves patients from 34
counties in the eastern third of
the state.

resident of Greenville. My educa-
tion did not come easy; a strug-
gle for which I am proud of has
gotten me to where I am today.

I strongly support small
farmers, a crisis for which } can
identify with. The time is now for
new leadership to move forward.
The time is now for equal
representation on the Board of
Commissioners. The time is now
for the Board of Commissioners
to meet after 5:00 p.m. for the
people, because the people voted

them in office. | deal with all peo-
pie everyday throughout Pitt
County.
%

In 1984 we came in second in

the Pitt County Commissioner
election and the Board of Elec-
tion threw away a certain
umber of vctes. ] was the only
candidate who was investigated
because of my race. 1988 is
another story.

Public Forum
to be held
February 21st

MOTTO: ~Onward Is Our
Aim� Featuring: Charles P.
Gaskins, Chairman; Eugene
James, Vice Chairman; Kramer
Jackson, County Manager; Tom
H. Johnson; Kenneth K. Dews;
Charles L. McLawhorn; Bruce
Strickland.

The Club is sponsoring a Public
Forum featuring the County
Commissioners and County
Manager on Sunday, February
21, 1988 at 4:00 p.m. at the Club,
707 Wyatt Street, Greenville.

We cordially invite you and
guest, as outstanding citizen and
community leaders to share your
time and interest with us.

Mission: To allow the citizens
to hear, see, learn and present
some community concerns.

To allow the Commissioners to
share and discuss their past, pre-
sent and future projections.

To establish a knowledgeable
and positive working relationship
between citizens and
Commissioners.

... An informed citizen is an in-
volved citizen.

For more information, call
Raymond Reddick, 758-2900; or
John Bizzell, 752-5409.

AFRO AMERICANS WHO CARE , . . The month of Febr

Municipal Response to

the Challenge Part IV

The motel owners met without
reaching a consensus of purpose.
Two motel restaurant operators
were absolutely opposed to any
change of policy in regard to their
segregated practices. As of
February, 1964, the motels were
still undecided as to what to do.
At one point three motels were
ready to desegregate according
to a plan, but one withheld and at
a later date that motel voluntari-
ly permitted a desegregated din-
ner in its restaurant. This situa-
tion remains confusing. It is felt
by the Committee that a very
serious error may have been
made by using an all-white sub-
committee in working with the
motels.

Two restaurants have
desegregated, and three have
been isolated incidents of
Negroes eating in normally
segregated facilities. On October
10, 1963, the United States Air
Force Band rendered a concert
and stayed in motels all over the
City with its Negro members.

The same subcommittee met
with the board of directors of the
Greenville MerchantsT Associa-
tion in July, 1963, to discuss a
petition by the Progressive

CitizensT Council. As a result of
this meeting the board of direc-
tors immediately published a

resolution stating that they en-

couraged all merchants to adopt
nondiscriminatory employment
and service practices

This subcommittee met with

the City Council in regard to the
petition by the Progressive
CitizensT Council. As a result of
this meeting, the City Council im-
mediately issued a_ resolution

through the local newspaper
Stating that it endorsed non-
discriminatory employment and
service policies and enpowered
the Mayor to establish a Good
Neighbor Committee.

In September, 1963, the Green-
ville Ministerial Association
desegregated its membership.

The subcommittee met with
the city officials and county of-
ficials and accomplished the hir-
ing of Negroes and the
desegregation of city facilities
such as the hall and the cour-
troom of the Pitt County
Courthouse.

Prior to the birth of the Inter-
racial Committee, there were
desegregated facilities in the
County. Most prominent of these
were East Carolina College, the
Municipal Library, and the Coun-
ty Health Department.

The Pitt County Interracial
Committee as a whole is active-
ly engaged in a public relations
and educational venture. It is ac-
tively seeking opportunities to
speak to civic clubs, church
groups, and others. The Commit-
tee seeks to commit responsible
people of the community to
responsible action. The co-
operation with this program has
been most encouraging.

East Carolina College
desegregated quietly over the
past years and now has some 60
Negroes enrolled, including a
number living in the dormitories.
The college has served as a great
public example of how
desegregation can be ac-
complished and how fruitful and
beneficial the results can be.

~Continued -insiethissued

HONORED GUEST . . . Shown at the American Legion Building
recently the REv. Dave Hammond, Mrs. Bob Jordan and Senator
Tom Taft. Its that time of the year for campaign 1988.

Public Service Announcement...

Project Find

Do you know a child or youth,
ages zero through 21, with special
needs? Project Child Find is a
statewide effort to identify
children and youth who may be
handicapped and are not in
school or receiving special help.

underway

You can help this child receive
special attention by calling your
local school system at 830-4228,
the State DepartmentTs Division
for Exceptional Children at (919)
733-3004 or CARE-LINE,
1-800-662-7030.

jary is African American History month and

these Brothers make things happen in your life every day, Name them and win a free picture in The

~m� Voice.

t





RSDAY, JANUARY 14-21, 1988

PCC offers course on ~How to
| talk So Kids Will ListenT
Pie Commanty Collegs willed. children, It ideal for social

fer a communication en-.workers, guidance
prea go + : ts, grandparents
� on e $= parents, §, Or anyone -
January vay from who has contact with children.
T to 9:30 p.m. in Room 10 of the
Vernon White Building on the
PCC campus, The first session role play.
Tuesday, January 26 will meet
from 7 to 10 p.m.
The principles and skills taught
in this class can be used by
anyone who works or lives with



bidder oes lors, "
teachers, clergy, teenagers,

The class will include discussion,
written and group exercises, and

Costs for the course include a
$15 registration fee and $16.60
charge for books and workbook.
Call 756-3130, ext 298 or 260 to
reserve a space in this class.

TROY ROBINSON

CASH PAID FOR DIAMONDS AND GOLD
FLOYD G.

ROBINSON JEWELERS

407 EVANS MALL
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE, NC 27834
(919) 758-2452
Salutes Martin Luther King, Jr.
MIKE ROBINSON
INDEPENDENT DIAMOND JEWELERS

LAURA FAIRBANKS

Mr. BTs
Snack

Bar &
Game
Room

SOUTH LEE ST.

Ayden, NC

Location:
Beside of

ClarkTs
Barber Shop

AUTO
REPAIR

OLD HWY. 11

Ayden, NC

Eddie
Mack
Cherry

746-6556





aa

-

8
CJ =

~-

SCHOOLWORK PAYS OFF

he wasn7t the smartest oneinthe ing your

his homework and was rewarded.

... work! While youTre in school,
itTs your job, and it does pay off.

1. Save those plastic bags from
You are not likely to get one of the fruit section of the super-
market. When taking baby out,
job out of school now. You will take a few of those bags along.
Put a souled diaper inside, tie a

the better jobs without making a

develop or establish good habits

that will make you stand out in
Awards day at school held the job market. Those who have
some suprises. Certificates of applied themselves in school
achievement were being given to _ usually find it easier to do well on
outstanding students when Ted the job. While you~are in school,
heard his name called. Tedknew __ that is your main job. You are fill-
~rooms�T
school and he hadnTt really ex- knowledge, preparing for a suc-
pected to win anything atawards _ cessful future, social activities,
day. But he had learned anim- sports, friends and so on are im-
portant lesson. He learned to portant, but make sure you donTt
work at learning. He tried his neglect schoolwork because of
best to lear, spent some time on _ them. Who knows? Teh next time
awards are handed out at school,
You see, schoolwork is just that your name may be called!
HINTS...



oral
3. Staple a self bag to
oe cccomhs list in it of
items in the attic.





4. Make a list of all the meals you child

have prepared for the past few
months and place inside the
cabinet door. When you are in a






hurry or when you have just clothes, their talk, ; thus, they
rinatind from work and you donTt out different people who are

know what to prepare, just look ing some of their diffic
at the list. Better still, cut = sad rey stressful or , )
page of menus from ~Family Cir- cones oe ae

SURVEY FINDS CHILDREN _ takes precedence over fam

cleTT and post. Good variety!

ARE FATTER... ap by
AmericaTs young children are 2. Talking frankly, not hostile
fatter than their counterparts two a bata tod _ Pi |
m ~

decades ago, are not getting the ae for you bata contro th
more time watching television when they are out of your sightT
i . Leaner and reach, but let them know the
than in physical activity. Lea consequences of their behavingied

they are caught. Mig
and who get regular exercise 3. Encourage home visitation, ae
questionable friends par. "
ticipating in activities with the
family. Your teenager will see jgT
his friends fit in and youTll get fo

right kinds of exercise and spend

children tend to have parents who
take time to exercise with them

themselves. Children are fed the
way their parents eat, usually.

HEART DISEASE


















ven

proval,



Eb &E

HEADLINES

CONTRIBUTORS:

. Smoking

. High blood pressure
. Overweight

. Diabetes

A FAMILY HAIR SALON

RIVERGATE SHOPPING CENTER

. Family history

. Lack of exercise
. Stress/Tension

. Animal fat

. High cholesterol

752-3462

6] CO ~2 OT & GS RO

know the qualities that your sonT
or daughter liked; consequently,T
you'll be more comfortable with
the situation. 3
4. To forbid your teenager to
associate with a bad friend often
results in rebellion and destroy
the parent/child relationship,o
5. When the relationship reacheg
a destructive point, resulting in
poor school performance or



3101 E. 10th St. " 264 By-Pass at 10th Street
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 27834

BOB AND MARY HARDY
OWNERS

Super Cuts for Guys and Gals

HAIR CARE PRODUCTS

3101 E. 10th Street
Greenville, North Carolina 27834
(919) 752-3462

START WALKING! START
WALKING! START WALKING!
START WALKING! START
WALKING! START WALKING! 8
ARRANGE FINANCES ;
BEFORE NEED ARISES

People should gather all impor-
tant papers to one place. Include
birth certificates, marriage
licenses, military discharge and
pension documents, insurance
policies, auto and house titles,
loan agreements, tax records,
outstanding bills, a list of regular
payments for a which no bills are

1,

drinking, or tension is so high that
communication is almost im-
possible, then the family needs
counseling.

Set standards early, not just

upon the children, but upon
yourselves as parents.

Both sets of parents might sit

down and discuss what is accep-
table behavior in front of their
children, «|
DO IT NOW! pot PUT IT

OF
Some say, ~When ITm 18.�

~When I buy a new 450 SL
Mercedes Benz!� ~When I put

Hi, my name is... .

CHARLES C. WATTS, JR.

...and for all your furniture needs see
meat...

Heilig -Nleners

FURNITURE

18 E. Greenville Blvd. " Greenville, NC 27834
Phone 919-756-4145

BOB AND MARY HARDY " OWNERS

documents and wills.

issued, bank and investment



758-7061



CASH & CARRY



NOTE: The oM� Voice apologizes to
Mr. Huggins for using the wrong pic-
ture by mistake in our January 4-13,
1988 edition.



RUFUS HUGGINS
Your City Councilman

tf , a : .
had | #5 i
i i Bs aa F Wei piled Ai
¥ OE or wo
a NSS Ue Ea

tS Bs ES

the kids through college.� ~When
I have paid off the mortgage.�
~When I reach the age of retire-.
ment, I shall live happily ever.
after!�T -

The true joy of life is going on







WILLIAM T. ATKINSON
Sales Manager =~

the trip. ~Relish the moment� is:
T0 SAVE a 2008 motto, especially when:
Y OU coupled with Psalm 118:24: ~ThisT
is - day tl rojol sap ane
e we will rejoice e glad:
MONEY 5 ik bt te urns of
. a mad, It is the:
. egret over everday: and oe
ear of tomorrow. Regret }
1700 Mon.-Fri. wy rere twin thieves sittich toh ust
Dickinson Ave. 8:00-5:00 0 y. 5
0-49: So, sto ing the ais] d:
Greenville Sat. 8:00-12:00 counting ee miles, thethodt
i ; 4
SHINGLES... $11.95 so, 5-V TIN ice cream, go barefoot. more
BLACK SHINGLES........... 14.9550 [7 8445 We $7.00 mae oe eet
15 LB. FELT (#2).......... «S595 rou | 8, ss 06 , Cc ve eves I repeat, laugh more, cry less�
$ a 5.71 cece een L t be lived along.:
15 LB. FELT (#1)... 0.0.00... 8.00 rou +n ns ShiasTs $10.25 Do it now. Don't put it oft Ong.
ANCE
REJECT PLYWOOD Does ~your homeowners in-:
HARDBOARD SIDING surance policy give you peace of
7 T o 1 0 matter iw much:
$ 25 $ 95 8 x16 see eee $2.49 12 x16 feces $4.69 coverage you have, you also need:
5/8� 3/4� ATx7TT od ., 97.00 4x8. $9.63 a household inventory, warns;
acai Janice Holm Lloyd; NCSU exten-:
UTILITY PLYWOOD SHER IROGK 4x8 ment specials ae,
o . io Trying to fi , out what wag
5/8"... $8.48) 1/2"... $4.65 3/8�... $4.65 Pio oF stolen eer be
trating. Most peop
1/2". $6.90 5/4"... $10.90 PANELING - (25 STYLES) dozen tsa vatbl alg
BC PLYWOOD *5.25 1 (Continued on page 3) ;
4" uw * $ ; bg
1/2� 2.0... ilT , ate lee oo $14.35 MANVILLE FACED % , ee
= INSULATION eM Voice
SHUTTERS... ron $2V 00. | s%005...513.45 oxs.....814.30 peep
~ Publi
#1 CONST. GRADESTUDS............. 7,55 [3%x23.. $23.10 6x23... $21.50 a
PRECUT PINE STUDS... so... 1.52 By gaia a
#38T STUDS.............. rae 51.15 | STORM WINDOWS..........16.50 au rather au! j

MOBILE HOME SKIRTING
GALVANIZED .......... $3.49
BROWN & WHITE.......$5.69

STORM DOORS...............346.10
DOOR UNITS - INTERIOR... .. *31 85 4 up
METAL DOOR UNITS........ , $125 & Up

WINDOW UNITS...........837.71 ow







a SHELVING BOARD
ALUMINUM ROOF 4 (#3) 48° LF.
coatinc.......° 19.75 ARMSTRONG VINYL

7 Royelle.......; ec ws $3.89 $4, V4.
BLUE RIDGE PAINT $40

Exterior White... 25. Neate 39,50 Gal. val ne in . i ; ms 4.95 mi ne |
Interior Flat Latex K4 KS Kb... 55,95 cu. TREATED LUMBER ss
us © Desk Eromel...... 19.95 | ana... §] 50 5/4x6-12", $4.35,

[cig Tennis | ME ABTS ste. $4,80
















a

SS ae de ee ee eee ee ee ee Sn = 4 ce oe Te
ee ee eS ee eee� | we ii aad. pe. moked 3 if

Proverbs
"" table or home

as
at

Insurance agents are familiar
with policy holds who te
in thier losses in dribs and drabs
for days and weeks after a loss.

Complete a household inven-
téry before it is needed. Walk
each room and list every
atticle. Take pictures to go with
the written description. Or make
a Video of your belongings.
ys
oKeep the original receipts for
alt purchases and have valuable
jewelry and silverware apprais-
ed; Update your inventory as you
purchase new items. Check to see
if'your coverage is for the cash
value of your household goods or
fer their replacement cost.

~Finally, store the inventory,
pictures and receipts where they
wonTt be destroyed in case of fire.
ATSsafety deposit box may be a
good choice.

STRENGTH FOR TODAY

_it is hard to cope with feelings
of inferiority, particuarly if those
Who consider themselves
superior exert themselves to im-
press this conviction upon us. But
we might as well get used to this
situation, for we are all inferior
to, someone in something. The
poor look at the rich and envy
them, the ignorant look at the
educated and bemoan the fact
that they never had a chance to
go to college or graduate school.
Bat perhaps more important, all
of'us, day by day, are meeting
péople who do better than we do
atthe things we do best. By the
same token, we ca be sure that if
these people are superior to us in
something, we are superior to
them in something else. And most
probably they are looking at us
with just as much envy as we are
looking at them. °

LOCAL PARENTS DAUGHTER
HONORED
. SundayTs DAILY REFLEC-
TOR, January 10, carried the ar-
ticle, ~Local Roots Affect Her
Life,� is a feature story about Dr.
Ann Garrett Robinson of New
Haven Connecticut, whose hus-
band Charles is a 20-year pro-
fessor at Yale University and

~ SMITTYTS
o Aarpet
1. SOFVICe

-Expert Installation
Carpet

oTiles.

oLinoleums

, Vinyls

You Buy It " We
oCan Save You Money.
We Are Cheaper

Than The Store
« Prices. Call Us & Let
oUs Check It Out
a FREE!

aft

« 156-8103

Pots
ri

their children Angela, a second
year law student at Yale and

George, a gases at the
University of at

a scholar of note. Not only is Dr.
Robinson a professor of clinical
psycology at South Central Com-
munity College in New Haven,
but also national president of Psi
Beta, a national honor society in
psycology for Community and Jr.
Colleges. She has the distinction
of being the first Black women to
hold a major presidency in
psycology in the nation, presiding
over the national council which
guides policies for all chapters in
the United States. The national
headquarters is in Chatanooga,
Tennessee.

Dr. RobinsonTs parents are Mr.

and Mrs. George Garrett of 1300
Ward Street in Greenville.

8 SYMPTOMS OF EATING
DISORDER IN YOUR
CHILDREN
A CHECKLIST OF NUTRI-
TIONALTSIGNS:

1. Sudden or severe weight gain
or loss

2. Frequent fluctuation of weight
3. Food hoarding

4. Eating alone

5. Skipping meals

6. Frequent nausea, bloating or
constipation

7, Exaggerated fear of gaining
weight

8. Amenorrhea (cessation of
menstruation)

WORKING WOMAN, LOVING
MOTHER
SOME TIPS FOR HANDLING
BUSY DAYS:

1. Mention your departure before
breakfast.
2. Start the day with a shared ac-

eu
Mi

T CEMETERY LOTS FOR SALE

Studio A
Museum

Of
Fine Arts

210 B Vance St.
Greénville, NC
Martin Luther
King, Jr.
Plaque...

Makes A
Beautiful
Place On Your
Wall

a �

for TODAY (continued from page

#° In Branch Cemetery. DonTt leave your

loved ones with a burden. Save Now.

ca. 830-0444

CEMETERY LOTS FOR SALE

oie mi si it ener

tivity. Begin a game or book that
can be finished after work.

3. Smile at your child first when
the sitter enters the room. Your
child will understand your
4, When itTs time to go to work,
donTt sneak out. A firm, fast,
friendly good bye works best.

5. ~Quality time� doesnTt mean
~more action is always better.TT
The best example of quality time
is walking around the block and
splashing in a puddle, says the
child psychiarist who studies
working mothers and their
preschoolers.

FIGHT HARDER

Most of us tend to fight harder
for our rights than for our
responsibilities.

If you want to improve so-
meoneTs hearing, praise hi.

People can generally make
time for what they choose to do;
it is not really the tima but the
will that is lacking.

aie eee ey ee ee

HISTORY FOLK . . . enjoying the sunshine at his home in Ayden is
Mayor Pro-tem J. J. Brown and his wife. Father J . J. Brown has

ee SE ee I ots Be ty ya ale Be

been mayor pro-tem for the last ten years.

a a a nll Tia

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14-21, 1988-3

Workshops |
Scheduled

January 20"Budget (to be held
at Farmville Middle School)
January 25"Facility/Capital
Outlay Improvements
(Construction)

(February 1"Regualr Meeting)
February 8"Attendance

. Lines/Racial Balancing Review

February 15"Grouping for In-
struction (to be held at Bethel
Elementary School)
February 22"Instructional Pro-
gram (to be held at Ayden-
Grifton High School)
February 29"Instructional Pro-
gram (to be held at G.R. Whit-
field School)
All of the meetings listed above
will officially begin at 7:30 p.m..
Meetings where locations are
not noted will be held in the Cen-
tral Office Board Room.



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T
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ate
~

Wy sill

YY
AN

The Dream

Dr. Martin Luther King
January 15,1929-April4.1968

bd

m4 7





Martin Luther King, Jr.

(1929-1968)

The Dreamer

... o1 still have a dream. It is a dream -

deeply rooted in the American dream.

~I have a dream that one day this nation
will rise up and live out the true meaning of
its creed...

~~I have a dream that one day .. . the sons |

of former slaves and the sons of former
slaveowners will be able to sit down together
at the table of brotherhood.

~o~T have a dream that one day ... the heat
of injustice and oppression will be transform-
ed into an oasis of freedom and justice.

oIT have a dream that... children will one
day live in a nation where they will not be
judged by the color of their skin but by the
content of their character.

oI have a dream today.

oI have a dream that one day every valley
Shall be exalted, every hill and mountain

Shall be made low, the rough places will be .
made plain, and the crooked places will be
made straight, and the glory of the Lord shall :
be revealed, and all flesh shall see it :

together.�T

This Space Sponsored By These
-" Equal Opportunity Merchants:




NN ait
Doctor Isaac A. Artis
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JOE CULLIPHER SUBARU
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The Man " Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

and

Keeps His Dream Alive!



|
|
|

|





Importan

Eh ah oMartin Luther
ng Jr. is second of three
children

Luther King Sr. and Mrs. Alber-
ta Christine Williams King in
Atlanta. |

1935
SEPTEMBER He enrolls at
David T. Howard Elementary
School, but later attended Atlan-
ta University Laboratory School.
Thereafter he attended Booker T.
Washington High School, skipp-
ing ninth grade and entering
sophomore class.

1944
SEPTEMBER He enters
Morehouse College at age 15 after
passing entrance examination
and skipping 12th grade.

1948

FEBRUARY 25 He is ordained
to the Baptist ministry.
JUNE He graduates, at 19,
from Morehouse with bachelor of
arts degree in sociology.
SEPTEMBER He enters
Crozer Theological Seminary
where he was one of the six Black
students.

1951
JUNE With an A average, King
is graduated from Crozer, where
he was most outstanding student,
president of the senior class and
recipient of graduate fellowship.

1953
JUNE 18 He marries Coretta
Scott in Marion, Ala. Martin
Luther King Sr. officiated.

1954

t dates in the life of Dr. Martin Luther

MAY 17 Racial segregation in
public schools is declared un-
constitutional by U.S. Supreme
Court which ruled unanimously
in the Brown V. Board of Educa-
tion case.
SEPTEMBER 1 Dr. King
becomes full-time pastor of Dex-
ter Avenue Baptist Church in
Montgomery, Ala.

1955
JUNES He is awarded Ph.D. in
systematic theology at Boston
University.
NOVEMBER 17 The KingsT
first child, Yolanda Denise, is
born in Montgomery.
DECEMBER 1 Mrs. Rosa
Parks is arrested and charged
with violating Montgomery city
segregation code after refusing to
relinguish her bus seat to a White
man.
DECEMBER §& Montgomery
Bus Boycott begins.

1956
JANUARY 26 Dr. King is ar-
rested and charged with driving
30 mph in a 25 mph zone in Mon-
tgomery. After being jailed for
the first time in his life, he is
released on his own
recognizance.
JANUARY 30 A bomb is thrown
onto the porch of Dr. KingTs Mon-
tgomery home while he is away
addressing a mass meeting. Mrs.
King, their baby, and a visiting
friend are not injured. Dr. King
calms and disperes the angry
crowd that gathers.
FEBRUARY 2 A suit asking

BiG GOSPEL PROGRAM

that Montgomery's travel

segregation laws be declared un-
FEBRUARY 21 Dr. King and
others are 2 eee in the Mon-
tgomery Boycott.
JUNE 4 Racial segregation on
city bus lines is ruled unconstitu-
tional by a U.S. District Court. .
NOVEMBER 18 The U.S.
Supreme Court upholds the deci-
sion of the U.S. District Court in
declaring unconstitutional
AlabamaTs state and local bus
segregation laws.

A



DECEMBER 21 Montgomery
city buses are integrated for the
first time.

1957

JANUARY I@-11 He is electued
president of the Southern Chris-
tian Leadership Conference at
founding meeting.

JANUARY 27 An unexploded
bomb is found on Dr. KingTs front
porch,

MAY 17 Drn. King delivers the
speech, ~Give Us The Ballot,� at
Lincoln Memorial during Prayer
Pilgrimage For Freedom on the
third anniversary of the U.S.

|

SINGING FOR MARTIN LUTHER KING .. . The young Barrett
Singers are shown at the annual Martin Luther King observance last

week at Philippe Church of Christ.

PHILLIP! CHURCH
OF CHRIST

1610 Farmville Rd. " Greenville, N. C.
ADV. ADM. $7.00 " AT DOOR $8.00 " CHILDREN (Under 12) $3.00

WED.
FEB.

7:00 P. M.

Coo

~ FEATURING "
SLIM AND THE

SUPREME ANGELS

OF MILWAUKEE, WISC.

TOMMY ELLISON And The

3 SINGING STARS

OF BROOKLYN, WN. Y.

ANGELIC

GOSPEL SINGERS

OF PHILADELPHIA, PA.

ROBERT BLAIR And The Fantastic

VIOLINAIRES

OF DETROIT, MICH.

SWANEE QUINTET

OF AUGUSTA, GA.

THE EXCITING

EDWARDS SISTERS

OF GREENVILLE, N.C.









" Jim Rouse and RLS Production "



benign

9 9 Bow 208 Berni NCTE 3 098) 086 Dest

Dont Miss This Big Gospel Program

Need more cabinet space?

SN ea Ga aig eR ae es












3 Chicken Littles
eSmall Fries
oMedium Drink

#6 Kentucky Nuggets
B eSmail Fries
B Medium Drink



|_| We have ev

: e

erything you need

IZED WAY

te ee oe ee

a ea a a ee ee

[Fans &A Op



eee
fi
Y T ©
o 1 " {
gales Eee
*
i







Fried Chicken.

belore ordering Good thru March 31, 1908.

Ci mus present
a a eo eS ee eo es er ee ee ee

Supreme CourtTs desegre gation
decision

SEPTEMBER President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
federalizes the Arkansas Na-
tional Guard and dispatches
paratroopers of the 10lst Air-
borne Division to protect nine
Black students who integrated
all-White Central High School in
Little Rock.
OCTOBER 23 The KingTs se-
cond child, Martin Luther ITI, i
born. .

1958
SEPTEMBER 3 He is arrested
(for the third time) and charged
with loitering near the Mon-
tgomery RecorderTs Court. The
charge is later changed to ~failure
to obey an officerT and he is
released on $100 bond.
SEPTEMBER 17 ~Stride
Toward Freedom: The Mon-
tgomery Story,� Dr. KingTs first
book is published.
SEPTEMBER 20 Izola Curry,
later alleged to be mentally
deranged, stabs Dr. King while
he is autographing his book in
Harlem.

1959
FEBRUARY 2"MARCH 10 At
the invitation of IndiaTs Prime
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Dr.
and Mrs. King spend a month in
India studying Gandhi's techni-
ques of nonviolence.
NOVEMBER 29 Dr. King
resigns as pastor of Dexter
Avenue Baptist Church.

1960

Kentucky Fried Chicken.

$4.75 !

..f0F only $1.75 with this coupon. Limit one package per coupon. Good on combination
orders only. Customer pays applicable sales tax.
GREENVILLE. KINSTON, GOLDSBORO, WILSON, TARBORO, WILLIAMSTON, JACKSONVILLE

: Kentucky

& ..+f0F only $1.75 with this coupon. Limit one package per coupon. Good on combination
orders only. Customer pays applicable sales tax.
| GREENVILLE. KINSTON, GOLOSBORO, WULSON, TARBORO, WILLIAMSTON, JACKSONVILLE

Y Kentucky Fried Chicken,

fuse preserd Coupon betore ardenng Good wey iiderch 31, 1998

|
|
|
i
|
$4.75!
:
4
i

Atal ¥
¥

King, J

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14.

JANUARY 4 He becomes co-
pastor, with his father, of
Ebenezer Baptist Church in
Atlanta. :

FEBRUARY 1 Students in
Greensboro, N.C., - stage first
lunch-counter sit-ins.

FEBRUARY 17 Dr. King is
issued an arrest warrant charg-'

ing perjury in filing his 1956 and
1958 Alabama state taxes.
MAY 28 An all-White jury in
Montgomery acquits Dr. King of
perjury charge.

OCTOBER 19 In Atlanta, Dr.
King and 51 others are arrested
for participating in a sit-in and
are jailed on charges of violating
the stateTs trespass law.
OCTOBER 22 The Atlanta
trespass charges are dropped
and all demonstrators are releas-
ed except Dr. King, who is held
on charges of violating a pro-
bated sentence in a September,
1960, traffic case. He is transfer-
red to the DeKalb County Jail and
then to Reidsville State Prison.
OCTOBER 27 Dr. King is
released on $2000 appeal bond
after Robert F. Kennedy, cam-
paign manager for presidential
candidate John F. Kennedy,
intervened.

1961
JANUARY 30 The KingTs third
child, Dexter Scott, is born in
Atlanta.
MAY 4 Freedom Riders,
organized by CORE to integrate
(Continued on page 6)




Pe eas ee eee eee

BH ot Biscuit



9 Piece
Thrift Box

i

4

i .. for only $4.95 with this coupon. Limit one package per coupon. Good on combination
| orders only. Customer pays applicable sales tax.
a
i
f

You are invited to

FOCUS ON BUSINESS FROM A BLACK PERSPECTIVE:
A NETWORKING EXCHANGE

at
Greenville Middle School
600 W. Arlington Blvd,, Greenville, NC
Sponsored by
Eastern North Carolina Business Network
Friday, January 22, 1988
$:30 ~ 7:30 PM
Guest Speaker:

Mr. Muhammad Nubee of Earth Fragrances

Complimentary beverages and hors d'oeuvres

°4.95

GREENVILLE. KINSTON, GOLDSBORO, WILSON, TARBORO, WILLIAMSTON. JACKSONVILLE

Kentucky Fried Chicken.

Cimtomer must present coupon before ordering Good Merch 31. 1908

eS eee
i 02 pieces Of ChickemOriginat Recipe Or Extra Crispy)
1 Mashed potato & gravy

$1.75

j .. for only $1.75 with this coupon. Limit one package per coupon. Good on combination

orders only. Customer pays applicable sales tax.
GREENVILLE, KINSTON, GOLDSBORO, WILSON, TARBORO, WILLIAMSTON, JACKSONVILLE

' Kentucky Fried Chicken.

Customer must present coupon before ordering Good thru March 31. 1988
















TE GE Se a a

THURSDAY, JANUARY 14-21, 1988

Greenville City Council Agenda

The Greenville City Council
will hold a Retreat Saturday,
January 30, 9:00 a.m. in The Teen
Center, 1703 East Fourteenth
Street in Greenville.

The Retreat originally schedul-
ed for January 16 had been
cancelled and rescheduled for
January 30.

Voice.

SUPPORT THE oM� VOICE ADVERTISERS

They Support you by advertising there
businesses in your newspaper. To adver-
tise in the ~ooM� Voice call 919-757-1308 or
752-4808. Our office is located at 421 W.
4th St., Greenville, NC 27834. Send news
and events to above address or call The

SHAWNTS " NO. 1 & NO. 2

KEARNEY PARK/BROAD STREETS

Hot Foods

Hot Dogs " 3/$1.00
2 Liter Minute Maid " $.99



09 E 14th Street




Greenville

Reese Furniture Co.

HISTORY PHOTO.

752-2405



SNOW RECOVERY SAL

EVERYTHING MARKED DOWN

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BED FRAME RAILING

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In Business Since 1939
Come In & See Our New Selection Of Lamps!

- During the stuggle in the early 60Ts, brothers
like Rev. Milton Galamison, Brother Rev. Adam Clayton Powell and
Malcolm X often got together to discuss the probems of the Afro-
Americans and the movement of Martin Luther King.

ee we

ee ee ogden Lars

Can blacks change
things in T8g

It is possible for a black com-
munity in 1988 to exercise the ap-
propriate influence to see that its
government fairly responds to its
just needs.

Indianola, Mississippi, is such
an example.

The town is 58 percent black.
The school population is 93 per-
cent black. The staff and ad-
ministration are 100 percent
black.

The school board, contrary to
the expressed wishes of the com-
munity and board-selected, out-
of-town consulting group,
overlooked the apparent black
successor to the resigning white
superintendent.

The community undertook a
campaign to achieve their ~ra-

(Continued on page 8)

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

PLANNER |
(Community Development Specialist)

Performs professional planning and community
development duties, and assist in the develop-
ment and administration of State and Federal
Grants. Examples of related responsibilities in-
cludes assisting with coordinating the economic,
energy, housing rehabilitation, acquisition and

relocation activities.

Four year degree in planning or related field with
four years experience in community planning and
development or an equivalent combination of
training and experience required.

EOE/AA M/F/H

Salary range $18,096-$27,144. Apply by Friday,
January 29, 1988, to the City of Greenville, Per-
sonnel Department, PO Box 7207, 201 West Fifth
Street, Greenville, NC 27835-7207. Employment
duration: one year.



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3 Other Locations To

Goldsboro, N.C.

Regency Plaza

237-6777

oe

Martin Luther
King dates

(Continued from page 5)
interstate buses, leave
Washington, D.C., on a
Greyhound bus shortly after the.
Supreme Court outlaws segrega-�
tion in interstate transportation.�
On May 14, racists bomb and
burn the bus near Anniston, Ala.,
and the Riders are attacked in
Birmingham. On May 20, a new
group of Freedom Riders is
assaulted in Montgomery. At-
torney General Robert Kennedy
sends 400 U.S. marshals to the ci-
ty to maintain order.
DECEMBER 16 At an Albany
demonstration, Dr. King is ar-
rested and charged with obstruc-
ting sidewalk and parading
without permit.

1962
FEBRUARY 27 At a trial, Dr.
King is convicted of leading the
Albany march.
JULY 27 Atan Albany city hall
prayer vigil, Dr. King is arrested
and charged with failure to obey
a police officer, obstructing the
sidewalk and disorderly conduct.
OCTOBER 16 Dr. King meets
with President John F. Kennedy
at the White House.

1963
MARCH 28 Bernice Albertine,
the KingTs fourth child, is born.
APRIL 3 Dr. King opens the
Birmingham campaign to protest
segregation. On April 12, he, Dr.
Abernathy and 53 demonstrators
are jailed.
APRIL 16 Dr. King writes his
~Letter From Birmingham Jail�
during his imprisonment.
MAY 2 Safety Commissioner
Eugene ~BullT? Connor orders
police to use dogs and fire hoses
on Black youth demonstrators. |
MAY 20 BirminghamTs
segregation ordinances are ruled
unconstitutional by the U.S,
Supreme Court.
JUNE 12 Medgar Evers, a
Jackson, Miss., NAACP leader, is
assassinated before dawn by a ri-
fle bullet at his home.
AUGUST 28 The largest in-
tegrated mass protest, The
March On Washington, is held.
Dr. King delivers his ~I Have A
Dream�T speech before 250,000 at
the Lincoln Memorial.

SEPTEMBER ~Strength To
Love,� Dr. KingTs fourth book, is
published.

SEPTEMBER 15 Four children
attending Sunday School at the
Sixteenth Street Baptist Church
in Birmingham are killed and 2]
others are injured when the
church is bombed.

NOVEMBER 22 President John
F. Kennedy is assassinated in
Dallas.

{} tne
JUNE. Dr. King fifth book,
~Way, We Can't Wait,� is
published.

JUNE At Soldier Field in
Chicago, Dr. King addresses
75,000 persons at a civil rights ral-
ly organized by an interracial, in-
terfaith citizens group. o;
JUNE 11 With Rev. AbernathyT:
and a party of 16, Dr. King stages.
a sit-in at an exclusive restaurant,
in St. Augustine, Fla. Dr. King isT;
arrested for the 12th time and-
charged with violating FloridaT s:
~unwanted guest law.�
JUNE 21 Three civil rights:
workers (James Chaney, Black,T
and Andrew Goodman and-
Michael Schwerner, both White),
are reported missing after travel;
ing to Philadelphia, Miss. r7
JULY 2 Dr. King is present at�
the singing of the Civil Rights Act:
of 1964, by President Lyndon B-*
Johnson at the White House. Thé :
bill, which guaranteed access to
public accommodations, was sub-,
mitted to Congress by President:
Kennedy.
JULY 18-23 A Black man is kill
ed during race riots in Harlem. ~
AUGUST 4 FBI agents discover}
bodies of James Chaney, Andrew:
Goodman and _ Michael:
Schwerner buried a
Philadelphia, Miss.
SEPTEMBER 18 At the:
Vatican, Dr. King has an au-:
dience with Pope Paul VI.
DECEMBER 10 In Oslo, Nor-:
way, Dr. King receives the Nobel.
Peace Prize.

1965 :
FEBRUARY 21 Malcolm X is:
assassinated at Audubon:
Ballroom in New York City.



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. » ECU -VS- Winthrop Saturday,
January 2, 1988 " Minges Coliseum. Gus Hill (42) leads ECU
to victory over Winthrop Eagles. Gus scored 18 points. The
Eagles defeated the Pirates last season in Rock Hill, SC by a
score of 66-52. Pirates gain revenge defeating the Eagles 52-45.

(Billy Walls, Photographer)

Legacy of King and Malcom X

After a lengthy debate in its
Central Committee meeting in
Kansas City, Missouri on
September 30th and October Ist,
1983, the national Black United
Front (NBUF) endorsed the
presidential candidacy of Rev.
Jesse Jackson. At the October
8th, 1983 Saturday morning
meeting of Operation PUSH, ac-
ting in my capacity as National
Secretary of the National Black
United Front (NBUF), I read our
endorsement statement.

The rational for our endorse-
ment of Rev. Jesse JacksonTs
presidential bid was drawn, in
part, from NBUFTs national con-
stitution. In this document states
~Whereas it is vitally important
that our respective organizations,
clubs, political factions and in-
dividual leaders recognize that
none of us (singuarly or by
ourselves) represents the Black
community, the best a particular
organization or leader can claim
is a particular constituency
within the Black community.�

The NBUF constitution further
states ~~Collectively considered,
however, the various groups and
individuals can bring to approx-
imate the general will of the
Black community and more
reasonably hope to represent the
total Black community.�

~The National ~Black United

» Front (NBUF) believes that Rev.

Jesse JacksonTs candidacy for
president of the United States of

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America represents this general
will, which speaks to our collec-
tive interest as Black people.

In the election of Mayor Harold
Washington, the Black communi-
ty of Chicago witnessed an un-
precedented show of Black unity
in electoral politics. Mayor
WashingtonTs candidacy brought
together the conservative,
moderate, reform, radical, na-
tionalistic and revolutionary con-
stituencies in ChicagoTs Black
community. We went to the polls
in record numbers to help defeat
the old Chicago political
machine.

The impact of this election and
the spirit it has generated across
Black communities of America is
a sign of growing national Black
unity. Rev. Jesse JacksonTs
presidential candidacy has cap-

tured this spirit and serves as the
basis for national unity among
our people.

What we are witnessing is the
coming together of two major
trends in the Black movement
which Oba TTShaka (NBUF vice
chair of training) discusses in his
book, The Political Legacy of
Malcolm X.

In discussing the issue of unity
and the impact of Malcolm X in
the 1960Ts, Shaka writes that
Malcolm represented the Black
movement forces that were rais-
ing the question of national
liberation (nationhood or seeking
land.) Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. represented the civil rights
movement.

Prior to Malcolm XTs
assassination, according to



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Shaka, he was working toward
finding a method by which these
two trends in the movement could
come together in a unified front.

The endorsement of Rev. Jesse
JacksonTs presidential candidacy
by Minister Louis Farrakhan,
leader of the Nation of Islam and
the National Black United Front
represents the coming together of
these two Black movements that
have historically been an-
tagonistic to each other.

Minister Farrakhan and NBUF
represent the legacy of Dr. Mar-
tin Luther King, Jr.

The coming together of these
two movements around the
presidential candidacy of Rev.
Jesse Jackson is a positive sign
for the Black movement in
America.





Greenville

AMERICA HAS HAD
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BUT ONLY ONE KING.

His dream was to make America work for all of us.
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tional� objective of seeing that
_ An economic boycott appeared
to be the solution. Over a period
of 38 days, blacks bused, carpool-
ed their way to stores sar from
their homes to make purchases.
Convenience stores in town
formerly making $7,000 to $8,000
a day were now making less than
$1,000 a day.

4
*

Stores in the black community
which were making $3,000 a day
were taking less than $100.00 a
day.
After the closing of four
businesses and the reducing of
hours at others, the white
business community bought out
the three-year contract at a cost
of $90,000 of the superintendent
the school board had imposed on

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oSelling Stock For The Future�
ATTENTION CITIZENS

How would you like to own aradio station?
WOOW radio station is for sale. Located
in Downtown Greenville, NC.
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He

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ait 3

Can blacks change things ~continued from page 6)

the community, and the peoplesT
choice was hired.

The Indianola communtiy at- THE SONGRESS .. . ItTs that
tribute their success to untiy, col- -time of the year and Lt. Gover-
lective effort and cooperation. nor Bob Jordan was in town

These three factors should be/ last week to kick off his cam- .
seen as an example of that which paign for governor of our
can be achieved in any communi- state. Shown with the Lt.
ty across our nation that may Governor is Sister Debra
face a similar set of circumstatn- Leathers who entertained the
ces, and we should never forget gathering with songs.
that the black community is the
margin of victory in an election
and the profit in many business
endeavors.

BY JIM ROUSE

- HELP WANTED

Sales Person Needed With Experience
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Roundtree says, oI am here to get

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When asked why he wouldnTt
sign a warrant for the arrest of a
police officer, who had charged
him with resisting arrest, Bennie
Roundtree, president of SCLC,
chapter Greenville, said, ~I am
here to get people out of jail, not
to put them in.�T

Today civil rights leaders is
taking care of business although
the civil rights movement is not
the number one story on TV to-
day. Bennie Roundtree still lives
to see the day his brothers and
sisters are freed of the schackels
and chains that bind them.

TodayTs press conference, was
focused toward the school board
of Pitt County. SCLC is concern-
ed about the education our kids
get in schools. Anyone interested
in the movement during the 60Ts

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Bus. Phone (919) 355-6080

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and 70Ts knows (B.R.) means
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rights. He related a story to me
after the conference.
oYeah, we all went to jail in
Ayden, and Golden,� Jessie, Rev.
Gray and others were there with
me. The police officer said that I
was resisting arrest and I was
charged because we were
demonstrating. Now in my 25
years of involvement in the strug-
gle everyone that knows me,
knew that I have never had cause
to resist arrest or be disorderly.
As a matter of fact, there weré
times when the jailer refused to
olock me up because they know
I would be in court to fight for my
rights and the rights of others.�
He had the courage to break
with tradition. LetTs keep the
dreamerTs dream alive.

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of the 60-year-old school.
Armed with bullhorn

Bulllhorn in hand, Clark
patrols the hallways, ready to
mete out summary justice to
anyone who breaks his rules.

Such offenses as wearing a hat
when entering the school, dropp-
ing a piece of paper on the im-
maculately waxed floors or
wandering in the corridor without
a pass Can result in suspension.

ClarkTs tough style has not gone
unnoticed. Four years age he
received a personal call from
President Reagan congratulating
him for his work. And last year,
U.S. Education Secretary
William Bennett visited Eastside
to praise Clark in front of an
auditorium full of students and
parents.

Two weeks ago he suspended
scores of failing juniors and
seniors, calling them ~con-
taminants and leeches� who had
no chance of graduating.

Faced with a threat of suspen-
sion himself, Clark was forced to
readmit the students after Pater-
son school officials said they were
entitled to due process. But true
~to his no-nonsense style, Clark
banished them to the auditorium,
saying they ~weren't deserving of
being taught.�

Then the Paterson Fire Depart-
ment cited Clark for violating fire
laws by chaining school doors.

It was a repeat of a similar
citation last spring, for which the
Board of Education was fined
$7,000. The fine was waived after
consent agreement in which
Clark promised to remove the
chains.

- oThis neighborhood is full of
drug pushers and
troublemakers,� said Clark. ~I
couldnTt wait for the bureaucracy

to get me doors that lock from the:

outside.� igi

Clark admits he runs the
2,700-student school like a
dictatorship.

He said, ~They (the students)
need someone to set strict rules

lesson,

During ClarkTs six-year tenure,
more than 100 teachers and a
dozen administrators have left.
_ oIf you as much as teach a sub-
ject different than the way he
wants it to be taught, he goes
after you,� said one teacher, who
asked not to be identified. ~He
stopped me in the hall in front of
students and yelled at me. He
made me feel like a total fool.�T

Crucifixion a week

Clark responds: ~Sometimes I
need a crucifixion each week. It
keeps things lively here.�T

Students, though, give Clark
high remarks.

~I love that man,� said Cyonne
Mark, 16. ~I donTt have a father at
home and for me Mr. Clark is like
a father.�

Even Miriam Nieto, one of the
students Clark suspended, said
she likes the principal.

~ITm a year behind because I
goofed off and didnTt go to class,�
said Nieto, 17. ~The suspension
taught me a lesson. If I donTt try,
I wouldnTt be given a chance to
learn.�T

While Clark has not been able
to change the schoolTs 40%
dropout rate, test scores have im-
proved during his tenure. Fifty-
five percent of the students now
pass basic English skills tests,
compared with 39% six years
ago.

But Clark said the bottom line
is that he ~canTt save all the
students.T�T

Dr. Bill Mason, a Clark sup-

porter and community activist,

said he worries that the principal
goes too far.

~HeTs turned Eastsid}e
around,� Mason said. ~But the
purpose of education is to teach
kids to learn how to think and to
learn how to motivate
themselves. Sometimes I worry
how they are going to do that
when they go to a school run like
a dictatorship.�

Dear Family Friends:

On February 20, 1988
we will celebrate the
100th birthday of our
Mother and Grandmother,
Helen Roach. The
celebration will be held at
QuincyTs Family
Steakhouse Restaurant at

Farney MooreTs

Collected Pearls

of Precious Price

oWe are here this evening for
serious business. We are here in
a general sense because first and
foremost, we are American
citizens, and we are determined
to acquire our citizensip to the
fullness of its meaning. We are
here also because of our deep-
seated belief that democracy
transformed from thin paper to

thick action is the greatest form "

of government on earth. There is
a critical element in race rela-
tions...and a flagrant discrepan-
cy between American ideals and
practices so far as our people are
concerned. Our protest is a revolt
within the system, not against it.
We are out to reform, not tear
down.

We are here in a specific sense
because of the bus situation here
in Montgomery. We are here

because we are determined to get

the situation corrected....We are
here because of what happened to
Mrs. Rosa Parks....We have long
suffered abuses and indignities
on the buses, and we sound now
the call to action....But there
comes a time when people get
tired. We are here this evening to
say to those who have mistreated
us so long that we are tired"tired
of being segregated and
humilated; tired of being kicked

(Continued on page 10)

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Pinto Beans
Butter Beans
Sweet Bread

:

THEY CALL IT
FOOD, BUT WE JUST
CALL IT...
EVERY DAY FOOD!

SOUL

Without advertising, a terrible
thing happens...

NOTHING!!!

THINKING ABOUT STARTING

603 Greenville Bivd. We
will meet there at 4:30
PM.

and make sure they follow
them.�

Not only students, but teachers
and his own administrators must

- YOUR OWN BUSINESS?
Watkins OY Plan to-attend this
HOW TO START A SMALL BUSINESS
Helen Bryan, Sales Representative WORKSHOP

Greenville, NC 758-9361

Saturday, February 6, 1988
Greenville Hilton

9:00 am - 2:30. pm
Sponsored by
PITT GREENVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Small Business Council

: | Salute His Dream...
| Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

and
PITT COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Small Business Center

Are you thinking about owning your own business? Are you unsure of

CALL? MeCLOUD $Associares

$20.00

~ ~ é where to start? This workshop Is answer your questions a
Hair Unlimited yoo eurmy ote vp epee (9) 752-0120
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Is Offering A Mid-Winter Special On SO, YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT HAVING A BUSINESS!
Hair Care For January & February Souinses tnd Yoohaaleay Conter af BO. rehab adaaaias
All Chemical Services Will Be THE BUSINESS PLAN -
' a" J. Harris & James Bryan Cash, C.J. Harris and Company, H arTs Radin g TV Service |
Reduced 20% Beginning 4: so rite Sy Speen once with NCNB alp
Friday, eee? 15th SETTING UP THE BOOKS = co We Can Fix Any Model i
Monday, February 15th ls Gall Us " We Pick Up |
The Look . . . That Gets Fhe Looks! tor crn en nda non A and Deliver! :
1 oma , in ;
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Full/Partial veaving |
Precision Cuts ¢ Extensions Coo ee Pri es Start At | a
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|
)





10-THURSDAY, JANUARY 14-21, 1988

Farney Moore cconinuei irom pase 9

MUNiICipal (continued from page 1)

there were no ws in

about by the brutal feet of oppres- of our actions we must stick never came downtoearth.Ifwe are written in .he future, third subcommittee, which has the city Seas Pie eeevomeninace
sion...We have no alternative but together. Unity is the greatneed are wrong, justice isalie....0urs somebody will have to say, nly recently been appointed, is contacted city officials and in-
to protest. For many years, we of the hour, and if we are united, is not a violent movement. May ~There lived a race of people, of | ne appointed to propose a con- formed them of the presence of
have shown amazing patience. we can get many of the things 1 caution us ours is not a black lack people, of people who had stitution for the Pitt County an Interracial Committee and of-
we have sometimes given our that we not only desire, but which J counterpart of the White CitizensT the moral courage to stand up for Committee. fered its services. The Mayor, Ci-
white brothers the feeling that we we justly deserve. We are not Councils or the Ku Klux their rights. And thereby they in- The major objective of the Pitt ty Manager, and Chief of Police
liked the way we were being wrong in what we are doing. Ifwe Klan....In our protest, there will jected a new meaning into the County Interracial Committee is ere most cordial and receptive
treated. But we come here are wrong, the Supreme Court of be no cross burings. No white per- "_yeins of history and civilization.� to establish an instrument of to this offer and immediately
tonight to be saved, to be saved this nation is wrong. If we are son will be taken from theirhome _Rey, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Communication in the com- engaged the subcommittee as the
from patience that makes us pa- wrong, the Constitution of the by a hooded Negro mob and munities between the races efective interracial negotiating
tient with anything less than United States is wrong. brutally murdered. There will be oWe have always struggl- through the sponsorship Of 4m of the City. Mayor West
freedom and justice. Therehave ~If we are wrong, God no threats and intimidation. We ed....Was it not Stanley when he regular public meetings where 4. -ided that all businesses which
been divisions and apathy that Almighty is wrong. If we are willbe guidedby the highest prin- " went on his quest for Livingstone whites and Negroes can meet to night be a target for demonstra-
has immobilized us asa people in wrong, Jesus of Nazareth was ciples of law and order. Our and found the bleached bones of discuss their mutual problems or tions be given an opportunity to
the past. I want to say that in all merely a Utopian dreamer who method is persuasion, no coer- our forefathers On those West their individual feelings and discuss with the Negroes the ac-
cion. We are going to say, ~Let Africanshoresburiedinthe sand ideas. tual segregation situation. Dur-

your conscience be your guide.T with chains around them where Most of the desegregation of ing May, June, and July, this sub-

L5i

UNITED INSURANCE

COMPANY OF AMERICA

George E. Davis
Sales Representative

337 Circle Dr

ates.
People coun

Greenville. NC 27834
Bus: (949) 752-3840
Res. (9419) 758-7376

Our actions must be guided by
the highest principles of Christian
faith. Love must be our
regulating pedal. You remember
Christ admonished us: ~Love
your enemies, bless them that
curse you, and pray for them that
despitefully use you.T If we fail to
do this, our protest will end up as
a meaningless drama on the state
of history, and its memory will be
shrouded with the ugly garments
of shame. In spite of the mistreat-
ment that we have confronted we
must not become bitter, and end
up by hating our white brothers.
As Booker T. Washington said,

they wrestled against being taken
captive on a slave ship? They
died on those African shores
rather than get on the ship as a
slave...ever singing a song in
their own language and their own
hearts:TT Before I be a slave, I'll
be buried in my grave, and go
home to my Lord and be free. We
yet struggle today: for fair jobs
in the workplace; for justice in
the American system, and
Freedom for all mankind....How
can we reach that ~o~Tomorrow�
with the Dream fulfilled? By lov-
ing one another....teaching our
children....and never forgetting

public accommodations and
businesses has resulted from the
personal efforts of the four-man
subcommittee appointed to deal
with the subject; however, many
things have been accomplished
informally through the individual
members of the Interracial Com-
mittee, such as the promotion of
the hiring of Negroes for extra
Christmas help by one member,
who first hired Negroes himself
and then encouraged other
businessmen to do likewise.
When demonstrations ap-
peared forthcoming in May, 1963,
the ad hoc subcommittee discuss-

committee met with the lunch
counter operators, restaurant
owners, theater owners, motel
owners, and city officials many
times. As a result of these discus-
sions, the lunch counter operators
desegregated their businesses
early in the summer; the
restaurant owners were of a
divided opinion as to what ad-
justments they might make. Two
restaurants immediately
desegregated; others promised
to desegregate when the whole
group moved; and some pledged
never to desegregate.

The theater owners reported

~Let no man pull yousolowasto our God.� ing desegregation with that they would desegregate

hate him.T businesses investigated the ex- when the majority of the

oIf we protest courageously, Farney Moore isting laws of the City pertaining pysinesses in the City
and yet with dignity and Chris- to demonstrations. The subcom- desegregated .

tian love, when the history books mittee was happy to find that Continued in the next issue of the
Voice

HARPERTS

Radio and TV Service

Winterville 756-5636

Mill Street
Call Us Today! TVTs For Sale
Prices Start at $25.00
Happy New Year!

RayTs Laundromat

1214 N. Greene Street
Harris Supermarket Plaza
Hours: Sun.-Fri. 8 AM to 10 PM
Sat. 7 AM to 10 PM

2 PRICE SALE

Select Group Of Frames Now Reduced 1/2 Price

25% off

Joe Lois Harper, Repairman
Doris Philliphs, Secretary

Raymond oCookie� Williams

All Other Frames
IN STOCK

S

OPTICAL} PALACE

703 Greenville Blvd.

(Across From The Plaza)

Gary M. Harris, Licensed Optician
~*~ oOpen 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Mon.-Fri. Phone 756-4204

LUCKY SIZE REMNANT
CLEARANCE SALE

Remnant Clearance Sale. Lucky size remnants are the end pieces of carpet
left over from large rolls of carpet and we sell them at a fraction of the regu: Ends
lar price and have reduced over 200 in stock remnants to rock bottom e
prices...many below wholesale...just to Clear our inventory for new stock. Jan 23rd
L

Call us if you need someone to collect your rent and
manage your property.
**» TO BUY, RENT, OR SELL
REAL ESTATE, CONTACT

D.D. GARRETT
AGENCY

606 Albemarle Ave.

Since 1946
757-1692

Ba.

757-1162










Attend Church
Sweet Hope Freewill Baptist

Church - Route 3 - Greenville

Invites You To Worship With Us!
Rev. Elmer Jackson, Jr.

9:30 AM Sunday .................55. Sunday School
11:00 AM ............ 3rd Sunday Morning Worship
By the Pastor, accompanied by the Senior Choir and
Ushers .. 11:00 AM Ist Sunday .. Morning Worship

Rev. Luther Brown, Pastor



Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service, p.m.
















201 Tyson 758-6077

Now is the time to cover those COLD BARE FLOORS during the Lucky Size



















Holy Trinity
United Holy Church

: Bishop Ralph E. Love, Sr. Pastor

Mr. Calvary Free Will Baptist
Church

Rev. Elmer Jackson, Jr.








This Is A Small Listing Of What Is Available
















































Color Size Regular Sale Color Size Regular Sale oae i "Shines Ste. Worhightt am, . 7790p. m
Rust 12x70" | 150.00 29.95 Brown 12x15'7" | 345.00 129.95 Greenville, North Carolina Prayer Service Thurs. 7:30 p.m.
Tweed 12x17'6" 500.00 89.95 Rust 12x12'7" 357.00 119.95 Hudson 758-2532
Beige 12x12'6" 449.00 69.95 Moss 12x13 349.00 99.95 If No Answer, Dial Lonnie Anderson 752-7601
Tan 11'6"x8'6� | 139.95 39.95 Brown 12x20'11" | " §59.00 159.95
Red 12x14'6" | 479,00 89.95 ~Lt. Green | 12x17'8" | 479.00 159.95 7
Gray 12x15 375.00 89.95 Orange 12x9'9" 135.00 95 .
Silver 8x16'6" 250.00 69.95 Beige 12x17 240.00 so Selvia Chapel FWB Church Cornerstone Baptist
Rust 9'6"x7 155.00 29.95 Brown 12x14 179.99 109.95 Bishop A. H. Hartsfield Church
Beige 12x14'6" 329.00 89.95 Gray 12x16'4� 200.00 119.95 Arlee Griffin. Pastor
Tweed 10x11'6� 238.00 69.95 Brown 12x14'9" 199.99 119.95 Services Every 1, 2, 3, & 4 Sunday 11 a.m. ,
Lavender | 12x9'6" 309.00 59.95 Smoke | 12x16 458.00 169.95 ge ee ee 3-50 am Sunday Schoo!
Taupe | 12x10°6" =| 329.50 50.95 Beige =| 12x12 240.00 129.95 owv Pais 11:00 a.m. .................... Morning Worship
Tweed 12x14 359.00 89.95 Tan 12x13'5� 357.00 139.95 7:30 PAM. occ eee cee eee Thursdays
Tweed 6x19'4� 240.00 49.95 Brown 12x11'2" 298.60 129.95 FOR BIBLE STUDY & PRAYER SERVICE
Red 12x26'6" | 699.00 129.95 Red 12x9 190.00 109.95 maa Gtecte 796-3909 stantonsburg Road (& Allen Rd.) TSETSO1
Burgundy | 12x21'7" 475.00 169.95 Brown 12x11'1" 299.00 109.95
Lavender 12x25'2" 599.00 169.95 Cream 12x12'3" 289.00 119.95
Rust 12x13'11" | 317.00 129.95 Peach 12x9'9" 200.00 109.95
Pottery 12x12 299.00 129.95 Lavender | 12x10 269.90 109.95 GREETINGS!
Green 12x10'2� 204.45 109.95 Rust 12x21'7" 412.00 239.95
Lavender 12x22'5� 597.80 229.95 Green 12x7'1" 142.00 49.95 CELEBRATE MARTIN LUTHER KING'S BIRTHDAY WITH NOTE CARDS AND PRINTS
Gray 12x9'2" 244.99 99.95 Tweed =| 12x127" | 335.60 139.95 OF MARTIN LUTHER ING
Rose 12x13'3" | 265.00 139.95 Coral 12x11'4" 260.00 129.95
Purple 12x9'4" 248,00 99.95 Tweed 12x11'9" 310.00 139.95
Brown 12x12'4� 328.00 129.95 Brown 12x16'7" 440.00 189.95
Rust 12x11'8� 235.99 109.95 Pink 12x10'2" 260.00 109.95
Green 12x13'6� 325.00 129.95 Gray 12x10'7" 399.00 109.95
Lavender | 12x15'11" 424.40 189.95 Beige 12x22'1" 580.00 239.95
Brown 12x11'7" 329.00 109.95 Forest Green) = 12x24'2" 484,00 249.95
Aqua 12x25'7" 425.00 299.95 Gray 12x22'10" | 499.52 249.95
TE Beige 12x17'6" 255.00 159.95 Lavender | 12x12'7" 258.00 119.95
Brown 12x13'2" 220.00 99.95 Navy 12x20 480.00 220.95
_ Mauve 12x16 243,00 169.95 Brown 12x1210" | 960,00 119.95
~Blue 12x16'6" 410.00 189.95 Cream 12x18'2" 440.00 179.95 4
Brown 11x11'10" | 220,00 109.96 Brown 12x12'7" 250.00 119.95 y
Beige 919'11"x11 226.00 139,95 ~

GREETINGS! |S A NEW COMPANY EMPHASIZING THE AFRICAN AMERICAN CULTURE

CARPET - VINYL - WALLPAPER - AT DLE:

CARDS AND NOTES FOR ALL OCCASIONS NOW AVAILABLE AT GREETINGS!

During the moaths of January and February, in celebration of
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Birthday and Black History Month







GREETINGS! will contribute

$1.0010 your church or to any GREETINGS!
non-profit organization for every box 211 West 1th St, Suite C
of cards or notes sold from the Black Heritage Serics, Greenville, NC 27834
and $2.00 for every print sold, Choose the (919) 830-0105
church or organization at the time of purchase.

(Laicated in the offices of Landmaaters Real Estate)


Title
The Minority Voice, January 14-21, 1988
Description
The 'M' voice : Eastern North Carolina's minority voice-since 1987. Greenville. N.C. : Minority Voice, inc. James Rouse, Jr. (1942-2017), began publication of The "M" Voice in 1987 with monthly issues published intermittently until 2010. At different times, the paper was also published as The "M"inority Voice and The Minority Voice. It focused on the Black community in Eastern North Carolina.
Date
January 14, 1988 - January 21, 1988
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
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