The Minority Voice, September 7-13, 1989


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





Serving...
3 Eastern North Carolina Ts A
| . . : BEAUFORT-WASHINGTON
M inority Voice MARTIN-WILLIAMSTON
BERTIE-WINDSOR

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7-WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1989

A Long Way

manhood by the money you

The ~MW T OIC

What You See Is What You Get, What You Read Is What You Know & Save

EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA TS MINORITY VOICE " SINCE 1987

OUR BLACK MEN: WHERE baby, but also to raise a baby,

ARE THEY?

BY: SANDRA DUPREE BOYD

You can hear this question

often asked. Especially in the
churches. I understand that a
considerable number of our black

protect a baby, and most of all to
provide for that baby.

Rev. Jackson also stated that
we need to improve ourselves
individually.

Black men must realize that no
matter how much they may run
away from their problems, their

make, the cars you drive, and
your ability to prove yourself sex-
ually, bring a new meaning to
your manhood by proving your
ability to provide and protect
your family, maybe our children
will too.

5. Say yes to hanging in their

males are in prison. And what are
not in prison, you'll find some of
them in the streets.

Our black men are suppose to
be their families friends, fathers,
leaders, husbands, and role
models. But it seems as though
© they are more our public enemy
No. 1.

There Ts an old saying that,
when the going gets tough; the
tough get going. This saying
describes some of our black men
perfectly. ;

As long as things are going
their way, and smoothly, you can
find them. But let one small thing
go wrong and they Tre ready to
throw in the towel.

Black men must learn to stop
running away from their respon-
sibilities and start shouldering
some of the blame. Your families
don Tt need for you to run away
from them when things go wrong.
They need for you to run to them,
so that you can change that
wrong to a right together.

with your families when times
are bad, maybe your young men
will too.

6. Spend some of that money in
the Black community, maybe our
children will too.

7. Make yourself go to church
on Sunday, maybe our children
will too.

Learn to put your faith in God
and He will deliver you. When life
hands lemons, make lemonade.

Black families don Tt want their
black men to walk in front of
them, nor do they want them to
walk behind them either. They
want you to walk beside them,
and be their friend.

And remember: The family
that worships together, and prays
together, will beat the odds and
stay together.

problems are not going to run.
Those problems are going to ex-
ist until they are solved.

Families need their black men
to laugh with them, cry with
them, worship with them, and to
be supportive of them. You would
be surprised at the difference it
can make in your life, your wife Ts
life, and at the top of the list, your
children Ts life.

So if you want to make a
change, try this: 1. If your black
men and black women say no to
drugs, maybe our children will
too.

2. Say no to driving and drink-
ing, maybe our children will too.

3. Say no to Anthony Ts and Mr.
C Ts, maybe our children will too.

4. Rather than measuring your

Ruby Tisdale promoted

HONOR TO A GREAT LAWYER AND FRIEND...

Powell. He was presented a plaque showing app
munity and for opening the law doors for others to come and make changes at the Courthouse.
d Carter, who changed his plans to be on hand for the

Shown above is Greenville Ts Mayor E e
time friend, and Attorney Richard ~ ~Judge

event, Mr. William Myers, Attorney Wooten - long
Powell. Shown below are Mrs. Powell, children and family.

. Family and friends gathered at the home
of Brother Jimmie Jones to honor Pitt County Ts first African-American Lawyer, Mr. Richard

reciation for his dedicated service to the com-

(Voice photo by Jim Rouse)

Our black men must learn to
develop a strategy to deal with
the conditions in our society. You
are becoming your own self
destruction.

If you can open your mouth and
repeat any of the music you hear
in these days and times, it says
start with the man in the mirror.
Take a look at yourself and make
a change.

I saw a film not too long ago on
the Rev. Jesse Jackson. Rev.
Jackson stated that man has the
power to kill, but also to heal.
Man has the power to make a

Chemists claims the AIDS virus
was man made to kill off Blacks

By HAROLD L. JAMISON

Following extensive research
into what causes AIDS, a local
bio- chemist charges ~ ~AIDS is a
U.S. government germ warfare
creation deliberately given to
Black Africans and Haitians in
a plan to eradicate them from
the face of the earth. ?

Jack Felder, a 49-year-old

- Springfield Gardens, N.Y.,

biological-chemist with degrees
in biology, chemistry and ap-
plied science in engineering,
charged in a carefully worded
research paper ~ ~the AIDS virus
is man-made and a_ bioen-
gineered virus created by splic-
ing or mixing together a virus in
sheep called ~visna virus T and a
retrovirus of cattle known as
~bovine levkemia virus, T which
was then introduced into human
beings. ? T

Felder backs up his assertions
with an impressive array of
documentation accumulated
from various sources around the
world.

oThe fact that AIDS was a
U.S. germs warfare creation
was the headline and front page
news of the Sunday Express
newspaper in London, England
on Oct. 26, 1986 and how AIDS
was given to Black Africans and
Haitians was clearly exposed in
The London Times, May 11,
1987," Felder Stated. ~ ~The next
day every country in the world

U.S. media was silent on the
issue. ~ ~For some strange rea-
son, T he rhetorically ques-
tioned, ~ ~the story was killed. ?
oReporters like Jon Rap-
poport (a Los Angeles based in-
vestigative reporter and author
of oAIDS INC., Scandal of the
Century T T), spoke to newspeople
at the Associated Press in
Washington, Boston and New
York; Reuters at the United Na-
tions; and the United Press In-
ternational in New York. No one
he interviewed had ever heard of
the story out of London. With
AIDS, the media have chosen not
to become embroiled in the ques-
tion of causation, ? Rappoport ac-
cuses in his book AIDS INC.
oMedia get their information
from press people who work at
universities and public health
agencies, and who are fed HIV-
dogma like popcorn. Why? he
asked rhetorically, answering his
own question. ~Because the of-
ficial line daily newspapers print
comes down from NHI (National
Health Institute) and CDC
(Center for Disease Control).
Writers from dailies don Tt get
paid to do research in bio-medi-
cal libraries, to put together
pieces of information they ac-
tually dig up on their own from

medical literature or human
sources. ~ oTherefore, T T he con-

cluded, ~ ~federal health agencies
are always going to sound right

1932, where the government,
under the direction of CDC,
deliberately infected 400
African-American sharecrop-
pers with syphillis and watched
them die, even after penicillin
cure for syphillis became avail-
able in 1940; to what he declares
is the ~ ~most notorious six-days
in America, ? when U.S. milit:
ary personnel sprayed clouds of
potentially harmful bacteria in
clouds over San Francisco, and
other secret experiments where
bacteria was sprayed in New
York subways, Washington,
D.C. airports and on highways
in Pennsylvania.

oBy 1980 certain biowarfare
weapons have been uniquely de-
signed for targeting and killing
of specific ethnic and racial
groups, T Felder charges.
~There are few Americans who
are even vaguely aware that the
U.S. Army has a biological and
chemical warfare department,
located at Fort Detrick in
Frederick, MO. Its functions
are to develop chemical and
biological weapons and they al-
ready have a well documented
tradition of experimentation on
human beings. ?

Jt was in Cold Springs Har-
bor, N.Y., in the early 1960's
that Felder claims biologists
and scientists first gained the

ability to slice DNA out of cells yp

and recombined them in other

Representatives in 1969 dis-
cussed a Pentagon brief to
create through genetic engineer-
ing a virus whose action would
defeat the human body Ts im-
munity, someone therefore was
interested in such a virus then, ? T
he reminded. oJohn Seale, an
English venereologist, who
claimed the AIDS epidemic was
caused by experiments carried
out in the U.S.A., told reporters
he was totally convinced the
AIDS is man-made, ? Felder
stated.

All of the 1,083 homosexuals
who took the Hepatitis B vac-
cine given in New York in 1979
were dead a decade after the
test, as were 1,402 gay men
recruited from gay VD clinics in
San Francisco, Los Angeles,
Denver, St. Louis and Chicago.

~There is complete agreement
in the virology world that the
AIDS virus didn Tt exist before
1978 in the U.S. homosexual
population, T T Felder said.

Smallpox vaccinations is
fingered as causing the AIDS
virus to raise its ugly head in
Africa and Haiti, according to
Felder.

~The smallpox eradication
program, sponsored by the
World Health Organization
(WHO) was responsible for un-
leashing AIDS in Africa, ?
Felder contends. oAlmost 100

to banking officer

Garland Frazier, NCNB Con-
sumer banking director for
Greenville, made the announce-
ment today.

Ms. Tisdale has been manager
of NCNB Ts West End branch in
Greenville since October 1987.
She will continue in that position.

The daughter of Warren and
Victoria Tisdale of Salters, S.C.,
Ms. Tisdale earned her
bachelor Ts degree in business ad-
ministration and her master Ts
degree in business education
from South Carolina State
College.

Shortly after completing re-
quirements for her master Ts
degree, Ms. Tisdale joined NCNB
in Columbia in 1986. She moved to
Greenville with the bank in late
1987.

Currently, Ms. Tisdale is in-
volved with the Greenville

Chamber of Commerce and the
Pitt County United Way, which
she will serve as a loaned ex-
ecutive in its 1989 fund campaign.
She is a member of the Bankers
Educantional Society, Inc., and

RUBY TISDALE

the Cornerstone Missionary Bap-
tist Church.

NCNB National Bank is a sub-
sidiary of NCNB Corporation, a
Charlotte-based holding com-
pany that manages more than $60
billion in assets and has full-
service banks in seven Southern
states.

| had this news on their front and authorative to reporters. cells, This, he asserts, was the ". million Black Africans were in-

| page news media, except the beginning of genetic engineer- .) oculated by WHO, also 14,000

news media of the U.S.A, Even Felder traces U.S. govern- _ ing, and consequently the devel- Haitians working in Zaire were _ "

| up until today, ? he charged, ~'no ment involvement inexperimen- " opment of AIDS. inoculated with an AIDS laced an Mii is Te
| U.S. media has published this ~#l bio chemical testing against oThe English sociologist Ali smallpox vaccination, When WINDSOR, NORTH CAROLINA... Ona clear day in the heart
i tect. ? the masses from Macon County, _tair Hay reported the existence , returned to Haiti, thy of Windsor, Mr. and Mrs. Outlaw can be seen doing things
| Despite the importance of the "Ala., and the now infamous a document in which it is et the AIDS virus wi together around the house and outside of the house,

, story, in Felder's opinion, the oTuskegee Experiment T in stated.that the U.S. House of " them." h (Voice photo by Jim Rouse!

A:

E







RULES FOR BEING A GOOD
CONVERSATIONALIST:

1. Learn to be a good listener.

2. Learn to talk more about
things and less about people.

3. Allow others in the conversa?"?
tion a chance to express and ex-
change ideas.

4, Keep up-to-date on every day
happenings and talk of things you
know.

5. Ask questions concerning
things mentioned by others in the
panel that you misunderstand.

6. Talk about things of interest
to others, as well as yourself.

7. Avoid gossip.

8. Don Tt prevaricate;
truthful.

9, Don Tt monopolize the time
away pretending; be yourself.

10. Don Tt be too stern, nor too
humerous.

be

SOME ADVANTAGES IN NOT
BEING A DROP-OUT:
These are the effects of an
education:
1. Enrich your life.
2. Increase your

income

Owners & Operators

; Wyson 4 bust

901 Hackney Avenue
Washington, N.C. 27889

Doris Stokes & Lois Edwards

potential.

3. Upgrade job skills.

4. Increase promotopn
opportunities.

5. Lead to new career.

6. Have fun and meet people.

SEARCH YOUR MIND...

Is there a reconciliation that is
needed, some personal problem
unsolved, some good deed left un-
done. Even if a long time has
elapsed, don Tt assume it Ts too
late, because it never is. Get your
house in order, and do it now.

GOOD ADVICE
Shop carefully. Don Tt run up
bills. If you have to borrow, repay
promptly. Put something aside
for a rainy day.

VIRTUES

Courage, a strong sense of the
difference between right and
wrong, moral certitude, probity
and thoughtfulness. Holidays
make me restless. Work hard,
fear God and make yourself
useful to society. You are accoun-

.

975-3255

urage him to look up words.
he goal is to nurture a lifelong

| reading habit.

The breaking up of marriage
leaves deep scars.

Loneliness and depression are
the effects of divorce. |

Followers will never go any
further than their leader.

God needs Christians who are
separators and not mixers.

Those who follow the crowd are
quickly lost in it.

It Ts a cold world out there and
we can Tt let it change us.

GEORGE HENSON, soulful
singer, superb song writer and
sensational guitarist, admonishes
his children not to smoke. ~ ~We
don Tt smoke, so that Ts something
that they can Tt pick up from us, ?
he emphasis. ~ o ~The best way to
get someone to listen to what you
are saying is by example. If you
set the example then he has a
model to go by, ? T Benson points
out. When discussing drugs, he
tells them: o ~If you never get in-
to drugs, then you don Tt have the
problem of trying to get off
drugs. ? We started teaching this
early to our kids (JET, May 1,
1989). (Their three sons - Robert,
23; Marcus, 21; and Christopher,
11.) He and his wife conduct Bi-
ble reading discussion in their
home.)

Do you know that Keshia
Pulliam (Rudy Huxtable on ~ o oThe
Cosby SHow T T) - all of her clothes
are donated to a Brooklyn
Children Ts Home?

SAFETY
PROCEDURES:

1. Never leave your belongings
unattended in airports or
restrooms.

2. Be on guard in crowds.
Beware if someone jostles you.
Pickpockets act fast.

3. If you Tre traveling by car,
don Tt leave belongings on the seat
or floor. Lock them out of sight in
the trunk.

4. When traveling by air, lock
your suitcase before you check it.

SOME

Keep valuables with you in a -
carry-on bag.

5. Don Tt draw attention to your
camera, jewelry, or money by ©
displaying them when checking
into a hotel.

ol

DISCOUNT

UN GvEm YING BUT GUALITY

CRINKLE CUT

FRENCH FRIES

GREEN GIANT

CUT BROCCOLI

PET RITZ

z
mee SHOPPING IS A PLEASURE"

~Ne Reserve The Aight To Limit Quantities
We Accept Food Stamps and WIC Vouchers

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY

COBBLERS a

Room ? sign on your door.

8. Remove your name tag when
you Tre not at official functions.
Thieves might be able to find out
your room number if they know
your name.

9. Make sure all windows and
doors are locked, including
sliding glass doors leading to
patios and balconies.

10. Don Tt invite or admit
strangers to your hotel room. If
someone knocks unexpectedly,
call the desk to find out if he or
she has been sent for a legitimate
service.

BE STROKE SMART: KNOW
THE FACTS

Do you know . . . 1. Stroke is the
third leading cause of death in the
U.S.?

2. Stroke is the number one
cause of adult disability?

3. One-third of all strokes are
fatal?

4. Some risk factors of stroke
can be controlled?

5. Sudennly blurred vision can
indicate onset of stroke?

Some stroke risk factors are:
poor diet, obesity, heavy alcohol
consumption, family or personal
history of heart attack, smoking,
age, gender and race.

Serious stroke warning signs
are: suddenly blurred vision,
severe headaches, difficulty
speaking, understanding or
swallowing, dizziness or loss of
balance.

SOME FACTS:

1. The best thing you can do is
to get followers to mirror your ac-
tions by being what you wish
them to be. .

2. Don Tt wait until you T ve had a
heart attack to start doing

JIM ROUSE
Publisher
Georgia Rouse

Business Manager

ABDUL JAMES ROUSE II!
Co-Publisher

i Solinor Rouse Co-Founder

Office Address T
clo WOOW Radio Station ~*
304 Evans St. .
Greenvillé, NC
919-757-0425

-

former presidents.

4. Standing in the middle of the
road is very dangerous; you get
knocked down by the traffic from
both sides.

5. We never repent of having
eaten too little.

6. Look out how you use proud
words. When you let proud words
go, it is not easy to call them
back.

7. The less secure a man is, the
more likely he is to have extreme
prejudices.

8. A wise man controls his
temper. He knows that anger
causes mistakes. Proverbs 14:29.

9. Don Tt ever forget that it is
best to listen much, speak little,
and not become argry; for anger
doesn Tt make us good, God
demands that we must be. James
1:19 and 20.

10. Don Tt be too eager to tell
others their faults, for we all
make mistakes. James 3:1.

11. Anyone who says he is a
Christian but doesn Tt control his
sharp tongue is just fooling
himself, and his religion isn Tt
worht much. James 1:26.

12. Don Tt criticize and speak
evil about each other. If you do,
you will be fighting against God Ts
law of loving one another, declar-
ing it is wrong. What right do you
have to judge and criticize
others? James 4:11 and 12.

13. To remove grease and
grime from the hands and face:
Take a cup of lard and add 5
tablespoons of sugar. Mix well
and use like soap. You'll be amaz-
ed at the results.

14. THIS YEAR TS RECIPE:
Take 12 fine full-grown months;
see that these are thoroughly free
from all old memories of
biterness, rancor, hate and
jealousy. Cleanse them complete-
ly from every clinging spite; pick
off all specks of pettiness. Cut
each month into equal parts - an
equal part for each day of the
month. Do not attempt to make
up the whole batch at one time.

Prepare one day at a time at
follows: Into each day put equal
parts of faith, patience, courage,
work, hope, fidelity, liberality,
kindness, rest, prayer,
meditation.

Add about 1 teaspoon of good
spirits, a dash of fun, a pinch of
folly, a sprinkling of play, and a
heaping cupful of good humor.

Pour love into the whole and
mix with a vim.

Serve with quietness,
unselfishness and cheerfulness.

to the list.

This, the 10th day of August, 1989.

Notice of Election - City of Greenville
November 7, 1989

Pursuant to G.S. 163-33(8) and G.S. 163-287, NOTICE is hereby given that there will be an election conducted within the City of |
Greenville on November 7, 1989, to elect a mayor and one council member at large to be voted upon by all registered voters within
the City and one council member from each of five electoral districts, to be voted upon within each district, all for two year terms.
Amendments to the City Charter relative to the mayor's vote and length of terms of office of mayor and councilmen will also |
be voted upon at large within the City of Greenville. :

The voting places within the City of Greenville will be open for voting on November 7, 1989, from 6:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m.

A list of the registered Tvoters residing within Greenville and newly annexed territory will be available for public inspection in the
Elections Office, 201 East Second Street, Greenville, for a period beginning September 18, and ending October 9. During this period,
any voter resident within Greenville and any newly annexed territory not included on the list may cause his/her name to be added

All residents of the City of Greenville who are registered to vote in Pitt County may vote in this election. Voters residing in areas
annexed into the City of Greenville who are registered to vote in Pitt County will be notified of their eligibility to vote in city elec-
tions and notified as to voting places assigned and districts in which they are eligible to vote.

Residents of the City of Greenville who have not heretofore registered in Pitt County should register on or before Monday, Oc-
tober 9, 1989. Voters who have moved must notify the Elections Office of that change on or before Monday, October 9, 1989.
Qualified Pitt County residents may register at the Elections Office, 201 E. 2nd Street, Greenville, between 8 a.m. and 5.p.m. Mon-

day through Friday. Registrars are also available at ECU Joyner Library, ECU Spilman Building, all h
and all branches during regular hours. igs o ng, all high schools, Shepperd Library

Any voter who will be out of the county the entire time the polls are open on election day, or who will be unabie to go to
polls because of sickness or physical disability, may vote by abeentee bello, The voter may apply for an absentee ballot beginn
ing on Tuesday, September 19, 1989. The application must be made in person, by signed request to the Board of Elections or
by a near-relative. The deadline for applying for an absentee ballot to be mailed is 5 p.m. on Tuesday, October 31, 1989. One-stop &
absentee voting at the Elections Office begins October 10, 1989, and ends at 5 p.m. November 3, 1989. (.

Questions concerning registration and elections should be directed to the Elections Office telephone number 830-4121.

in spuern oee hearing
pairments as
to work, hopefully,

Tulsa, Oklahoma. Frazier Ill

received his MA Degree from the

University of Arkansas recently,
A feature of their visit was hear. -
ing the Count Basic Jazz Band.

The Leroy Jameses extensive
vacation took them to New York,
Atlantic City, new Jersey, Green-
ville, South Carolina and the
Bahamas. Happy return!

Mrs.. Inez Ellison, french
teacher at D.H. Conley High
School, nominated Katrina
Layton, who was recognized
recently as a US National award
winner in foreign languages.

Mrs. Veronica Gist, Director,
Enrichment Program, Sycamore
Hill Baptist Church, which begins
Saturday, September 9, at 9 a.m.,
invites students grades 3-8 to
attend.

New members of the Pitt Coun-
ty Unit of the American Cancer
Society include Miriam Car-
raway, Leroy and Bettie James,
Virginia Monk, the Frederick
Grahams and Howard Pearce
among others, held orientation
recenlty.

Ann Brown was named to th
Director Queen Ts Court of Per-
sonal Sales at Mary Kay
Cosmetics T ~ ~Festival of Friends ?
seminar in Dallas, Texas
recenlty.

The John F. Ceudle Family
Reunion was held this weekend in
Greenville and members wor-
shipped at the Sycamore Hill
Baptist Church with Gloria Pean-
sall, Coordinator.

Mrs. Jeanette Maye and her
daughters, Carmen and Johnelle
visited their grandparents in
Bethel and Greenville over the
Labor Day Weekend.

Welcome Cliff and Cathy Ver-
nable and son to the Davenport
Street Community.

Mrs. Connie Morris and
daughter, Harriet visited their
daughter, son and_grand-

- daughter, Kendall over the Labor

Day Weekend in Durham, North
Carolina.

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Shop At Tarboro Ts Ne
Men and Women Ts First Quali
Stop and Shop At

Thackeray of Bronx, New York |
visited Mrs. Thelma Moore, "
Doris T mother, at 503 Contentnea "
Street recently. y

Mr. and Mrs. F.R. Sanders of
1706 Battle Drive visited their "
son, Frazer III and his family in "

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rf worst for civil rights in this cen-
_ __, tary. The Court, rejecting the
_ _ "_,@0ncept of an equal society and
_Tetreating on gains won over the
Peale ig took a dramatic
away otec the
irights of saleeiities api
rand African-Americans in par-
~ticular. We saw it coming; the
~Court has been in transition for
oseveral years.
- The Supreme Court is that
branch of government specially
.Charged with protecting the
rights of minorities. It is sub-
ject. to the will of Congress in
-applying the laws enacted by
Congress. There is no such con-
~straint on its authority to apply
cthe Constitution; but when it in-
Sterprets the Constitution, the
oCourt is supposed to bear in
omind that document's overall
purpose and meaning, as well as
how earlier Courts applied its
, provisions, This term the court
disregarded both.
In the area of civil rights, the
Court stood the Constitution on
its head. Instead of serving the
- will of Congress, it consistently
undercut our nation Ts stated
~commitment to weed out the
~vestiges T of slavery, root and
obranch. While continuing to use
othe rhetoric of equality, five of
the nine Justices actually

~ " eee a ee ee
ae " ;

10 years as a bank teller, and
by white who hate
Blacks. She sued under Section
1981, the civil rights statute
enacted after the Civil War to
prohibit employers from treat-
ing Black workers differently
than whites,

The Court ruled that the post-
Emancipation law was meant to
bar race discrimination in hiring
but not discrimination on the
job! The Court advised Patter-
son to seek relief under other
statutes, such as Title VII of
the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The
problem is that while Title VII
bars employment discrimina-
tion, it does not cover the same
situations, allow as much time
to bring suit, or allow for as
much damages, as does Section
1981. Clearly, Congress in-
tended the latter to protect
Blacks, not just in getting jobs,
but on the job as well.

In another case I discussed in
an earlier column, the Court
ironically used the Constitu-
tion Ts bedrock of equal treat-
ment for minorities - the 14th
Amendment - as a weapon
against them. In City of Rich-
mond v. Croson, five out of the

HANDLING TRAFFIC AND
CRIMINAL OFFENSES

ROBIN LOYD FORNES
ATTORNEY AT LAW

123 WEST THIRD STREET
GREENVILLE, NC 27835-8408

POST OFFICE BOX 8408
TELEPHONE 919-830-5447

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i

Bae, gist he ' )
The Interracial Nein Styling Seton!

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A ie J a Ww pig :
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ea gaara era de

problem that doesn Tt exist. The
Court also makes the false as-

patterns and institutional forms
of discrimination are the unin-
tended result of longstanding
social, political and economic
realities - in the Croson case,
for example. When the City of
Richmond, Virginia created a
set-aside program for minority
businesses, it did so in recogni-
tion of the construction in-
dustry Ts longtime and almost
total exclusion of African-A-
mericans and other minorities -
citywide, statewide and nation-
ally. (Fortunately, although the
Court wrongly struck down
Richmond's plan as unconstitu-
tional, it did not rule out the
validity of race- conscious at-
tacks on discrimination al-
together.)

The Court snatched a vital in-
strument for substanding
employment discrimination
claims from the hands of the na-
tion Ts minority workforce in a
decision involving the Native
American and Filipino cannery
workers, who presented statis-
tics providing that ~they had
been relegated to all of a com-
pany Ts low-paying positions
while whites got all the high-
paying desk jobs. The Court, in
rejecting their claim and greatly
limiting the use of statistical

john a. powell
evidence, made it harder to gain
relief under Title VII.

The Court, issuing one of its
worst opinions in an already ter-
rible term in the Martin v.
Wilks case, egged on whites
who feel ~ ~discriminated T T
against by court-approved,
voluntary settlements in dis-
crimination cases to legally con-
test such settlements - which
could trigger the unravelling of
many. The case involved the Ci-
ty of Birmingham, Alabama
which, after years of fighting
charges that it had violated Ti-
tle VII in hiring and promoting
firefighters, entered into a cour-
t- approved agreement with two
of its legal adversaries to set up
a remedial hiring and promotion
scheme. A group of white
firefighters, after declining their
right to enter the. litigation
while it was in progress, chal-
lenged the constitutionality of
the settlement after the fact.
Legal precedent dictated that
their suit be barred. The Court
permitted it instead, thus open-
ing the floodgates to similar ac-
tions by whites disgruntled over
efforts to free minorities from
centuries of inequality and
oppression.

Each of these decision is
harmful. Together, they signal
the dawning of a dark age, in
which blatant disregard for the
rights of African-Americans
and other minorities will be the
rule of thumb. An activist, hos-
tile, conservative majority, that
began to take shape a year and a
half ago with the appointment
of Justice Anthony M. Ken-
nedy, is loose in the land. Mis-
sion: to perpetuate the system
of inequity the Court's
predecessors sought to dis-
mantle,

in the

and documentation of specific instances that affirmative action is not prac-
.ticed within the department under the present administration.

= = There are those within the Police Department who are making a futile at-

| otempt fo discredit our charges of discrimination in making

| Ments, inconsistencies in promoting
female officers, sexual harassment, and the creation of cosmetic positions
with no bs ge pe duties. These are only a few of the charges that have been
presented to

~ the appropriate federal government agencies.

The concerned officers of the Greenville Police Department have proof

patrol assign-
practices, favoritism toward white
this administration. At a later date, these will be reviewed by

These practices must not be allowed to continue within the Greenville

~Police Department for the officers currently serving nor for those who will

come after us. The continued growth of our city demands that the quality of
leadership and the management of personnel and resources within the local
law enforcement agency be superb.

We are asking for your support of our efforts in correcting certain prac-
tices which will help the Greenville Police Department give better service to
the deserving public.

Lt. A.S. Fordham
Greerville Police

@

~ fe

gh ke
pee

|
y you look at things
4 sy ae Hy ~a ~

Madam Eden

(919) 946-8693

(919) 946-8693
Hwy. 17 North Huy. 17 North
Washington, N.C. Washington, N.C.

(have hard luck and been
under evil influence for

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Ds
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CALL FOR APPOINTMENT (919) 946-8693

Saal

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Es » Be

_ & THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7-WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBE® 18, 1960-THE ~M T VOICE

Greenville Ts Police Department ranks well
statistically among others in the nation

Greenville Ts police department
compares favorably with other
departments across the nation
based on Greenville Ts violent
crime statistics and a U.S. Dept.
of Justice report released
Sunday.

oThe Justice Dept. report tells

me that we're right on the mark
in man of the areas and

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sworn officers. Greenville, with dicates separ peut opened
an estimated population of 46,507, 62 percent more cases in the
now has 103 sworn officers, or _ first five months of 1989 than dur-
2.22 officers per 1,000 ing a similar period last year.
the same asthena- The memo also _ " a 12] per:
tional average for the larger cent increase in drug arrests an

cities. The report also noted a 107 percent rise in the number

that cities of less than 500,000 of drug charges cone -
ee averaged 46 cars The City Ts Special Investiga-
officers. Greenville, with 52 tions Unit, from Jan. 1 to May hoe

@ Cars, a T bet- of 1988, opened 74 cases, arres
ae 50 sg I aa 38 persons and filed 70 drug
The number of violent crimes charges. From Jan. 1 to May 31
on the Justice Dept. Ts Uniform of this year, the Unit opened 120
Crime Index averaged drug cases, made 84 arrests and

Reports

10.012 per 100,000 population.
That compares to 533 violent
crimes last year in Greenville, or
783 per 100,000. The violent crime
index includes apenas on
murder, negligent mans ter,
rape, robbery, and aggravated
assault. Greenville reported six
murders, 15 rapes 14] robberies
and 371 aggravated assaults.

While non-uniformed
employees now comprise 23 per-
cent of the police work force na-
tionwide, according to the report,
only 25 of 128 " or 20 percent " of
Greenville police employees are
civilians.

In a related statistical report,
information collected in June in-

filed 145 drug charges:

oThese are telling figures
about the Greenville Police
Dept. Ts war on drugs, T T Tesmond
said. ~ ~There has been a dramatic
increase in our number of drug
investigations during the past
year. This increase is the result
of two factors: first, the City
Council has given us the addi-
tional funding we need to in-
crease our personnel in the
Special Investigations Unit, and
second, the amount of drug ac-
tivity in the city has also increas-
ed. More drugs are being shipped
to Greeenville, resulting in more
drug investigations and more ar-
rests. ?

When will criminals be
stopped from dictating

When are we going to stop
politicians, judges, and parole
boards from allowing criminals
to dictate our lives? Being 53
years old, I have the benefit of
remembering when criminals
weren Tt in charge.

Up until the '60s you didn Tt have
to have to have exact change to
get on a trolley car or bus. You
just handed the driver a dollar
and he'd give you change. Then
drivers started getting held up.
Instead of catching and imprison-
ing the robbers, we put
passengers to the inconvenience
of having exact change.

Department stores use to have
numerous exits. In response to
widespread shoplifting, they Tve
reduced the number of exits.
Again, we're inconvenienced in-
stead of authorities catching and
imprisoning thieves. What Ts
more, merchandise prices reflect
the steep cost of anti-shoplifting

hated that stores must buy.
~housing project, where
we lived, my mother, sister, and
I washed clothes in the basement
ted washing machine
and later hung them out in the
community clothes yard. Mom
went off to work and we off to
school. After school our job was
to gather the clothes. Thieves
began breaking into the
machines while others stole the
clothing; now residents must
bear the inconvenience of going
to a laundromat.
In the same neighborhood, you

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could shop for just about
anything in a three-mile radius.
Besides, you could safely walk to
the store day or night. Today,
there are not only no stores of any
significance, but even _ if
therewere, you wouldn Tt want to
walk, at least not at night.
Criminals have put the stores out
of business. Residents, that don Tt
want to get ripped off by Mom &
Pop stores, must bear transpor-
tation costs to go downtown or to
surburban malls.

Politicians, judges, and parole
boards treat law-abiding people
with contempt. Remember Ber-
nard Goetz, who defended
himself against would be at-
tackers in a New York subway?
He was jailed. Now remember
the lady jogger who was raped
and beaten into a coma in New
York Ts Central Park? Had she
carried a gun and shot her
assailants, she would be in jail
with Goetz instead of the hospital.
Civil authorities, along with their
friends in the anti-gun lobby,
would rather have us be victims
of brutal assaults and live in fear
than defending ourselves against
barbarians they put on the
streets.

I say hogwash to all of that. As
a kid I used to steal money from
Mom's piggy bank. When I got
caught, and between the lashes,
Mom said that she was neither
going to lock up nor hide her
money and I wasn Tt going to steal
it either. She didn Tt hide or lock
up the money and I didn Tt steal it
" again. We-.need to put Mom in
Charge of our criminal justice
system?

Ask any. politician about mak-
ing our streets and homes safe.
You'll get and endless list of ex-
cuses from ~ ~we don Tt have
anywhere to put criminals T Tto
owe don Tt have enough police. ? T
One of Mom Ts famous speeches
applies here, oIf you Tre doing
something you Tre not supposed to
be doing, uou Tre not going to be
able to do what you Tre supposed
to be doing. ? City and state
goverments spend countless
billions of taxpayers T money for
handouts for the indiscreet, idle
and lazy, massive sports com-
plexes, and one junket or boon-
doggle after another " things
they are not supposed to be doing.
Therefore, they don Tt have
enough resources to protect the
citizens from criminals " which
they Tre supposed to be doing.

The only short-run solution is
for law-abiding people to arm
themselves and defend when at-
tacked. Like Goetz, I prefer jail
to the hospital or morgue. But the
long-run solution is to run our
political derelicts out of office.

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: VOICE ? PHONE: 756-3228





i savas aen mab ates sak eee tee aor oe?

Sa he ee ae eee ee ee Ge

te

~ Gath 600 eG Be ee
7) slavery and we should be i to do is tb make movies for each
our own food,.And remem , other. The b demand is
The Whites who gave us the lef- ~there %
tovers make 50 percent of theit - Fore
total incove from us. , ;
Therefore, when my movie, at the
Pa wh poe? Girl, T T ge Ti on
evruary 9, 1990 (during Black
History Month), it will be
distributed by Black colleges, en-
ietontian tg Civic and

a é Poche », churches, etc,

| feeding them, we are
going to teach them how to fish "
so they can feed themselves " by
showing them how to market and
promote a movie.

These Buy Freedom Partners
will Share the boxoffice income
from each theater oGirl ? is
shown in; how much they make
depends on how hard they work fice potential when it opens in
(for details: call (212) 575-0876). theaters tionwide in February.
CAUSED BY What we're doing will give new Al Pyblic reaction to any
MUSCLE TENSION meaning to the concept of being sible to predict and
~ . a independent in the movie Make and predictions
ig industry. of o ~Girls T} sing potential, kit

s An independent Black. film- is encouragifiy that in its initial

= maker is not an independent per- _Tun it beqan films that went on to
son who is directing or producing make $153 million ( ~Fatal At-

movies for a salary from White ~traction T T) and $79 million

Hollywood studios. That Ts totally

* record of
such major Hollywood
oBeverly. ts CoP nr ? Patal
o ., Bs $6 ~a
oAttraction, ? oCrocodile Dundee
II, ? * bo lll; ? oColor Pur-
ple T and# ~Raw ? T.

oGirl ? i sold twice as many
tickets ag ~The Mighty Quinn ? T
and sold more tickets in one day
than oI Tm Gonna Get Ya Sucka ?
didina ste t's why we feel

ATIONALLY SYNDICATED COLUMNe
The Revolution Of 1990 Will Be Seen In The Movies

In a recent movie trade because that Ts all of the $100
magazine, a Black producer for million that movie earned from
a major Hollywood studio Blacks (other than those who
boasted of leaving the unused worked on the movie) that they
food from the movie set behind are ever going to get. ? T
for the local Black community. Although rebellious in tone, the

I thought, oHow nice " Black producer in question has

broken no new ground. You can
get all ecstatic, if you want, about
a job or free food from a White
Hollywood company, distributed
by a Black who says he Ts o ~in-
dependent, ? Tbut the truth is we
nad Sul emaplgyment during fo enthuslastic about our boxof- | TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
TV series can be seen on public :
television in Greenville on Chan- -
nel 2 (WUND). Please consult TV

listings or phone station for air é
time. 4

Is The Basketball ;
Playing Field Level? ©

it won Tt be televised. f

NOT ONE OF THOSE PU.
CORRECTED Yak yetb Es ifr
9

MOST HEADACLES
ARE

=

YOUR CHIROPRACTOR CoR
oeg PROBLEMS

OF THESE

ba

EO if]

WL
THOM

Dr. Steven Cohen,

Dr. Dan Goldberg ,
756-8160

GREENVILLE FAMILY
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER
2100 © Memorial Ortes
Greenvitie, HC 87834

dependent. And other than that
Black person benefitting, nothing
will change for Black people as:a
whole. .
An independent. Black film-
maker is someone whg, develops
his or her own property with
money he or she has and then
produces and marketa Ta movie
outside (and frequently in spi
of) the studio system " to benefit
the entire Black community.
When we do that enough times
with enough movies, then " and
only then " will enough jobs, and
the right jobs, be created, along
with truthful images. All we have

tyr,

. (Golden Child ?) .
T In this business, numbers alone
~do the talking: 50 percent of the
.film-going audience is Black ($2.2
billion of the total $4.4 billion) and
80 percent of the $4.4 billion
comes from the top 20 most-
Populated cities. And over 50 per-
icent of the Black population lives
in those top 20 urban centers. The
;Black population ias the
~backbone of thé movie industry.
What we Ts# doing with our
~movie, by sharing the boxoffice
income, however, will redirect
ithe flow of this: money back to
.people and groups in our com-
~munity. This same network of

§

By now you've probably heard :
of the cowardly action of racism Z

that sent a tear-gas bomb via the |

U. S. mail to the NAACP regional ia
office in Atlanta. Fortunately, no
one was seriously injured. That _
was Monday, August 20.

Three days before, on Friday,
another bomb went off in Atlan-
ta. A center-forward for the .
Atlanta Hawks basketball team |

was offered $2.5 million to play - "

basketball for one year with the
Detroit Pistons.

This will put him in the top five
of all men who play professional
basketball. Only Patrick Ewing
($4 million), Akeem Olajuwon ($3
million) and Michael Jordan

a a

lage near the Sudanese border,
maybe a village so remote - like
Shangrila - that the fact he Ts a
United States Congressman
means nothing to them. Maybe
they'd see him'as'a gift from the
gods and are marrying him of
to the chief's daughter while the
whole world beats the bushes
looking for him. Silly, I know,
now. But some sorrows are
easier to accept sugar-coated,
and a small dose at a time, lest
the full impact unleash sudden
unbearable despair.

To everyone Ts surprise,
Mickey readily admitted he

feared his trips. kept. him, ax
_ from thope he. cared; about. to
back in touch, Leland, in,a

get
hands-on ~approach T to :¢nd_ dill
hands-on approaches, would

the 5 am. municipal
buses and shake hands with
riders telling them who he was,
and that he cared about them.
He did this for two weeks, He
won 80 big, no one Ts heard from

_ Elizabeth Spates since.

It was that big Texas style
that got him over, I'll never for-

in his pockets. Then took them

out as several females from the
judience surrounded ohinr*

him of his good:looks,

d apply whatever ego assuag-

verbal oin ia ? desc

I moved in also, nicely printed
card at the ready, but was el-
bowed by a particularly aggree-
sive ~sister T who went so far as
to invite him to her place for
dinner. Some people.

I fihally eased in and intro-
duced myself::Press you know -
and was surprised to hear him

Pty

F ) | ($2.8 million) will earn more.
e ing places in the U.S. take pic- face with any man alive, white, This man will make as much as z
Mick we hardl Rnew a f tures and write-up reports. His ~Red, Black, rich or poor. Magic Johnson, a superb @
9 e activities made T him enemies, ° reminded me of all superstar. :
but his style was without guile. «that. When I met him at River- He will make more than other ,
By ABIOLA SINCLAIR o He'd look you dead in the eye, Tside he surprised me by reveal- Peay sven as _ aoa
Just like Mickey to pull a and tell you in a. very. direct ing that he felt he wasn't good Otiliont ne omer Aue
spectacular disappearing act. way, no drama, no. malice, just looking, but just passable, oIf million) Larry Bird ($1 r
Go down in a blaze of glory. right on. People respected that. you don Tt look at me too long, ? million) Charles Barkle .
. . , T , y ($1.6
I just kept hoping he was stil] His constituents loved him. he said. oThat's another reason million) and Dominique Wilkins
alive. Maybe he had bailed out They re- elected him. by land- | keep moving. ? | ($1.4 million), the undisputed star =
early or something. I kept hop- slides for four terms. Condemned world hunger of this man Ts own team.
ing he waited by the plane as During his fifth run for Con- After his speech condemning oUnbelieveable, ? ? responded
long as he could, got hungry gress he was severely chal- world hunger as unnecessary, Golden State general manager ..
and decided to make it to the lenged by Elizabeth Spates, and also blasting Israel for sell- and coach Don Nelson. :
nearest place he could get food who charged that his globe-trot- ing arms to South Africa, and oUpon learning that (the 3
and rest. . ting was unfair to his neglected re. labeling South African pro- players name) had been offered $
I kept imagining he'd come constituents. ducts ~Made in Israel T to under- $2.5 million, the first thing a lot ©
dragging inte sores small vil- Ten gallon Mickey mine sanctions, he stood hands f people did was faint, ? wrote

Mark Bradley in The Atlanta
Constitution. Upon coming to, the

. Atlanta Hawks management was

told it had 15 days to match
Detroit's offer.

Phoenix Suns general
manaager Jerry Colangelo said,
o ~A lot of people are very stunn-
ed. For a player of that caliber to
receive that kind of money. ?

What kind of caliber igs this
26-year-old player? Last season
he averaged 4.7 points, 6.1 re-
bounds and shot 52 percent in 74
games. An abysmal record.

One expert observed that he
got the offer because he is an

RES. poke

4 another good Black man. Some get the news footage of Leland say he read my column and en- 26? He doesn't have verre
q thing we can ill afford. As a arriving in Africa wearing a. joyed my.work, oemerge. ?
Black woman | take this loss | Texas ten gallon hat, frye boots, I was equally surprised to get Why then? Why did Jon Kon-
quite personally. Useless, good: ! and a dashiki! The Africans will a Igtter ae him'on Congree- cak, a non-superstar get pro-
1, for-nothing men laying all over | never forget it, either! They lov- sional | ck Caucus Founda- " moted to the head of the sport?
A the place, you can Tt move with ed him, too. His hands-on tion atationery, : concerning Maybe because he Ts 7 feet
2}. out stepping into one. No place | dedication to the elimination of media properties Capital Cities tall? Maybe because in the last 16
«to put them. Jails don Tt even starvation earned him the re B iting wes forced to sell. | games of the season, he shot 69
Want them. So who do we lose MICKEY LELAND " Nov. 27, 1944 . Aug. 7, 1989. Con- spect even of page De eee - Soublotignre ek nnabed
_ Mickey Talend! Now go figure. greseman, (D) Texas; civil rights activist, hamecitecint race ary leaders in Ethiopis, indud: of Teiicomimun- thes
T Latest news ing Lieutenant Colonel Men- he, along with . ,
, and chairman - onal Committee on World Hunger. ile Mari . And maybe because he Ts White
I'm try ders eshringrcodii try: Member Congressional Black Caucus. parser looked sll ane 8 i wanted to vel in a Black-dominated sport.
hews . eat " \ . ee tid
i prt eth disappearance | worldwide famine relief effort as obuy theese lio and T sta. abandoned Beck ens ans ag0
§ and some useless male is out: Pharmacy and civil rights © would dance openly at drum simply a Western ploy to em*tidtg: °° ). the White suburbs. A new White
ef side my window raising hell be- But the family held on, and rituals, play the drums himself, barass the Communist govern- I was plotting on how I could hope may be worth $2.5 million at
i cause he needs five dollars to Mickey finished Wheatly High he considered Africa home. ment. Leland would give him parlay the letter into lunch with the Pistons T gaye because of the
i} buy some drugs, and I Tm think- School and went on to Texas A trip to Tanzania that was that same straight-in-the-eye, . surplus of White fans Koncak will
if the f... is this jerk alive Southern University where he to last three weeks my attract, hungry for one of their
ing, why j ty supposed
b and Mickey... ? studied pharmacy, in between lasted three months instead and own on the starting team.
e civil rights activity with the he felt something to do with Unbelievable? It Ts no. more
4 be his life Ts work. He unbelievable than the bomb that
% _ My thoughts deepened asthe Black Panther Party, and Africa would : was sent as opriority mail T Tto the
& night wore on. I wondered if it SNCC and CORE, It was his visited Africa soveral crore was beat as op
f would have made a difference if mother that insisted he learn a | TONY BROWN TS JOURNAL
the human garbage outside my trade, in addition to his civil | TV series can be seen on public "§
window had known about rights activities. Pharmacy Encouraged to television inGreenvilleonChan- _;
Mickey Leland. If the setbacks sounded solid. oAt worst I | When rani nel2 (WUND). Please consult TV
in his life were the same as the could always learn to poison my bara nd gpg a her con- listings or phone station for air
( setbacks in Mickey's life? enemies, ? he once told a laugh- pate Mickey td yee on q
i audience during a speech. Ls
: Would it help him to know ing encouraged by friends to run, if 9 i |
* Mickey overcame them? noted that otiny eta be would represent the Let Ts buildour :
He also t o very grew up,
Po gaa ey ag they were achanging, ? and the Fifth Ward, Leland Ts appeal community
pt on With all the courage he could was a'basic humanity. And, ' th
sonatas, which was sonsidershl, wee a charmer ogether
he decided to take the system at met personally at a
gyda, pe rt function at ~eo gether ping ge acrid rf :
Texas State Legislature during the height to to develop a spirit :
1972, He won! Much to his own pian famine crisis. He laughed, : ! | cooperation and withinthe
surprise, and brought with him ie. ee st hs , ; : create 8 Saat ae ~1
macho of the militant in Ethiopia, and the thet SERIE ee create a to our ©
? g the | the o89 =n 2a hs , E to help us build our & like |
Legislature chambers dressed wasn't add pod s ry pect al i
famous dashiki, super of hanger both his abroad. oTee pad jos ty e
Afro, (circa early 70s) and He » spoke of the rural cell ~eath: bs . hemes,
boots! township of Fayette, Missis- autos, etc. share it with the com,
po hegre Na a pe afrenfan how munity first, because once it gets
i nO sew out into the world it's
by them. He made his food, and were living in total forever. a
~trip to Africa in 1972, and contrast to yes am Send distribution of items to:
ss impressed. Where many white area; na ~M T Voice Newspaper
| Cigrten othipandlpare pip terre pay lee P.O. Box 2046
erved their African they can't begin to help Westiagion. NC 57000-S0a





6-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER T-WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1989-THE ~M T VOICE
Pa.) Ly be x *} apart

Eastern North Carolina Minority Peo

Ce

1/2 Beef cut and wrap ........... eee eee 1.35 Ib.
Hind cut and Wrap............cceeeeeeeeee eens 1.55 Ib.
| Front cut and Wrap .........ceceeeeeeeeeeeees 1.30 Ib.
T-Bone Steak... .10 Ibs. oo... eee. 29.90
Sirloin Steak... .10 Ibs. ................000. 28.90
Rib Steak... 10 IDS. oo... eee eee eee 27.90
' Round Steak ..........cc cece ese ee ee seen eee 1.89 Ib.
) Chuck Steak ....scssseecccssteseesseeereeen 1.69 Ib.
) Rib-Eye Steak... .10 Ibs. oo... 39.90
( Rib Stew Beef ......... eee ce cece neers 13.90
| Boneless Stew Beef ...........:.ccccee0eeees 1.99 Ib
Ground Beef ............ccccceceeeeeeeeeeeeees 1.35 Ib.
Turkey. Wings... .10 Ibs. oo... 5.90
Jamestown All Meat Hotdogs . .10 Ibs. ..... 11.50
| Yorktown Bacon . .(6) 1 Ib. pks. .............. 4.99
\ Beef Bar-B-Q Ribs ...............c cece eee. 1.69 Ib.
Pork Sausage (Tom Thumbs) .............. 1.99 Ib.
Juice, several flavors ...............0c0e00e 1.09 gal

Call In Orders For FAST SERVICE!

All Meats Guaranteed:

All Beef " Western

All Pork " Native

No Limit on Purchases | Sate
CALL IN YOUR ORDER \S

It Will Be Ready :

MEAT SPECIAL

September I through September 30

" ALL MEATS PREPARED UNDER N.C.D.A. INSPECTIONS "

Ham Hocks Smoked... .10 Ibs. ............ 11.90
Country Sausage Dry . . .10 Ibs............... 19.90
Links, Sausage... .10 Ibs. .......... eee eee 14.50
Bulk, Sausage... .10 Ibs. oo... eee. 12.80
Pork Tailed (Corned)................0c0eceeees .99 Ib.
Country Side Pepper Coated .............. 1.19 lb.
Pork Chittling, Raw... .10 Ibs. .............. 5.50
Fres.. Pork Neckbones. . . .10 Ibs. ............ 3.90
Pork Chop, frozen... .10 lbs. ............6. 16.90
Pork Salt Side (Small) ...................064 1.09 Ib.
Slab Bacon Slice ..........0..ccccceeeeeeeees 1.39 Ib
Slab Bacon Whole ..............cccceeceeees 1.09 Ib
Fresh Pork Shoulder .................00.006 1.09 Ib.
Lard, 25 lb. Pail (Smithfield) .................. 10.95
Pork Chops Center Cut Frozen . . .10 lbs. .. 19.90
Country Ham Hocks . . .10 Ibs. .............. 11.90
Corn Bread Sticks (12 doz.) ..........ccceeceeeeee 8.00
Pork Spare Riblet. . . .10 Ibs. ................ 10.90
Jimmy Green Smoked Sausage . .10 Ibs. .... 13.60

Jimmy Brown Ts Smoked Sausage . .10 Ibs... 13.80
Pork Smoked Shoulder..................066+ 1,29 lb.

Food Stamp Customers Welcome

- ?

Turkey Neck... .10 Ibs. .
. .10 Ibs.

Pork Chop, end cut. .

Smoked Ham Bone ....

Fresh Pork Back Bone

Fresh Pork Hams .....

bocce cece eeeeueeueeuees .99 Ib.

e

ee gGeeedesesesveeee

(
boc ee eee ueeeeeneueees 1.49 Ib. |

A PACK
10 lb. T-Bone Steak
10 lb. Ground Beef
10 Ib. Chicken Whole
10 Ib. Prk. Chps. Mix
40 Ib. for $69.95

B PACK
10 Ib. Sirloin Steak
10 Ib. Grd. Bf. Pattys
10 Ib. Smkd. Sausage
10 Ib. Fryers
40 Ib. for $49.95

C PACK
10 Ib. Round Steak
10 Ib. Hot Dogs
10 Ib. Chick Leg 1/4
10 Ib. Pk. Sp. Ribs
40 Ib. for $47.95

D PACK
10 lb. Pig Feet
10 Ib. Pork Spare Ribs
10 Ib. Chicken Wings
10 Ib. Pork Sausage
40 Ib. for $39.95

Open
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
8:00 A.M. " 6:00 P.M.

~Pollard Trading Post

(

100 Pollard Street
| Behind Fred Webb Ts Grain Mill

Greenville, North Carolina
PHONE 758-2277
Owner and Operator

George Whitley

tal

a "_
~ " " "
tien sill

SR OR RP eee ie el mee BGP SPDR TORO EPA UAE peer Eee ee See ee







|

LASTING IMPRESSION BOUTIQ

lose some weight or get slim, Sister Aubrey Vines and Mrs

McGuffin can help you. They are shown outside of their business
in downtown Farmville. Call them and see their ad in the paper

for an appointment.

(hoice photo by Jim Kor

GUILTY OR
NOT GUILTY?

To say Congress kills is a
serious charge, but let me lay out
some parameters and you make
the decision " Guilty or not
guilty?

Africa Ts drought and Soviet-
style farm collectivization ac-
count for a large part of the con-
tinent Ts starvation. It also stems
from U.S. policy on the export of
effective pesticides. Locusts start
out as relatively harmless
grasshoppers. When conditions
are right they emerge in stagger-
ing numbers, up to 150-million
locusts per square kilometer,
where they can eat 100 tons of
food per day. That Ts enough food
to feed 500 people per year.

According to Dr. Thomas R.
DeGrogori and Dina F. Solovey in
an article, ~ ~Out of Africa, ? in the
Summer 1989 issue of Priorities,
a publication of the American
council on Science and Health,
the most effective weapon
against locusts are DDT-type
compounds such as Dieldrin. But
elite environmentalists have
pressed Congress to ban the ex-
port of Dieldrin in the name of
protection the earth and human
life. They want poor Africans to
buy Malathion and Carbaryl
which are much less effective
against pests and 10 times as
expensive.

It Ts true that DDT-type insec-
ticides are more toxic than their
more modern and costly
substitutes. It Ts also true that we
used DDT in the United States
when we couldn Tt do better, but
the environmentalists would
deny the same access to others
that can Tt do better. This is a
familiar tune among do-gooders;
now that we Tre on the boat, let Ts
pull up the gangplank.

Our Congress provides equal

COOKING UP
A GOOD MEAL

QUESTION: Is there a test to
determine if baking powder is
still active?

ANSWER: Stir one teaspoon of
baking powder into!, cup of not
water. Baking powder is fit to use
if it bubbles abundantly.

QUESTION: What Ts the secret
to stop cookies from spreading
too much?

ANSWER: You may need to
add more flour to batter. If recipe
calls for solid shortening, don Tt
substitute butter or margarine
because they have more water
than shortening and may make
dough too soft.

Cookies may spread because
the oven isn Tt hot enough. Or you
may be over-greasing the cookie
sheets. Except for low-shortening
cookies, cookie sheets rarely

need to be greased.

QUESTION: What Ts the
method for cooking ham in the
microwave oven?

ANSWER: Place a fully-
cooked ham, fat side up, in a
glass baking dish. Shield top edge
with foil and loosely cover ham
with plastic wrap. Microwave on
medium for 12 to 14 minutes per
pound, After% of the cooking
time, invert ham, placing foil
again on top edge, re-covering
with plastic bie for the last
third of me.

Use a meat thermometer
designed for the microwave oven
or an oven probe and cook ham
to 160 degrees. Let meat stand for

5 to 10 minutes before carving.

opportunity in the sense that it:
policy kills Americans as well

Rachel Flick, in an article, ~Why
Can Tt We Get the Medicine We
Need? T Tin the current Reader Ts
Digest, writes about callous Food
and Drug Adminstration (FDA)
policy. In 1980, Knoll Phar

maceuticals introduced pro
pafenone, an effective treatment
for a potentially fatal heart
disease, FDA didn Tt approve the
drug until 1988. We can only guess
at the number of people who
needlessly died as a result.

Dr. George Frederick had pro-
state cancer and _ needed
flutamide which had been wide
ly used in Europe for years anc
found effective and _ safe
However, flutamide had not beer
approved in the United States. T
get flutamide, Dr. Frederick
managed to get FDA Ts permis
sion to o ~research ? T the drug and
now his prostate cancer is i:
remission.

About 500,000 Americans die o!
heart attacks each year . Accor
ding to Flick, 75 percent of these
attacks are caused by blood clots
The drug TPA was found effec
tive in dissolving clots in clinica]
tests in 1985, but the FDA didn Tt
get around to approving it unti!
late in 1987, and only then
because of loud protests from the
medical community. One
wonders how many Americans
die as a result of this branch of
government.

Last month, I wrote about how
Department of Transportation
regulations send thousands of
Americans to their death through
their mandate for Detroit to pro-
duce higher mileage cars. Cars
that get more mileage are made
lighter and less crashworthy. Ac-
cording to several studies, 4,000
Americans will needlesssly lose
their lives and another 20,000 will
be injured annually as a result of
DOT requirements for the 1989
models. I asked Transportation
Secretary Samuel Skinner about
this and his answer showed a
callous disregard for life in favor
of a concern for the environment
and the wishes of Congress.

Congress and the bureaucrats

are only too willing to take these

risks with our lives because the
victims are invisible. Those who
die because of starvation, the
unavailability of useful drugs,
and less crashworthy cars are not
likely to know why they died and
their relatives would never think
of their deaths as resulting from
an act of Congress.

UE... If you are looking to

Byrd becomes engineer

James A. Byrd, an engineer
with the Greenville Development
Department, has received his
professional registration for Pro-
fessional Engineers and Land
Surveyors.

Byrd is a 1984 graduate of N.C.

State University in Raleigh, |

where he received a B.S. degree
in civil engineering. He is a
member of the American Socie-
ty of Civil Engineers, the Na-
tional Society of Professional
Engineers, the Professional
Engineers of North Carolina and
the Association of State Flood
Plain Managers.

As an engineer for the City,
Byrd reviews subdivision plats,
erosion control plans and storm
water drainage plans. Byrd also
is responsible for on-site inspec-

tion of City and private construc-
tion projects, as well as providing
cost estimates, design data and
contract administration for
Capital improvement projects.
He joined the Develoopment
Department in 1986.

Byrd previously worked for
the N.C, Dept. of Transportation
as an assistant project engineer
in Raleigh. There, he supervised
a team of technicians collecting
data for culvert, bridge and
storm sewer design.

To become a registered profes-
sional, Byrd had to pass the
state Ts engineering and training
exam and work for four years
under a registered professional
engineer. He took the exam in
April.

HAD AN ACCIDENT IN WHICH YOU WERE INJURED? |

NEED A LAWYER?

YOU MAY BE ENTITLED TO COLLECT MONEY

RC I

FROM A LAWSUIT!

106 Howell St.

This firm specializes in personal injuries as a result of
@ AUTO ACCIDENT
THERE TS NO CHARGE UNLESS YOU WIN THE CASE.
ALL EXPENSES ARE REPAID WHEN THE CASE IS OVER.
FOR.A FREE CONSULTATION, CONTACT THE OFFICE OF
ATTORNEY ROBERT L. WHITE
Greenville, NC
Call 355-9832 or 355-9941

@ FALL

EDDIE YARRELL TRUCKING

~BAND © ROCK ¢ GRAVEL © ASPHALT © TOP SOIL
oWe Might Doze But Never-Close ?

EDDIE YARRELL
Home 756-0177

P.O. Box 334
Greenville, NC 278634

fon omens 20 esa

\ Social Worker II

Responsible for comprehensive social work services
to prenatal patients, especially those with complex
medical, obstetrical, and psychosocial problems.
Prefer Master Ts Degree from an accredited school of
Social Work, or Master Ts Degree in a related human
service field. Experience in counseling/social work
related to women Ts health care is desired.

Salary Range: $22,491 - $36,096.

East Carolina University is an AA/EEO Employer
and encourages applications from qualified women
and minorities. Federal law requires proper documen-
tation of identity and employability at the time of
employment. It is requested this documentation be
included with your application.

a=

[CHRYSLER

\

Regardless of your
preference, if we
don Tt have it,
We will get it.

| ; Sales Consultant
Home: 830-1276

RONALD HILLIAR

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY GMC
605 W. Greenville Blvd. " Greenville, NC
Work " 355-3355

PEUCEOT

Telecommunications
Equipment Maintenance

YE
a ) Clerk Typist III

We have a part-time Clerk Typist III position
available from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

ARE THE KIDS BACK IN SCHOOL? ARE YOU
LOOKING FOR oSCHOOL ? WORK HOURS? Part-
time, 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. clerical position Mon-
day through Friday, available for high school
graduate with 2 years office clerical experience in
medical or social service fields preferred. Excellent
typing and word processing skills required, experience
with Data Base preferred. Duties include, but are not
limited to, answering telephone, computer labels,
mailing list, bulk mailings, and letter and form typing.

Salary Range: $8,936 - $13,853.

East Carolina University is an AA/EEO Employer
and encourages applications from qualified women
and minorities. Federal law requires proper documen-
tation of identity and employability at the time of
employment. It is requested this documentation be
included with your application.

Supervisor I

East Carolina University has an immediate opening
for an experienced Telecommunications Equipment
Maintenance Supervisor I. Successful candidates for
this position must have a strong working knowledge
of broadband communications systems with regard
to design, maintenance and support. This position
is responsible for the campus wide broadhead system
for data, and video communications. *Experience
with satellite transmissions and video reception
equipment is a plus. Experience with Ungermann-
Bass Net/One hardware and software also a plus.
Duties also include supervision of subordinate techni-
cians. This position reports to the Associate Direc-
tor for Systems and Communications for Computing
& Information Systems. aa
Y-

Salary Range: $27,920 - $45,432. Vy

East Carolina University is an AA/EEO Employer
and encourages applications from qualified women
and minorities. Federal law requires proper documen-
tation of identity and employability at the time of
employment. It is requested this documentation be
included with your application.

oGraduation from a two-year technical school and
four years of experience, or an equivalent combina-
tion of training and experience required.

eae

Commercial
Truck Rentals

MID-SIZE " COMPACT CAR RENTALS
DAILY, WEEKLY OR MONTHLY

Highway 11 South
Winterville, NC

796-3635

Flowers for all occassions - Weddings, Corsages, Funerals, Parties

MARGARET R. KING

198 W. Main Street
Washington, North Carolina 27889

Bus. 946-0086
Night 946-2343

Research Technician II

We have a full-time Research Technician II position
available for Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m.

Requirements: B.S. in biology, chemistry, physics,
medical technology or related area. Previous ex-
perience preferred. Will conduct studies in
biochemical pharmacology. Duties include: isolation
and purification of enzymes, spectrophotometric
analysis of enzyme activity, gel electrophroresis and
blotting, and use of chromatographic techniques.

Salary Range: $18,994 - $30,012.

For more information contact Don Barnes at
551-2747.

East Carolina University is an AA/EEO Employer
and encourages applications from qualified women
and minorities. Federal law requires proper documen-
tation of identity and employability at the time of
employment. It is requested this documentation be
included with your application.

sli: i capeelitt aol 1 Rd oie Ce ie ag ic ange





4

\

oxuveensy. SEPTEMBER 7-WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1989-THE ~M T VOICE

i BREEZE FOR SALE!!

CONVENIENT STORE

800 Fleming St. and Pamlico Avenue

Greenville Ts
P&ZC seeks
thoroughfare

The Greenville Planning and
Zoning Commission will conduct
a public forum on a proposed ci-
ty thoroughfare plan at 7:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, August 15, in the Coun-
cil Chambers of City Hall.

Representatives from the City
and the North Carolina Depart-
ment of Transportation also are
sponsoring an open house in the
Council Chambers from 10:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m., August 15, to
explain the thoroughfare plan in
depth and receive comments
from interested local residents.

#

An E.F. Johnson, repeater 100 Watts out-
put. Has oCall Guard, ? automatic station
identification card, and telephone inter-
face unit. Rated for continuous duty opera-
tion. Frequency UHF 462.025 MHz
transmit and 467.025 MHz receive.
$1200 Negotiable
Call 746-6954 or 757-0365
And Ask For Gene!!!!

Fix All Small Engines and Motorcycles
And Also Kerosene Heaters

Fix Lawnmowers & Small Domestic Tools

Open: Mon.-Sat. 9 am-5 pm
Owner " PeeWee 830-6624

VV ee (Nintendo) Wi whiteWestingnouse SHARP ENITH

7 \e 4a =
WIN eS
AND MORE!

SANSUI

SHARP

CONSOLE
COLOR TV

| eRemote Control

| eCable ready
eSleep timer
eOak cabinet

$439%

Model VLC-77

WASHER & DRYER T

Washer Model A105 Dryer Model DE303

aa MITSUBISHI

XOAVNDUW

eNo 1. in long eNo. 1 preferred

MAGNAVOX

life dryer
CAMCORDER eFewest repairs § *Easy care fabric
* 225 CGD Image Sensor + F x " eLowest service cycles»
Variable Speed oa Macro oN - a costs *Porcelain
se enamel top

lance, ins control date and
clock

$1099.95
100.00 hedate

$999.95

Piw4ou 3534

$469° $3799

(Nintendo)

MAGNAVOX

Model MX9356

337UD 21

STE 4 a O , "_ "__ Model WLW1500
Digital High Fidelity Rack System \ arn \ WASHER
4 4 \ .
* 120 watts RMS power output _ \ * Large capacity washer with 4 cycles; reg-
per channel ° 20-memory CD ules, permanent 9 lea orcarremea ty
player with 120V power supply wash/rinse temperatures * Self-cleaning

¢ CD shuffie play/3 ? CD singie
ready © Digital symthesized
tuning with 18 AM/FM presets
¢ Dual stereo cassette decks

a \
]

~ ~ filter ring

Model #DLB-1550 _

DRYER =

" Heavy-duty dryer with up to 90 mi-
nutes of timed drying * Permanent
press and knits cycle * Up-front lint fil-
ter © Porcelain enamel finish drum « 3
drying selections } 1;
Neg cael
1

$299% ia

HOTPOINT For the tong run.

*90-day refund or exchange option Girect from Hotpoint

Amana

Model R310T

RADARANGE

*Full size
°10 power levels

eSee through window
°600 watts

* High-speed dubbing/con-
tinuous play

$7 99%

wm JENN-AIR

Model CVJ310

~CAMCORDER

e ¥° CCD imager with 250,000
Pixels ¢ Time lapse recording capa-
bility © 2-position high-speed
shutter

*899"

Model RX4240

19 ? Color TV

Remote Control
eCable ready

a

a

EMIT ES

GREENVILLE TV TS
FALL KICKOFF!

eService «Savings ¢Selection

7 o
eS ae

_ ot eg .
yh bi

ov NNSA

~Wagic chet*
Model RB19-1
18.6 Cu. Ft.

REFRIGERATOR

e Reversible doors * Separate dairy
department ¢ Adjustable freezer
shelves

$499°"

©tegetars :4an% Z eRe
(See ~ katt as en Se a= :

@= MITSUBISHI
Mitsubishi is going to
demonstrate at your

house for 30 days.
Here are our conditions.

aan

, MVJENN.AIR |
KITCHEN REBATE

Maker
{) Optional

bela

JENN-AIR

SHARP

REBATES
UP 10 S400 8

Model RC24-3PW

REFRIGERATOR

* Wine chiller rack « Adjustable refrigerator
door shelves « Vari-Temp drawer © Extra deli
drawer * Adjustable shelves « Lift-out egg
» tray
$s

We want you to take home J
: 1 any one of our 40 ? to 60" bic Model RB23-3AW KITCHENS
_ |" screen TV's. Free, for a 30 22.6 CU. FT. COME WITH
i || day trial period. Now, these REFRIGERATOR WITH
,. I THE ONE
mo | rs J are our demands. March
~1 v a "_ "e down here between Sep- ICE & WATER ON THE DOOR FEATURE
f 5 Pe, tember Ist and ~1th Use or = ee ' "door sheives ie ne wataole . cod 3 s o
= c apply for a Mitsubishi Three tempered glass Hise ls $1 049.95 : Pr M = sks fe ia | YOU HAVE
; ?,? peeee DAO oDiamond® Credit Card and ail a aa Di -50.00 rebate Kanye? | THe Mons You boy BEEN
~ a we'll deliver the TV to your _ | Tw Mows Wo Swe
p E wee uu house. If after 30 days $ 95 te a y_Ue 1 +900 WAITING
f i you're not happy, we'll be ts ma ve = = \
& , back. To take it away, sons FOR.
F peacefully :
hy
a

©14 Day/4 Event
*Cable ready
*Wireless remote

7h Th Oe

, «From September | through Novemoer 30, you can

4 Cash rebate of $100 when you buy special

Se@eeee ct ee ee ee ee eee eee
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~ =1 00.00 Rebate

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SSteaanpe
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ISLAM
IN FOCUS

ISLAM IN FOCUS
BY NORIA HALIMAH NAMAZ
IN THE NAME OF ALLAH
THE BENEFICENT
THE MERCIFUL
As Salaam Alaikum, Greetings of

Peace from Masjid AL Nur.

Muhammad was born nearly
six hundred years after Christ.
The Arabs were known for their
beautiful poetry, and great
memories. But they scorned lear-
ning. Few people in Arabia, at the
time of Prophet Muhammad,
could read or write. Neither
Hebrew, nor Christian mis-
sionaries could convert them
from idolatry.

When God missioned Muham-
mad to be His prophet, the very
first word revealed was
oREAD! ? ? Muhammad replied
that he could not read. The com-
mand to oREAD! ? was repeated
again, and again Muhammad
said oI cannot read, I am not
learned ?. Finally at the third
command to ~ o oREAD T TMuham-
mad replied READ WHAT?
Thus, the first five verses of the
Quran were revealed, ~ o ~Read in
the name of thy Lord who creates
" Creates man from a clot, Read
and thy Lord is most Generous,
Who taught by the pen, Taught
man what he knew not. ? Holy
Quran 96: 1-5.

A startled and shakened
Muhammad went to his wife and
repeated to her those same
verses word for word. At that
very moment Jesus prophesy
was fulfilled, o ~HOWBEIT WHEN
HE, THE SPIRIT OF TRUTH, IS
COME, HE WILL GUIDE YOU
INTO ALL TRUTH: FOR HE
SHALL NOT SPEAK OF
HIMSELF; BUT WHAT-
SOEVER HE SHALL HEAR,
THAT SHALL HE SPEAK: AND
HE WILL SHOW YOU THINGS
TO COME. ? John 16:13. Here,
Jesus prophesied that the one
following him would guide us in-
to all truth. Jesus, the seal of pro-
phethood to the Israelites, urged
us to watch for and follow
Muhammad, the seal of pro-
phethood to the world.

In this message Jesus also in-
structs that we shall find the truth
he brought in the words given to
Muhammad. ~ ~He shall glorify
me for he shall receive of mine,
and shall show it unto you. All
things that the Father hath are
mine: therefore said I, that he
shall shew it unto you. ?

With our own eyes we are wat-
ching society unravel. Yet God,
in His infinite wisdom and
knowledge has shown us the way
to stop this destruction, and make
our society, our world whole
again. We choose to turn our
backs on His guidance, and by so
doing we are helping to destroy
ourselves, our children, and
everything good and wonderful in
our world.

In our society religion has
become a status symbol not a
way of life. We use it for social
climbing or as an emotional
outlet for fears, and disappoint-
ments. We no longer seek true
salvation. When we have
spiritual problems, we attempt to
solve them through emotional
ways. Seldom do we apply
reasoning, logic, or common
sense to the spiritual messages
given to us by those who have liv-
ed before us, or. those who are liv-
ing with us now. In our own way
we are very much like the old
Arab, scorning knowledge. The
Quran says of us, ~ ~THESE ARE
THEY WHO HAVE BARTERED
GUIDANCE FOR ERROR: BUT
THEIR FRAFFIC IS PRO-
FITLESS, AND THEY HAVE
LOST TRUE DIRECTION ? Ho-
ly Quran 2:16.

I listen to spiritual gospel
songs, I hear and watch the
preachers speak. And then after-
wards I hear the souls of black
folk crying for relief. All my life
I have heard that cry, as I wat-
ched drugs and disease ravish the
friends of my youth and destroy
our communities. Paying little
heed to our overpowering gospel
music and soul stirring songs. I
wonder why Satan hasn Tt run
away from our preachers hard
and fast lectures. Why haven Tt
the people shouting, fainting, and
speaking in strange tongues kept
him away from their youth, It
seems that the more spiritual
we've become the more settled
and secure Satan has become in
our midst. A wise people would
stop and ask ~ ~What in the world
is going on? ? ~What are we do-
ing wrong? T

Since we've been in this coun-
try, we accepted the ill of goods
just as it was given to us . It
helped for a while but when the
going really got rough it deserted

~us, Many of our foreparents came

here with truth in their hearts.
And a strong desire to keep the
fire of truth alive in the souls of
their children. That truth still
lives, And is ours for the asking.

If you truly loved Jesus, you
would love Muhammad, for the
teachings of Prophet Jesus and
Prophet Muhammad (PBUT)
come together to bridge a

a spiritual gap. By taking the

(Continued on page 9)







|

Dr. Frank Fuller, the Chair-
man of the Board of Directors for
the Council on announces,
after 12 years of service as Ex-
ecutive Director, Jeffrey
McAllister is beginning his retire-

ISLAM
IN FOCUS

_ rejecting the guidance God gave

to-Muhammad (PBUT), we are
allowing ourselves to hang over
a spiritual void In this position we
have stunted our spiritual
growth, and have denied the
world a modern day miracle.

In view of all we Tve been
through, what would be wrong in
checking out Islam. If the Arabs
had denied Muhammad, they
would have denied their bir-
thright. For the God of Abraham
was theirs by descendancy. And
if they had persisted in denial
they would have been left in
idolatry and the world would
have been denied a beautiful gift.
And so my people it is the same
with us.

Many of our slave forefathers
came here with a desire to keep
Islam alive in the hearts of their
children. Slavery denied them
that chance. Now we their
children Ts are denying them that
chance for a few pieces of silver.
Because it is more acceptable to
mimick this society than to try to
understand our own. Brothers
and Sisters, we are walking with
our heads in the wrong direction.
We can Tt see where we Tre going,
and we Tre quickly forgetting
where we caqme from. If you
turn your back on Islam, know
that you are turning your back on
your birthright. You are denying
yourself what is yours, and you
are denying your gift to this
society. For Islam is our gift. God
did not bring us here empty hand-

~ed. With Islam this country has a

chance to become a shining ex-
ample of God Ts love.

SA,

sue ASP a
a ee 2: ia 2
i @
x] ¢ Bi
a Ee F J :
cance ieee 4
ee aaa

LASTING IMPRESSION TS
BOUTIQUE =

105 N. Main St. " Farmville

753-3914

BODY WRAPS
/) * BALDING & THINNING
* HAIR TREATMENT
/ * ARTHRITIS TREATMENT CREAM
* AND ACNE TREATMENT
* AND MUCH MORE

We are certified skin consultant

AUDREY VINES AND KAREN McGUFFIN
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 12-6 " Sat. 9 to 6

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
(For Men, Women, Teen-agers)

ment phase and has moved to the
position of Administrative Assis-
tant and the Board has appointed
Vina Hassell as the new Ex-
ecutive Director. Mrs. Hassell
has worked with the Council for
several years, and is originally
from Martin County. She attend-
ed Pitt Community College where
she earned a Degree in Mental
Health and East Carolina Univer-
sity where she majored in Social
Work.

Vina states that she is honored
by the promotion and the
challenges of her new position is
exciting. Working with Jeff, she
says, has made her aware of the
hard work it took to develop the
council from it Ts beginning to a,
Senior Center, A Chore Program,
Four Nutrition Sites and Home
Delivered Mealsserving approx-
imately 400 meals per day
throughout the county. She
states, o ~I am also committed to
service that will meet the chang-
ing needs of people who are 60+
in our community. Iam commit-
ted to continued development of
programs like these that brought
the Council on Aging to the atten-
tion of the Governor who
designated the Council on Aging
as the FOCAL POIINT ON AG-
ING for Pitt County. I know I will
need the support of all citizens in
Pitt County in order to do this. I
am looking forward to continuing
work with agencies and the peo-
ple in our county who also have
concerns in this area. The service
we give at the Council on Aging
benefits the entire community.
New programs will include a
after school enrichment program
for children at the Senior Center,
and I do ask that people Re-Visit
the Senior Center, we are plann-
ing activities that may be just
what you have been waiting for. ?

Who is poor?

Who is poor in North Carolina?
More of the people who are poor
are white than black, although a
higher percentage of blacks are
living in poverty.

NE \

\

Courses is the same as Resident of North Carolina.

except Adult Driver T

College
Fall Quarter 1989
FOR HELP DIAL 355-4388

Crowd Pleasing Classes
NON-CREDIT COURSES

REGISTRATION INFORMATION
STUDENTS WILL REGISTER FOR NON-CREDIT COURS

There is a small Registration Fee for all non-credit c
there is no cost. There is no charge for Senior Citi
Adult Driver Ts Training. (High School students sixt
ate public school official in any course(s)

courses with the exception of Adult Basic Education and Adult High School

zens 65 or older. A special fee of $50.00 is concged to adult students enrol
een years of age or older are permitted to enroll written

8 Training.) Tuition for a Non-Resident of North Carolina for Ne

Course Title Cost Hours Begins Time Day(s) Room
COURSE TITLE COST HOURS BEGINS TIME DAY(S) SITE
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 66 9/6 §=6. 8:50 M&W = SGRD
11:50
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 96 8686912 M&W MHA
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 9/6 7-10pm M&W Campus
14
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 916 12:30 MWF OAHS
2:30pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 95 912 TTH MHA
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 917 7-10pm MTH Campus
T-14
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 9/13 7-10pm MW BES
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 9113 6:30 MW PES
9:30pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 914 = 6:30 3S TTH) «= GRW-S
, , 9:30pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 9/5 6:30 TTH OAHS
9:30pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 9126 6:30 TTH CES
9:30pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 9/25 7-10pm MW SGRD
ADULT DRIVER TRAINING 50.00 60 10/2 7-10pm MW Campus
6:30- T-16
ART: CALLIGRAPHY 25.00 30 9113 9:30pm 9 W ~GRO
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH | 25.00 30 9/13 7 W Campus
9:30pm
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH II 25.00 30 913 7 W Campus
9:30pm
ENGLISH FOR FOREIGN BORN NONE 60 9/19 7-10pm TTH Campus
ENGLISH AS SECOND LANGUAGE NONE 60 9/11 7-10pm MW Campus

CES - Chicod Elementary Schoo!

GRW-S - G.R. Whitfield School In Grimesland
PES - Pactolus Elementary School

BES - Bethel Elementary School

OAHS - Old Ayden High School

M- Mo Housing Authority

SGRD - South Greenville Recreation Department

GRD "Greenville Recreation Dept.

"= "= "=NON-CREDIT COURSES CAMPUS AREA

COURSE TITLE COST HOURS BEGINS TIME DAY(S) ROOM
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 69 9/5 7-10pm TTH T1161
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 70 916 =67-10pm MW 14-1
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 102 9/6 912° MWF 114-1
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 72 8/29 7-10pm TTH 114-1
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 66 5 912 TTH Ti41
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE TBA 91 Cam = F E-150
5pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 72 9 §=612:30 MWR 141
2:30pm
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE TBA 9/5 Sam M-TH ?,?E-150
- | 9:30pm
ADULT HIGH SCHOOL NONE TBA 9 Sam "s "s*#F E-150
5pm
ADULT HIGH SCHOOL NONE TBA 9/5 eaoon MTH E-150
CAKE DECORATING 25.00 30 912 7-10pm T 123
CHORE SERVICE PROVIDER 15.00 48 911 -7-10pm MW T2t-1
CPRIFIRST AID 15.00 8 9/11 7-1ipm MAW T17-1
CREATIVE WRITING 25.00 36 9/27 7-10pm W VW-10
EMT REFRESHER 15.00 33 114 7-10pm MW W-221
EMT-BASIC 15.00 124 81 7-10pm TTH W-221
AID/CPR 15.00 8 O11 =7-tipm MT TI?-1
GED PREPARATION NONE TBA 95 8am MTH ?,?E-150
9:30pm
GED PREPARATION NONE TBA 1 Bam =F E-150
5pm
INTERIOR DECORATING 25.00 30 9/11 7-10pm M VW-07
NOTARY PUBLIC EDUCATION 15.00 4 8/3 610pm TH VW-07
1.00 4 97 &10pm TH VW-07
15.00 4 10 ?,?10pm TH VW-07
15.00 4 11/2 610pm TH VW-07
25.00- 36 912 7-10pm T W-201
25.00 36 9111 7-10pm M W-201
25.00 36 913 7-10pm W W-201
24 912 7:40pm T VW4O7
24 17 =7-10pm = "T VW-07
7 3 gem TH E145
4:30pm
7 10 Sam TH E145
, 4:30pm
4 114 Sem SAT ?,?E-145
tpm
25.00 30 1018 7-0pm W VW-23
16.00 24 O13 7-10pm W VW-07
15.00 24 118 7-10pm W VW-07

Look For NEW Classes

AT THE FIRST CLASS MEETING

approval from the

oe"
Course Title Cost Hours Begins Time Day(s) Room
ART: WATERCOLOR PAINTING 25.00 36 913 Sam =O GRD
12noon
BASKET MAKING 25.00 36 911 6:30) M GRD
9:30pm
BOSE PROGRAM . NONE 1 719 =7-Bem W RAMADA
EFFECTIVE TEACHER TRAINING 15.00 30 87 = «8:30 MF SO OG-Mid-S
3:30pm
MENTOR TRAINING 15.00 24 7H8 = "8:380 TF 2S G-Mid-S
3:30pm
PAINTING PECAN RESIN FIGURES 25.00 30 913 14pm W GRD
PAINTING PECAN RESIN FIGURES 25.00 30 913 6:30 W GRD
9:30pm
POTTERY 25.00 36 9/11 7-10pm RHS
PRENATAL EDUCATION NONE 3 8/3 7-10pm TH PCHD
PRENATAL EDUCATION NONE 3 9/7 7-10pm TH PCHD
PRENATAL EDUCATION NONE 3 10/5 7-10pm TH PCHD
PRENATAL EDUCATION NONE 3 11/2 7-10pm TH PCHD
SEWING 25.00 48 91 Sam = M SGRD
1:30pm
SEWING 25.00 48 912 Sam T SGRD
1:30pm
SEWING 25.00 48 914 «Sam TH SGRD
1:30pm
STAINED GLASS 25.00 36 912 «6:30 06=COT GRD
9:30pm
T-SHIRTISWEAT SHIRT PAINTING 25.00 30 oi 866:30060 "COM GRD
9:30pm
T-SHIRTISWEAT SHIRT PAINTING 25.00 30 91 14pm MM GRO_
MENT TRAINING _ 15.00 24 8 7N8 8:30 TF GMS |
3:30pm .
MENT TRAINING 15.00 24 88 88:30 )«= "«TF TBA
3:30pm
WEAVING 25.00 36 Of11 9:00em- M GRO
2:30pm ;
WEAVING 25.00 36 9113 9:00am- GRD
2:30pm

SGRD - South Greenville Recreation Dept.
GRD - Greenville Recreation Dept.

PCHD - Pitt County Health Department
WMS - Wellcome Middle Schoo!

RHS - Rose High School
RAMADA - Greenville

G-Mid-S - Greenville Middie Schoo!

eum NON-CREDIT COURSES AYDEN AREA ===

2 ee es ee ee

COURSE TITLE COST HOURS BEGINS TIME DAY(S) SITE
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 70 8/28 9:30am MWF OAHS
2:30pm ni:
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 72 916 9%30am MF OAHS
12:30pm
Ai. BASIC EDUCATION NONE 66 8/29 6:30 TH (OAHS |
9:30pm
ART: DRAWING 25.00 30 91 «6:3 M "COANS |
9:30pm :
ART: PAINTING 25.00 30 93 C2 W OAKS
ART: WOODCARVING 25.00 30 92 63 T OAKS
FALL LANDSCAPING 25.00 30 914 6:30 TH OAHS
FLOWER ARRANGING 2500 24 Ono 630 T OAHS
9:30pm
FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY 25.00 60 ©6918-6380 MAW OAKS
SEWING 25.00 30 918 ?,?30 M OAHS.
11:30am i
SEWING 25.00 30 9120 630 W OAKS
11:30am :

OAHS - Old Ayden High Schoo!

,
bie.

=== NON-CREDIT COURSES BELVOIR AREA

COURSE TITLE COST HOURS BEGINS TIME DAY(S) SITE
ADULT HIGH SCHOOLIGED PREP. NONE 66 9/19 6:30 TTH Belvo,
Belvoir ES - Belvoir Elementary Schoo!

a=m== NON-CREDIT COURSES FOUNTAIN AREA===m

COURSE TITLE COST HOURS BEGINS TIME DA
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60 918 6:30 ww

FNTN CB - Fountain Community Bullding
=== NON-CREDIT COURSES FARMVILLE ARE

COURSE TITLE COST HOURS BEGINS TIME DA
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 6% 695 7.
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION NONE 60







m
f ~a

on in highway contract at its
eting Sept. 1 in Wilmington .
3.3 miles of the US-1 Henderson
3ypass to four lanes, to build 3.6
miles of Interstate 40 bypassing
Winston-Salem, to build 3.4 miles
of US-321 in Lincoln County, to
improve 8.8 miles of NC-24/NC-27
near Albemarle in Stanly County
and to replace bridges in Wake,
Hertford and Sampson counties.

_ In all, the board will consider _

AMERICAN CREDIT COMPANY
AT 3005 S. MEMORIAL DR.
GREENVILLE, NC 27834
A.- MANAGER

eager awarding i$

Kcacot comanyy
See Us Today For

New Hanover, Dare, Stanly,
Polk, Onslow, Durham, Gaston,
Pitt, Chatham, Moore, Randolph,
Richmond, Scotland, Carteret,
Craven, Pamlico, Beaufort, An-
son, Cabarrus, Mecklenburg,
Union, Cumberland, Brunswick
and Pender counties. The
board will meet at 10 a.m. in the
Coast Line Convention Center on
Nutt Street. On Thursday, Aug.

31, board committees will meetin _

Center. Those mee
at8:30a.m. Members

the N.C. Board of Transportation

are Philip P. Godwin of

Gatesville, Randy D. Doub of |
Greenville, Tommy Pollard of "

Jacksonville, John E. oJack ?

Bishop of Rocky Mount, Elwood

Goodson of Mount Olive, James
M. Peden of Raleigh, Nancy
Rand of Durham, H. Terry Hut-
chens of Fayetteville, Albert 0.
McCauley of Fayetteville, W.B.
Buchanan of Graham, Richard
K. Pugh of Asheboro, Herman G.
Thompson of Southern Pines,
Charles M. Shelton of King, Sed-
don ~ ~Rusty T T Goode of Charlotte,
James E. Nance of Albermarle,
Dr. Moses A. Ray of Tarboro, C.
Richard Vaughn of Mount Airy,
Brent B. Kincaid of Lenoir, H.
Dean Proctor of Hickory, Ken

~ Younger of Cherryville, Bruce B. ,

Briggs of Mars Hill, James P.
Myers Sr. of Bryson City and
John Hutchens of High Point.

SHOWN ABOVE IS THE BOYD FAMILY POSING FOR OUR CAMERA AT THEIR

LY REUNION HELD RECENTLY. THE OLDEST MEMBER IS DAVID BOYD, 82.

a a |

Staff Nurse

We have a part-time Staff Nurse position available
with hours varying.

Requirements: Registered Nurses needed to work
supplemental hours in Student Health Service Out-
patient Clinic. Hours preferred 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
weekdays, 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekends. Will con-
sider supplemental day hours. Application should
have at least one year experience and be registered
in the State of North Carolina.

Salary Range: $10.81 hour to $17.35 hour, Yo

CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES

PART-TIME
School Crossing Guard

SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD: To work at
designated school crossings in Greenville. Applicants
must get along well with children, provide own
transportation to work site, and be willing to work
under varying weather conditions. Hours are from
7:30 to 8:30 a.m. and from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. on
scheduled school days during the school year only.

\
For more information contact Jolene on at
757-6841.

East Carolina University is an AA/EEO Employer
and encourages applications from qualified women
and minorities. Federal law requires proper documen-
tation of identity and employability at the time of
employment. It is requested this documentation be
included with your application.

Lien

Salary: $4.45/hour.

EOE/AA M/F/H

Apply to City of Greenville, Personnel Department,
Post Office Box 7207, 201 West 5th Street, Green-
ville, North Carolina 27835-7207.

fUL
U\

Two Credit Cards,

One Low

That's The

C.

FAMI-

Public Health Educator II

We have a full-time Public Health Educator II posi-
tion available from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Mon-
day through Friday.

Requirements: Needed to provide technical
assistance and consultation to multiple community
health and human service agencies /organizations;
develop and conduct training program on various
health and related topics; assist in design and con-
duct of community research assist in the development
of grant applications. Requires a Master Ts Degree and
educational training in health education or related
field: or a Bachelor in health educational and two
to three years of experience; excellent writing and
presentation skills; preferable work experience in
rural settings. Relevant experience and education will
both be considered. OC

" "-
Salary Range: $21,56¢ - $59 540.

For more information contact Walter L. Shepherd at
551-2785.

East Carolina University is an AA/EEO Employer
and encourages applications from qualified women
and minorities. Federal law requires proper documen-
tation of identity and employability at the time of
employment. It is requested this documentation be

included with your application.
ion nA UE

EVERYTHING MUST GO!!
1/2 PRICE SALE BEGINS FRIDAY
SEPTEMBER 8TH " 10:00 A.M.

EVERY SINGLE ITEM
IN OUR
ENTIRE STOCK

| DON'T DELAY! ACT NOW!!

@ CARDS
@ FLOWERS


Title
The Minority Voice, September 7-13, 1989
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
September 07, 1989 - September 13, 1989
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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