Citation
Florida star

Material Information

Title:
Florida star
Uniform Title:
Florida star (Jacksonville, Fla.)
Alternate Title:
Florida star news
Creator:
McLaughlin-Leath, Clara ( owner )
Place of Publication:
Jacksonville, FL
Publisher:
Florida Star Pub. Co.
Clara McLaughlin-Leath
Publication Date:
Frequency:
Weekly
regular
Language:
English
Physical Description:
v. : ill. ; 58 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
African American newspapers -- Florida ( lcsh )
African Americans -- Newspapers -- Florida ( lcsh )
Newspapers -- Jacksonville (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Newspapers -- Duval County (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Genre:
newspaper ( sobekcm )
newspaper ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Florida -- Duval -- Jacksonville
Coordinates:
30.31944 x -81.66 ( Place of Publication )

Notes

Additional Physical Form:
Also available on microfilm from the University of Florida.
Dates or Sequential Designation:
Vol. 12, no. 13 [i.e. 39] (Jan. 6, 1962)-
General Note:
"Florida's statewide black weekly."
General Note:
Publisher: Eric O. Simpson, Feb. 14, 1981- .
Funding:
This project was funded under the provisions of the DLIS Florida American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Florida's DLIS Florida ARPA program is administered by the Department of State's Division of Library and Information Services.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact Digital Services (UFDC@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
022797756 ( ALEPH )
02261130 ( OCLC )
ADA9536 ( NOTIS )
sn 83045218 ( LCCN )
0740-798X ( ISSN )

Related Items

Preceded by:
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Full Text
brary of Fla. History
lniverior. of Fl. Ro
{Gainesville Fla. 32611

-. Don't Rely On Government NUL Boss Tells Blacks mi

BE AARAARMARARAAR CASAS EARS ASS

:FJC TEACHER FREED:YOUNG MOTHER HELD:
UNDER $5,000 BOND { IN BABY'S DEATH

Ealiotoiotoi i ob bteioboboetobodoetotetododololieiodollolololiots : ie o* . by v

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ir

MANNY

Prominent Jax Woman
Facing Murder Trail

In far away Providence, R.l. ajury
was deliberating the guilt or
innocence of socially prominent
Claus: von Bulow charged with
twice attempting to murder his
multimillionaire wife while, about
the same time, in Jacksonville, a
Florida Junior College professor
and member of a well known
family was being held for the
alleged shooting of herhusband...
proving only one thing: Calamity
knows no barriers.

Rachael Hampton Malloy, 54,
was taken into custody last
Sunday morning, June 9 in
connection with the shooting of
her husband, Roy Lee Malloy, 58,
in their home at 6104 Japonica Rd.

Officer E.W. Mullis reported that
he was dispatched to investigate a
shooting at the Japonica Rd.
address about 3:30 a.m.

According to the police report,
the couple began arguing when
Malloy returned home and Mrs.
Malloy accused him of being out
with another woman.

The report stated that the victim
(Roy Malloy) hit the suspect in her
head with his fist, whereupon, Mrs.
Malloy ran to the bedroom and got
a .32 revolver from the nightstand
and shot her husband once.

Malloy was rushed to University
[Hospital for treatment of a
gunshot wound in the chest, but
he died three hours later.

Like all cases involving
prominent people the incident has

pi i He ig

SCLC Concerned
About CBS
Purchase Move

ATLANTA--The president ‘of the
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference says he's been
assured by Ted Turner, that if he
acquires the CBS network that the
broadcast tycoon would not be
controlled ‘by Senator Jesse
Helms or anyone elise.

After meeting with Turner
recently, SCLC. President Joseph
E. Lowery said, "| believe him
when he says that if he purchases
CBS, that he will operate it
independently from right wing
interest groups.”

Lowery had sent Turner a
mailgram asking that Turner
clarify what role, if any,
conservative North Carolina
Senator Jesse Helms and the
Fairness in Media (FIM) group
would have if Turner acquired the
network. Helms and supporters of
FIM have expressed an interest in
buying CBS because of what they
say is the network's liberal news
policy.

However, Turner said in a letterto
Lowery that "TBS is acting entirely
on its own in attempting to acquire
CBS, Inc. and has no past or
present agreement or under-
standing with any outside group,
including FIM regarding this
transaction.”

Turner went further saying "TBS’
efforts have been undertaken
exclusively to meet its indepen-
dent business objectives” and is
acting "entirely independent of
FIM or any other politically
motivated group.”

Lowery, who heads the Atlanta-
based civil rights organization’
once headed by Dr. Martin Luther
King, says Turner's personality
won't let him te controlled by

special interest. "While Turner
often shoots from the lip, he has

convinced me he will not be a
puppet for Helms or anyone else,”
Lowery said.

Some have tried to discredit
Turner among Blacks and
minorities by accusing him of
being racist. Lowery says Turner
"ig probably no more racist than
the top officials running any of the
other networks. Turner Broad-
casting has probably shown more
sensitivity and fairness in placing
Blacks in positions of authority
and in reporting Black news and
issues of concern of Black
Americans,” said Lowery.

However, the civil rights leader
does not give any of the networks
_high grades when it comes to
sensitivity to Black issues. "All the

major networks have been found

wanting, including Turner's when
weighed
sensitivity to the Black perpective
on the news and adequacy of
coverage. of Black events," id said

p18 at “CBS, Inc. have

publically rejected Turner's offer

they're not interested

~ and ind
in. selling the network and woul

fight any’ ‘efforts to take it

A
if

on the scales of

generated a magnitude of interest,
sprinkled with speculation,
conjecture and plain old gossip.
In addition to her career as an
instructor at FJC, Mrs. Malloy is
well known in political circles
because of her involvement in
politics with her politically
prominent brother, former City
Councilman and businessman
Frank Hampton.

Mrs. Malloy was released.
Tuesday under $5,000 bond.
The family has not released any
information regarding funeral
services for the deceased. The
Florida Star will not be able to
furnish any information whatever.

Blacks Told
To Do More
For Themselves

FORT LAUDERDALE (PAVE)---
The federal government is no
longer “benevolent” so Blacks will
have to become unified for

economic survival, says National
Urban League President John,
Jacob.

wi growth rates 10 moderately highly §
“fertility among Blacks,

Speaking during the’ 10th
anniversary celebration of the
Broward County Urban League
last Thursday, Jacob said that
gains were made by Blacks in the
1960s and 1970s, but Blacks
"have been sliding backward
ever since.” :

"The Black community is going
to have to do more for itself. We
cannot wait for the government to
do it any longer, because this
government is no longer
benevolent,” Jacob said.

The league president had lots of
praise for city officials here who
have snubbed U.S. Justice
Department attempts to dismantle
affirmative action plans put in
place during the Carter
administration. Quotas and goals
for hiring minorities here and in
Pinellas County are among 51
nationwide that the Justice
Department seeks to abolish.
through court action.

"In-many of these communities,
people are saying no to the Justice
Department gunslingers who're
trying to reverse the positive
developments,” added Jacob.

He said a "legal solution is not the
resolution.” That's why: he's
suggesting that Blacks become
‘unified and private enterprise be
encouraged to join. the move
toward getting Blacks into ‘the
“mainstream as equals -- not
dependents.”

The Urban League, has some 113
affiliates across the country,
Jacob said and each is working on
trying to solve some of the social
ills plaguing Blacks including
crime and Black teenage
pregnancy.

Florida affiliates in six cities are
involved in the Black on Black
crime awareness program that is
being used as a model for other
cities. The state helps finance the
program in Miami, Jacksonville,
Tampa, St. Petersburg, Tal-
lahassee and Orlando.

Jacob said teenage Black girls
are the focus of programs aimed at
reducing the high rate of
pregnancy. In 1980, Black
teenagers became mothers to 57
percent of babies born to those 17
years and under.

"Black male teenagers make up a
significant part of that equation,”
Jacob said.

"We're telling them Don't make a
baby if you can't be a father.”

South African
Violence

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa-

Police said they shot and killed

three black men who were in a
crowd attacking the home of a
black police officer near Port. ;

Elizabeth,
Police said the three

ft
AY

BE A a

- and sex

ony were
killed in an gtack at Zwide. a

—————

—— Ea i a a

7)

Sa

MA

STAR

“FLORIDA'S STATEWIDE BLACK WEEKLY” JUN 2 4 1989

VOL.35 NO. 8

FANON NNN NHN
EE SS a 220s ses esesssssssssssss

SATURDAY, JUNE 15-21, 1985

30 CENTS
PETES SEE

Govenor Signs Minority Bill

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The
nation’s Black population grew: at
twice the rate of Whites between
1980 and 1984, according to a
report from the Commerce
Department's Census Bureau.

The bureau’s latest annual
population estimates by age, race,
indicate that Blacks
totaled 28.6 million in July 1984--
up 1.8 million or 6.7 percent over
the 1980 census count.

The White population rose from
195.1 million to 201.4 million, up
3.2 percent. The total U.S.
population was 236.7 million

(including the armed forces
overseas), up 9.6 million or 4.2
percent.

Census Bureau analyst Louisa
Miller attributes the difference in_

who:
increased their share of the
population from 11.8 percent in
1980 to 12.1 percent in 1984.
The Black population's median
age rose from 24.8 in 1980 to 26.3
years in 1984. (Median age means
half the population is older and
half is younger than the stated
figures.) The 1984 median for
Whites was 32.2 years, compared
to 30.9 in 1980. :

Here are other findings from the
report:

eThe fast growing Black
population groups in 1980-84 were

Bill Will Assist
Minorities In

Getting Contracts

TALLAHASSEE -- The minority
business assistance bill is now law
following its signing by Gov. Bob
Graham last week. |

The signed bill provides minority
business with a chance to get low-
interest loans and makes it easier
for small and minority owned firms
to get state contracts. wl

A compromise $14.3 billion
budget bill and a $200" million
public school construction bill is
pending the approval of the
governor.

The $14.3 billion appropriations
bill would fund the state
government and public school
construction bill would fund new
construction at schools for the
state's 67 local school districts.

State Puts 2.5
Million Into Black
Endownment Fund

TALAHASSEE (PAVE)---With a
$2.5 million appropriation, the
Legislature has taken the initial
step in a joint project to create for
the first time an endownment fund
for Black scholars.

Two years ago, the McKnight
Foundation of Minneapolis
challenged the state to put up $5
million which’ the foundation

promised to match so that a $10.

million fund would be established
for Blacks doctoral candidates

and others. seeking university

faculty positions and for programs
designed to expand the ranks of
college-educated Blacks.

“This yh an : Historie ‘occasion,”

those age 85 and over (26.9
percent), 35 to 44 (18.1 percent),
and 25 to 34 (17.7 percent).

- eThe only Black population group

experiencing a decline was those
age 14 to 17--down from 24
million to 2.2 million.

~ oThe Black median age has

increased each year since 1967,
when it was 22.1 years, and the
trend is expected to continue as
the baby boom generation
8pproacnss! middle age. The Black

NON NN NIM NNO XN XO NOON XR XO XN XXX

Black Growth Rate Has Doubled
That Of Whites Since 1980

female median age in 1984 was
27.6 compared with 24.9 years for
males.

eBlack females outnumbered
Black males by 1.4 million in 1984-
-15.0 million to 13.6 million. Males
outnumbered females only
through age 17, reflecting more
male births. Among Blacks age 65
and over, women outnumbered
men by almost half a million
(464,000) because females live
longer.

A Changing of The Guard

"Incoming president, Dr. Frederick S. Humphries accepts the keys to the
presidential’ suite from outgoing president, Dr. Walter L.

Smith, as he

.assumed the position as Florida A&M University’s Eight President.

(PHOTO BY KEITH L. POPE)

News Briefs

During 1984, the number of black

elected officials at all levels of
government rose by 356 and
reached 6,056 by the start of the
present year, with 85 percent of
the increase coming from the
South, said officials from the Joint
Center for Political Studies.
The study shows despite gains,
the blacks still hold only 1.2
percent of the 490,800 elective
offices in the country. Black
elected officials continue to be
concerntrated in black majority
districts and generally depend on
the black electorate for victory.

Of the 6.056 black elected
officials:

*2,189 hold posts as members of
city councils “or similar city
governing bodies.

'*1,368 are black elected board
members.

*534 have positions as County
Board members.

*20° members of Congress, 90
black elected state senators and
302 black elected state
representatives.

*286 black elected mayors.

*8 black elected judges in the
highest courts and 359 judges in
other courts.

*There were also 230 elected
magistrates, justices of the peace
and constables; 37 elected police
chiefs, sheriffs and marshals; and

26 lesser elected judicial officials. -

GOLDEN "BEACH,

Wednesday at a detention center

~ after their boat drifted ashore on
Golden |

iden Beach.
The aliens, II from Bangladesh
and two from SriLanka, left the

la~Thirteen
illegal aliens, most from’
Bangladesh, were being held last

By in the Bahamas 5

NAACP Monitors Black Hiring
And Buying At Wal-Mart

: (PAVE)--NAACP chapters in the
southeast have been requested to
collect information on employ-
ment profiles and customer flow in
Wal-mart stores in their
communities.

That's all in a bid by the civil
rights organization to find out the
extent to which minorities are
employed by the retail chain and
how much patronage Wal-mart
gets from Blacks, according to
NAACP southeast director Earl
Shinhoster.

Representatives from the NAACP
regional office in Atlanta met a top
store official in Bentonville, Ark.
last May 22 and Shinhoster
characterized the meeting as "a
start in the process to get the chain
into a fair share agreement.”

"We were disappointed that we
didn't have access to real hard
information” on how many
minorities are employed by the
company and what opportunities
there are for Black contractors and
suppliers to do business with Wal-
mart, he said.

Wal-mart operates 28 stores in
Florida among 753 in the South.
Sam's Wholesale Club here is also
run by the retail chain.

Company officials were
unavailable Friday for comment
on the NAACP move because of a
stockholders’ ingr, secretary

"Our A aIS roar.

to hire the best qualified people”

‘The NAACP's fair share prograt
encourages | businesses to em

|

Institution women's unit on a

(2% hed

Mother, 19
Held On
$75,000 Bond

Nineteen-year-old Vonda L.
Anderson, charged with the death
of her one-month-old daughter,
Rhonda, is being held at
Jacksonville Correctional

$75,002.00. bond.
The Baldwin resident was
arrested Monday, June 10, five
‘days after she told police she
"dropped her baby” Wednesday,
June 10, and “the child hit her
head on a bed.”
The medical examnier listed the
child's death as "homicide"
because of blow to’ the head.

Ms. Anderson said she "knew the
child was hurt but was afraid to say
anything about it

The suspect is presently under
investigation for the abuse of other
children, police said.

She is scheduled to return before
the judge, Thursday June 27.

Rev. Eugene Pryor
Dead At 51

REV. EUGENE PRYOR

Founder of Epiphany Baptist
Church and ex-pastor of Shiloh
Metropolitan Baptist Church, Rev.
Eugene Pryor, died Monday, June
10 at age 51. Funeral Rites were
held Thursday, June 13, at
Epiphany Baptist Church, where
he served as the pastor.

+ Rev’ Pryor "served -as pastor of:
‘Shiloh Baptist Church until he
resigned his post in October of
1984 following four years of
turmoil and opposition from some
of its members. -

He was a graduate of Luther Rice
‘Seminary, member of the Baptist
Ministerial Alliance, the
Interdenominational Ministerial
Alliance, and a Mason.

Rev. Pryor entered the Baptist-
ministry in 1972 after he retired
from the Marine Corps, for which
he served as a drill instructor.

Survivors include his wife, Sylvia
M. Pryor; a daughter, Deidre
Whitfield; and a son, the Rev.
Kevin Pryor, all of Jacksonville; his
mother, Lettie Pryor, of East St.
Louis, lll; two brothers, David
Pryor and Robert Pryor, both of
Jax; two sisters, Mabel Hill of East-
St. Louis and Nellie Malone of
Louisville Ky., and a grand-
daughter.

minorities and expand the
chances for goods and services
contracts with minority-owned
firms.
Shinhoster said that the Wal-mart
store managers apparently have
‘much control over who's hired and
who gets an opportunity to do
business with individual stores.
He said the surveys that are being
done by local NAACP chapters is
"to find out if employment at local
stores reflect the racial makeup of
the community.”
"The line of communication is
still open with Wal-mart,” he said.
Another meeting with company
officials will be sought in two.
months Shinhoster said, when
local NAACP chapters would've
completed their surveys of how
much shdpping is done by Blacks
at Wal-mart stores and how many
Blacks work .for the stores.

South African |
Mine Accident
Leaves 8 Dead

JOHANNESBURG South Afri
can - - Last Fricay. a wall at foek

Wal-mart’s director of public pers
ollie i Von Gra Nas nee ¢



PAGE 2

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

"THE FLORIDA STAR
"THE PEOPLE'S PAPER"

ERIC O. SIMPSON
Editor & Publisher

Liz Billingslea.....Subscription & Classifieds
Ronald News Editor

2616 Myrtle Ave. near 16th St.
PHONE- (904) 354-8880
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA 32209
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

One year--$16.00 - Half year--$9.00. Mailed to you
anywhere in the United States. Subscription
payable in advance.

Send your Money Order To:
FLORIDA STAR P.O. BOX 40629
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA 32203

py oo

TO BE EQUAL By John E. Jacob

Save The Children

America, the world’s richest nation, tolerates a situation in which a
significant portion of its children grow up in deep poverty. Recent
Congressional studies report that 22 percent of all children -- more than
one out of five -- live in poor families. What's more, that shocking figure
has climbed steadily. Back in 1969 less than fourteen percent of U.S.
children were poor, a significant reducion from earlier figures. Since
then, the total number of children decreased by 9 million while the total
of poor children increased by 3 million. :

As in all aspects of poverty, the effect is heaviest in the black
community. Nearly half of all black childen are poor. But child poverty in

. America is not solely a “black” problem -- not by a long shot. Two out of

three poor children are white. And poverty in female-headed households
with children also cuts across racial lines. Almost half of all white
children in female-headed households are poor, while over two-thirds of
black and Hispanic children in such homes are poor. And today's poor
families are a lot poorer than their counterparts were in the late 1960s.
Then, the typical poor family had about 90 percent of the income they
needed to meet the basics -- food, shelter, and utilities. Today's average
poor family has only about sixty percent of the income needed for
survival.

Over two million of the nearly fourteen million poor children live in
families with a full-time wage earner. And the biggest increase in poverty
has been among two-parent families. The working poor has been
whipsawed by rising taxes, federal cuts and low wages in the industries
in which they are concentrated -- and their children suffer most. In the
context of the expanding poverty among children, it is unconscionable
to make more cuts in the programs that sustain them. Such cuts have fed
the widening. pool of poverty as the poor have found themselves
removed from the rolls of survival programs and impacted by lower real
benefits as payments lag far behind inflation. Between 1976 and 1983,
cash and food stamp benefits per poor child have decreased in
purchasing power by about $300.

For all the propaganda about less government, Americans have to face
the fact that without new federal initiatives to help children break the
bonds of poverty and want, they consign a significant podion of future
generations to lives of hopelessness. We are wasting the’ potential
contributions of over-a fifth of the ‘people we will need to run the
computers ‘and design the systems of a changing economy. Realizing
that, the nation needs to make a major effort to ensure that all of its
children get a decent start in life. One major step would be to establish
minimum national benefit standards indexed to inflation. Another would
be to ‘provide work and training opportunities for the poor, to reduce
dependence on social programs and to increase the incomes of poor
families.

Still another would be to exempt the poor from federal and state income
taxes that drive many of the near-poor into poverty and lock the working

. poor into deeper hardship. In addition, there is urgent need for support

-~ cluttered with gobbledygook and loopholes designed for those with the

for programs that reduce the incidence of teenage pregnancy. The
poverty rate for children in families headed by women under 30 who have
not completed high school is an astonishing 93 percent. With the futures
of some fourteen million children at stake, we must act with a sense of
urgency.

A i Y.-S I... Ee
CAPITAL BEAT BY WILLIAM CLAY .

‘Reagan's Tax Reform Plan Isn't Fair

On May 28 President Reagan presented his tax reform proposal to the
country. Characterizing the present system as "complicated, unfair,

power and influence to hire highpriced legal and tax advisors,” Reagan
stated that “in both spirit and substance, our tax system has come to be
un-American”. Considering that it was Reagan's own changes in the tax
code enacted in 1981 that more than anything else shifted tax burdens to
the poor and middle class while granting huge breaks to corporations
and the rich, this is a remarkable admission. It is also true. Our tax system
is unduly complicated, allowing those who benefit most to avoid paying
their fair share while unfairly burdening the majority of American
workers and their families. Our tax system is in desperate need to reform.

In his May 28th address President Reagan asked the American people
to work together to “change the tax code to make it fairer”. The President
stated that the tax system “must promote opportunity, lift up the weak,
strengthen the family, and perhaps most importantly, it must be rooted in
that unique: American quality, our special commitment to fairness".
Unfortunately, in his tax policy as in his civil right policy, President
Reagan's commitment to fairness is indeed special. Only in comparison
to our present abysmal system does the President's proposal meet those
objectives. = :

Despite its complicated structure, the problem with the present tax
code is easily recognizable and simply stated. First, because of the
tremendous number of loopholes and exemptions that have been
created to encourage certain types of economic activity, corporations
and the wealthy are able to avoid taxes leaving American workers, the
poor and middle class, unfairly burdened. Second, primarily as a result
of additional loopholes and exemptions created for corporations and the
rich in 1981, our present tax system does not generate sufficent revenue
and is creating a gargantuan deficit that threatens not only our own
future but our children’s future.

The President's proposal would moderately increase taxes paid by
businesses, but provides tremendous reductions for the rich. The plan
reduces taxes on some of the poor, but as a result of eliminating state
and local tax deductions, taxing health insurance and many benefit
payments including unemployment and workers’ compensation
payme

ts, reinstating the marriage

deductions Reagan unfortunately leaves the primary
rely it has always been, on the backs of the
rs; If Congress is going to take the time and energy to
rm, let’ sure that the result on reform is to lift the
rice ers. Finally, rather than reducing the
an would increase the deficit by as

years.

By his actions he has made the’

ibility than it would otherwise
would be very difficult, though
ngs worse. If, however, our
Fi who benefit most in our
‘the

Pu

penalty, and limiting the ability to"

t requires all Americans to
Congress much to do.

« wr —

yg

~~ Save Our
¢ Children

__)

ARIES
BORN MARCH
21st-APRIL 19th

It costs too much! The emphasis at

the start of this week is on
communication. You feel like
being out and around in’ your
neighborhood, so a project that
calls for lots of short jaunts will be
right up your alley on the 18th. A
proposed self-indulgent or
entertainment-type expenditure
may come under family scrutiny

on the 49th but: it looks like all ©

involved | wilt gives heir

from the purehase. The spending
picture is radically different on the
23rd, for on this date an
ecquaintance or group may try to
get you to part with a big bunch of
bucks, and the bottom line may be
that "you been took!’

© 8-9-6-5

TAURUS
BORN APRIL
29th-MAY 20th

@

Money plaris. You've certainly
been through a lot of concern
about money and the material side
of your life in the past several
weeks, so it will be refreshing to
feel, on the 18th, that you finally
want to do something positive
about it all. This is an ideal time to
refine your budget, get a savings
plan together, get some income-
producing ideas in motion, find
new ways to utilize your talents.
You have a charming way of
expressing yourself on the 19th,
and may get a chance to useitata
local gathering.

12-13-19-25

GEMINI
BORN MAY
21st-JUNE 21st

@

Get it together. Your interest in
self-improvement may be strong
‘on the 18th; projects begun then
are meant to polish up your image
or increase your self-confidence.
This is also a good day to go out
for interviews or take care of other
matters that depend on your
personal presence. You may

carefully scrutinize your budget
on the 19th to secure the funds for
a gift for. one you love.

21-3-4-8

CANCER

OS BORN JUNE
NY 20nd JULY 22nd

Bad money tips. Your time of

astrological rest and recreation is
coming to a close shortly, but
before it does consolidate the
gains in serenity and inner peace
you may have made during this
cycle. Try to carry certain

The Future Depends On Their Survival...

YOUR WEEKLY
HOROSCOPE GUIDE

BY PABLO THE ASTROLOGER WHICH ARE YOUR
LUCKY DAYS... FOR BUSINESS, LOVE, TRAVEL?

LEO
BORN JULY
23rd-AUG. 22nd

Take it easy. You're soon to enter
an astrological cycle of rest and
relaxation, but before that
happens (on the 21st), there's
quite a flurry of activity going on
where friends and groups are
concerned. The 18th should be
your target date for beginning
group projects and implementing
.plans that will: bring your hopes

# Behind-the-scenes

satisfaction you desire. A flirtation
with a higher-up may take on a
hidden aspect-all this on the 19th.

12-13-21-29

VIRGO
BORN AUG.
23rd-SEPT. 22nd

Great achievements. On the 18th,
you may feel secure enough in
your position to institute some
new programs, or energetic
enough to make a major play for
the next rung up the career ladder.
Whatever the achievement is,
you'll be able to sport the glow of
satisfied ambition, or at least
ambition in progress. Talk with
friends on the 19th can make you
feel full of affection for them.
Large amounts of money spent on
a health spa or a superficial job-
skills course on the 23rd will be
money wasted. Neighbors can
reveal their secrets on that date,

but don’t reveal them to anyone.

17-23-8-9

LIBRA
BORN SEPT.
23rd-OCT. 23rd

a

New information. The urge to
learn may be one of our best
human characteristics, and you
will be happy to do what you can to
further your own education, either
formally, or, just as important, in
the ways of the world, on the 18th.
Getting into a course of some kind
would be just the ticket. Words or
gestures of approval from a
higher-up can make your day on
the 19th. Speculative ventures can
be dangerous on the 23rd,
especially if you're gambling with
money that isn't yours.

2-23-8-7

»

SCORPIO
BORN OCTOBER

24th-NOV. 22nd

Divide the conquer. The reasons
for sharing that you've learned as a
kid may seem overly idealistic in
this money-oriented day and age,
but one thing is sure-if you learn
how to handle shared resources,
your personal image and sense of
integrity will both benefit. All this
should be remembered on the
,18th, when others might

successfully be persuaded to

share their funds with you. The
' 19th is a day for marital happy talk

and other affectionate gestures; a

ivacation may be in the works.

and dreams closer to reality. .

informatioff""“day easier on the 19th; positive
approval, everrifthey won't bénefit'A’'* can get you closer 'to the career

. insecurities.

SAGITTARIUS
BORN NOV.

23rd-DEC. 21st

Start again. Despite the problems

that may have come up in your
marriage recently, you and your

mate are apt to agree thatthe basis
of your relationship is as solid as
ever. Some couples may want to
reaffirm their marriage vows as a
way of acknowledging this on the
18th; some others do well to
decide on this for their wedding
date. Words of love make the work

comments on your appearance
can fuel your desire to stick to diet
and exercise routine. Jokes and
expenses can go way out of
bounds on the 23rd.

&

A new leaf. It's never too late to rid
yourself of old habits, especially in
the areas of health and work. New,
positive habits, such as getting
organized or starting an exercise
program, are apt to be successful
if you begin them on the 18th. Your
loved one will bask in the glow of
any loving words or gestures you
give on the 19th (you are likely to
be on the receiving end of these,
too). On the 23rd, remember that
love can't be bought, even by the
most extravagant gifts. This date
can bring new depth to your
relationship if the two of you are
able to learn from others’
experiences; otherwise, personal
confusions can get in the way.
10-11-4-3

9-20-23-25

CAPRICORN
BORN DEC.
22nd-JAN. 19th

a AQUARIUS
ap BORN JAN.
20th-FEB. 19th

Starting something. When you feel

. you're stuck in a rut, there's
nothing like a hobby to pick you
up. The 18th is a fine day to start a
new hobby or get a new project
going in a current avocation.
Romance, dramatics, and all
dealings with children, are
favored, too. You may decide to
take a small flier on a speculative
venture you have a good feeling
about. Charming small-talk with a
neighbor on the 19th could
devélop into a flirtation-but
perhaps nothing more.

5-3-2-11

+. PISCES
BORN FEB.

9th-MARCH 20th

Home concerns. Home has been
. feeling quite cozy this month, and
you might want to keep those
good feelings going by immersing
yourself in a domestic or family
project on the 18th. This could be
anything from a major clean-up
effort to

quarters. It's also a good time to

- set up a home-based business if

you've been considering thatas an
alternative to _ current cafeer

9-10-11-3

AUGUSTUS HAWKINS

actually moving to.
roomier, more comfortable

/ASHINGTON

ROUND-UP

- BY

Fighting The
Politics Of
"Gradualism”

Recently the House of
Representatives debated H.R.
1460, the - Anti-Apartheid * Act
which imposes economic
sanctions on the country of South
Africa by placing tough new curbs
on future investment and trade
with that nation. Further debate
and a vote on the bill is scheduled
after the Memorial Day recess.
This anti-apartheid bill which |
strongly support, repudiates the
White House police of ‘“con-
structive engagement” or friendly

. persuasion, rather than sanctions

as a means of influencing South
Africa's white minority to end its
system of separating races.
“Constructive engagement” is
really diplomatic double-talk for
saying that you recognize there is’
a problem but that you don’t want
to do anything about it.

The White House foreign policy
with respect to South Africa is
known as the politics of
"gradualism”, that is you can't
change things overnight; let them
gradually evolve. We heard these
same overtones during the civil
rights upheavals here in America.
We were told then that we
shouldn't deal with racism, that we
should focus on other issues,
everything that is except what was
the most pervasive and systematic
barrier to blacks- racism. If blacks
submitted to the politics of
gradualism and had not marched,
and had not participated in the
"freedom rides”, and had not
voiced their opposition to
segregationist policies- then they
would not enjoy the measure of
rights and civil liberties they have
today. Actually, we have rested a
little too much since that time.

The politics of gradualism did not
work in America and it won't work
in South Africai'The only.way that
the white minority in South Africa
will ever agree to.end their racist
system of apartheid is if they come
to the conclusion that the price of
maintaining that system exceeds
the advantages of retaining it. That
will only happen as a result of a
combination of increasing internal
and external pressure. .

H.R. 1460, goes right to the heart
of putting pressure on South
Africa by banning the U.S. firms
from making future investments in
their country and forbiding U.S.
citizens from purchasing South
Africa gold coins. It would also
prevent U.S. banks from lending
money to the South African
government and U.S. firms from
selling them computers.

Supporters of the White House
policy of friendly persuasion claim
that economic sanctions would
hurt the 66,000 blacks who would
lose jobs as a result of these
sanctions. This is a ridiculous
argument when you consider
that there are Y million blacks in
South Africa. Given this disparity
the ratio of those who work for
American corporation to those
who do not, make up only eight-
tenths of 1 percent. It is also
ridiculous because it is like
arguing that you cannot end
slavery because you will have an
unemployment problem.

The Anit-Apartheid Act will send
a signal to the Government of
South Africa that the U.S. will not
continue to do business as usual
with the apartheid regime so long
as they maintain their system of
institutionalized racism. It will help
us mobilize the support of other
countries around the world in an

effort to get them to impose °

sanctions on South Africa as well.
it will assist in fighting the
fundamental problem which is
exclusion of the black majority
from any opportunity to
participate in the determination of
their own destiny. ;

H.R. 1460, minus any weakening
amendments, will setinto motion a
chain reaction of economic
actions against South Africa and

express international - outrage
against the immoral policy of

apartheid. x
NOTES...
COMMENTS
“A good reputation is a
fair estate.” A
Thomas Fuller

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STAR PAPERS

PAGE 3

Charlotte
Stewart

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Delores and Adrian.!

hh

*
*

LS
1)

And
Charlesette Watson 23

David Allen 21
And
Melveta Morris 20

Joeseph Jones 37
And
Brenda Lockhard 31

Alejandro Julian 48
And
Iris Ortiz 42

James McClendon 36
And
Marcia Laster 28

Michael Spears 22
And
Brenda Johnson 26

Anthony Toothe 23
And
Janet Chambers 21

Thomas Carter 21
And
Princella Smith 18

‘Pota:Dunmyer, 111 20
And
Marvenia Robinson 18

. Donald Jordon 26
And :
Yvonne Haynes 23

Mark Asbey 22
And
Gail Lewis 20

Cyril Campbell 27
And
Donna Ezell 28

Reginald Goodman 21
And
Andrea Gray 21

Phillip Lee, Jr. 21
And
Cynthia Chance 14

Wanza Burney 26
And
Anita Grant 25

_ Melvin Bines 23
And
Janice Walker 28

Fredmon Brown 23
And
Marla Thorpe 31

James Johnson 23
And :
Phyllis Pittman 22

Anthony Carter 17
And
Terri DeBose 19

Gregory Roper 26
. And
Sandra Mitchell 28

: Last Saturday a surprise "Baby Shower" was given for Delores Pickett
vin the.home of Melzar Hudnell with Shirleye Brockington as co-hostess.
But the surprise came three days before the shower when Delores
delivered five pounds and twelve ounces Jeremy Charles. The
hostesses, however, decided not to postpone the shower but to
“shower” the father, Adrian.

Delores and Adrain received many beautiful and useful gifts. There
were games played and prizes awarded and plenty of chit chat for the
father. The hostesses had the table beautifully decorated and laden with
delicious food and drinks. Among the participants were: Margaret
Pickett (grandmother), Doris Rhymes, Olga Burnham, Joann Clark,
Bernard Hudnell and Mary Trice just to name a few. Congratulations

Attended a great office opening last Sunday afternoon for Dr. Marvin
Wells the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon has a second office in St. Lukes
Hospital Professional Building on Belfort Road. Sharing that office is Dr.

~Henry J. Taheling, so the doctors held open house to show off their well
appointed facility. Both doctors and their wives were there to greet
friends. It was just four and a half years ago when Dr. Wells opened his
office in medical Plaza Il on West Eighth St. Now his patients will have
the convenience of two locations. Many folks came out to “tour” the
expansive suite. Talked to Eleanor Hughes who was there with sons
Brennan, a dental student at University of Florida and Bertram, a
University of Florida pre-dental student. Dr. Wells’ family members were
proudly present also: Mother, Mrs. Frances Walls, sister Bernice
Douglas, Leonella Williams, Francina Robinson and Mary, brother and
sister-in-law Elijah and Ravinia Wells. Saw Ray White, an administrator
from Methodist Hospital; Dr. Tony Morrison, Russell Tisdale and Dr.
Lionel Bryan, psychiatrist, originally from Miami but has relocated here
near his former University of Florida mates Wells and Kenneth Atkins.
Serving as “tour” guides were: Sandra Ferguson, Evelyn Ferguson,
Surgical Assistant and Tina Reese. Vary tasty and colorful refreshments
were served by caterer Dennis T. Stewart Jr. and his staff. It was very nice

reception!

RARRRE

President Linda Belton and party chairperson Brown and all the other
regulars of the local Boylan Haven Alunmae Chapter are looking forward
to seeing all of the former students and. their guests at the Summer
Outing on Saturday evening. Sara Potts, Carolyn Parker and others may

be contacted for place and time for you BHS ladies are expected.

WEDDING BELLS

Local Couple To Exchange Vows

Lanita Augustine Jones and Michael Thomas Grant will be joined in Holy
Matrimony by Rev. Tom E. Diamond, Saturday, June 15, 6 p.m. at Abyssinia
Missionary Baptist Church. :

The Bride-To-Be is the daughter of Mrs. Christine Jones and the late Augustus
Jones Sr. She is a graduate of William M. Raines High School and employed by
AT & T (Normandy).

Grant is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Grant Sr. He is a graduate of the
former Eugene Butler High School and is currently enlisted in the U.S. Army.
SSG Grant is stationed in Ft. Stewart, Ga.

Following their honeymoon, the couple will reside in Jacksonville. Friends are
invited to attend the ceremony.

Donell Jordan 29

And

Kenneth Tinsley 24 Patricia Freeman 35

And

Veroncia Douglas 23 Elvin Masline 50

And

Elouis Reed 39
Edward Cherry 27

And
Annazzta Demps 21

Johnny Rodgers 33
And
Valerie Nealey 26
Arthur Gamble 74
And
Doris McCoy 66

Gregory Williams 20
And
Glenda Wright 26
Frederick Gray 20
And
Michele Howard 21

Dwayne Brown 20
And
Simona Mitchell 18
Randal Green 29
And
Wanda Denefield 29.

Emanuel Porter 18
And
Tammy Lockwood 18

owed

‘We Make Caps For The Stars
The Best Heads On The Planet Wear
ROLLS ROYCE

$8.00..................58.00 2 Days Only - June 14 & 15

Anthony Copeland 19
And - ;
Colorenda Love 19

James Hill, Jr. 31
And
Sallie Lawrence 23

The National Council of Negro
Women, Inc. and Affiliated
Organizations-Southeast Re-
gional Consultation will be held
June 15, at the Jacksonville Hilton,
565 South Main St. Jacksonville.
Registration will begin at 8:30 a.m.

The Consultation Faculty will
include Professors, Policy Makers,
Health Care Professional,
National, Regional and Local
Representatives of the National
Council of Negro Women and -
Affiliated Organizations.

The meeting marks the launching
of the 50th Anniversary of NCNW
and the Forthcoming World
Conference on the U.N.’s decade
for women to be held in Nairobi,
Kenya in July 1985.

The one day session has been
designed to have morning
sessions in which black women
from different walks of life speak
out on issues affecting their lives,
their children and families.

In the afternoon strategy
sessions, the focus will be on
Using Qrganizational Strength for
the Interorganizational Nework
Effectively.

Subjects to be addressed and
speakers are: “Strengthening Our

Relationships Internationally = Dro¢

Paulette Coleman, Director Of
International Affairs, NCNW,
Washington DC; *Harnessing Our
Power Around Critical Issues and
Concerns-Betty Holzendorf,
Administrative Assistant, to the
Mayor of Jacksonville, Florida;
*Making Our Presence, Alice
Grant, Florida Junior College;
*Setting Our Priorities-Juanita
Fletcher Cone, MD, Jacksonville,
Florida; *Shaping Our Future-
Attorney Helen E. Huyler, Atlanta,
Georgia; *“Why We Must Fulfill Our
Commitment To The National
Council Of Negro Women,
Khadijah Bilah, National President
Job Corps Alumni, Washington
DC; "Pooling Our Resources, Dr.
Anna Harvin Grant, Professor Of
Sociology, Morehouse College
Workshop Facilitators are:
Attorney Lucinda Stephens,
NCNW Camden County Section,
St. Mary's Georgia; Henretta
Mathes Canty, Former Assistant
Commissioner, Georgia Depart-
ment of Agriculture, Atlanta,

B-CC Prof Nominated
For National Award

DAYTONA BEACH-Dr. Jake C.
Miller, professor of political
science at Bethune-Cookman
College, has been nominated for
the 1985 National Professor of the
Year award presented annually by
the Council for Advancement and
Support of Education (CASE).

Dr. Oswald P. Bronson, president
of B-CC describes Dr. Miller as
"An individual possessing unusual
and highly commendable
scholarly qualities. Dr. Miller is
competent, dedicated, co-
operative, and labors untiringly on
behalf of the college and the
students. Additionally, Dr. Miller is
a wholesome influence in the
institution taking those positions
designed to clarify com-
munication problems without
compromising his own integrity

Black Women Will
Address Key

Effecting Their Lives

‘Jax Beauty Entertains us.
Military On Caribbean Tour

rh *

Penny Robinson, Miss Black Florida 1984-85, while on tour for the

2

Â¥ 4

Defense Department, make history by teaming up with Miss Florida to
entertain thousands on U.S. Armed Forces Personnel Stationed
throughout the Caribbean. (MISS BLACK FLORIDA PHOTO)

Issues

Georgia: Wilma Lauray, Past
Regional Director, Chi Eta Phi
Sorority: Laura D. Young, Deputy,
Clerk, Eleventh Circuit Court Of
Appeals, Atlanta, Georgia:
Blondell Mathews, Alpha Kappa

Alpha Sorority:

Registration forms may be

secured from the Office of the
National Council Of Negro
Women, 927 1/2 West Beaver
Street Suite 1 and 2, Jacksonville,
Fla. 32204.

Dr. Reatha Clark King's

* Portrait To Hang At
Clark College

The portrait of Dr. Reatha Clark

King, president of Metropolitan
State University in St. Paul Minn.,

‘was presented by CIBA—GEIGY

Corporation to Clark College in
Atlanta on May 19.

The portrait of Dr. King, a Clark
graduate, was painted by noted
artist and illustrator Ernest
Crichlow for CIBA-GEIGY's
Exceptional Black Scientists
Poster Series.

A.M. MacKinnon, president and
chief operating officer of CIBA-
GEIGY, presented the portrait to

Dr. Elias Blake, president of Clark,
at a reception in Dr. King’s honor.

Dr. King has served since 1977 as

president of Metropolitan State,

an undergraduate and master's
degree level institution which
emphasizes education for adults
and returning students.

An innovator all her life, Dr. King
has led Metropolitan State-- a
university without a central
campus-- to the role of “change
agent” among educational
institutions.

During 1982-83 she served as
chairman of the board of the
American Council on Education, a
group which includes nearly every
major college and university in the

S

Dr. King continued research in
high temperature chemistry at the
National Bureau of Standards in
Washington, D.C., for five years. In
1968 she entered college teaching
and administration at York
College of the City University of
New York, and later became
professor of chemistry and
associate dean for academic
affairs.
CIBA—GEIGY started the
Exceptional Black Scientists
Poster Series in 1980 to acquaint
the general public with the
accomplishments of some
outstanding black scientists and
to encourage . more minority
students to choose careers in
science and medicine.

In early May, history was made
when Penny Robinson, Miss Black
Florida, and Lisa Valdez, Miss
Florida, departed Orlando for ‘a
tour of US Military Installations in
the Caribbean.

The four week tour took the
troupe of two State and Queens
and five other young ladies before
thousands of Army, Navy and Air"
Force personnel in Puerto Rico,
Ceilia, Veiques, Antigua, Panama,
Barbados, Sabana Seca, Grenada,
Honduras and Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba.

Ms. Robinson was selected
because of her, talent when she
competed in the Miss Florida
Pageant two years before
becoming Miss Black Florida.

State Pageant Director for Miss
Black Florida, Noble Sissle, Jr.
said, "...by recognizing the fact
that Penny.is Miss Black Florida
while on tour, the Department of
Defense will certainly give our
Black soldiers a little something
extra for which to protect our
Florida shores. Just the mere fact
that a black woman is on this tour
give credibility to the Armed
Forces that they are not forgetting
the overwhelming participation of
Black Soldiers In Uniform.”

M. Robinson has started college
internship at Walt Disney World
and on July 20*'y she will attend the
15th annual Miss Black Florida
Pageant in Tampa at Busch
Gardens to crown the new Miss
Black Florida. $5,000 in college
scholarships are at stake.

* Commuter Scholarships

Are Offered At B-CC .

DAYTONA BEACH-Dr. Oswald
P. Bronson, president of Bethune-
Cookman College, recently
announced the establishment of a
scholarship to help defray the cost
of tuition for commuter freshmen
and new students who attend B-
CC.

A one-half tuition scholarship will
be offered to any student who is a
freshman or new student
commuter, with a score of 900 or
above on the Scholastic Aptitude
Test (or an equivalent score on the
American College Test) or has
achieved 3.0 grade point average
in the following high school
courses: 3 credits in mathmatics 3
credits in science 3 credits in
English 1 credit in history.

The scholarship will include the

State of Florida Tuition Voucher

and the remainder will be
absorbed by the college after filing
the appropriate financial aid
forms.

HONEYMOON=
CRUISES
SHIPS AHOY
1384-6178

NORTHSIDE -
BEAUTY CARE
ACADEMY

5280 Pearl Street (Pearl Plaza)
PH: 358-7161

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Tally McCloud 44
And
Roser Flucas 43

and convictions.”

During the Bethune-Cookman
faculty awards ceremony held in
March, Dr. Jake Miller was

HAPPY FATHER'S DAY

" FATHER’S DAY SALE (
Thre Regular price $15.00 & Up

: Available at the following locations: Code 19 Gateway; Mahdi Clothing, 25th

~~

re

; Myre Ave & Kings Ré. (MUST BRING THIS AD! The Cap Connector Re EE awe 18 ALL FATHERS SPECIAL PRICES
4 = : Mae Wises # Fe spe re lS Cus....... vain ne 0820.50
a EL, a EE a a i lk Ea Michael Grant 33 Dr. Miller has been widel ‘
511 NOTICE Yo. Ein immu Sten HalGus oan SED

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£0 § Still like Old Fashioned Bible Teaching? Then Listen to || Annu} Rock 38 wiinena DO0k Sruitied Tne Pig: "Free Blow Dry With Above Services
5 I understanding the Scriptures, with Sis. Alberta T. Outlaw ever - Keonla Smith 3s | g aa
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PAGE 4

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

x

Religious “Shorts x:

TRINITY BAPT. CHURCH
762 W. Duval St. 3
Youth Day will be observed

Sunday, June 30 in New Trinity -

Baptist Church, beginning with
the Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.
Morning service at 11:00. Guest
speaker is Larry McNeal of
Hebrew Holiness Church. Other
local talent will appear on
program. The public is invited. Ms.
Amanda Shuman, chairperson;
Ms. Dorothy McCloud, co-
chairperson and Rev. Jonathan
Reid, interim pastor. Services
Sunday begin with the Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m., Supt. Harold
Denson in charge. Morning
service at 11:00, Willie Bryant and
Harold Denson will conduct the
devotion.
SECOND BAPT. CHURCH
954 Kings Rd. :

Father's Day will be observed
Sunday in Second Missionary
Bapitst Church throughout the
day. The activities begin with the
Sunday School at 9:15 a.m., Supt.

Seb. Chester in charge. Morning,

service at 11:00, Rev. T.T. Daniels
and Rev. Odell Smith presiding.
An associate minister will deliver
the message. Church Training at
5:30 p.m. The youth of the church
will be presented in a special
program, honoring all fathers.
Charles Warren and W.J. Wright,
chairman and co-chairman. The
Vacation Bible School will begin
June 24, registration is June 21 at9
a.m. Other weekly activities will be
held as usual.

ZION HOPE CHURCH

2803 W. Edgewood Ave.

Rev. S.P. Donald, pastor of Zion

Hope Missionary Baptist Church,
says services Sunday will begin
with the Sunday School at 9:30

WERE GLAD
YOU ASKED!

AB. Coleman, Jr, LFD.
AB. COLEMAN MORTUARY. INC.

EE Fy got

I Understand Some
People Pre-Plan
Their Own Funerals,
Why Do They?

Three important reasons come to
mind at once. Pre-planning
permits free choice, makes one’s
wishes known, and does away with
any possible disagreement among
the bereaved as to what to do and
how much to spend.

In effect, on eases the burden
placed on the immediate family--in
terms of both the proper course of
action to follow and the peace of
mind in knowing that ar-
rangements have been made in
advance.

Because we feel that this question
may be of value to many residents”
in the community we serve, we're’
glad you asked.

We welcome your question and
comments on this and other

subjects-- in private or publicly
through this column.

AB. Coleman
Mortuary, Inc.

"Our aim is not 10 equal but excel’
3631 Moncrief Rd.
Jacksonville, Fla.

32209
Jo 05

&

*

fF oY

a.m., Supt. O.L. Merritt in charge,

The lesson is: “The Day Of The

Lord.” Morning worhsip at 11:00,

Rev. A. Washington, associate
minister. will deliver the message.
CTU at 5:30 p.m., and evening
worship at 6:30. The Mass Choir,
under direction of Matthew
McCoy, Jerome Williams and Ms.
Pasty Bartley, will sing. Usher
Board 3 will serve.

The Public Relations Committee
will observe ‘its anniversary at 3
p.m. Mrs. Eddie Mae Stewart,
former president of the NAACP,
will be the speaker. The Male
Choruses of the church, St.
Joseph, abyssinia and Emanuel
churches will present their
quarterly musical at 8 p.m. The
public is invited.

sedans 4
MT. MORIAH AME
Sunbeam
. Family and, Friends Day will be
observed Sunday in Mt. Moriah
AME Church, Sunbeam, begin-

ning with the Sunday School at 10
a.m., Supt. Samuel Walker in
charge. Morning service at 11:00
with the pastor in charge. He will
also deliver the message. At6 p.m.,
a musical program will be
presented with various groups and
soloists appearing on program.
Mrs. Hattie Allen, sponsor. The
theme is: “Families and Friends
who pray together, Stay
Together.” The public is invited.

LEWIS MEMORIAL AME
2123 Talladega Rd.

A Men's Day program will be
presented Sunday at 3 p.m, in
Lewis Memorial AME Church with
Rev. Richard J. Arnold, pastor in
charge. Services Sunday begin
with the Sunday School at 9:30
a.m., morning service at 11:00, and
evening service at 5 p.m. The
missionaries will meet Saturday at
7 p.m., in the home of Mrs. Jackie
Taylor, 2113 W. 45th St. All
members are asked to attend.

DAYSPRING BAPT. CHURCH
The regular order of services will
prevail Sunday in Dayspring
Baptist Church beginning with the
Sunday School at 9:15 am.
Morning worship at 10:50. Supt.
Isaiah Rumlim will preside over the
Sunday School. The junior choir
and junior ushers will serve, and
Rev. Jessie Cross will deliver the
sermon. Evening worship at 6:00.
Brother Kenneth Patrick will
deliver the message.

aaa A 24P
BRYANT’ ANNIVERSARY

Deacon Willie Bryant, a member
of New Trinity Baptist Church and
manager of the Ponder Gospel
Singers, will observe his first
anniversary Sunday in the Elks
Auditorium, 718 W. Duval St. The
services will begin at 7:30 p.m,
with Deacon Harold Denson in
charge of the devotion. Mrs.
Thelma Edwards will serve as
mistress of ceremonies. The
public. is invited.

LAAs 2d

EL-BETH-HOLINESS
CHURCH 723 W. 4th St.
Services Sunday: in El-Beth- El
Divine Holiness Church begin with
the Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.
Morning worship at 11:00; YPIA at
6 p.m., and evening service at 7:30.
An old Fashioned Revival meeting
will be held June 17-21 with
Mother Dean Hall delivering the
message each night. The service
begins at 7:30. Elder Lorenzo Hall,
Jr., pastor, extends an invitation to

the public to attend.

. ROYAL TERRANCE CLUB

The Royal Terrace Charity Club
will observe its 62nd anniversary
June 16 at the Church of God,
Steele. and Blue Streets,
commencing at 4 p.m. Bishop
M.M. White is the speaker. The
public is invited.

MT. CALVARY CHURCH
301 Spruce St.

Sunday services in Mt. Calvary
Baptist Church will begin with the
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m., Supt.
Roland Shorter in charge.
‘Morning service at 11:00. Pastor

4 John. Newman. will deliver the

sermon and the Sanctuary Choir

* Deacon Robert Prater, Sr.

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will sing. Usher Board 3 wil serve
At 6:45 p.m., evening service
begins. The Mass Chair will render
the music. Weekly activities will be
held as usual.

FIRST BAPT.: CHURCH
(COLLEGE PARK)
1410 Engle St. -

Annual Dual Day will be observed
Sunday, June 23 in First Baptist
Church, College Park. The
speaker for the morning service
will be Sara Delagar of Faust
Temple. Bishop A. Simmons of the
Church of the Living God is the
speaker for the evening service:
The public is invited.

JESUS NAME ASSEMBLY
4456 Kenndle Cr.

The Pastor's Aid Board of Jesus
Name Assembly will conduct the
service Sunday at 5 p.m. Rev. T.O.
Hudgens is the guest speaker.
Also on program" willl be the
Queenaires and other guests.

Queen Mother Ruby E. Allen,"

pastor. and Lillie P. Kelley,
president.
PEA CE COMMUNITY BAND
Peace Community Prayer Band
will sponsor an appreciation
program June 22-23 in Murchison
Temple CME Church, 1908 W. 3rd
St., for Bishop M. Davis. The
program will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Many participants have been
invited to appear on program,
including Evangelist Gussie Gray,
Starlight Singers and the Sunrise
Singers. The public is invited.
NEW MT. OLIVE
1420 Brady Street
Services Sunday in New Mt. Olive
Baptist Church will commence
with the Sunday. School at 9:30
a.m. Supt. O'Neal Roberts in
charge. The lesson is: “The Day Of
The Lord.” Morning service at
11:00 and afternoon service at 3
o'clock. The Lord's Supper will be
administered, and the combined
choirs and Usher Boards 1 and 2
will serve. Rev. W.L. Glanton,
pastor will deliver the sermon and
preside. Weeklyu activities will be
held as usual.
MT. SINAI CHURCH
2036 Silver Street
The Vacation Bible School will be
conducted July 8-12 in Mt. Sinai
Baptist Church from 9 a.m. to 12
noon. Free lunches will be served
to children 18 years old and
younger. Mrs. Carrie B. Fields,
directress and Rev. B.J. Lane,
pastor.

ARERR

NEW ST. JAMES AME
Sit woR128 Forest Stu...

The Pulpit Aid Board of New St.
James AME Church will sponsor
100 men and women in white
Sunday at 4 p.m., at the church.
Mrs. Saundra Waldorf will be the
speaker and the choir of Fountain
Chapel United will sing. Rev. F.W.
Jones is the pastor.

APPRECIATION PROGRAM

An appreciation program will be
given for Rev. and Mrs. Tony Neal
Sunday at 6 p.m., at the church.
Some. of the participants are:
Deacon Robert Prater, Anthony
Jackson, Ms. Connie Baker, Ms.

' Diane Neal and Rev. Willie King.

Also on program will be the youth
choir and others. The public is
invited.

BAPTIST MINISTERS WIVES
The Baptist Ministers Wives
Alliance will present its annual tea
June 17 in Abyssinia Missionary
Baptist Church, beginning at 7:30
p.m. Mrs. W.T. Smith, program
chairperson and Mrs. S.L. Badger,
president.

MT. SALEM CHURCH
1281 W. 22nd St.

will
present a Father's Day Tea
Sunday at 3:30 p.m., in Mt. Salem
Baptist Church, Rev. Charles
Banks, pastor. The participants on
program include: Studio Gospel
Ensemble, Jean Stone, Eva Gavin,
Joseph Crews, Dixie Jubilee
Gospel Singers, Revival Mass
Choir of Moncrief Church of God
In Christ and others. The public is
invited. :

; CHOIRS ON PARADE

The Cleftone Gospel Singers will
present Choirs on Parade
Saturday at 7:30 p.m,
Baptist Church, 524 W. Third St.,
Rev. Wallace Rasberry, pastor.
The participants include Jax
Component of Fla. Mass Choir
St. Mark Baptist Church Choir,
Mayport, and many others.
The Cleftones will celebrate their

| 27th anniversary Sunday at 7:30

p.m. at the church. Rev. Marcius
King is master of ceremonies, and

‘special guests will include the

Brightside Gospel Singers of
Tallahassee, and the En-
semblettes Trio of Fitzgerald, Ga.

-Also on program will be the God

Brothers of the Jax Harmonaires.

| The public is invited.

beddofodod

ST. JOHN BAPTIST
1920 Mound St. :
The 104th anniversary of St. John

‘Baptist Church and the 3rd of Rev.
‘} Johnnie Torrence,

pastor began
Wednesday and. will continue

through Friday at 7:30 p.m. Guest

‘ministers will have charge of the

closing service Sunday, The
public is invited.’

in Central

interesting,

———

Rev. Washington To Speak In Bethel AME

Rev. Vernon’ Washington,
associate ‘minister of Greater
Bethel AME Church, Gainesville,
Fla., is the guest speaker Sunday
in New Bethel AME Church during
the. 10:50 a.m., service, in

observance of Fathers, according

to Rev. ‘A.J. ‘Reddick, pastor.
The Rev. Mr. Washington is a

~ graduate of EWC, Yale University

and Hopkins University. He has
pastored in Columbia, Ohio and
several churches in Florida. He will
be inffodieed by Rev. Frank

REV. E.E. TAYLOR

The 106th anniversary of St. Paul
Missionary Baptist Church and the
20th of Rev. E.E. Taylor, pastor,
will be held June 24-30 nightly,
commencing at 7:30, terminating
the celebration: with a banquet
June 29. Many local churches and
their ministers will share in the
observance. Deacon and Mrs.
Albert Kemp, general chairperson
and Deacon and Mrs. David
Frazier, co-chairperson. Ms. Jean
Stone . is program chairperson.
The following churches and their
congregation expected June 24
are: Rev. B.J. Lane, Rev. RW.
McKissick, Rev. Samuel Wash-
ington, Rev. W.B. Mack, Rev. J.G.
Wright and Bishop C.D. Kinsey,
June 25: Rev. T. Diamond, Rev. R.

Hezekiah, Rev. A.B. Coleman and ,

Rev. T.E. Shehee
Announces
S.S. Convention

Rey. T.E. Shehee, presiding elder
of the North Jacksonville District,
is calling all ministers, Sunday
School superintendents, officers
teachers of the district to
assemble, meet, and participate in_
the Annual Sunday School
Convention, June 13-15 at Greater
Payne AME Church, 1230 E. 23rd

REV. T.E. SHEHEE

St., Rev. JW. Jones, pastor.

Thursday (tonight), Rev. Henry E.
Green, pastor of New Hope AME
Church, will deliver the sermon
during the keynote service. The
Holy Communion will be
administered.

Friday at 11:50 a.m., devotion,
organization and the Convention
Institute will be held with Rev. A.J.
Reddick as the instructor. The
noon day sermon will be delivered
by Rev. Welbon B. Wallace, pastor
of Prince Chapel AME Church,
Nassauville, Fla. From 2:30 to 5
p.m., “Know Your Church and
Bible” quiz will be held with Rev.
J.M. Proctor as the instructor. The
annual choir contest will be held at
7 p.m., peewee, youth and adult

competition.

Saturday, the closing service will

be held. The noon day sermon will
be delivered by Rev. Z.L. Tyrus,
pastor, Macedonia AME Church,
Fernandina Beach.

According to Presiding Elder
Shehee; this year's convention
promises to be the most
informative ‘and
exciting meeting ever held. It is
planned to be a reality, equipping
workers for Christ and the church,
especially during the International
Youth Year 3985.

[New Testament]
So then, after the

Lord ‘had spoken

unto them, He was

received up into
heaven, and sat on
the right hand of
God.

Mark 16: 19°

Emanuel of Ebenezer Methodist
Church.

Rev. Gerald Williams? chairman,
announced that Rev. W.D.
Cannon, Sr, will deliver the
sermon during the 7:50 a.m,
service, and the K. White Gospel
Choir will render the music. All
fathers will be honored, according

to Rev. A.J. Reddick; pastor. A

special award will be given to the
"Father of the Year” who will be
crowned and the oldest -and

Rev. J.J. Bryant.

ministers and their
congregations invited will “be
announced later. Other weekly
activities will be held as usual.
Services Sunday begin with the
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m., Supt.
Fred Crawford in charge. The
lesson is: "The Day Of The Lord,”
reviewed by Mrs. Deborah Cobb.
Morning worship at 11:00. The
Youth Choir and Usher Board 3
will serve, and the message will be

Other

youngest father."

Other activities begin with the
Sunday School Convention,
which will begin Thursday
(tonight) at Greater Payne AME
Church. The Vacation Bible
School will be held June 18-28
under direction of the Rev. Mr.
Cannon, from 10 a.m, to 12 p.m.
Parents are urged.to attend with
their children in the educational
program. Lunches will be served
three times per day.

i ——————— ras at,

1 06th Anniversary To Begin In St. Paul Bapt.

delivered by Pastor Taylor or his
appointee. At 3 p.m:., District 8 will
present its annual Father's Day.

. Tea. Rev.James Edmondson is the

speaker. BTU at 5 p.m., and
evening service at 6:00. At 7 p.m.

- the Youth Choir will be presented

in its annual recital, under
direction of Ms. Dora Dailey, Ms.
Carmen Kinsey, Christopher
Jackson. Gerald DeSue will be the
special guest. The public is
invited.

Grant AME Choir 1
Sets Father's Day Tea

Choir 1 of Greater Grant
Memorial AME Church, 5533
Gilchrist Rd., will present its

annual Father's Day Tea and
Musical Sunday at the church,
beginning at 4 p.m.

Mrs, Geneva Mangrum, program
chairperson, says a very fine

attendants’ enjoyment.

program has been arranged for
Mrs.
Bettye Lasseter, co-chairperson;
Mrs. Theodoshia Graham,
president, and Rev. John F. White,
pastor, extend an invitation to the
public to attend.

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151



SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

STAR PAPERS

Sick- And- Shut-Ins

ROYAL TABERNACLE BAPTIST CHURCH

the REV. JEREMIAH ROBINSON, PASTOR
n, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wright Alex McQueen
ay Mary Grove Mrs. Cook
ME Lou Ellen Williams John Wallace
ble Sadie Fedd Walter Galvin
2 Mary Borders Lillie Miller
r.
m GREATER NEW JERUSALEM MISSIONARY BAPT. CHURCH
ith REV. J.C. FINNEY, PASTOR
nal Peter Jackson 2 Mary Coner
ed Corine Lockett Adam Fluker
Ella Fluker Charlie Gibbs
William Nesbitt Annie Brookins
Lillie Gibbs ) Mary Ann Ford
em Arthur Westbrooks
t FRIENDSHIP MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
* REV. ISAAC ROBERTS, PASTOR
his Mother Williams Brazella Davis
will Ethel Barrington Julia Smith
ay. Eula Johnson Ms. Bradford
the Rosa Speed Elizabeth Raysor
ind Essie Howard Ethel Hill
m., Blanche Simpson Lola Adkins
ted Johnnie Jones James Brown
ler Walter Mayhew Mr. White
Vis. Letha Pate James Williams
ner : Clavin McCray Flemming Albertie Sr.
the Patricia Patterson Ben Rickerson
is = i Mr. & Mrs. Fred Dixon
MT. SINAI BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. B.J. LANE, PASTOR
Ruby Washington Susie Bossard
Mildred Kendred J.D: Bell
f Minnie Lee Jones Charlie Mote
or Mattie Hart . Addie Williams
rs. Ida Myers Alice Anderson
on; Florida Brown Mabel Washington
m, Charles Lockwood ~ Etta R. Smith
ite, Ne
the SHILOH MET. BAPTIST. CHURCH
REV. FRED PRIESTER, INTERIM PASTOR
Helen Gardner Johnnie Wilson
Addie Gibbs Irene Pigford
_— Mamie Washington Tommy Green
Minnie Walthour Carrie Alston
Milton Maultsby Ruby Kitchens
Mr. & Mrs. Oscar Brown Caswell Aikens
James Gauldin Leona Marshall
Corine Dennard Myrtis Smith
Daisy Witherspoon Ruby Mackey.
Lester Alberta Venita Carter
Johnny Jones Fannie Brown
, Cleveland Jones Gatsie Lewis
Ruth Parrot - Geneva Lundy
Jessie North Marie Fleming
Py Vandora Jackson Bernice Robinson
hi
Pd :
* FIRST TITUS BAPTIST CHURCH
> REV. ISIAH JOHNSON, PASTOR
y Mother Nina Williams ‘ Louise Hunter
Grady Dix Fred Clark
1
Kr ip e,

135 BROAD STREET

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. will perform. Rev. Willie Holland

| as guest organist. The usher board
w St. James AME Church ;

“commencing with the Sunday
School at 9:45 a.m., with Guest

. A. Earl will preside. Elder Willie
‘Tucker,
| Bibleway Holiness Church, is the
| speaker, and guest soloist is
Charlie Cisero. The choir from
Greater

a

The East Florida and Bethany
Congress of Christian Education

will convene in its annual session -

‘July 18-23 at St. Joseph
Missionary Baptist Church,, 485
W. Figst Street, Rev. H.T. Rhim,
host pastor.

The theme for the session is: “The
Purpose of Christian Education.”
The Congress is a School of
Methods, classes will be provided
for ministers and lay people.

Fathers Will Be Saluted
At Christ Temple Church

The Father's Day Committee at
Christ Temple Missionary Baptist
Church has planned a special
religious service in honor of
fathers, 3:30 p.m. Sunday, June 16
at the church located at 3124 W.
Edgewood Ave.

Fathers, families, churches and
organizations throughout the city
of Jacksonville - are invited to
attend and enjoy "A Salute To
Fathers.”

The speaker for the service is
Rev. Lawrence Callahan, pastor of
Philippian Interdenominational
Community Church. Rev.
Callahan, a dynamic speaker, has
dedicated his life to spreading the
word of God through the ministry.

Phillippian’s Mass Choir will
provide the music. Special
arrangements have been made for
fathers. A special gift will be
presented to the first 25 fathers
who attend.

Why have a special service for
fathers? Mrs. Milease Wells, a
committee member, thinks it is
unfair for mothers to receive daily
attention and fathers mostly
considered when a family member
has personal needs.

"Fathers are the backbone of the
world and many accomplishments

“._ would not have taken place if there

thad not been fathers,” added Mrs.
ells.

Mrs. Emma Randall, also a
committee member said “fre-
quently, fathers are used as
bankers. It is past time that we iet
them know they. are valuable
members of our families and
society.

Rev. George Harvey s pastor.

The public is invited to

~ Father's
Family And
Friends Day

Family and Friends Day will be
observed throughout the day
Sunday in Second Missionary
Baptist Church, located 732 South
Third. Avenue, Jax Beach, Rev.
Charlie McCormick, pastor.
Services begin with the Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m. Rev. James
Jennings will have charge. Mrs.
Alma Hoffman is superintendent.

During 11 am. service, all
attending fathers will be
recognized during a specail
father's day program. Choir and
Usher boards 1 and 2 will serve.
Devotion will be conducted by
Deacon -Talmadge Gray of First
Baptist Church and the guest
soloist is Mrs. Dorothy Davis of St.
John Baptist Church.
At 5 p.m., a musical program will
be presented for the attending
fathers. There will be guest soloist
and the Fellowship Male Chorus

ttend.

will preside and the pastor will
deliver the message.
A youth revival is slated for July
10-12. The public is invited to
attend.
Co-chairpersons for Family and
Friends Day are Mrs. Pearlie
McCormick and Mrs. Erma
Barrett.
The pastor is calling a board
meeting of all ministers and
deacons for the Union of the
Beaches at Greater St. Mark,
Baptist Church, June 19, at 7:30.
Rev. McCormick is president. Rev.
Ernest Mitchell is the guest pastor.

Allen AME
To Observe
Men's Day

Men's Day will be observed
Sunday in New Allen Chapel AME
Church, 1531 Swan St.,

Superintendent Eugene Sawyer
presiding, Deacon Henry Young
will review the lesson. ¢

Morning service at 11:00. Russell

associate minister of

St. Matthew, Baptist
Church will serve with Gary Tyner

Alexander Heard, dean and Rev.
W.H. Mack, assistant.

The activities will begin with
the Youth Day program Tuesday
at 9 a.m. Young representatives
from churches throughout the
district of the association will
participate on the programs, with
Ms. Louise Perkins, and other
adult workers in charge of the
teenagers. The program of
welcome will be held Tuesday at

7:30 p.m. Mrs. Fannie Whitfield will
give the response. The general

program will begin Wednesday,

July 19, Rev. S.H. Gatson
presiding. Rev. John Newman will
discuss the theme at this time and
Friday morning. Rev. James Smith
is the speaker on the theme
Thursday and Saturday mornings.
The president's Hour will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. Election of officers
will .be held at this time.

Annual Session Scheduled For Bethany Congress of Education

Other

ministers participating.

during the session are: Rev. Alcine
Caldwell, Rev. Gatson, Rev. Mack,
Rev. |. Roberts, Rev. S.P. Donald,

Rev. Randy Hezikiah, Rev. H.T.*
Rev. George Price,
C.B. Dailey,

Overstreet,
Rev.

Rev.

R.W.

McKissick, and Rev. T.E. Mitchell.
The concluding activities will be’

held Saturday morning with a .

workshop.

St. Paul A.M.E. Church Debuts Youth Choir

Srown from Left to right on top row are Aaron
Stanberry, Janice Morrison, Sharon Robinson,
Derrick Thompson, Tenner Washingfon, Kim
Robinson, Karen Adams, Patrice Washington and
Kim Morrison. On the second row front from left are
Ms. Johnnie. M. Chisholm, Joseph Merritt, Lavetta
Matthews, Darriel Jones, Anthony* Moultrie, Rev.
Keith Morrison, Sherrell

James M. Proctor,

The officers and members of Mt.
Nebo Missionary Baptist Church
announce the observance of the
14th anniversary of thechurchz ..
Rev. H.T. Overstreet, pastor will be

held June 13,14, and 17 at 7:30

p.m.
Ministers invited are: Rev. E.l
Norman, Rev. J.C. Finney, Rev. M.

King, Rev. J.C. Green, Rev. W.H.
Mack, Rev: J. Jones, Rev. W.L.
Lavant, Rev. E.L. Mitchell, Rev. J.
“Jones, Rev. S.S. Robinson, Jr.

Rev. S. Foster.
The termination service will be
held Monday with Pastor J.W.

Mt. Zion Bapt.
Schedules

117th Anniversary
2328 San Diego Road
Rev. John A. Gadling, pastor of
Mt. Zion Baptist Church,
announces the 117th church
anniversary and the 8th of the
pastor will begin Monday night,

June 17 and continue through
June 19.

wt

RAWLS).

Marshall Rev. R.W. Jackson, Rev.
T.C. Jones, Rev. W. Rasberry, Rev.
B.H. Hartley and Rev. R.L. Wilson.
Services Sunday commence with
the Sunday School at9:30 a.m. Ms.
C. Ricks in charge. Rev. C. Wallace
will deliver the message during the
11 a.m., service. Weekly activities

New Canaan
Bapt. Church
Slates Revival

The Soul-Saving Revival will be
held in New Mt. Canaan Baptist
Church, beginning June 24
through June 28. Minister
Lawrence Callahan, pastor of
Philippians Community Church is
the speaker nightly. A special
Father's Day service will be held
Sunday at.11 a.m. Sunday School
begins at 9:30 a.m. with the
superintendent and teachers in
charge. The Holy. Communion
service will be held at 3:30 p.m.,
with Rev. Perry C. Robinson,
pastor presiding.

will be held as usual. Rev. H.T.

Mt. Nebo Schedules 14th Church Anniversary

Overstreet, pastor.

Townsend, Renelda Stubbs, Chris Robinson, and
O'Dell Brown:As members of the Youth Choir of St.
Paul A.M.E. Church, these youths were featured in
their Musical debut, performing with poise, grace
and dignity. They are directed by O'Dell Brown and
supervised by Ms. Johnnie Mae Chisholm, Rev.
James M. Proctor is pastor. (PHOTO BY LARRY

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STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

eS BL i ot Be
UNITED BAPT. CHURCH
296 Woodlawn St.
Services Sunday in United
Baptist Church begin with the
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m., Supt.
L. Hunter in charge. Morning
worship at 11:15 with Rev. W.
Smith, pastor in charge. He will
also deliver the message. The
Youth Parade will be held at 3 p.m.
Beginning Monday and cont-
inuing through June 20 at 7:30

p.m., nightly. Many churches and
their choirs have been invited to

attend. RR,

ST. PETER'S CHURCH
1737 W. Third Street

A Soul-Saving youth revival will
be conducted in St. Peter's Baptist
Church June 17-23, beginning at
7:30 nightly, with Rev. Ernest T.
Bell, pastor in charge. The public
is invited.

GENESIS BAPT. CHURCH
241 S. McDuff Ave.

Services Sunday in Genesis
Missionary Baptist Church begin
with the Sunday School at 9:30
a.m., Supt. Lucille Wright
presiding. Morning service at
11:00 with Rev. Leon Washington,
pastor in charge. Evening service
at 6:00.

The Sunday School and Youth
Departments will observe their
joint anniversary Sunday, June 23,
throughout the day. Walter
Ponder, Thunderbolt Of The
South, will be presented at 4 p.m.,
in a benefit program in interest of
the Sunday School Dept. Other
‘participants will appear on
program.

RARE

MT. SINAI BAPT. CHURCH
2036 Silver Street

Fathers’s Day will be observed
Sunday during the morning
worship service Brother Walter
Kimbrough is chairman. Choir No.
3, The Male Chorus and Ushers
Board No. 3 will serve. The
message will be delivered by Rev.
E. Fields, Jr. ;
The Male Chorus will present a

rogram at 6:15 p.m. Appearing
witll be Senior Choir and Usher
Board No. 3, a selected group of

hostesses and host. Mrs.
Catherine W. Sykes, musician and
Bro. James W. Jackson, president.
The public is invited to worship.
Rev. B.J. Lane is pastor.

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Jacksonville, FL 32208
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CHRIST TEMPLE CHURCH
3144 W. Edgewood Ave.
The regular order of services will
prevail in Christ Temple
Missionary Baptist Church
beginning with the Sunday School
at 9:30 a.m., with the youth
superintendent in charge. The
lesson is: "The Day of The Lord.”
Rev. George Harvey, Jr., pastor
will deliver the message during the
morning service. A special
Father's Day program will be
presented at 3 p.m. The pastorand
members of Philippians Baptist
Church will have charge of the
service. Women's Day will be
observed June 30. Mrs. Emily
Timmons is the speaker during the
11 a.m., service, says Mrs. Barbara
Dixon, chairlady. A Churchwide
Seminar will be held June 18, 20,
21 at the church at 7:30 p.m. Mrs.
Emily Nicholson, master teacher.
Pastor Harvey invites the public to

attend. fa
NEW JERUSALEM CHURCH
1435 W. State Street
Sunday services in Greater New
Jerusalem = Missionary . Baptist
Church begin with the Sunday.
School at 9:30 a.m., Supt. Ed.
Chaney in charge. The lesson is:
“The Day Of The Lord.” Morning
service at 11:00 with Rev. J.C.
Finney, ‘pastor presiding. He will
also deliver the sermon. The
district's anniversary will
terminate at 3 p.m. Other weekly
activities will be held as usual.
EMANUEL BAPT. CHURCH
2407 Division Street
Services Sunday in Emanuel
Missionary Baptist Church begin"
with the Sunday School at 9:30
a.m., Supt. Tommy L. Wilson in
charge. The lesson is: “The Day Of
The Lord.” Morning service at
11:00. Choir 2 and the Male
Chorus will sing, under direction
of Mrs. Lonetta Hagans, and
Jackie Keith. Usher Boards 2 and 4
will serve. Rev. S.L. Badger, pastor
will deliver the sermon. BTU at 5
Mrs. Larice Cameron
C>- ~~ in charge. Evening
service at 6:30 Weekly
activities as usual.

223%]

SHILOH METROPOLITAN
1118 W. Beaver St.

The Layman's Brotherhood Pre-
Father's Day fellowship breakfast
of Shiloh Metropolitan Baptist
Church will be held Saturday at
9:30 a.m. Conley H. Hughes, Sr,
chairman of the Deacon Board is
the speaker.’ SA Sm Ba

Service Sunday begins with the
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. The
lesson is: "The Day of The Lord.”
Morning worship at 11:00, Rev.
Fred Priester presiding, and the
Youth_and Chancel Choirs will
sing. Usher Board 1 will serve. Rev.
Brodie Johnson, pastor of
Ebenezer Baptist Church,
Durham, N.C, speaker.

At 6 p.m., Church Training, Ms.
Gladys Anderson directress.
Evening service at 7:00. The
Vacation Bible School will be held
June 17-21 from 9 a.m, to 1 p.m.,
Mary Cummings, directress.

ST. THOMAS CHURCH
2333 Moncrief Rd.
Sunday services in Greater St.

Thomas Missionary Baptist

Church will begin with the Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m., Supt. John
Feagin in charge. The lesson is:
"The Day Of The Lord.” Morning
service at 11:00, Rev. W.C. Neal,
pastor presiding. Jimmie Green is
the speaker and Choirs 1,2, and
Usher Board 1 will serve. Men and
Women in White will be presented
at 7 p.m, Rev. J.D. Goodman,
associate minister of Mt. Bethel
Baptist Church, is the speaker.
The public is invited.

TWELVE TRIBES OF ISREAL.

District 3 of Friendship
Missionary Baptist Church, will
present a program entitled:
"Twelve Tribes of Isreal,” Sunday
at 4 p.m. at the church. Rev.
Joseph James from Yulee, Fla., is
the speaker. The Sunday School
begins at 9:30 a.m. Morning
service at 11:00 with Pastor Isaac
Roberts in charge. The public is
invited.

ThERRR

Tuesday, June 18
Bh 7:30 - 10:30 P.M.
At SKATF CITY
5133 Soutel Drive

or Prizes! B
Family And

To All Past And Present Patients Of

DR. ORRIN D. MITCHELL
SKATING PARTY & DANCW®

Early And Register

FRIENDSHIP PRIMITIVE
Annual Youth Day will be
observed Sunday in Friendship
Primitive Baptist Church,
beginning with the Sunday School
at 9:30 a.m. with the youth in
charge of the service. Morning
service at 11:00. At 4 p.m., the
youth will present a musical
program. The public is invited.

Elder Bobby Sheffield, pastor.
DEACONESSES’ ANNIVERSARY

The Deaconess Board of First
Titus Missionary Baptist Church
will celebrate its anniversary
Sunday at 3:30 p.m., Ms. W.M.
Armstrong, chairlady.

Service Sunday begin with the
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m., Supt.
P.M. Robinson in charge. The
lesson is: "The Day Of The Lord.”
Pastor Isiah Johnson will review
the lesson. .

Rev. Alfred Stevens of First
African Baptist Church, St. Mary's
Ga., is the speaker for the 11 a.m.,
service. Weekly activities as usual.

ROYAL TABERNACLE
1320 W. 21st St.

The church and pastor's
anniversary continues in Royal
Tabernacle Baptist Church with
Rev. Tom Neal, Rev. s.L. Badger,
Rev. C.B. Dailey and Rev. John
Newman in charge of the services
tonight. Ministers in charge Friday
night are: Rev. Percy Jackson,
Rev. W.L. Glanton, Rev. P.C.
Robinson Sr., Rev. A.L. Neal, Rev.
A.J. Simmons, Rev. W.L. Lavant
and Rev. Frederick Demps.

SPRINGHILL BAPT. CHURCH

2808 Buckman St.

Services Sunday in Springhill
Baptist Church begin with ‘the
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m,
Deacon Henry Woodfork in
charge. Morning service at 11:00.
Rev Levi White, pastor, will deliver
the message. At 4 p.m., the four
Gospel Writers will be presented
by four young ministers. Revival
service begins June 17 and
continue through June 21 at 7:30
p.m. Rev. L.L. Leeis the evangelist.

Ahk hhR

Railroad Employees
Set Memorial
Rites Sunday

Rev W.C. Brown, pastor of
Mother Midway AME Church, is

REV. W.C. BROWN
the master of ceremonies for the
48th Memorial Service of the
railroad employees Sunday at 6
p.m.

The service will be held in Mother
Midway AME Church, located on:
Van Buren St.

The employees gather each year
to honor its deceased members at
a local church. A well planned
program will be presented with
outstanding participants ap-
pearing. The public is invited to
attend.

Senior Citizens’
Club Elects
New Officers

The Live Long and Like It Senior
‘Citizens Club will elect officers
Thursday, June 27, 1 p.m. in the
auditorium of the Mary L.
Singleton Building, 150 E. 1st St.

The nominating committee met
June 3 in the home of Mrs. Alice
Mcintosh with Mrs. Eugenia

Brown, chairperson, presiding. All

members are expected to attend
the election.

Officers. will be installed
following : election and refresh--
ments will be served in the dining
room.

"This will be our last meeting for
the next two months. We will
return in September. We plan to
leave Thursday, July 25° on a
Senior Citizens Tour for South
Carolina and Saturday, July 29 for
the Heritage USA Tennessee
Tour,” explained Emma Watkins,
reporter.

The club's next meeting is set for
Thursday, September 26, 10 a.m.
at the Singleton Building.

The club has also made plans to
participate in the clean-up project
at Memorial Cemetery Saturday,
June 15-16. Members are
expected to gather at 9 a.m. at the
cemetery along with volunteer
organizations, city helpers and
citizens.

All News

Deadline
Monday At

4:30 P.M.

Members of the Postal People are Robin
Whitehead (front), on second row from left Eugene
Flagg, Joyce Wilcox and Josh Baker; second row
from left George Herring, Margaret Wilcox, Marjorie
Thomas and Mary Roper; third row from left, Noah
Battle, F.E. Holzendorf, Hiram Waters and Stareatha
Frederick; and fourth row from left J.L. Wright, Joe

group 0

attend.

Jax Man One Of Nine
Getting Commissioned
At Albany State College

ALBANY, GA.—-Darren Holsey of
Jacksonville, Fla. was one of nine
Reserve Officer Training Corps
(ROTC) cadets commissioned as
officers in the United States Army
here at Albany State College
recently.

The nine were pinned as second
lieutenants during the College's
66th Commencement exercise at
the Albany Civic Center before
some 5,000 parents, friends and

Transportation Corps.

Others receiving their bars and
assignments were Derek
Petterson, Tallahassee, Fla.
Infantry Corps; Keith Horton,

Albany, Ga., Armor Corps; Joseph

J. Moore, lll, of Newton, Ga;
Aviation Corps; Joyce Demons,
Thomson, Ga., unassigned; Irma
S. Hurt, Milledgeville, Ga.,
Transportation Corps; Wilbur
Yancey, Atlanta, Ga., field Artillery

White, J. Brockington, Rev. Burdette Williams,
nd Rev. Shade Herring. The

Nathaniel Williams a (
i ix. Fourth Anniversary of “The

Postal Peoples Hour June
p.m., at Emanuel Baptist Church, 2407 Division St.
Rev. S.L. Badger is pastor. The public is invited to

Power” Sunday, June 16, 3

FIRST CLASS REPAIR
SERVICE WHILE-U-WAIT

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SERVICE

IF OUR SERVICE PLEASES
YOU, TELL OTHERS -IF
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9061 Lem Turner Rd.

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DAN TEDESCHI

alumni.

They received their officer's bars
and duty assignments. Holsey
has been assigned to the

Corps;

Signal Corps.

.

Sonya D. Greene,
Swainsboro, Ga., unassigned and
Mercedes Leach of Atlanta, Ga.,

OWNER
HOURS: Mon. thru Sat.
8 a.m. til 6 p.m.

Being Black in America: A Real Picture

My buddy...
~~ mydad.

PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOHN PINDERHUGHES

. For the last fifteen years, Mr. Pirderliuthes has pursued a
successful career as both a commercial and fine arts photographer.
He is based in New York. :

There’s a special bond between a
father and a son. Something that has
to do with heritage, history, and keep-
ing a family name alive.

A father shapes a son in a special
way because he not only gives him
life, he passes on dreams.

This cultural heritage, passed
down through generations, has greatly
enriched American culture.

In recognizing this, Anheuser- :
Busch is committed to supporting
organizations across the country which
contribute toward the progress of
their community.

A real picture of being Black in
America includes all of us. By
appreciating the importance of the
dreams and aspirations of all, we take
an important step toward making this
nation a strong family.

Building a future in partnership
with the community.

Anheuser-Busch Companies is the parent company of Anheuser-Busch, |

iL Michelob Michelobe Light, Budweisers Light,
®, LAw, Mi i + i

ighual gy, Busch A ichelob Classic Darks beers and King Cobra



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SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

enlightening and entertaining ideas for the kitchén

. . la Combine % cup of the maple syrup, 2 tablespoons of the butter, and the
way 19 bse i i I nls Syrip ties walnuts. Divide evenly among 12 buttered large muffin cups. Set

OY

t gi oe hil aside. Combine flour, baking powder, and salt. Mix evaporated milk,
Wondhedltintasstute tomes Bns lmnvine over the nut mixture, alsg contains maple syrup, 25 Vell 85 atc emanina Js cup map ora remain talespoons ber
he Greeni ng Of Pasta ... A Fresh Idea even more “maple rich” when served with Maple Butter. and egg. Add all at once to flour mixture; stir just until moistened. Fi

prepared muffin cups 23 full. Bake in hot oven (400° F.) 20 to 25
minutes. Immediately invert muffin pans on racks set on waxed

paper. Let stand 2 to 3 minutes. Remove muffins from pans. Serve.
Maple Walnut Coffee Cakes Pa Maple Duger
& T— - 4 x ¢

MAPLE BUTTER: Cream '% cup soft butter. Gradually beat in % cup
maple syrup until thoroughly combined. Makes about 1 cup.

(MICROWAVE BASICS]

Simplify A Sauce

Trying to prepare a simple sauce over a hot stove often results in one
harried cook. To simplify sauce making, use your microwave oven and keep
these guidelines from the Banquet Foods Test Kitchens in mind.
+1. Select a basic sauce recipe from your microwave oven cookbook then
use your imagination to create new ideas.

2. Be sure to use a container that is large enough for the sauce to expand
during cooking.

3. When possible select a bowl or dish that can be used both for micro-
wave cooking and serving.

4. Although occasional stirring is necessary, it will eliminate lumping
and scorching that often occurs during stove top cooking.

Add this delicious sauce, served over a frozen prepared cream pie, to your
microwave recipe file. .

: 45k i rom - 7 Chocolate Butterscotch Treat
i J To : ; 1 jar (12.5 oz.) butterscotch 1 package (1 1/8 oz.) English
You've no doubt heard of green noodles, but noodles with greens?! It’s Goi . sundae sauce toffee candy bars,
Pasta Verde. . . egg noodles plus spinach, California ripe olives, cheese and ; 1 cup (8 oz.) half and half crumbled

sour cream. . . and it adds up to perfection. The greens lend a refreshing

lightness to the pasta. The ripe olives contribute texture and color contrast, ,
and mellow taste. The cheese blends together the other ingredients. And the
subtle flavors of sour cream and herbs enhance all to make a luscious dish
hearty enough for an entree but equally beautiful as a side dish or first course. 1 cup maple syrup

cream or milk > 1 package (14 oz.) BANQUET
: >i ye sr 1 tablespoon cornstarch Chocolate Cream Pie
2 tablespoons cold water

(Makes 1 dozen)

In 1 1/2-quart microwave-safe bowl, combine butterscotch sundae sauce’

1 teaspoon salt

and cream. Heat on HIGH 3 to 4 minutes or until hot, stirring occasionally.
_ Pasta Verde 6 tablespoons melted butter %, cup undiluted CARNATION In small custard cup, combine cornstarch and water. Stir until smooth. Add
6 ounces medium egg noodles 1 large clove garlic, minced Y% cup chopped walnuts _ Evaporated Milk cornstarch mixture to butterscotch mixture. Heat on HIGH 3 to 4 minutes
(about 2 cups) or pressed 2 cups all-purpose flour V5 cup water or until bubbly and slightly thickened, stirring occasionally. Stir in candy.
1-1/2 quarts boiling water 1-1/2 teaspoons basil, crumbled - 1 tablespoon baking powder 1 beaten egg Cool 30 minutes. Serve over pie, Makes 2 cups sauce.
1 tablespoon vegetable oil 1-1/2 teaspoons oregano, crumbled
1 medium onion, chopped 1-1/2 cups pitted California ripe ——
(1/2 cup) . olives, cut into wedges
1 pound fresh spinach or 1 cup grated Monterey Jack
Romaine lettuce, washed, cheese
trimmed and chopped 1 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 cup dairy sour cream (optional)

Drop noodles into boiling water. Return to boil. Reduce heat and simmer
7 minutes; drain. While noodles cook, heat oil in skillet. Add onion and
spinach and cook over medium-high heat for 4 to 5 minutes or until onion is
cooked and spinach is wilted. Stir in sour cream, garlic, basil, oregano and all
but 1/4 cup olives. Drain noodles::Return to kettle. Add Jack cheese and 1/2
the Parmesan cheese. Heat, stirring until melted. Stir in spinach combination.
Heat gently but do not boil. Turn into serving dish. Sprinkle with remaining

. olives and Parmesan cheese. Makes 4 to 6 servings.

Washington Potato Appetizers
Bring Compliments

Hot appetizers are always popular with party guests. Next time you enter-
tain, be prepared for compliments when you serve Crusty Potato Tidbits
piping hot from the oven. Inexpensive to prepare, the recipe makes a generous
70 appetizers. To avoid last minute preparation, they can be baked in advance
and refrigerated or frozen, then simply reheated at serving time.

For these tasty tidbits, mashed Washington Russet potatoes are blended
with milk, butter, grated Parmesan cheese and green onion. The mixture is
formed into balls, dipped in beaten egg and crushed cornflakes before baking
until crispy and hot. Terrific for snacking, they also can serve as a meat ; :
accompaniment. ;

Washington Russets are a quality, all-purpose potato, rich in important :
vitamins and minerals. You'll recognize them by their oval shape, shallow :
eyes and light netting. oe el
Crusty Potato Tishus +@
2

pounds hot, cooked . cup grated Parmesan
Washington Russet potatoes cheese :
2 tablespoons milk 2 tablespoons minced green

3 seblesponns butiee ot en WE ARE SO SURE THAT YOU'LL LOVE
Bn GE ee bend THE GREAT NEW TASTE OF COCA-COLA
ee a WE GUARANTEE IT! OR YOUR MONEY BACK!

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â„¢ : : ;

i tato balls i , th 11 in cornflakes. Place on greased baking sheet * . : , ;

SE Bake at 400°F. 10 minutes or until balls are hot and crusty. Makes about | This offer is easy: Try a can or bottle If you don't agree, we'll refund your

$30 apperiaer balls. of Coke with a purchase price of up to purchase price up to 75¢ when you

R Recipes That Beat The Heat 75¢. If you agree with us that the new return the official refund certificate and

NX Has summer's sweltering sizzle wilted your desire to entertain family and Coca-Cola is the best tasting soft drink a cash register receipt for your purchase.
'Fiends? Then beat the heat with these cool dishes and a refreshingly creamy 2 of i

Saocsert like Great Ice Creams of the South. It's a unique new ice cream Svar send the sig refund certificate Complete details are on the official

rived from famous southern dessert recipes and produced with real chunks eiow along with a cash register receipt refund certificate

‘ouf fruits, nuts, and bits of cookies or pie. crusts. And with names like Apple for your urchase. and we'll send vou etu :

Brown Betty, Shoofly Pie and Southern Vanilla Puddin’, your guests won’t be P ’ y

RH to resist this premium frozen treat! $2 worth of coupons good for future TRY THE GREAT NEW TASTE OF

on Here are a few main courses that will prime your guests’ palates before you

Ge

BT er rings purchases of Coke. COCA-COLA! BETTER THAN EVER.

- Vichyssoise

8) hit art , thinly 4 cups chicken broth TED EER GED GED SED GI ES SD SI CHI) SD GED SHED GIN NON GEN SE Sm RE an,
Ox leeks (w ite pael) 1. tablespoon salt [ManuracTuRER'S coupon] EXPIRES: 8/31/85] OFFICIAL REFUND CERTIFICATE 1
8% 1 medium onion, thinly 2 cups milk Check One Box Only
NY sliced 2 sunslighi cream RA RR
: -25¢ off coupons; of i
Rx : vi pe Ew TUp Whipping cream 1 Ee PUI PIE CIEE or ose i

sliced (about 4 cups) ; ON COKE OR CAFFEINE FREE COKE WHEN YOU

[] don't agree. Please send me $1.25 worth of coupons (5-25¢ off coupons)
PURCHASE ANY MULTI-PACK OF CANS OR BOTTLES, 2

good for purchases of other products of The Coca-Cola Company. Enclosed

Cook leeks and onion in butter until tender, but not brown; add potatoes, is a cash register receipt with the purchase price of Coca-Cola circled.

oth and salt. Cook 35 to 40 minutes. Rub mixture through fine sieve;

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turn to heat. Add milk and light cream. Bring to a boil. Remove from heat OR ONE 2L OR 3L BOTTLE 3 have enclosed a cash register receipt with the my
: . + : NOTE TO DEALER: For each coupon you accept as our authorized agent, we will pay you the face value aisles puchase
Mprving. Garnish with finely chopped chives. Makes 8 servings. of ue coupon, gue Be ha hovarce provided you and ye cus roses od vin he NAME i
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PAGE 8

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

LOCAL DEATH

ANDERSON--Rhonda G.
Anderson died June 5th, at 369
Palmetto St., Baldwin, Fla.
Survivors include her mother, Mrs.
Vonda Anderson; father, Donald
Anderson; grandparents; great-
grandfather; brother and sister,
Donald and Mia Anderson; other
relatives and friends.

BAKER--Mrs. Inez Baker, of lI0 W.
12th St., died June 2nd. Survivors
include her son, Willie Smith;
stepdaughter; sisters, Pearl
Lawson, Lula Scott and Hattie
Pino; nephews; 6 grandchildren; 4
great-grandchildren; sister-in-lw;
other relatives and friends.

GINWRIGHT--Mr. William
Ginwright, of 5806 Begonia Rd.,
died June 5th in a local hospital.
He was born in Marion, S.C., but
had lived in Jacksonville since
establishing residence here 36
years ago. He was a member of the
Ephesus Seventh Day Adventist
Church, Elder Herman Davis,
Pastor. Survivors include his
daughters, Mrs. Anna G. Bowman,
Ms. Sylvia Ginwright, Ms. Marilee
Ginwright and Mrs. Alice G. Sapp;
son, William Ginwright, Jr., a
number of grandchildren, great-
grandchildren; 2 nephews; other
relatives and friends.

GLOVER--David Glover, a well
known resident of 8286 Moncrief
‘Rd., Ext., died June 2nd, in the
Veteran's Administration Hospital.
Lake City. He was born in
‘Arlington, Ga. and had lived in this
city for a number of years.
Survivors include his wife, Isabella
Williams; stepdaughter; brother,
- Johnny Glover; sister, Ceola Hall;
grandchildren; other relatives and
many sorrowing friends.

JOHNSON--Deacon Ulysee
Johnson of 7533 John F. Kennedy
Dr., W. died.

JONES--Mr. Johnnie Lee Jones,
Sr., of 6441 Hughes St., died May
3st.

KING--Mr. Edward Campbell
King, Sr., a well known resident of
1704 Seminary St., died June 4th,
in a local hospital. Mr. King was
born. in Hardeeville, S.C. and
reared in Jacksonville, where he
lived until his death. He is survived
by his devoted wife, Mrs. Margaret
G. King; | son, Edward King, Jr.;
daughter, Brenda King White-
head; 2 grandsons; brothers and
sister-in-lw, Melvin and Mildred
Campbell of New York and Harold
Campbell of Hardeeville, S.C;
brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law;
many nieces, nephews, cousins,
other relatives and a host of
sorrowing friends.

LUCILLE--Mrs. Ethel Lucille of
629 Court G, died June 3rd at 732
Court E. She was a member of the
African Universal Church.
Survivors include her daughter,
Mrs. Minnie Manning; 9
grandchildren; 14 great-
« grandchildren; other relatives and
. friends.

. LUMPKINS--Mrs. Jesse Henry
© Lyons Lumpkins, member of a well
. known Jacksonville family of 6939
* Wilson Blvd., died June 6th at a
+ local hospital. Mr. Lumpkins was
. born in Jacksonville and was a
* lifelong resident here. He was a
- member of the Bethel Baptist
Church (Sweetwater) the Rev.
. William Lavant, Pastor. Survivors
- include 3 daughters; 2 sons; his
mother, Mrs. Alice E. Kohn; 2
© sisters, Ms. Angela E. Kohn and
Ms. Evelyn Matthews; 3 brothers,
* Charles L. Lumpkins, John D. And
Ervin T. Kohn; 2 aunts; | great-
aunt; 5 sisters-in-law; a number of
cousins; other relatives and
friends.

LUNSFORD--Mrs. Lena Mae
Lunsford, of 2943 Springpark Rd.
Apt. 448, died June 4 in a locai
hospital. She was a native of
Tallahassee, Fl. and lived in
Jacksonville most of her life. She
was a longtime member of
Wayman Chapel, Pastor Rev. Mike
McFarland. She is survived by her
son, Marvin Lunsford; 2
daughters, Rose Lunsford and
Darlene Brown; 2 sisters, Mary
Williams and Amanda Henderson;
2 brothers, William Hayes and
Dea. Edward Hayes, Sr.; a host of
nephews, nieces and friends.

MCKENZIE--Mr. Rudolph
McKenzie, of 164 W. 35th St., died
June 9, 1985. A native of Albany,
Ga., he had been a resident of the
Jax, Fla. area a number of years.
Mr. McKenzie was a member of
Abyssinia Missionary Baptist
Church, Rev. Tom E. Diamond,
Pastor. Survivors are a loving and
devoted family, wife, Mrs. Beatrice
J. McKenzie; son, Mr. Carlton
Alonzo McKenzie; daughter, Ms.
Debra Elaine McKenzie; sisters,
Mrs. Dorothy Terry and Mrs.
Bernice Cato; brother, Mr. Earl
McKenzie; 2 grands; father and
mother-in-law; 4 sisters-in-law; 3
brothers-in-law; a host of
nephews, nieces, cousins, other
relatives and many sorrowing
friends among them devoted
friends.

MCNEALY--Deacon King David
McNealy, of 601 Court "G”,
Blodgett Homes, died June 4t , at
a local hospital. He was born in
Marianna, Fla. but had lived in
Jacksonville since establishing
residence here more than a half
century ago. Deacon McNealy was
a member of the Second
Missionary Baptist Church, The
Rev. J.C. Sams, Pastor, where he
served with the Board of Deacons.
Survivors include his daughter,
Mrs. Maple M. Jones; step-
daughter; grandchildren; 5 great-
grandhildren; sisters, Mrs. Susie
Corbett, Mrs. Linnie Williams and
Mrs. Jessie L. McCullough;
stepson-in-law; a number of
nieces, nephews, other relatives
and friends.

MCRORY--Mrs. Nellie McCrory,
of 320 W. I6th Stl, died. She is
survived by a sister, Willie Mae
Williams; 2 nieces; nephew; dear
a host of grand-nieces and
nephews; other relatives and
friends.

MASON--Evangelist Bessie E.
Mason, of 1692 Hiram St., died
June Ic . Survivors include | son; a
stepson; a grandson; several
nieces and nephews ; cousins
and a host of sorrowing friends.

MAYS--Mrs. Mary Mention Mays,
of 10843 Happy Vale Road, died
May 3I-% in a local hospital. A
native of Darien, Ga., Mrs. Mays
had lived in Jacksonville for 60
years. She was a member of the
Mt. Sinai Baptist Church, Rev. B.J.
Lane, Minister; Survivors include a
daughter, Mrs. Delores Perry;
niece, cousin; 2 granddaughters; a
host of nieces, nephews, cousins
and a host of friends.

MILLER--Mrs. Mattie Miller, of
1559 W. 22nd St., died June 8"
She was a member of Mt. Ararat
Baptist Church, Rev. R. Thaddeus
Williams, Pastor. She is survived
by a daughter, Annie Rogers; a
son, Herbert A. Miller; 2 sisters,
Queen Liatimore and Annie
Malone, both of Lakeland, Fla.; a
grandson, Harold Keith Miller; and
a host of other relatives and
friends.

PETERSON--Mrs. Mildred Adams
Peterson, member of a prominent
Jacksonville family, of I355 W. 12th
St., died June 81 at a local

DRS. LEWIS J. MARCHAND,

" DEWAYNE M. BROWN,

WILLIAM M. FLEISCHMANN, P.A.

© ASSOCIATES:

THOMAS F. YOHO, BRUCE M. CARPENTER

UPPER AND LOWER
(#05110)
® One

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JAY SHREE A. PATEL. B.D.S.

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AILABLE

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Medicaid Dentures & Surgery (Over 21).

Restorations (Under 21). Also VA & Insurance
235 West Third St., Jacksonville

hospital. Mrs. Peterson was born
in Key West, Fla., but had lived in
this city since establishing
residence here in 1943. Her church
membership was with the
Ebenezer United Methodist
Church, Rev. Roosevelt Dell, Jr.,
Pastor. Survivors include her
husband, Preston S. Peterson:
daughter, Dr. Carrell Peterson
Horton; grandson and grand-
daughter-in-law; sister, Bertha
Adams Baker, and a brother-in-
law; niece; cousin; and other
devoted relatives and” many
friends.

PRYOR--The Rev. Eugene Pryor,
51, of 3047 Ribault Scenic Dr.,
Pastor ' of Epiphany Baptist
Church, died on June 10 . Rev.
Pryor was born in Athens, Ala.,
where he confessed Christ at age
10, in Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church,
began- his pastoral duties in 1972.
Cherishing his memory are his
darling widow, Mrs. Sylvia M.
Pryor; son and daughter-in-law,
The Rev. Kevin and Annette P.
Pryor; daughter and son-in-law,
Deidre and Charles Whitfield;
mother, Mrs. Lettie Pryor of East

. St. Louis, lll.; brothers, David and

Robert Pryor; sisters, Mrs. Mabel
Hill, East St. Louis, Ill. and Mrs.
Nellie Malone, Louisville, Ky.; |
loving grandchild; many nieces,
nephews, adopted children and
friends.

REESE--Beulah Reese, a well
known resident of 888 Franklin St.,
Apt. 566, died June 4t in her
residence. She was a member of
the Zion Hope Missionary Baptist

Church, Rev. S.P. Donald,
Minister. Survivors include
godsons, cousins, a devoted

friend; other relatives and many
sorrowing friends.

ROLLER--Sister Lillie Mozell
Lewis Roller of 4648 Bristol Ave.,
died June 2’ .. Survivors include
her husband, Minister Charles
Roller; daughter, Chinishau
Roller; son, Jeffery Lewis; mother,
Mrs. Rosa Lewis; father, Mr. Sam
Lewis; sisters, Gaynell Webb,
Shirley Smith and Ida Smith;
brother, Sammy Lewis; other
relatives and friends.

SMITH-—-Mr. Jacob Franklin Smith,
died Wednesday, June 5,
1985.. He was born in Tuskegee:
Ala., and resided in Jacksonville
for several years. Survivors are 2
daughters, Ms. Carletta F. Smith
and Mrs. Robin Smith Bailey; 2
brothers, Edgar L. and Curtis M.
Smith; 3 aunts; sister-in-law; 2
nieces; 4 nephews; 3 grand-
children; several cousins and
devoted friends.

STEWART--Mr. Johnnie Stewart,
Jr., of 6426 Manhattan Dr., died
June 3, 1985. A native of Jasper,
Fla., he had been a resident of the
Jax, Fla. area for 35 years. He
leaves to’ mourn his demise a
loving and devoted family, son, Mr.
Johnnie Stewart, lll; daughter,
Mrs. Velma Haugabrook; 3
grandsons; brother, Mr. Richard
Stewart; sisters-in-law; a host of
nephews, nieces, cousins, other
relatives and many sorrowing
friends.

THOMAS--Doris Geddes Thomas
of 101 W. 23rd St., died June 4’ .
She was a native of Jacksonville,
attended the local public schools.
Survivors include her son,
Leander Geddes; daughters,
Janice Cisero, Kathy Johnson and
Sandra Lundy; mother, Josie
Adams; father, Leander Geddes;
sister, Almeda Smith; daughter-in-
law; sons-in-law; sons-in-law;
grandchildren; a dear friend; a
godson; a host of nieces,
nephews, cousins, other relatives
and friends.

WASHINGTON--Leroy
Washigton (better known as
Geech), of 1761 Hiram St., died

June 6.. in the Veterans
Administration Hospital, Lake
City.

WEST--Mrs. Gracie Mae West, of -
2263 Hartridge St., died June 6. °

Survivors include her daughter,
Minnie Ruth White; sons and
daughters-in-law, James and
Brenda Jackson, John and Karen
West, Allen West and Antonio
West; her mother, Mrs. Emma
Pollard; brother-in-law; uncle; 8
grandchildren; a host of other
relatives and friends.

WEST--Mrs. Hattie Pearl “Chippy”
West of 1710 W. Union St., Apt. |,
. died June lc. Survivors include
her daughters, Ann Sanders,
Francina Miller, Marian Stewart
and Gloria "Nancy” Matthews:

WILCOX--Mr. General Wilcox, of
1830 Cleveland St., died May 3iri.
He was born in Brookfield, Ga.,
and had resided in Jacksonville for
a number of years. Survivors
include | sister, Elizabeth Daniels,
2 brothers, William and Joseph
Wilcox; 3 sisters-in-law; a very
special nepew; a host of nieces,
nephews, cousins, other relatives
and friends.

WILLIAMS--Mrs. Susie Williams,
well known citizen who formerly
lived at I3I5 Madison Street, died
June I<: in a local hospital. Mrs.
Williams, a native of Waverly, Ga.,
had lived in Jacksonville since
1924. She was a member of the
Second Missionary Baptist
Church, Rev. J.C. Sams, Minister.
Survivors include a devoted
daughter, Mrs. Mamie Hiliad; son,
Angelo Williams; 3 grand-
daughters; 2 grandsons; 3
grandsons-in-law; 2 grand-
daughters-in-law; Il greatgrands
and | great-great-grandchild;
several nieces, nephews and many
friends.

WILLIAMS--Mrs. Thelma R.
Williams, of 2523 Petunia St., died
June 6u.. at a local hospital. She
was a member of the Faust Temple
Church of God in Christ, Elder
W.F. Faust, Pastor. Survivors
include her devoted husband, Mr.
Arthur Williams; daughters, Ms.
Tanya and Ms. Harriet Williams;
mother, Mrs. Lucille Worthy;
sisters, Mrs. Louise Perkins, Ms.
Lucille Worthy. Mrs. Jewel D.
Thurman, Mrs. Glenda Wade, Ms.
Lucille and Ann Worthy; brothers,
Woodrow, Jr., Timothy, Walter
and Clint Worthy; mother-in-law;
father-in-law; 2 sisters-in-law; 3
brothers-in-law; nieces, nephews;
cousins; other relatives and many
friends.

WILSON--Mrs. Inez G. Wilson,
died in her residence ‘at 1159
Steele Court. She was a member of
St. Stephens AME Church, Rev.
R.V. Webster, Pastor. Survivors
include a brother and sister-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wright of
Miami, Fla.

Word Of God

What Shall Be The
Sign?

Mark 13:4

Jews return to Israel

that. he. is: his Cl
that are
scattered; so wili | seek

ous my sheep, and will
deliver them out of all
places where they have
been scattered in the
cloudy and dark day.

And | will bring them
out from the people,
and gather them from
the countries, and will
bring them to their own
land, and feed them
upon the mountains of
Is'ra-el by the rivers,
and in all the inhabited
places of the country.

Ezekiel 34:12-13

MEMORIAMS
aaa th A a

memory of the late
arion Royal, who

In lovin
Mrs.

departed this life five years
ago, June 18, 1980.

MARION ROYAL

She did not bid farewell or say
goodbye. She was gone before we
knew it and only God knows why.
Your memory is a keepsake of
which we will never part. Our
hearts still ache, our eyes still shed
tears. Only God knows how we
miss you at the end of these five
years.

Sadly missed by loving husband,
Mr. Sam Royal.

| know thy works,
that thou art
neither cold nor
hot: | would thou
wert cold or hot.

So then because
thou art lukewarm,
and neither cold
nor hot, | will spew
thee out of my

mouth.
Revelation 3:15,16

In loving memory of the late

Henry Ambrose Cotten, Jr.
who departed this life three years
ago, June 15, 1982.

=

HENRY A. COTTEN, JR.
Jr., there is a vacant place in
our home, we miss you very
much and often think of you,
for your many kind and lovely
deeds. Your sweet smile.

It is sometimes hard to
understand why, but God
knows and loves you too.

Your family, Mama and
Daddy; Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Cotton, Sr., sisters & brother:
Everlena, Janice, Derick &
Edward, Aunts, Uncles, Sister
and Brothers-in-Law; Denise,
Evander & Gerald and friend;
T.%0n.

Our Father Randolph McKeiver
Jr. 11 years have past, You know
three But only one knew you But,
we all love you Buck Love Always,

Your Daughters; Delisa, Tantrell,
and LaTonya McKeiver.

FOR

DAD’S
EYES
ONLY

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ARNOLD
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262-SPEC or 262-7732

3. @ MON-FRI. 9-7, SAT. 9-2,

better.

ATHLETE’S FOOT

The onset of hot, humid summer weather in Florida is a sure
sign that the annual outbreak of the itchy, often painful
condition we know as athlete’s foot is about to occur. Increased
physical activity and perspiration are the primary culprits with
this problem, which can develop into a serious infection if not
managed properly.

Athlete’s foot is a fungal infection that can cause a variety of
symptoms, including blisters, cracks in the skin, and the build.
up of thick calluses that can crack and bleed. Simple cases of
athlete’s foot sometimes are effectively treated with medicated
powders, commonly available over the counter. However, if the
condition does not clear up within a week, it should be seen by
a professional.

The podiatrist, a doctor who has completed four years ‘of
training in the diagnosis and treatment of foot disorders, is
perhaps best-qualified to control athlete’s foot infections.
Treatment generally includes careful cleaning and trimming of
dead skin around the affected area and prescription of oral
medication and/or topical ointment. Mild cases can be resolved
in a few days; more severe outbreaks may take a month or more.
Therefore, the sooner effective treatment is commenced the

The best precaution against athlete’s foot is to keep feet dry.
Pay particular attention to drying between t
swimming. Powder in shoes and/or socks may help, as will a
change of socks during the day for those who

For more information on athlete’s foot, call 355.1553.

* x xx

Dr. Stephen Meritt attended the University of North Carolina
in Chapel Hill and was graduated from the Ohio.
Podiatric Medicine in Cleveland. He has been

after bathing or

rspire heavily.

practicing podiatry

of

son, Jimmy Lee West; an aunt: I3 in Jacksonville since 1975. For the convenience of patients, he

o TR 0 NM TT, HT TON Se eR

OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRL 8.5, grandchildren; 6 great-grand- ' { maintains offices at both 431 W. 8th St. (Downtown, Westside,
= SAT.8-12 ine children; ! Jeatniecs; 2 great, Northside) and 4010 Sunbeam Rd. (Southside, Mandarin, Beaches,
. x in-law; cousins and Honey. a Wa ory ange I rk). t “hone ® 355-1553. AE i

en i

AN A



SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

‘PAGE 9

SATURDAY
6/15/85

5:00 AM EB Beverly Hillbillies

@ MOVIE: ‘Hit Lady’ A woman's job

as a professional artist is a cover for

hot real ce psen as a hired assassin.
vette Mimieux, Joseph Cam

Clu Gulager. 1974 Pp Paris.

5:30AM @ What's Happening
6:00 AM @ Farm and Home Show

Alice

€D U. S. Farm Report
6:15AM EB Job Finder
6:30AM @ Info 4

€® Andy Griffith

Amazing Spiderman

Picture of Health

@) Essence

7:00 AM @ it's Elementary
@ Sesame Street (CC)
@B Hi Neighbor
€D Incredible Hulk
It's Your Business
Focus 44
7:30AM @ New Zoo Revue
: Kid-A-Littles
€D Kidd Video
Romper Room
Spiderman
8:00 AM @ Biskitts
Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood
Kids, Inc.
Snorks
MOVIE: ‘Kid with the Golden
Arm’ A famous security bureau is re-

quested by the Government to guard a
ic shipment of gold. 1980.

Voltron

8:30 AM @ Get Along Gang
Electric Company

- @B Kidsworld

: Transformers
Pink Panther and Sons

9:00 AM @ Muppet Babies
@ Nature (CC) ‘Discovery of Animal
Behavior: In Praise of God.’ Second of
5 parts. This episode profiles natural-
ists who were among the first to study
animal behavior. (R) (60 min.)
@ Mighty Orbots
Smurfs
MOVIE: ‘Rachel And the
Stranger’ A man's love for his wife is
aroused when a stranger visits their
home. William Holden, Loretta Young,
Robert Mitchum. 1948.

9:30AM @ Dungeons
Dragons
€ Turbo-Teen

10:00 AM It's Elementary
@d Down to Earth
Rubik the Amazing Cube
Greatest American Hero
10:30AM @ Bugs/Road Runner
JIP
Deaf Mosiac
New Scooby Doo Mysteries (CC)
€D Alvin & the Chipmunks
@ Video Game

11:00 AM @ CBS Storybreak
@ Pet Action Line
€» Scary Scooby Funnies
_ €0 Jackson Five Cartoons
" @ MOVIE: ‘The Last Man on Earth’:
.. After a strange'apidemic, one man, left
alive, finds himself being sought by the
walking dead who, at night, leave their
graves. Vincent Price, Franca Bettoca.
1964.
Mid-Atlantic
Wrestling
11:30AM. @ Pryor’s Place
Frugal Gourmet
Littles (CC)
@Mr.T
12:00PM @ Hardy Boys/Nancy
Drew Mysteries
Auction
All-Star Wrestling
America’s Top Ten
World-Wide Wrestling

12:30PM My Mother the Car

1:00 PM @ Buck Rogers
Putt-Putt Golf
Inside Look
MOVIE: ‘Pleasure Palace’ A tale
of romance and intrigue,among the
high rollers in the gambling capitals of
the world. Omar Shariff, Vigtoria Princi-
pal, Jose Ferrer. 1980.
@) MOVIE: ‘They Rode West’ When
a malaria®epidemic hits the Indians, a
young army doctor goes to help. Rob-
ert Francis, Donna Reed, May Wynn.
1954

1:15PM @ Major League
Baseball: Milwaukee at Baltimore or
Los Angeles at Houston

1:30PM Andy Griffith

2:00 PM @ MOVIE: ‘Taras Bulba’
16th century Cossacks fight for free-
dom from Poland's domination. Yul
Brynner, Tony Curtis, Christine Kauf-
mann. 1962.
€P Professional Golf: U.S. Open
Third round coverage is presented
from Oakland Hills Country Club in Bir-
mingham, MI. (4 hrs., 30 min.)

3:00PM €D MOVIE: ‘Wild in the
Streets’ A 24-year-old man is elected
President by teenage voters. Shelley
Winters, Hal Holbrook, Richard Pryor.
1968.

Championship

'9:00 PM @ Airwolf Dominic, Caitlin

and 9:30PM gD Mama's Family Ma-

10:00PM @ Mickey Spillane’s

@ MOVIE: ‘Mad Man’

4:00PM Ma ue
Baseball: on, White dea at
California or Detroit at New York
Yankees
4:30PM _ @ NCAA Special
Outdoor $s & Field Champion-
ships Coverage is presented from
Texas Memorial Stadium, University of]
Texas, Austin, TX. (60 min.)
5:00 PM @D solid Gold
@ Six Million Dollar Man
5:30 PM @ John Madden Special
6:00PM News
€D Dance Fever
@ Hawk
6:30PM @ CBS News
News
€D NBC News
Puttin’ on the Hits
7:00 PM @ Health Matters
€ Hee Haw
€D Star Search
WWF Championship Wrestling
Blue Knight

7:30PM @ Organ Transplants

8:00PM @ Second Chance:
Dedicated to Life Special program fo-
cuses on advances made with organ
transplants and need for organ donors.
€ T.J. Hooker (CC)
€D Diff rent Strokes (CC) Sam is up-
set to learn that his new neighbor is
nothing but a girl, but she soon
changes his mind. (R) :
€D Black Sheep Squadron
@ MOVIE: ‘Jamaica Inn’ Part 1 A
beautiful young woman discovers the
dark secrets surrounding the Jamaica
Inn, a haven for shipwreckers in 19th
century England. Jane Seymour, Pa-
trick McGoohan, Trevor Eve.

8:30PM It's Your Move Matt's
idea to use the apartment as a bachelor
pad does not work out as planned. (R)

and Airwolf rush to the aid of a country
music singer in danger. (R) (60 min.)
€B Love Boat (CC) Isaac, Gopher and
Ace try to make points with a girl by
fighting a former boxing champ, and an
overprotective mother causes prob-
lems for her daughter. (R) (60 min.)
0 Gimme a Break Nell and singer Ray
Parker decide to put on a benefit con-
cert for the widow of dead jogger, but
are shocked to learn he was a gangs-
ter. (R)

€D Cousteau/Mississippi

ma'’s record collection of ‘40s’ music
comes to the rescue when the band for
the school dance fails appear. (R)

Mike Hammer Hammer's investiga-
tion of an elderly couple's ruthless mur-
der involves him with international
terrorists. (R) (60 min.)

@B Finder of Lost Loves (CC)

A Portrait of the Press, Warts
and All, by John Chancellor Chancel-
lor reports on the American public's
view of journalists and their profes-
sion. (60 min.)

MOVIE: ‘Americathon’ It's 1998
and America’s run out of gas and mo-
ney. John Ritter, Harvey Korman. 1979

1 1:00PM © @ @ News
+ ED Benny HilFShow :

11:30PM @ MOVIE: ‘The Way
' We Were’ Two people with totally dif-
ferent lifestyles love and marry as they
battle for their personal beliefs. Barbra
Streisand, Robert Redford, Patrick.
O'Neal. 1973.
M*A*S*H
Saturday Night Live Host Rever-
end Jesse Jackson welcomes musical
guests Andrae Crouch and Wintley
Phipps.

: MOVIE: ‘Little Moon and Jud

McGraw’ A young reporter stumbles
onto the secret of a long-forgotten
ghost town. Sammy Davis, Jr., James
Caan, Stefanie Powers. 1979.
12:00 AM Star Hustler
€ Switch
@ Telephone Auction Shopping
Prog.
1 .00 AM €@ MOVIE: ‘Lifeguard’ A
32-year-old lifeguard is unable to make
a marital commitment or to obtain a
conventional job. Sam Elliott, Anne
Archer. 1976.

Star Search

New York Hot Tracks
1:30 AM @ Music City, U.S.A.
2:00 AM @ Movie Cont'd
2:30AM MOVIE: ‘Trail Street’

Bat Masterson saves a town from its

corrupt leaders. Randolph Scott, Rob-
ert Ryan, Anne Jeffreys. 1947.

4:30 AM MOVIE: ‘Slaughter
Trail’ A gang of robbers, aided by a
woman accomplice, kills three Indians
and an Army Fort Commandant. Brian
Donlevy, Gig Young, Virghiz Grey.
1951.

SUNDAY
6/16/85

‘6:00 AM @ Church Service

P) Welcome Back Kotter
@ Health and Happines

6:30 AM @ Sunday School Forum
EP Kidsworld

‘WATCH
THE WALTER PONDER SHOW
ON CHANNEL 19

"THE THUNDERBOLT OF THE SOUTH”

SUNDAY........5:30 P.M.
MONDAY.......12: 30 P.M.

STAR TV. GUIDE

Do Blacks Need New Leaders?

“DO BLACKS NEED NEW LEADERS?" --TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
tackles this question and examines the controversial meeting between
President Reagan and the Council for a Black Economic Agenda, a
group of non-partisan, non-establishment Black leaders. On the
program, Robert Woodson (left), chairman of the fledgling organization,
challenges the current Black leadership and programs. America’s
longest-running and top-ranked Black-Affairs television series has been

sponsored by Pepsi-Cola Company: for ten consecutive years and is

aired in this area on public television (PBS) on WJCT-7 at Midnight on

Thurday,

Citing the failure of current social
programs and policies to solve the
problems of minorities and the
poor, the newly-formed Council
for a Black Economic Agenda has
called for a leadership and thrust
that emphasizes independence
and self-help. The Council,
composed of non-partisan, non-
establishment Black leaders, met
with President Reagan to present
their solutions.

After meeting with this group and
ignoring requests to meet with the
traditional Black leadership,
President Reagan sparked a storm
of controversy. Four of "the
Council's recommendations were
included in his State of the Union
address: support for public
housing resident organizations;
provide tax incentives for small
businesses in low-income areas;
increase earned income tax credit
for poor working people; and
enforce urban enterprise zones.

Paxon. Revival Center

6:45AM Devotions

7:00 AM For Our Times
Jerry Falwell
€D Lewis Family
Jesus’ Name Assembly
New Life in Christ
7:30 AM @ Morning Line
€D There Is A Way
€D Dawn of a New Day
Let the Bible Speak
8:00 AM @ 4 the Asking
Sesame Street (CC)
€B James Robison
€ Ernest Angley
DO Jimmy Swaggart
Leroy Jenkins
8:30AM @ Wall Street Journal
Report
Dawn of a New Day
9:00 AM @ Sunday Morning
Sesame Street (CC)
@D First Coast Life
€ Robert Schuller
ED Evangel Temple .
Amazing Grace

9:30 AM € World Tomorrow

€D My Favorite Martian
Muppet Show
Jim Whittington
10: 00 AM @D Sesame Street cc)
€D Coral Ridge Ministries
€ Day of Discovery
Voyagers
Larry Jones Ministry
10:30 AM @ Face the Nation

@ MOVIE: ‘Hugo the Hippo’ A for-
lorn baby hippo struggles to survive in .
the jungle. Voices of Paul Lynde, Burl
Ives, Robert Morley. 1976.

11:00 AM Agronsky & Co
Firing Line ‘Psychiatry: New Ex-
plorations.” Among the guests is Tho-
mas Szasz, Professor of Psychiatry at
State Universiiy of New York's Up-
state Medical Center in Syracuse. (60
min.)

First Baptist Church
Tarzan
€O Wild Kingdom

11:30 AM @ Taking Advantage

Puttin’ on the Hits

112:00 PM © saint

@ Auction

€P This Is the USFL
Championship Wrestling of
Florida

EO Lifestyles of the Rich and
Famous -

@) MOVIE: ‘The Chapman Report’ A
psychologist and his staff conduct a
scientific sex survey ona group of ‘typ-
ical’ American suburban wives. Efrem

Zimbalist, Jr., Shelley Winters, Jane
Fonda. 1962.

12: 30PM @ Sportsbeat
1:00PM © 3 Michigan 400 Cover-

age is presen the Michigan In- °
ternational ay in Brooklyn, MI.
(3 hrs. 30-min. 0,

€B This Week with David Brinkley
€0 MOVIE: ‘How to Save a Marriage

A

June 13 and airs again Sunday,

June 16, 6 p.m.

"There needs to be a challenge to
the traditions that have guided the
Black progress in America for the
past 20 years,” says Robert
Woodson, chairman of the
Council and president of the
National Center for Neighborhood
Enterprise, on the next edition of
TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL, "Do
Blacks Need New Leaders?”
"There has been an absence of
dissent. There has been an
absence of debate within the Black
community as to .the future
direction,” he adds.

. TONY BROWN JOURNAL, the
nation’s longest-running and top-
ranked Black-Affairs television
series, has been sponsored by
Pepsi-Cola Company for ten
consecutive years. Televised on
the nation's public television
station (PBS), the program will be
seen in this area on WJCT-7,

Midnight Thursday, June 13 and
airs again Sunday, June 16,6 p.m.

PM 6B PGA Golf: U.S. Open

Final: round: coverage is: presented

from the Oakland Hills Country Club in
Birmingham, ML. (4 hrs.)
€@ MOVIE: ‘Gidget's Summer
Reunion’
@ MOVIE: ‘The Sea Hawk’ A sea-
going Robin Hood sails against the
Spaniards in the name of Elizabeth |.
Errol Flynn, Brenda Marshall, Claude
Rains. 1940.

3:00PM ED MOVIE: ‘A Guide for
the Married Man’ A philanderer takes
on the task of ‘educating’ a faithful hus-
band in the art of infidelity. Walter Mat-
Sin, Robert Morse, Inger Stevens.
1967.

4:00PM @ CBS Sports Special:
-Fathers, Sons & Daughters Host
Brent Musburger takes a look at some
famous sports families. (60 min.)
Wimbleton Preview
@ MOVIE: ‘Conquest of Cochise’
After the war between Mexico and the
U.S., Cavalry officers are sent to main-
tain peace in the Southwest. John Hod-
iak, Joy Page, Robert Stack. 1953.

4:30 PM €B SportsWorld Coverage
includes the 10-round Lightweight
Bout between Edwin Rosario and Fran-

- kie Randall, the NHRA World Finals of
Drag Racing and the CART Indy Car
Preview. (90 min.)

5:00 PM €O MOVIE: ‘Guess Who's
Coming to Dinner?’ A young white
woman with well-off, liberal-minded
parents falls in love with a distin-
guished black doctor in Hawaii. Spen-
cer Tracy, Katharine tiepburn, Sidney
Poitier. 1967.

5:30 PM @ Sports Inside Out Host
John Tesh takes a look at sports from
a child's point of view.

6:00PM © News
@ World-Wide Wrestling

6:30PM @ CBS News
News
@ NBC News

7:00 PM @ 60 Minutes

Ripley's Believe It or Not! (CC)

Tonight's program features a look at a
man who shredded 6 million dollars in
cash. (R) (60 min.)
Punky Brewster Punky panics
when she loses her lucky nickel. (R)
€D Fame
@ Blue Knight

7:30 PM €D Diff rent Strokes (CC)
Phil enlists the aid of Lance Parrish
when he runs into problems coaching
Sam's little league team. (R)

8:00PM Murder, She Wrote

(CC) A famous artist is murdered at his }

birthday bash on a remote Mediterra-

nean island. (R) (60 min.)

€ MOVIE: ‘F.1.S.T.’ (CC) A labor or-

ganizer rises to power and corruption.

Sylvester Stallone, Rod Steiger, Mel-

inda Dillon. 1978. :

& Cosby Show Cliff is presented with

a special Father's Day in December af-

ter complaining about his usual pre-

sents. (R)

Start of Something Big

@ MOVIE: ‘Jamaica Inn’ Part 2
8:30 PM €D Fathers and Sons The

relationships between fathers and}

Sons are explored in this comedy spe-
cial

9:00PM © Crazy Like a Fox Harry's
private investigator friend is murdered
* after he finds $2 million stashed at a
local 'Y.’ (R) (60 min.)

) MOVIE: ‘A Father's Love’ (CC) A
young man st s to break family

. tradition and to find his own niche in

society. Richard Gere, Marilu Henner,
Tony Lo Bianco. 1978.

€D Too Close for Comfort

10:00 PM @ Trapper John, M.D.

Trapper and Stanley mistakenly sus-
pect a young couple of § abusing their

- son. (R) (60 min.)

€D Fast Forward
@) Baptist Church
10:30PM Jacksonville This
Month
11:00PM © @ € News
2 Peter Popoff
Dolly Harrell
" :15PM @ CBS News
11:30PM @ Entertainment This
Week
EB At The Movies
Cannon
World Vision Special
@ Dawn of a New Day

12:00AM Star Hustler
MOVIE: ‘Kingston: The Power
Play’ A media executive uncovers a
plot to use nuclear power plants to
take over the world. Raymond Burr,
Bradford Dillman, James Canning.
1976

12:30AM @ Saint
@D Meet the Press
€9 Mito Komon
@) Telephone Auction Shopping
Program

1:30 AM @ Bob Newhart Show
€ Tales from the Darkside
MOVIE: ‘The Great O'Malley’ A
policeman who lives by the rulebook
learns that tickets for misdemeanors
may cost a life. Pat O'Brien, Humphrey
Bogart, Anh Sheridan. 1937.

2:00AM © cBS
Nightwatch
MOVIE: ‘Baron’s African War’

3:30 AM @ MOVIE: ‘Death Squad’
After a series of gangland-style execu-
tions, an ex-cop is lured back to the
force to infiltrate renegade elements in
the department. Robert Forster, Mel-
vyn Douglas, Michelle Phillips. 1973

4:00 AM @ Gunsmoke
WEEKDAYS

News

5:00 AM @ 700 Club
5:45 AM Job Finder

6:00 AM @ sally Jessy Raphael
ABC News This Morning (CC)
€D First Coast Sunrise
Great Space Coaster

6:30AM @ CBS Early Morning
News
Farm Day
E&P» Good Morning Jacksonville
NBC News at Sunrise
Jimmy Swaggart
Paxon Revival Center

6:45AM Weather

7:00 AM @ CBS Morning News
@ Sesame Street (CC)
€R Good Morning America (CC)
€D Today
€D Tom & Jerry
Richard Roberts Show

7:30 AM ED Inspector Gadget

8:00AM Mr.
Neighborhood
Spiderman
Flintstones

8:30AM Electric Company
Gilligan's Island
@) Popeye

9:00AM @ Donahue
Subscription TV
@ Tic Tac Dough
Scrabble
Gidget
Little House on the Prairie

9:30 AM €B Card Sharks
€D Joker's Wild

Rogers’

€D Bewitched :
10:00 AM © Hour Magazine

. € $25,000 Pyramid -

€D Facts of Life

"@ B.J./Lobo Show

-@ 700 Club :
10:30 AM '€B Divorce Court

€D Sale of the Century :
11:00 AM @ Price Is Right

€D Wheel of Fortune
@ PTL Club
@ Barnaby Jones
11:30 AM @B All-Star Blitz
€D Love Connection
12:00PM News
@ Ryan's Hope
€D Let's Make a Deal
@D | Love Lucy .
@ Super Password
12:30PM @ Young and the
Restless
@ Loving
€D Search for Tomorrow
Leave It to Beaver
PM Magazine
1:00PM Varied Programs
- @A All My Children
Days of Our Lives
OD Movie
@ Maude
1:30PM @ As the World Turns
Archie Bunker's Place
2:00 PM @€B One Life to Live
& Another World
My Three Sons
2:30PM @ Capitol
Pink Panther Cartoons
3:00 PM © Guiding Light
Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood
€B. General Hospital
€D Santa Barbara
€D Heathcliff
Scooby Doo
3:30PM Sesame Street (CC)
€D He-Man & Masters/Universe
@) Tranzor Z
4:00PM @ Love Boat
Diff'rent Strokes
Quincy
All Star Cartoons
@) Voltron
4:30PM 3-2-1, Contact (CC)
€B What's Happening
5:00 PM Dallas
Electric Company
Newlywed Game
€D Jeffersons
Batman
Gomer Pyle
5:30PM Varied Programs
€ Name That Tune
Benson
Mork & Mindy
Happy Days Again

MONDAY
6/17/85

1:00 PM @ Military and the News
Media ‘Correspondents under Fire.’
Professor Arthur Miller of Harvard Law
School conducts this session on the
role of the press during a protracted
military intervention. (60 min.)

€® MOVIE: ‘Boys’ Town’ Story of
Father Flanagan's Boys Town. Spen-
cer Tracy, Mickey Rooney. 1938

2:00PM @ Yin and the Yankee
This program follows Malcolm Forbes,
editor of FORBES magazine and
internationally-known balloonist, on a
Journey across the People’s Republic of
China. (60 min.)

6:00PM @ @ ED News
Auction
€D CHiPs
@) Laverne and Shirley

6:30PM @ CBS News
ABC News (CC)
€D NBC News
@) | Drearh of Jeannie

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PAGE 10

FLORIDA STAR TV. GUIDE

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985"

7:00 PM @ Entertainment Tonight 2:00 PM Nova (CC) ‘Goodbye,

ED Diff rent Strokes

€B Bamey Miller ;

8:00PM @ Scarecrow and Mrs.
King Amanda and Lee set out to clear
Lee's uncle of murder charges. (R) (60
min.)
Major League Baseball: Teams
To Be Announced
€D TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes
Tonight's practical joke victims are
Loretta Lynn and Adrian Zmed. (R) (60
min.)
€D MOVIE: ‘Mutiny on the Bounty’
Part 1
@ MOVIE: ‘Die, Darling, Die’ A wi-
dow is accused of murdering her dying
husband. Everyone knows she threw
away his medicine--but out of mercy or
impatience? James Stewart, Julie Har-
ris, Henry Jones. 1973

9:00PM Kate & Allie Kate be-
comes romantically involved with a
plumber. (R)
€D MOVIE: ‘Remembrance of Love’

" (CC) Two teenage Jewish lovers, be-
lieving the other died in World War II,
meet again 35 years later at a Holo-
caust reunion. Kirk Douglas, Pam Daw-
ber, Robert Clary. 1982.

10:00 PM @ Cagney & Lacey (CC)
Chris becomes the victim of sexual har-
assment. (R) (60 min.)

@» Honeymaqpners
@ Barnaby Jones
10:30 PM €D Get Smart

11:00PM @ ED News
€ Hogan's Heroes :
@) Carol Burnett and Friends
11:30PM Jeopardy
€ M*A*S*H
€D Best of Carson Tonight's guests
are Amy Irving and Fran Tate. (R) (60.
min.)
Star Trek
Bizarre
12:00 AM Simon & Simon
Nightly Business Report
€B ABC News Nightline
@ 12 O'Clock High
12:30AM Star Hustler
EB Worldvision

Louisiana.” This program reports on
Southern Louisiana where miles of
coastline disappeared into the Gulf of
Mexico in 1981. (R) (60 min.)
6:00PM © News
Auction
CHiPs
@) Laverne and Shirley
6:30 PM @ CBS News
€B ABC News (CC)
ED NBC News
@) | Dream of Jeannie

7:00 PM © Entertainment Tonight
EB Diff’ rent Strokes
€D Family Feud
Private Benjamin
Happy Days Again
7:30PM Bulls Sidelines
€P Barney Miller
€D People’s Court
€D Soap
@ Mary Tyler Moore

8:00 PM @ Jeffersons George uses
his granddaughter as a means to win
the dry cleaning world's ‘Man of the
Year’ award. (R)
€B Three's a Crowd (CC) Mr. Brad-
ford fixes his ex-wife up on a blind
date. (R)

A-Team (CC) The A-Team be-
comes ‘involved with the recording
business when they discover that an
all-female singing group is being ripped
off. (R) (60 min.)

€® MOVIE: ‘Mutiny on the Bounty’
Part 2

@ MOVIE: ‘Murder on the 13th
Floor’ A young man is found in a mur-
der victim's room minutes after the kill-
ing took place. James Stewart, Teresa
Wright, Strother Martin. 1974

8:30 PM @ Alice Mel buys a nursery
school and plans on turning it into park-
ing lot for the diner. (R)

Foul-Ups Bleeps/Blunders To-
night's in-house guest is John Ritter.
(R) (CC)

9:00 PM MOVIE: ‘The Other
Victim’ (CC) A man struggles with his
emotions after his wife has been”
raped. William Devane, Jennifer
O°Neill, James Blendick. 1981.
€B Who's the Boss? (CC) Tony takes
on another job around Christmas in or-
der to make some extra money. (R)
Riptide Cody, Nick and Boz learn
that their new dock boy has potentially
dangerous underworld connections.
(R) (60 min.) :

€B Late Night with David Letterman 9:30PM @ Hail to the Chief A

€ MOVIE: ‘Boys’ Town’ Story of
Father Flanagan's Boys Town. Spen-
cer Tracy, Mickey Rooney. 1938

1:00AM Columbo
@ Family

1:30AM MOVIE: ‘Star’ Singer

Gertrude Lawrence is portrayed rising
from her humble upbringing to star-
dom. Julie Andrews, Richard Crenna,
Michael Craig. 1968.

News

2:00 AM €D Job Finder

2.30AM © CBS News
Nightwatch JIP

3:00 AM @B Charlie's Angels
@ MOVIE! “The Gill Whe Came

Gift-Wrapped’ A young lady is deliv-
ered as a birthday present to a wealthy
magazine publisher. Karen Valentine,
Richard Long, Louise Sorel. 1974.

4:00 AM @ Gunsmoke

TUESDAY
6/18/85

1:00PM Firing Line ‘Psychiatry:
New Explorations.” Among the guests
is Thomas Szasz, Professor of Psy-
chiatry at State University of New
York's Upstate Medical Center in Syra-
cuse. (60 min.)
MOVIE: ‘indiscreet’ An unmarried
American diplomat claims to be mar-
ried when he becomes attracted to a
European actress. Cary Grant, Ingrid
Bergman, Cecil Parker. 1958.

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RQUEENS & C.

woman is elected President of the Un-
ited States. (R)

10:00 PM € MacGruder and Loud

(CC) Jenny and Malcolm try to help a
burned out friend who is suspected of
providing information to the mob. (R)
(60 min.)

Remington Steele Remington dis-
covers the body of a murdered corpor-
ate president in his bathtub. (R) (60
min.) :
@ Honeymooners

@ Barnaby Jones

10:30PM Get Smart

11:00PM €D News
€D Hogan's Heroes

11:30PM @ Jeopai
M*A*S*H

Tonight Show
Star Trek
Bizarre

12:00 AM Magnum, P.l. Mag-
num’s attempts to clear a union leader
of murder cause unexpected problems.
(R) (60 min.)
Nightly Business Report
€B ABC News Nightline
@ 12 O'Clock High

12:30AM Star Hustler
Worldvision
€D Late Night with David Letterman
Tonight's guest is carnival guesser
David Glovsky. (60 min.)
€ MOVIE: ‘Indiscreet’ An unmarried
American diplomat claims to be mar-
ried when he becomes attracted to a
European actress. Cary Grant, Ingrid
Bergman, Cecil Parker. 1958.

1:00 AM McCloud
_@ Family
1:30AM MOVIE: ‘Amelia

Earhart’ A drama of the famed 1930's
flier and champion of women’s rights.
Susan Clark, John Forsythe, Jane
Wyatt. 1976

€D News

2:00 AM Job Finder
Mod Squad

2:30AM @ CBS News
Nightwatch JIP .

3:00 AM @B Charlie's Angels
MOVIE: ‘Message to My
Daughter’ A young girl's father gives
her tapes that her dead mother re-
corded for her 17 years ago. Martin
Sheen. Bonnie Bedelia, Kitty Winn.
1973.

4:00 AM Gunsmoke

WEDNESDAY
6/19/85

1:00 PM @ Non-Fiction Television
(CC) ‘Hungry for Profit.” This docu-
mentary explores the relationship of
agribusiness to hunger in the Third
World. (90 min.)

MOVIE: ‘Dinner at Eight’ A soci-
alite hunts for the proper dinner guests
when she is hostess to nobility. John &
Lionel Barrymore, Jean Harlow. 1933.

| 2:30 PM @ Dream This program ex-

amines how society nurtures the fas-
cination of many young athletes with

1 sports.
16:00PM © @ @ News
1 @ Auction

Gr

_ @ Laverne and Shirley
6:30PM CBS News
@B ABC News (CC)
NBC News
GB | Dream of Jeannie

7:00 PM @ Entertainment Tonight
EB Diff'rent Strokes
Family Feud
€D Private Benjamin
@ Happy Days Again

7:30PM Wheel of Fortune
€ Barney Miller
People’s Court
Soap CER
Mary Tyler Moore

8:00 PM MOVIE: ‘Calamity
Jane’ This drama traces the courtship
of Martha Jane Cannary and Wild Bill
Hickok, which results in the birth of a
child that Bill doesn’t want and Jane
can’t properly care for. Jane Alexan-

der, Frederic Forrest, Ken Kercheval.
1984.

@B Fall Guy (CC) Colt's life is in danger
when he becomes bodyguard to one of
the richest women in the world. (R) (60
min.) ’

Highway to Heaven (CC)
MOVIE: ‘The Long Hot Summer’
A young man arrives in a small South-
ern town and changes the lives of it's
leading. citizen's children. Paul New-
man, Joanne Woodward, Orson
Welles. 1958. ;

@) MOVIE: ‘Blood Feud’ A distraught
widow is bent on avenging the murder

of her husband. Sophia Loren, Marcello.

Mastioanni, Giancarlo Giannini. 1978:

9:00 PM @B Dynasty (CC) Krystle is
driven further into the arms of Daniel by
Blake's recent behavior. (R) (60 min.)
Facts of Life (CC) The truth may
hurt their friendship when Tootie asks
Natalie's opinion on“an essay she has
written. (R)

9:30 PM €B Double Trouble Allison
seeks Margo's help in writing a term
paper. (R)

9:45PM @ News

10:00PM CBS Reports:
Terrorism--War in the Shadows The
increasing use of terrorist tactics, parti-
cularly against the United States, is dis-
cussed. (60 min.) .
Arthur Hailey’s Hotel (CC) Peter
and Billy come to the aid of a young girl
who has become involved in prostitu-
tion. (R) (60 min.)
St. Elsewhere An old friend of Dr.
Auschlander’s comes to St. Eligius in
his search for a kidney donor for an
African boy. (R) (60 min.)
Barnaby Jones

10:30 PM @ Get Smart

11:00PM © @ €D News

€D Hogan's Heroes
Carol Burnett and Friends
11:30PM Jeopardy
M*A*S*H
Tonight Show
€D Star Trek
@) Bizarre
12:00 AM @ Night Heat
Nightly Business Report
ABC News Nightline
12 O’Clock High
"12:30 AM @ Star Hustler.
@ Eye onHollywood ~~
€D Late Night with David Lettermah
Tonshvs guest is John Waters. (60
min.
MOVIE: ‘Dinner at Eight’ A soci-
alite hunts for the proper dinner guests
when she is hostess to nobility. John &
Lionel Barrymore, Jean Harlow. 1933.
1:00AM MOVIE: ‘Goldenrod’ A
story about the break-up of a marriage
and the reuniting of a family. Donnelly
Rhodes, lan McMillan, Patricia Camp-
bell. 1977
More Real People
Family
1:30AM € MOVIE: ‘Tail Gunner
Joe’ A factual drama of the late Sen.
Joseph McCarthy, whose charges of
communist infiltration into the military
and government touched off the ‘Red
Scare’ of the 1950's. Peter Boyle, Bur-
gess Meredith, John Forsythe and Pa-
tricia Neal. 1976.

€) News

2:00 AM €B Job Finder
@ Mod Squad

2:30 AM CBS News
Nightwatch JIP

3:00 AM @B Charlie's Angels

MOVIE: ‘Affectionately Yours’ A
reporter schemes to win back his ex-
wife who is about to remarry. Merle
Oberon, Dennis Morgan, Rita Hay-
worth. 1941.

4:00 AM € Gunsmoke

THURSDAY
6/20/85

1:00 PM @ In Search of Bach The
Bach Aria Institute, which encourages
its.students to analyze and understand
Bach's music, is examined. (60 min.)
€® MOVIE: ‘Gaslight’ A diabolical
husband attempts to drive his wife in-
sane. Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman,
Joseph Cotton. 1944.

6:00 PM @ @ News
Auction
€D CHiPs
Laverne and Shirley

6:30PM © CBS News
ABC News (CC)

NBC News
@) | Dream of Jeannie

7:00 PM @ Entertainment Tonight
€D Diff'rent Strokes
€) Family Feud
ED Private Benjamin
@ Happy Days Again

7:30PM @ Wheel of Fortune
€B Barney Miller
&D People’s Court

€ Soap
@ Mary Tyler Moore

18:00PM @ Magnum, PL. The

- search is on for some valuable love
songs believed to have been written
a now deceased music star. (R) (

- min.)

YHA

€® MOVIE: ‘A Different Story’ A
homosexual man and woman form an
unlikely romantic relationship. Perry

King, Meg Foster, Valerie Curtin. 1978."
@ MOVIE: ‘Murder in the Slave

Trade’ An ex-football pro is accused of
the murder of a sports baron who is the
despotic owner of several champion-
ship teams. James Stewart, Ellen
Weston, James Luisi. 1974

8:30PM Family Ties Mallory
feels that no one is grieving properly
when her favorite aunt dies. (R)

9:00 PM @ simon and Simon (CC)
Rick and A.J. are hired by a social
worker to find out who has been kid-
napping Skid Row bums. (R) (60 min.)
€D Cheers Diane is threatened inh more
ways than one when she meets Fra-
sier's mother. (R)

9:30 PM €D Big Shots in America A
Soviet-born building __ superintendent
discovers that his brother has also de-
fected to the United States.

10:00 PM @ Knot's Landing (CC)
€B 20/20 (CC)

Hill Street Blues The station has a
unique problem when a grossly over-
weight hood passes away in the hold-
ing cell. (R) (60 min:)

& Honeymooners

@) Barnaby Jones

10:30 PM’ @ Get Smart
11:00PM @ € News

ogan‘s Heroes
Carol Burnett and Friends

it :30PM Jeopardy

M*A*S*H
€D Tonight Show Tonight's guest is
Laura Branigan. (60 min.)
0 Star Trek
Bizarre

12:00 AM Fall Guy
Nightly Business Report
ABC News Nightline
@ 12 O'Clock High

12:30AM MOVIE: ‘The Baby
Maker’ A young woman accepts the
job of giving birth to a child by the hus-
band of a barren wife. Barbara Hersey,.
Scott Glenn, Jeannie Berlin. 1970.
Star Hustler
Eye on Hollywood
Late Night with David Letterman
Tonight's guest is Miles Davis. (60
min.)
MOVIE: ‘Gaslight’ A diabolical
husband attempts to drive his wife in-

sane. Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman,

Joseph Cotton. 1944.

1:00 AM @B More Real People
@ Family

1:30 AM €B MOVIE: ‘Scott Joplin;
King of Ragtime’ A musical drama
that traces the life of a gifted black mu-

sician. Billy Dee Williams, Art Carney,
Clifton Davis. 1977.

€D News

2:00 AM Job Finder
Mod Squad

2:30 AM CBS News
Nightwatch JIP

3:00 AM @B Charlie's Angels
@ MOVIE: ‘That Hagen Girl’ A
young girl attempts suicide when she is
hounded by gossip and suspicion re-

garding ‘her true parentage. Shirley

1
4:00AM Gunsmoke

FRIDAY
6/21/85

1:00 PM Mark Russell Comedy

Spec. Mark Russell takes a humorous
look at current events.
MOVIE: ‘Treasure Island’ A
young boy finds a map for hidden trea-
sure and has a run-in with Long John
Silver. Wallace Beery, Jackie Cooper,
Lionel Barrymore. 1934.

1:30PM Plowing Up a Storm
The history of the plight of the Ameri-
can farmer is documented. (90 min.)

4:00 PM @ Hugga Bunch

6:00PM €D News
Auction
Ed CHiPs
@ Laverne and Shirley

6:30PM CBS News
@ ABC News (CC)
€D NBC News
| Dream of Jeannie

7:00 PM @ Entertainment Tonight
Diff'rent Strokes
ED Family Feud
@ Private Benjamin
Happy Days Again

7:30 PM Wheel of Fortune
ER Barney Miller
€D People’s Court
€D Soap :
@) PM Magazine

8:00 PM @ America’s Junior Miss
Pageant Over 50 high school seniors
compete for the title of America’s Ju
nior Miss 1985. (60 min.) .
Webster (CC) Webster and
George try to revive a janitor’s career
when they discover that he was once a
magician. (R)
€D Mike Nesmith in TV Parts To-
night's guests are Dick Cavett, Martin
Mull and Whoopi Goldberg.
MOVIE: ‘From Here to Eternity’
The passions and violence of a group
of soldiers stationed at Pearl Harbor
just before World War il are portrayed.
Burt Lancaster, Deborah Kerr, Frank
Sinatra. 1954.

@ MOVIE: ‘Murder in Movieland’ A

smart country lawyer comes to Holly-
wood to defend a famous actor who
has confessed to murder. James Ste-

wart, Strother Martin, Sheree North. -

1973 :
8:30 PM Comedy Factory
(PREMIERE) :

Spencer, Wayne and

@ Spencer
Bailey decide to join the Army after
they are suspended from school. (R)

9:00PM _@ MOVIE: ‘An innocent

Love’ (CC) An unusual romance blos-

emple Ronald Reagan, Rory Calhoun,

9:45 PM @ News

10:00 PM @ Miami Vice Crockett
and Tubbs wind up in the Everglades in
their search for a ‘murder witness. (R)
{60 min.) :
@ Barnaby Jones

10:30 PM @0 Get Smart

11:00 PM 6B €D News
Hogan's Heroes
Carol Burnett and Friends
11:30 PM © Jeopardy
M*A*S*H ;
€D Tonight Show Tonight's guest is
B.B. King. (60 min.)
€D Star Trek
Bizarre
12:00AM @ MOVIE: ‘Super-
dome’ The Super Bowl game is threa-

tened by a silent killer. David Janssen,
Donna Mills, Edie Adams. 1978.

Nightly Business Report
BD ABC News Nightline
Golf: McDonald's Kids Classic
Tournament
12:30 AM Star Hustler
€B Africa: A Continent in Crisis
Friday Night Videos
@ Soul Train

— Movie

SUNDAY

1:00 AM More Real People

@ MOVIE: ‘Jamaica Inn’ Part 1 A
beautiful young woman discovers the
dark secrets surrounding the Jamaica

»

Inn, a haven for shipwreckers in 19th

century England. Jane Seymour, Pa-
trick McGoohan, Trevor Eve Sn

1:30AM @ MOVIE: ‘Young
Winston’ This biopic covers Winston
Churchill's early life, private and public,
up to his election to the House of Com-
mons in Parliament. Simon Ward, Rob-
ert Shaw, Anne Bancroft. 1972.
€ Solid Gold

2:00AM @ Harry O -
News

2:30AM @ Job Finder

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A A) 7

(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

“F.I.S.T.” (1978) Starring Sylvester Stallone, Rod Steiger, Peter
Boyle, Melinda Dillon and Tony Lo Bianco. Stallone stars as a
dynamic labor leader who hammers out an empire — and seals

his own doom.

(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

MONDAY

(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE

TUESDAY

(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
“THE OTHER VICTIM” (1985) Starring Wiliam Devane and
Jennifer O'Neill. Devane struggles to regain a normal life after his

wife (Miss O'Neill) is raped.

THURSDAY

(ABC) THURSDAY NIGHT MOVIE

‘“IN LIKE FLYNN” (1985)

Starring Jenny Seagrove. Miss ©

Seagrove is an adventure novelist who begins investigating a
series of murders and disappearances in the Caribbean.

FRIDAY

(CBS) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE

“AN INNOCENT LOVE” Starring Melissa Sue Anderson, Doug
McKeon and Rocky Bauer. An unusual romance blossoms
between an ‘older’ college student (Miss Anderson) and her

much younger tutor (McKeon) .

RAMBO, FIRST BLOOD PART Il (R-Tri-Star) Starring Sylves-

ter Stallone, Richard Crenna. * * ;

By J.T. YURKO

For years after the Vietnam
War, film makers stayed as far
away from Southeast Asia as
possible. They even shied
away from making films on
wars in general. (In fact,
George Lucas was requested
to find some other name for his
space epic, ‘Star Wars."")

In the late 1970s, a few land-
mark films, including Michael
Cimino's "The Deer Hunter,
broke the cinematic ice on
Vietnam. These efforts were
serious in nature and often
graphically depicted the horror
of the Vietnam *‘conflict."”

But time heals all wounds,
and Vietnam is beginning to
look less like a national trauma

-and more like a handy back-
drop for action flicks. ‘First
Blood'' and now ‘Rambo, First
Blood Part II" are two films
that use Vietnam as a back-
drop and avoid the political or
philosophical issues that once
‘came with the territory.

“First Blood'" had a curious
premise. A Vietnam vet returns
home, is hassled by the local
police, and becomes a one-
man underground army, living
off the land and winning over a -
well-organized police action. In
a sense, we were presented
with a mini-Vietnam in reverse
order.

The film included plenty of
high-explosive thrills for action
fans, but it had one major flaw.
Since Rambo (the Viet vet,
played by Sylvester Stallone)
was fighting our local police
and National Guard forces, he
couldn't kill anyone. If he had,

our sympathy would have

come to an abrupt halt.

But no such problem holds
Rambo back in this sequel.
He's sent to Vietnam to search
of American prisoners of war
and runs into scores of sadistic
Vietcong.

The plot is simple. Stallone
doesn't have more than a few
pages of dialogue, but he does
his ‘Conan the Barbarian’
impression quite well, flexing
his muscles and hurling knives,
guns, grenades and whatever
else he can find.

It's exciting and suspenseful,
but just this side of a comic
book. It shows how much a
few years can change the way
we look at something that
once seemed so fraught with
meaning.

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SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

STAR PAPERS

PAGE 11

ENTERTAINMENT SECTION
‘Broadway Is May Beat

With Joey Sasso

Observations in Covering the
Night Beat...Diahann Carroll, the
haughty Dominique of Dynasty,
declares that she's spent enough
money on LSD to buy a five-star
hotel. The 49-year-old TV
temptress says it was part of drug
therapy and analysis she went
through for four years in the 1950s.
“l spent enough on it to buy the
Saboy,” she admitted during an
interview at the exclusive London
hotel.

"My problem was that | wanted to
be a Hollywood star--but there
were no black stars, and | came up
against a wall. "The drug therapy
helped me confront and
understand myself. And the irony
is that Dynasty may achieve for me
what | failed to achieve in the
1950s. "For Third World actresses,
there was no middle ground,” she
explains. "You were either a
hooker, or the most wonderful
mother the world has ever seen. It
became nauseating.

"We could never play villains,
because the producers were afraid
of being accused of racism.”
Diahann says that a black actress
can now play the biggest bitch on
the block. She can be strong,
powerful, demanding and pivotal
to the story, instead of waiting for
her husband to come home and
tell her what an exciting day he
had. "I was a strong, opinionated
black American woman with a
desire to break new ground in her
profession. "When it didn't
happen, | was confused, and |
went into drug therapy to find

____ KentTheatres J
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+ AVIEW AKILL

Rated PG. Starts Fri. June 14.
Shows at 1:30-4:15-7:15-9:45

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Shows at 1:15-3:15-5:15

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MATINESS EVERY DAY! $1.75 TILL 6 p.m.
Evenings: Adults $3.00, Children $1.75.

answers, and get some help.

" "People would say: 'You're crazy.

You're doing very well as a
singer.’...
Top Comic Bill Cosby says fellow

.funnyman Richard Pryor, Redd

Foxx, and Jonathan Winters can
make him roll with laughter any
time. "In the movie Peter Sellers
puts me on the floor,” declared
Cosby, who now stars in his own
weekly TV series, the Bill Cosby
Show. He finds Buster Keaton and
Charlie Chaplin the funniest of the
old-timers, while Sid Caesar and

Jackie Gleason get his nod from

the early days of television.

" Cosby says making people laugh

is a serious business that requires
a lot of hard work. "You need to
practice, practice, and practice to
get it best and right,” he noted.

"Just like Olympic gymnasts or

jumpers. Just like a professional
ballplayer or boxing champion.”
He says he tries out raw routines
on "himself, refining and honing
them until he's satisfied they're
funny.

"I think about who my audience is
going to be for the material and
plan what I'm going to say, and

‘how I'm going to move, gesture,

and mug in order to get the best
response out of my audience.

“Very little you see me do on
stage or especially on the TV show
is spontaneous, even though it
may look that way.” ....

The curtain of secrecy that
surrounds super rock star Prince
has been torn aside by a kiss 'n’ tell
gal pal. Shapely British model
Ashe told me that she dated Prince
while in Los Angeles. The two met
in a nightclub, she recalled,
adding that she was dressed only
in strips of leather tied around her
gorgeous body. The sight quickly
lured Prince to her side and he
asked Ashe to come to a party with
him. Ashe said she turned him
down because she didn’t want him
to get the idea that she was
overeager to go with him.

Prince then asked her if she'd
meet him at his recording studio
the next day and she agreed. The
following morning she met him,

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listened to some of his tapes and
then had lunch with him. She
recalled being so awed that she
couldn't recall what she'd eaten. A
few days later Prince took Ashe to
the movies to see Terms of
Endearment, and for the first time
the two cuddled up together. The
day before the stunning model
was scheduled to leave for home
the couple had another date. They
snuggled again, this time in the

back seat of his limousine which

she described as being big enough
to live in. "He told me how he liked

the muscles above his knees being

touched and we had a long cuddle.

It was great,”.

When Madge Sinclair left her
sons and her’husband in Jamaica
and headed to America in 1968, to
seek her fame and fortune, a
cousin castigated her for "greed."
After all, she already had all a
woman was entitled to. Although
she says now that it was a life-
threatening illness that triggered
her determination to demand
more from life than what she
describes as a "calm, marvelous,
middle-class existence.”

For her, the desire was as good as
action. "I'm not one of those
people who daydreams,” explains
the actress who portrays

_ Ernestyne Shoup on "Trapper

John, M.D.” "Once a thought
comes into my head, | set about to.
make a reality of it.” Her
immediate reality was a ticket to
New York. “The American dream
is America's best seller,” she says.
"| brought it.” :
Seventeen years later Madge
Sinclair still pursues her dream.
The 5-foot-10 inch actress is
striking and has a dramatic flair for
fashion; her full voice and precise
speech reflect the elocution

lessons that were ‘part-of her early

Jamaican education. In those
early New York days, she found
herself by working “on Wall Street,
as a cashier at a theater chain, in
the garmet district.”...

In 1957 a young black singer of
gospel music did the great deed of
his life: he went pop. Sam Cooke
was a star, a heartthrob, an angel.
At age 19 he had taken the
legendary Ray Harris’ place as
lead singer of the Soul Stirrers,
after which, for six incandescent
years he had swept aside standard
gospel expression. “Touch the
Hem of His Garment” and Jesus

Gave Me Water” flashed Cooke's"

soft, supple, silky voice brashly
across the passions of black
prayer.

And at the height of his fame and
his missions with the screams of
young female believers raising
him up and being raised up by him,
Cooke left it all behind. With "You
Send Me" he took his soft, supple,
silky voice to those who perhaps
who did not believe. Or at least did
not dwell on it. He invaded
nightclubs, the pop charts; the
voice of the angel was heard on
jukeboxes...

Ebony
Etching Etc.

A Weekly Syndicate
Column By Warren Lamer Sr.

"NOTES, NEWS, AND VIEWS."

Seems like Mr. William Johnson,
Chairman of the California State
Lottery Commission .is trying to
get by without giving minorities a
fair shake of the dice in the
minority contract vendors
opportunity department, but the
adhoc Committee of the Southern

California Minority Coalition, with

Bishop H.H. Brookins as
Chairman, is all set to take Mr.

Johnson and the entire California.

State Lottery Commission to task
about the situation.

Angletown theatre goers were
delighted to attend and reopening
of the historic art-deco Wiltern
Theater Wednesday May 1 ’, and
enjoy the Alvin Ailey An: rican
Dance Theatre group thz. was
invited to the west coast to help
with. the reopening festivities.
Patti LaBelle who's very hot with
her chart climbling single "New
Attitude” from the "Beverly Hills
Cop" album, just finished work on
Placido Domingo’'s ABC-TV
Special that'll air May (4), and will
be one of the five featured acts on
this years two month summer
Superfest Tour. She'll also record

a duet with Chicago lead singer

Bill Champlin “The Last Broken
Heart”, for her upcoming MCA
album, even though they both will
have to record their parts
separately because of her busy
schedule.

Marla Gibbs has been inked by
NBC-TV to star in a new sitcom
entitled "227". It's all about a well-
intentioned, busy-body neighbor
in a Chicago apartment building.
Here's hoping that this new series
for Marla runs as long and will be
just as successful as "The
Jefferson's” was on television. So
to Marla, NBC-TV, and cast..here's

to youl!

il Fo
A Fe Tp om a

Better

Mrs.

Summer Day
Camp Begins
At Kooker

Summer Day Camp Program at
Kooker Park Boys Club that began
Wednesday, June 12, will last
through August 23.

Programs and activities are
scheduled daily from 9:00 a.m. to
6:00 p.m.

Boys ages six through 18 may
join the Day Camp Program for a
fee of $5.00 per week or $50.00 for
the entire Program. The
membership fee at the club is
$1.00 per year.

Some of the programs and
activities that will be offered are:
learn to swim program (all ages),
Arts & Crafts, Movies, Group Club
and Special Interest Club, lunch
program (all ages), field trips,
special Events, gameroom
activities, summer baseball and
summer basketball. The Kooler
Boys Club is a United Way
Agency.

NewTown Clean-Up
Project Needs Help
From Residents

Though the clean-up project in
NewTown is progressing, the
Living Community
Association feels it could be a total
success if more residents became
involved. . ;

Louis Dinah, president, said a
cash award of $25 will be given to
the group or family providing the
“best” clean up job. However,
groups or families must enter the
contest to be eligible for the
award.

Registration slips can be
obtained by contacting Mrs.
Arlene McClain (353-9486) or
Louis Dinah (354-7256).

Persons who have not viewed the
film "Proud Partners” are invited
to a showing Thursday, June 20, 7
p.m., at the Refair Mitchell Center
on Acorn and Broadway Streets.
Refreshments will be served.

Cooper's Staff
Will Kick-Off
Summer Term

Now that a successful 1984-85
school term is behind them, the
staff at Cooper's Academy is set to
start its six week Summer School
Monday, June 17.

"It is a school of learning for life,
teaches the mind to think and the
heart to love,” expressed Bishop
M.C.H. Cooper, president and
founder of the school praising the
cooperation between faculty and
parents.

Bishop Cooper said the Academy

will be operated during the year by
C. Coopetr-'Pramer

Supervisor of the High School
Department, Mrs. 1.0. Adams,
principal and Mrs. M.L. Ware,
manager.

Masonic Family
Will Observe
St. John Day

Master Masons; the Officers and
members of all departments
working under the protection of
the Most Wonderful Union Grand
Lodge, Duval County Masonic
District No. 1 will observe, St. John
The Baptist Day, Sunday June 236
Masonic Temple.

The speaker is Rev. J.S. Gillyard,
Worthy Patron, Harmony Chapter
No. 85 Order of Eastern Star and
Pastor, St. James A.M.E. Church,
Eastside.

Dr. Henry Simmons (33 Degree)
is District Deputy Grand Master
and Dr. George Washington (33
Degree) is Grand master.

West Union To Honor
Its Academic Stars

Students of all ages who have
excelled in academics and
citizenship will be honored at West
Union Baptist Church's first
annual "Academic Superstars”
banquet Friday, June 14, 7:30 p.m.
at the Ramada Inn, West.
Dr. Regina Kelly, Clinical

. REGINA R. KELLY
Psychologist, Oakland Park

Veterans Administration Out-
patient Clinic, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
is the speaker for the occasion.
She is also a Captain in the United
States Army Reserves.

Dr. Kelly is a graduate of
Jacksonville's Eugene J. Butler
Jr.-Sr. High School (now Butler

His And Hers
Graduates Ready To
Show Their Stuff

Students of His and Hers Kiddie
Kollege will demonstrate what
they have learned "From A To 2”
when the school celebrates its
12th Annual Graduation Exercise
Friday, June 14, 7 p.m. at New
Bethel AME Church.

The graduates, Vinette Graddick,
Angela Melvin, Terry Williams,
Alex Morman, Howard Goode,
Nytalia Conway, Ansuan Fisher
and Lavonne Harrell, will join their
four-year-old classmates will be
featured a play, "From A To Z.”

+ Vinette, Angela, Naytalia and
Lavonne Harrell will also perform a
pantomine “The Lord's Prayer.”

Mrs. Mary Graddick, a Duval
County Public School Instructor,
will be Mistress of Ceremony. Mrs.
Derya Williams will deliver words
of wisdom to parents.
Mrs. Beatrice W. Zeigler, director,
and her staff invite: the public to
attend. The church is located at
the corner -of Third “and Tyler
Streets.

students have been

Seventh Grade Center) and a
member of West Union.
- The banquet is chaired by Mrs.
Rebecca Hobbs. Parents and
invited to
attend.

-Gilbert Grads Plot
Course For Reunion

The 1970 Graduating Class of
Matthew Gilbert High School has
set sail for its 15th year class.
reunion.

The class is being guided in its
reunion efforts by newly elected
president Dennis Clippell. The
class has incorporated a back to
the community theme.

The class basketball team played
the Young Panthers of the lower
Eastside on June 4 and lost by two
points.

"It was fun to run and gun with
the young adults of the community
and spend time talking about the
history of the Eastside and Gilbert
school.” said Paul Fields Jr., Class
Activity Chairman.

Other community activities are
being planned in conjunction with
the reunion.

[4

Jax Man Among Charter
Grads At Medical School

Edward Williams, Jr., 5230
Moncrief Rd., West, Jacksonville,
will be among the 35 charter class
students graduating from the
Southeastern College of
Osteopathic Medicine on June 16.
- William will receive one of the
first D.O. (Doctor of Osteopathy)
degrees awarded by the North
Miami Beach medical school
during its first commencement.

Prior to entering Southeastern in
1981, Williams graduated from
New Stanton Senior High and
Florida A&M University. The new
physician will begin a 1-year
hospital internship in July, at
Southeastern Medical Center in
‘North Miami Beach, Fla.

The’ Father's Day graduation
ceremonies will begin at 2 p.m. in
the North Miami Beach Aud-
itorium.

Wellness Wagon
To Provide
Free Screenings

St. Vicent's Wellness Wagon will
be at Gateway Shopping Center,
5164 Norwood Ave., to provide
free Cardiovascular Disease Risk

. Estimates on Friday, June 14 and’

Saturday, June 15 from 10:00 a.m.
until 5:00 p.m.

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PAGE 12

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

oY,

NAACP To Return To
Dallas To Host
Convention June 23-27

NEW YORK -- Once again the
NAACP returns to Dallas, Texas to
hold its annual convention. The
convention will be housed at the
Dallas Convention Center at 630
Griffin Street from Sunday, June
23 through Thursday, June 27.

More than 10,000 people are
expected to attend this year's
convention.

When the NAACP first held its
convention in Dallas in 1954, black
Americans were celebrating the
Association's landmark victory in
the Brown v. Board of Education
case in which the United States
Supreme Court outlawed the
"separate but equal” doctrine.

NAACP Executive Director
Benjamin L. Hooks, who will
deliver his address at a public
mass meeting on Sunday, June 23
at 7:00 p.m., said that since the
Brown decision, much has been
accomplished in the area of civil
rights, "but today we are faced
with a concerted effort by the
government to roll back those
gains.” Appropriately, the
NAACP’s convention theme is
"Help Make Democracy Thrive --
Join the NAACP in '85."

On Monday night at 7:00 p.m., Dr.
William F. Gibson, chairman of the
NAACP National Board of
Directors, will deliver the keynote
address. Dr. Gibson is a dentist in
Greenville, S.C., who has been
involved in civil rights since 1960
when he was chairman of the
education and voter education
committees of the Greenville
NAACP branch. He succeeds the
late Kelly M. Alexander, Sr., who
died in April.

Throughout the week other
prominent speakers will address
NAACP delegates including U.S.
Rep. William H. Gray, Ill (D-Pa),
U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland (D-Tex.),
U.S. Rep. Augustus F. Hawkins (D-
Ca.) and the Rabbi David

Saperstein, co-director and
counsel, Religious Action Center.
of the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations.

Hooks said the NAACP's return
to Dallas will emphasize "the on-
going struggle by black people to
make America a true democracy
and the continuing role of the

AACP to reach the goa.”

Clean-Up Army
To Converge

-On Cemeteries
; -

The war is raging. The soldiers
are poised and ready to strike with
their weapons. Before them await
the battle grounds-Memorial
Sunset and Pinehurst Cemeteries.
Scores of local citizens are
expected to gather at the entrance
to the cemeteries ‘located off
Moncrief Road and Edgewood
Avenue. Saturday, June 15
through Sunday, June 16.
They will gather with their lawn
mowers, grass cutters, shovels
picks and other tools around 9
a.m. each day. There, they will find
city sanitation and job release
workers and clean-up organizers
ready to lead them into action.
Though the the three cemeteries
are not its responsibilities (still
privately owned), Mt. Olive
Cemetery Inc. is spearheading the
project.

The non-profit organization
whose officers include Council-
‘woman Denise Lee, Senator
Arnett Girardeau and Rep-
resentative Corrine Brown,
directed the recent clean-up that
gave Mt. Olive Cemetery off 45th
Street a face lift.

Lee said nearly 300 people
pitched in on Saturday, June 1.
Voulnteers, many of them with
relatives buried in the cemetery,
mowed lawns on some graves and
sanitation workers cut down much
of the over growth at the entrance.

"As people pass by in their cars
they can notice the different,”
suggested Lee calling the first
phase of the clean-up at Mt. Olive a
success.

The Councilwoman said that
many people were afraid to come
out and participate because they
dreaded confrontation with the
large brush.

"The City contributed sanitation
workers and work release help to
do the heavy cutting. Many of
them walked around with senior
citizens.

Lee said food and drinks were
distributed to the workers
courtesy of Afro-American, Jax
Liquors, Daylight Grocery,
Barnett Bank, Popeyes. She said
other local businesses plan to do
the same June 15-16.

This time, she hopes the clean-up
army will increase with more
relatives who own plots in the
cemetery and friends of the
deceased.

“It's up to all of us to help bring
our community back to
respectability,” added Lee.

COMMENT

“Men tire themselves in
pursuit of rest.”
Laurence Sterne

-

Tots And Teens Explore World Of Living Theatre

The young people shown here, get
into the swing of. things

Coca-Cola
Salutes -
“Mr. Apollo Theater”

NEW YORK--Coca-Cola USA
and the Coca-Cola Bottling
Company of New York saluted
Francis "Doll" Thomas, the 82
year old, and still active, manager
of the world famous Apollo
Theater.
The salute to Thomas was in
conjunction with the recent re-
opening of the theater.

More than 500 guests attended a
champagne reception in the
specially redecorated mezzanine
of the station, then “took the ‘A’
train” for the ride uptown and ared
carpet walk through the streets of
Harlem to the gala reopening.

from well
This summer,

performing scenes
known plays.

William Raines Community
School's Assistant Principal
Robert Flowers, says tots and
teens ages four through 17 will get
an opportunity to experience
drama, dance and music during
Summer Theatre ‘85. Enrollment
will be limited, but there is still time
to get involved for the program
that will begin Monday, June 17,
lasting through Monday, August |.
Sharon Coon is director. Willie
Seymore is dance instructor and
high flying Sheryl Fletcher (shown

leaping in air) will assist. Etta Rose

Sanders is music director.
Instruction will be fun, but
participants should wear
comfortable play clothes, tennis
and hard soled shoes. Tots and
Teens will present a project at the
end of the summer program.

Families Excited About Super Parent Seminar

A Super Parent Seminar for the
Black Family is set for Saturday,
June 15, 9 am.-4 p.m. in the
Blodgett Homes Auditorium, 1207
Davis St. 3

The seminar, co-sponsored by
the Family Resource Center, Ann
Davis, executive director; and First
Timothy Baptist Church, Rev. R.B.
Holmes, pastor, will focus on
parent-children relationships and
family co-hesiveness.

According to workshop
developers Steward Washington,
M.Ed., and Marvin T. Black, B.S.,
the topics will range from
discipline to teenage pregnancy.

TARE nar isfregand opentothe

A family gathering and lunch
(free bar-b-que chicken, you must
attend at least one workshop) will
be held.

Workshops will include: (9:00 -
10:30 a.m.)-

NUTRITION AND STRESS
Parents will learn the basic
fundamentals of food selections,
preparation, sanitation and health
care, consumer tips on shopping
and community resources, and”
the effects of nutrition as it effects
physical and mental health.

HOW TO SAY NO — ON SEXUAL
ABUSE AND SEXUAL MISUSES:
This session will deal with
recognizing subtle and obvious

signs of sexual abuse, and the...

ingredients of a potential
encounter. It will teach parents to
avoid such experiences, organize
support mechanisms and prepare
their children to recognize and
avoid the sexual abuser.
HOW TO DISCIPLINE YOUR
CHILD WITH VERBAL NON
HOSTILE COMMUNICATION:
For those parents who are using
hostile methods of chastising
children such as screaming,
beating or other excessive
methods. For those parents who
suffer from hypertension,

insomnia or other nervous:

conditions that require medi-
cation. This session will teach
parents to modify hostile behavior
while under the influence of
chronic-stressful situations.

RELIGION AND MENTAL
‘HEALTH — KEEPING THE
FAMILY UNIT: Recognizing that
the church is the primary forum for
black families when mental health
becomes an issue of crisis. This
session will provide parents and
their children with effective coping
techniques for dealing with
anxieties, such as depression,
loneliness and rejection. It will
teach them to network and
maximize support systems in the
face of adversity.

(10:30 - 12:00 NOON)-
MOTHER—SON, MOTHER—
DAUGHTER RELATIONSHIPS —
"WHERE 1S THE FATHER?": A

_ session for single mothers who are

faced with the difficulties of
providing healthy role models for
their children while maintaining a
healthy self concept.

NEWS
DEADLINE
MONDAY
4:30 P.M.

SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND THE
FAMILY: This session is designed
to show how substance abuse
destroys the personality and the
family unit. From a preventative
stand point, it will teach parents
and children to recognize various
types of substances and there
effects upon temperament within
the household. :

* TEENAGE PREGNANCY: This

workshop will teach children to
recognize the psych-phy-
siological signs of puberty. How it
relates to sex and pregnancy and
the impact of both upon the

duration of their lives. It will inform
them on how to network support
services during times of crisis.

UNDERSTANDING YOUR’

PARENTS: A SPECIAL WORK—
SHOP FOR CHILDREN: This
session will teach children the
basic fundamentals of com-
munication with their parents,
coping with combative adult
behavior and maintaining long
term healthy parent-child
relationships.

(12:00 - 12:30 P.M.) RAP UP:
Marvin Black, B.S. and Steward
Washington, M.Ed.

Contact Raines Community

GOLDEN, Colo.--Two Adolph
Coors Company employees are
among 23 women from companies
throughout the United States to be
chosen by the Black Women Hall
of Fame Foundation to receive the
1984-85 Kizzy Image and
Achievement Award.

Rhonda Williams, a Coors brand
marketing ‘assistant in the
company's marketing department,
and Rusty Jackson, a Coors
community relations field
manager in Washington, D.C., will
receive the awards at the 8th
Annual Kizzy Awards Dinner and
Banquet at the Westin Hotel in
Chicago on April 27.

' Kizzy Awards recipeints are
chosen on the basis of their
professional accomplishments,
community service, public image,
for being an inspiration to other
women and an outstanding role
model for America's youth.

The award, presented annually to
career women throughout the
United States, is named in honor
of the Kizzy character from the
novel and T\' mini-series, Roots.

In her current position at Coors,
Williams, 31, is responsible for
assisting in the development and
execution of marketing and

School for fee information.

advertising programs for
Coors brand, the nation’s fourth-z
largest
She is a 1975 graduate of the
University of Minnesota with a
bachelor of arts degree Wn
Journalism.

Jackson, 32, joined Coors as a,
community relations field.
manager in 1984, with re-.

the.

selling premium beer.

+

I

1

sponsibilities for developing and »

implementing community.
projects, with emphasis on
minority programs, in

Washington, D.C., Maryland,
Virginia,

4

and West Virginia._-,

Jackson also served as executive

director of the Miss Black America

Pageant in 1981, as a beauty .

consultant for L'Oreal/Lancome,: »-

inc.;
representative for Fashion Fair-
Cosmetics, Inc.

Past recipients of the Kizzy.-

and as an account.

Awards, which began in 1976, ,

include Naomi Sims, Nikki,

Giovanni, Carolyn R. Jones, Joel: !

P. Martin, Susan Taylor, Kay.
Osborne, Barbara Proctor,
Christie Hefner, Sherren Leigh,

Sharon Morgan and Cleo Wilson... .

Southern Be

It Costs So Little
And It Means So Much.

Southern Bell Long Distance

Southern Bell Long Distance is a great
way to stay in touch with friends and
family at reasonable rates.

St. Augustine
Lake City
Palatka

A10-MINUTE CALL FROM JACKSONVILLE TO:

Call on weekends or after 11 p.m. and save even more.
Rates listed above are in effect 5-11 p.m., Sunday-Friday.

$1.89
$2.49
$1.89

‘Southern Bell

A BELLSOUTH Company

ALREADY INTOUCH WITH THE FUTURE?

calls. Rates sul

OE ISAC Tr hg

Dial Station (1+) ch
en +) es rly Thats

do not

apply to person-to-person, coin, hotel guest, calling card, collect calls, calls ch
to change. Daytime rates are higher. Rates do not reflect applicable federal, state and local taxes. Applies to intra-LATA long

arged to another number, of to time and
distance calls



Bh oe Add 8 Codd BS Siidd

alii ada 4 Ll CO

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

STAR PAPERS

PAGE 13

summer,

“worship services,

Christian citizens’
lobby headquartered in

~ Washington, will ‘coordinate the
. "Offering of Letters” campaign.

National Christian Campaign
Launched To Boost 1986
Africa Development Bill

WASHINGTON--Legislation to
help African farmers increase food
production and, thus, survive
droughts and similar catastrophes
in the future will be the focus of a
massive national Christian
lobbying effort this spring and:
Bread for the World
announced.

The official launching of the 1985
"Offering of Letters” campaign--a
grassroots drive by members of
local churches and community
organizations to write letters to
their U.S. representatives and
senators -- coincided with the
April 17th introduction in the U.S.
House of Representatives of The
Food Assistance and Africa
Agriculture Act, H.R. 2080.

This legislation would provide

$140 million in argicultural
development assistance to help
many African nations return to
food self-sufficiency.
-in addition, the bill contains $900
million in emergency food aid for
victims of the current famine to be
bsed in fiscal year 1986. A
companion bill is expected to be
introduced in the U.S. Senate this
month.

As many as 1,000 churches and
community groups are expected
to participate in the "Offering of
Letters,” producing anywhere
from 100,000 to 250,000 personal
letters from concerned citizens.
And many Christians will be
writing their members of Congress
for the first time, said Bread for the
World's acting executive director,

t Ginger Hooven.

“The Offering will be a new
experience for some people,” said
Hooven, "but as Christian, we

® have a biblical mandate to feed the
E hungry. We, therefore, view our

U.S. citizenship as a gift from God.

f to help achieve this objective.”
§ She said that churches
& participating in the "Offering of
Letters” will

help people
understand the connection
between their faith and writing
letters to Congress. The churches
will collect letters in support of
The Food Assistance and Africa
Agriculture Act in various ways: at
fellowship

meetings, Sunday school

~~ sessions, coffee hours, or when

tables are set up especially for

members to write such letter.

Bread for the World, the national
anti-hunger

The 47,000-member organization
is hoping that Congress and the
American people understand that
the food crisis in Africa has not

= ended.

The national letter-writing effort
represents the 10th anniversary of

i BFW-sponsored Offerings of

Letters campaigns, The 1984
Offering, The Human Needs and
World Security bill, produced
several key foreign aid provisions
on behalf of hungry people,

"VA Issues Report With
Census Data On
Female Veterans

The 1980 Census and recent

Veteran Administration ‘studies.

have indicated that the number of
female veterans in the United
States is on the rise.

"The number. of female veterans
counted in the 1980 Census has
increased nationally by ap-
proximately 51,000 in the last4-1/2
years as the number of
separations from military service
continues to outnumber deaths,"
said Carlos Rainwater, Director of
the St. Petersburg VA Regional

Office. "In contrast, the male

population is declining steadily as
deaths have surpassed separat-
ions from military service by an
average of 148,000 a year."
There are approximately 73,700
female veterans in the state of
Florida at this time (5.3 percent of
the total veteran population). The

median age is 58, compared to a

national median of 52.
“The 1980 Census was the first
time .that questions regarding
veteran status were asked of
women, providing reliable data on
women veterans’ employment
§tatus, educational attainment,
income, marital status, age, period
of service and race.
“The Census found that black
female veterans living ‘in the
United States numbered 123,000
fa percént .of the total) and
smale veterans of Spanish origin
numbered 44,000 (4 percent of the
total). The report also found that
25 percent of all female veterans
graduated from high school; 14.8
sercent were college graduates.
Zin total, female veterans
pépresented 2.6 percent of all
veterans in the labor force on
Census Day with slightly over 50
percent of the 1.1 million:female
veterans employed. :
‘Rainwater said that women
veterans are applying for their
benefits at only about half the rate
that male veterans apply. "If you
are a female who served with any
of the military services and were
discharged under conditions
other than dishonorable, you may
be entitled to a number of different
types of benefits”: reminded
Rainwater.

“including the establishment of a

$25 million Child Survival Fund to
finance low-cost and effective
health measures for children.
If passed by Congress, The Food
Assistance and Africa Agriculture
Act would provide: **An increase
in. U.S. aid for agricultural
development in Africa by
providing (a) a $100 million U.S.
contribution to a special account
within the International Fund for
Agricultural Development (IFAD)
solely -to fund projects in Africa,
and (b) a $120 million U.S.
contribution to IFAD's regular
program, one-third of which goes
to Africa. IFAD is an international
organization that was created in
1974 during the World Food
Conference. The multilateral
organization is widely ac-
knowledged as being successful
in promoting cost-effective and
well targeted projects that allow
poor people to help themselves
and their communities increase
food production. **An additional
$250 million in emergency food
assistance over the above the
regular food assistance program
(U.S. Food for Peace Program),
creating a total of $900 million in
emergency food aid for 1986.
These funds will allow the United
States to respond adequately to
anticipated emergency food
needs in Africa next year and in
other areas of the world.

Dignitaries Honored During FAMU’s Commencement Exercises

citizens during its 85th Commencement Exercises in Tallahassee, .

. Pictured shown with their Meritorious Achievement Awards are, from
left, Atty. Elbert L. Hatchett, Foreign Services Career Minister O.
Rudolph Aggrey, Florida University System Chancellor Barbara W.

Florida A&M University bestowed high honors on six outstanding

Newell, Gulf Oil Public Affairs Office Thomas D. Walker and NASA
Aerospace Specialist and liaison officer James G. Marlins. Mrs. Ellen
Matheus, accepted the award for her late husband, scholar, author and
educator John F. Matheus. (FAMU Photo by Keith L. Pope.)

Maynard Jackson, Others Form New Minority Securities Group

New York--Afro-American and
Hispanic-American leaders in the
financial world have formed the
National Association of Securities
Professionals (NASP) Maynard H.
Jackson, is Chair, and Travers J.
Bell Jr., Chair-Elect of the new

Afro-Americans in the securities
business, Jackson said, are
concentrated more heavily in the
public market, dealing in tax-
exempt bonds and notes, and
enjoying greater participation

since the increase of minority
mayors and other minority elected
officials.

"The market is much bigger on
the private side, however,”
Jackson explained, "where there

are far too few minorities engaged

in corporate securities. NASP will.

seek to address that situation and
others. Primarily, we want most to
assure equal opportunity for all
minorities to compete in the

financial marketplace of America.
Politics and economics are
essential to the growth and
stability of America’s minorities.
One without the other won't
work," said Jackson.

organization.

MAYNARD JACKSON
"NASP," said Jackson, Atlanta

Mayor from 1974-1982, "was
founded to improve the excellence
and professionalism of minorities
in the industry and to enhance
opportunities for minorities in the
securities business.”

Jackson, bond lawyer and
partner in the law firm of Chapman
and Cutler, said the minority

securities professionals set up

NASP at a closed, packed meeting |

in San Francisco on April 13, 1985.

"Just before NASP's first meeting °
in February in Chicago and after
the Wall Street Journal's front
page article in February about the
growth of minorities in the tax-
‘exempt field and how NASP was
being formed, we received about
1,400 calls of interest within a few
days,” said Jackson, "and the
response continues to be exciting
and reassuring. We have struck a
responsive chord and NASP's 21-
member Board of Directors
expects rapid growth of the.
association,” Jackson‘ added.
The professionals are drawn from
minority-owned and white-owned
securities and law firms, banks
and insurers all over the nation.
Jackson, who convened NASP,
has an office in the Chicago
headquarters of Chapman and
Cutler, but is based in and
manages Chapman and Cutler's
Atlanta office.

Other officers of the new
organization are: Chair-Elect
Travers J. Bell Jr., Chair, Daniels &
Bell Inc: of New York; Vice-Chair,
Joyce M. Johnson, of AG.
Edwards & Sons, Inc., Chicago;
Secretary, David Baker Lewis,
Esq., Lewis White & Clay, Detroit;
and Treasurer, Clark Burrus,
Senior Vice-President of First
National Bank of Chicago.
' Daniels & Bell was the first Afro-
American firm to acquire a seat on
the New York Stock Exchange 15
years ago. ; we

NASP. will lease space in ‘New.
York City and plans a board

——l

meeting there in late May. }

COMMENT

Prophecy
. [Old Testament]
For God shall
bring every work
into judgment, with
every secret thing,
whether it be good, ;
oh whether: it be
evil. ay

Ecclesiastes 12:14.

:
:
2
2
:
!

1 Warning: The. Surgeon General Has Determined :
I That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

You've got what it takes.

Share the spirit.
y Share the refreshment.



Se Th ih

PAGE 14

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1989

ar ESE Ra,

USED KNIFE TO GET HIM FROM ROUND HER NECK--Cynthia
Martin, 29, lives on Charles D. Evers Drive. Living there with her is her
boyfriend, John Hampton, 36, also her 11-year-old daughter. On the
evening of June 5 he grabbed her by her neck and wouldn't let go, so she
took a knife and cut him to get him from around her neck, she told Officer
R.C. Rowe. She showed Officer Rowe some scratches on her neck, and
went on to report that her boyfriend had also slapped her daughter.
When she called police, he left, she said. (SK)

BAREFOOT MAN SNATCHED HER EMPTY PURSE--A young woman
who was out walking on Moncrief Road at close to midnight had her
purse snatched by a strongarm robber who was wearing cut-off jeans
and no shirt or shoes. The 24 year-old victim, a resident of Brentwood
Avenue, told Officer H.G. Helton she was walking in the 5700 block of
Moncrief when the suspect started following her. He tried to strike up a
conversation, but she ignored him, she said. All of a sudden he grabbed
hold of her purse, but she hung on to it too and was knocked to the
ground. When he reached for his back pocket as if going for a weapon
she let go of the purse and he ran off with it, she went on to relate. She
said there was no money in it. just her hair brush and two bottles of

perfume. (SK)

'SKIP' SKIPS AFTER USING KNIFE--Eugene Creech, 41, was doing
some drinking with friends at 1145 Grothe St. when one of the persons
present, known to him only as "Skip," reportedly pulled a pocketknife
from a case on his belt, and cut Creech across the forehead with it.
"Skip" evidently skipped after that, and Creech walked on home to
where he lives at 1211 W. 4th, where his landlord called police. Officer
C.B. Shivers responded and took Creech, who was reported to be
intoxicated, to University Hospital. Creech said "Skip" was a friend of
his, but all he knows about him is that he hangs out in the Myrtle Avenue
area. (SK)

COLLECTOR COLLECTS BLACK EYE--A man who claims another man
owes him some money for something or other went to the man’s home

.last week to try to collect what he said was owed him, but all he got was a

black eye. The would-be collector, Horace Richardson, age 33, has been
badgering him for some time, according to the other man, Willie
Jackson, 37, who lives with his wife on Brook Forest Road. According to

- Jackson and other witnesses, Richardson came calling in a highly

intoxicated condition, and created a loud disturbance. He had been told
to stay away, because of previous threats made to Jackson's family,
Jackson said. A fight ensued, in which Richardson collected a left ., .,
eye swollen shut and cut. He had to be taken to University Hospital. (SK)

MOMS FIGHT OVER KIDS’ 'ALTERATION'--Joy Ann Souter, 27, lives at
2136 Phoenix , and Gerdenia Dixon, 43, lives at 2124 Phoenix. On the
night of May 31, while she was taking some groceries into her house, Ms.
Souter says Ms. Dixon was in her (Mrs. Souter's) yard, creating a
disturbance. According to a report filed by Officer D.J. Parson, Mrs.
Dixon approached Mrs. Souter and began having an “altercation.” The
whole thing was. about another “altercation” which reportedly took
place earlier between the women's kids, aged 9 and 6. Mrs. Souter told
Officer Parson that Mrs. Dixon had grabbed her by the hair and hit her
several times with her fists. Mrs. Dixon denied using her fists, and said it
was a board she hit her with. Officer Parson said he could not see where
the "altercation" had altered Mrs. Souter’s looks any, but he gave her a
card anyway. (SK) >

'PA-PA’ LEFT NEEDLE IN PATROL CAR--Officer C. Johnson is in the

habit of searching his patrol car after delivering prisoners to jail, he says
in a report filed recently. Around 3:50 a.m., Sunday June 2, after running
Sterling "Pa-Pa” Henry, 33, in on a charge of imbibing alcoholic
beverages on city property, he made one of his customary searches.
Tucked under the back of the front seat of his patrol car he says he found
a syringe containing a residue of a controlled substance and some
blood. Officer Johnson took the syringe to the police property. room, and
lodged one more charged against "Pa-Pa.” (SK)

SNEAKER THIEF NOT SNEAKY ENOUGH--A young man who went into
Zayre's wearing one pair of shoes, and came out wearing another has
ended up in jail. Sandra Westberry, security guard at Zayre's on
Normandy Boulevard, said she saw the youth enter the store and go to
the shoe department, where he proceeded to put on a pair of MA-100
white sneakers, priced at $19.99, and, after putting his old shoes on the
shelf, walked out without paying. A 19-year-old resident of Dellwood
Avenue, the young man was taken to jail by Officer R. Page. Zayre's got
it's new sneakers back, but the report does not state whether the suspect
got his old ones back or not. (SK)
[2

POINTS SILVER PISTOL AT MOM--Eimer Jean Woodrow, age 42, has a
son by the name of Origious Jones, Jr., age 26. On Sunday morning,
June 2, she reportedly asked her son to give back to her the title to her
automobile. Origious is said to have said he would give it back when he
got good and ready, which was apparently not right away. Mrs. Woodrow
says that when she pressed him for if, Origious went to his own home on
Bertram Street and came back with a silver revolver which he reportedly
pointed at his mother. She, accompanied by a nephew, . Anthony
William, 24 fled the scene and called police to come do something about
‘her son pointing a silver pistol at her. Officer J.A. Joiner responded,
giving her a report card. (SK) :

NEWS
DEADLINE

IS MONDAY
4:30 P.M.

Ml $6995
CASSAT GUN SHOP

==

>

POLI

ENNIS JUST HELPED HIMSELF--Paul Baker, ann employee of
Albertson's Drug on University Boulevard, on June 5 observed a young
man helping himself to numerous bottles of men’s cologne and after-
shave lotion, which he took from the shelf and placed in a brown paper
bag he was carrying. When the suspect left without paying, Baker gave
chase. The suspect ran across the parking lot, but tripped, enabling
‘Baker to catch up with him and take him into custody. Inside the paper
bag were 23 bottles of cologne belonging to Albertson's. Suspect, who
was charged with grand theft, was identified as Ennis Sykes, 29, a
resident of Logan Street. (SK) :

GOOD SAMARITAN GETS CUT--A man who was at the Casino Bar on
Main Street when two men got into a fight outside, got a cut on his groin
when he tried to break it up. Roy Lee, age 47, a resident of Winton Drive,
was the well-intentioned victim who ended up in University Hospital
having his privates attended to. Lee told Officer E.C. Rigdon, who took
him to the hospital, that while he was trying to puta stop to the fight one
of the men doing the fighting gave him a kick inthe groin, which caused
the cut, said to have been about one inch long. After Lee had been given
the kick, both of the men who were fighting fled the scene. (SK)

ASKED MEN NOT TO SHOOT HIM--Tony Winguard, age 19, was
drinking beer and talking with a friend at the corner of Waynesboro &
Portsmouth when a couple of men drove up in a white Ford. One of them,
identifieghas Sunny “Sunny Boodie” Singletary, 24, reportedly jumped
out and, pointing a silver pistol at Winguard, said he would teach him:
about messing with his brother.” "Sunny Boodie" then yanked him over
to the car and tried to make him get in, but Winguard, fearing for his life if
he did so, put up a fight. In the struggle "Sunny Boodie" and his pistol fell

" to the ground, and at this point the othr occupant of the car, identified as

Joseph "Cherry Joe" Howard, 25, jumped out and onto Winguard’s
‘back. The two assailants got hold of the pistol and were pointing it at

' Winguard's head when a bystander asked them not to kill him. "Sunny

Boodie" and "Cherry Joe” obliged the bystander by getting back into
their car and driving off. A little later the white Ford was seen returning to
the scene, whereupon Winguard took off, running. While running, he
heard several shots. When he came back later he found a bullet hole in
the front tire of his motorcyle. Witnesses said they heard shots but saw
nothing. (SK) .

MAN HE SAID 'HELLO' TO BEAT & ROBBED HIM--An elderly man who
said "hello” to a younger man he passed while strolling in the 1000 block
of West Beaver, got hit on the head three times with a brick by way of
reply, he told police. The victim, 62-year-old Frank Strugis of Tubman
Drive, told Officer E.W. Mullis that in addition to knocking him down with
the brick the man had broken a soda pop bottle and threatened to cut him
up with it unless he gave him all his valuables. Strugis handed over his
wallet, containing an unknown amount of cash. The man also took his
checkbook and credit cards, and then departed. (SK)

COPS BOUGHT POT FROM 'FA—FA’' BUT GOT THEIR MONEY BACK-
-Officer J.W. Crosby and reserve Officer R.J. Handres, attired in plain
clothes and driving in an unmarked car, paid a visit to 301 Caravan Trail,
where they were approached by a young man who asked them what they
wanted. After some words (not specified) the young man reportedly
offered to sell the officers a baggie of marijuana for $10. The officers
handed him $10 and he handed them a baggie of pot weighing 2.9 grams.
The officers then took suspect, pot, and $10 to jail. The suspect is said to
go by the name of "Fa-Fa." (SK)

BROKE ALL OF MIRROR: r the past year, according to a report,
Mario Mixon, 21, has been at the resident of Reginald Stone, 22,
Apt. 4, 1507 W. 28th St. Now, however, Mario doesn’t live there anymore.
Shortly after midnight June 3, Reginald says that the two of them got into
an argument, during which Mario proceeded to slic: up a 7-piece
sectional sofa set, and break 32 mirror tiles. Reginald went on to state
that Mario also inflicted a small cut on his (Reginald’s) left leg with a
piece of glass. Officer R.G. Dorsey gave him a referral to the state
attorney's office. (SK) ;

ALL IN THE FAMILY--A man whose last name is the same as his
girlfriend’s, and who is listed as living in the same apartment she does,
got socked in the eye by her while he was sleeping, for no reason known
to him, he told police. The victim, Damon Dismuke, 37, weight 210, and
his girlfriend, Dozier Mae Dismuke, age 45, weight 250, reside on Anders
Avenue. It was around 6:30 Sunday evening June 2, he said, when he was
awakened by her hitting him in the eye with her fist. There has been no
argument of any king prior to the attack, he assured Officer H.R.
Atkinson. The officer left him some forms. (SK)

DEMANDED DRUG MONEY OR A BODY--A mother who works for HRS
and her adult son were at their home on State Street Sunday night June
.2, when a young man paid them a visit, waving a .357 Magnum pistol at
them, and stating he either wanted money or drugs, or a body, and he
didn’t care who's body it was. The Victim in the case were Mrs. Bloneva
Williams, 55, and her son Edward, age 28. They identified the man who
said he wanted money or a body as Robert Simmons, 22, of 1417 State
St., which is in the same block where they live. According to Officer D.J.
Simmons, who investigated, Mrs. Williams "was, and still is” terrified as a
result of the -~cturnal visit, which occurred shotly before midnight.
Apparently { suspect quit the premises without getting either drug
money or a body. Officer Parsons went to his home, looking for him, but
he was not there. (SK)

NAKED MAN GIVES COP A SHOWER--A policeman who was sent to.
investigate a domestic disturbance came up against a naked man who
proceeded to turn a hand-held shower on'him. Undaunted, the officer
subdued the wet man and hauled him off to jail. The officer involved in
this ‘unusual case was C. B. Johnson, who on Sunday afternoon June 2
was called by Nadine Forest, 26, to come do something about her
husband Melvin, 27, who she said was throwing her and furniture around
the house. Upon entering the Forest residence on Brentwood Ave.
Officer Johnson was met by Melvin, naked and wet. The suspect was
advised to put on some clothes; the officer reports, but instead got into
the bathtub and started rinsing off with a hand-held shower. Officer
Johnson says Melvin then aimed the shower “in the direction of this

GERALD B. STEWART, formerty
sistant :
State Attorney Fourth Judicial Circuit

ANNOUNCES

a * The opening of his Law Practice
~~ in Association with =
W. BENJAMIN KYLE, Esquire

| pushing his bike along. When

| bill Issac had in his hand. By
4 into :

officer causing water to .spray all over this. officer.”

threatening manner, and had to, be physically subdued. Mrs. Forest
showed the officer an injunction ordering Melvin to leave her alone, but
he just wouldn't, she said. S5E ; :

«

i

BANDIT LEAVES BIKE & GROCERIES BEHIND--A 14-year-old boy

stopped at 10th & Liberty by an
10 asked him for a cigarette. The
r didn’t give him one, and just kept
g got to 419 Carr

who was pushing his bike hom
.older youth, who also had a
young victim, didn’t have a cig

armen St. the youth who
had asked him for a cigarette ju to take away the $20
a building the suspect fo
~ then ran off with the money,
full of can goods behind. Officer
get his bike and groceries, a
fictim and suspect were lo

property room scoring a net

3s Marvin Miller, a white
hi nar

A -

E REPORTS

CHUNKS BRICKS AT RIVAL--Jerry Wilson, 29, now resides with his
fiancee Nancy Wilbert, 36, on Smyrna Avenue. However, he used to go
with Darlene Griffin, age 30, of E. 24th St. According to police report,
Darlene has been following the engaged couple and bothering them for
quite some time. When the couple got home around 1:30 on Sunday
morning June 2, Darlene was reportedly there waiting for them, prowing
around in the backyard. Darlene then came up ard hit Nancy in the
mouth with her fist, and also threw bricks at them, th2y say. The police
report states that Jerry observed all this, but does not ‘ndicate that he did
anything about it. After throwing the bricks Darlene took off in her blue-
and-white Grand Prix. (SK)

SAID SHE CLAWED HIM & HE SLAPPED HER--Ronald Thompson, age
30, resides in Apt. 141, 301 Caravan Trail. On the afternoon of June 3 he
was visited by Renee Johnson, 19, who reportedly entered his apartment
“looking for a friend” without having been invited to come in. Upon
leaving, she told Officer W.Winko, Thompson slapped her on the side of
her head, and for that reason she had gone into Apartment 216 and
called police. However, a witness, Roland Hayes, told Officer Winko that
he had seen Ms. Johnson, upon exiting Thompson's apartment, turn
around and claw him on his left arm. (SK)

SAYS IT WITH FLOWER POT--Mary Brooks, age 28, now resides in Apt.
1602 at 11291 Harts Rd. Around 3:00 a.m. on the morning of June 5 a
flower pot came sailing through her rear kitchen window, doing an
estimated $100 worth of damage. She blamed the pot-throwing on her
ex-boyfriend, Edward Zack Lewis, a 33-year-old pharmacist. Leonard
Holmes, 38, who was a guest of her's at the time of the pot-throwing, is
listed as a witness. This was apparently not the first time that Lewis has
given her tourble. According to the police report filed by Officer R.J.
Rein, on a previous occasion Lewis accused her of forgoing

prescriptions and being a drug addict, but when police sought to

investigate she would not open the door. (SK)

Affirmative Action Is Under
Attack In San Diego, Calif.

WASHINGTON, D.C.--The
sDepartment of Justice and the City
of San Diego have asked a federal
court to delete numerical hiring
goals for minorities and women
from a 1977 consent decree.

Assistant Attorney General
William Bradford Reynolds, head
of the Department's Civil Rights
Division, said a joint stipulation to
modify the consent decree was
filed in U.S. District Court in San
Diego, California.

Reynolds said San Diego has
already achieved many of the
objectives of the decree, including
either meeting or exceeding the
numerical goals or having made
substantial progress toward the
goals through recruitment and
other good-faith efforts.

He said the city had suggested to
the Department the elimination of
thé goals more than a year ago,
citing its accomplishments under
the decree.

On January 10, 1985, the
Department included the city
among 50 jurisdictions requested
to modify their decrees in light of
the Supreme Court decision in the
Memphis firefighters’ case.

The Justice Department sued the
city on December 21, 1976,
alleging a pattern and practice of

discrimination in employment in
municipal jobs, and obtained the
consent decree on December 20,
1977. The decree established

specific goals and guidelines for

recruiting, hiring, and promoting
minorities and women.
In addition to meeting or making

substantial progress toward the
goals, the city has established
effective training programs
designed to enable minorities ....
into journey-level

and women
jobs, the motion said.
Women currently hold 7.1

percent of firefighter positions and
two women have advanced to fire
engineer, the motion noted. As of
June, 1984, 12.2 percent of the
firefighting force were Hispanic
and 6.2 percent were black.
The motion asked the court to
delete all numerical goals from the
decree, and the city agreed to
continue to hire and promote
qualified applicants on a
nondiscriminatory basis.
In addition, the city agreed to
continue to give the Justice
Department annual reports on its

employment activities.

The decree will remain in effect
for two more years, exceeding the
five-year provision in the original

decree.

State Netting Big Results
In Anti-lllegal Drugs Program

The Florida Highway Patrol
have released figures regarding a
program aimed at interdicting the
steady flow of illegal drugs being
transported on Florida highways.
During 1984, FHP Troopers seized
more than $50 million in such
illegal drugs.

Colonel Bobby R. Burkett, Patrol
Director, stated, "These figures, as
sizable as they are, represent only
the tip of the iceberg in the overall
transportation of illegal drugs
through our state. The seizures of
drugs and other related
contraband being transported on
the highways is being encouraged
within the Patrol”.

A breakdown of the drugs seized
during 1984 in the program and
their value is: TYPE Marijuana
AMOUNT 56,312 Ibs. VALUE
$28,156,279. Cocaine 201 Ibs.
6,444,800. Pills 12,350 12,350.
Total $34, 613,429.

The Patrol's ten aircraft pilots
were responsible for spotting 36
fields being used to grow and
harvest marijuana plants having a

street value of $15,516,000.

In addition, 140 weapons were
seized along with 118 vehicles
valued at $706,815. Troopers
made 2,114 assorted drug arrests

in the 1,147 incidents seizing
$1,780,230 in cash. The money,
when cleared by the court, is
‘deposited in the state’s general
revenue fund.

Colonel Burkett, who was
encouraged by the success of the
drug program, also quoted
preliminary figures for the first
quarter of 1985 (Jan -March)
which indicate a 74% increase in
drug related arrests and a 263%
increase in the value of illegal
drugs seized during the same
period in 1984.

The naked man then got out of the tub and lunged toward the officerina

58-year-old black man who works ‘|

BURNEY BIVENS

J ‘MEDICAL MALPRA

BIVENS AND PRESCOD

Attorneys At Law
400 E. Monroe Street Ph: 353-5579

“ACCIDENTS ‘DIVORCE ‘DRUNK DRIVIN
"PERSONAL INJURY * WRONGFUL BEAT +

DENESE PRESCOD

CTICE ‘BANKRUPTCY

PEI IID TIT EPI RII TRS III OR Ton



SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

STAR PAPERS

PAGE 15

or ly E. Gobb Black Vietnam Veterans: Forgotten Men

‘After 10 years of relative silence.

about the Vietnam War, we have

been treated, recently, to a media
blitz about that disturbing piece of
our” history, . Strangely missing

from the news report, however,

were any significant interviews
‘with Black veterans about their
experiences in Vietnam.

“But perhaps this country is not
yet ready to accept those
experiences: ~~.

Listen, for example, to what Lt.
Commander William S. Norman

says in the book, BLOODS, an oral
‘history by Black Vietnam Veterans
edited by Wallace Terry.
Commander Norman notes: "The

Navy was asking Black people to

take part.in a war while subjecting
them to institutional racism --
institutional racism intentionally.”

And, he continues, “You could go
‘aboard a carrier with 5,000 people,
and ‘you would. find the

overwhelming majority = of the

Blacks in the lowest level jobs, in
the dirtiest jobs, down ‘in the
laundry room, down in the bowels
of the Ship. You walk into the areas
where - : work with all

the

sophisticated computers, and it
would. look as if there were no

Blacks on the entire ship.

Racism was also evident in the
way troops were deployed.-In the
mid-sixties the percentage of
Black soldiers on the front lines

was greatly disproportionate to

the Black population generally.
At a time when Blacks were
estimated to be 11% of the
population, Black soldiers
accounted for 31% of the troops in
Vietnam and 23% of the deaths.
Black soldiers rightfully
considered themselves cannon
fodder for the U.S. military in
Vietnam. Is it any wonder, then,
that the Black vet returned to this
country with, as Commander
Norman. termed it, "a special
brand of bitterness”?

That bitterness was compounded

~ by the hostile reception which the
.-Black verteran received upon his
return. While the employment

difficulties faced by white vets
were bad, those faced by Black
vets were abominable. '

Anew report, presented by New
York's Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Committee, in fact, confirmed a

"consistent relationship between
‘race, ethnicity and combat level

and these career deficits.”

The report also noted that the
unemployment rate among Black
veterans.

The lack of access by Black
soldiers to computer and -other
skills training during the war, as
noted by the Commander, could
well have contributed to this
situation.

This country has not yet faced up
to the horrible legacy of the
Vietnam War.

An important part of that legacy is
the pain and suffering which that
war inflicted on a whole
generation of young Black men
and women who fought bravely
and received less than nothing in
return. i
- A memorial is not enough.
Substantive job training and job
counseling programs are what's
called. for. We owe our Black
veterans at least that much.

YT Receives $140.000 From Mott Foundation

NASHVILLE, TN---Meharry

Medical College officials have
announced receipt of a $140,000
one-year grant from the Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation of Flint,
MI, in. support of the faculty
augmentation component of the
college's Plan for . Academic
Renewal.

The funds will be used to support
additional faculty in the areas of
aging and nutrition. Four new
faculty/researchers will include a
cellular immunologist, a
pharmacologist, a nutritional
biochemist
scientist. :

Cardiovascular disease,
hypertension, cancer, diabetes,
obesity and infections disease--all
of which affect a large segment of,
the American population--are of
particular concern lo minorities.

and a behavioral

‘These health problems are

: closely linked with lifestyle factors

Such as nutrition, environment,
stress and other behavioral
variables. This is ‘also. true for
many of the chronic and disabling

disease of the elderly.

The Meharry Plan for Academic
Renewal is a program to increase
faculty, create centers of
excellence, increase the funding
for educational program support
and revitalize campus facilities by
raising $33 million over a five-year
period. Since this inception in
1982, $22.5 million has been raised
toward that goal.

"We are pleased that the Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation has
recognized the need for research
in the areas of aging and nutrition,
two of the areas designated for

‘self

Centers of Excellence in the
college's Plan for Academic
Renewal,” said Dr. David Satcher;
‘Meharry president. "These studies
will prove even more vital as the
population of this country ages
over the coming decades.
The Charles Stewart Mott
Foundation is a private foundation
with assets of about $555 million
that awards over 360 grants a year
for programs fostering community
improvement through
education, citizen involvement
and community leadership and
developed processes.

This grant is part of a long-range
program of assistance to
historically and predominantly
black institutions of higher
education expected to reach a
total of ‘$20 million this decade.

| § YA Corner

QUESTION: Can the interest rate
on a VA home loan be changed?
‘ANSWER: The prevailing interest
rate at the time the loan is made, .

_ established by the Government

and set forth in the mortgage note,
is a fixed non-adjustable rate
mortgage which remains the same
for the ‘life of the loan.
QUESTION: My: husband had a
Veterans’ Group Life Insurance
policy when he died. An attorney
from a company where he owed
money said they would attach the
proceeds of the insurance to pay
the bill. Can they do this?
ANSWER: No. Servicemen’s
Group Life Insurance and
Veterans’ Group Life Insurance
proceeds are not assignable, nor
are payments to beneficiaries
subject to claims of creditors of
the insured or beneficiary.
QUESTION: Doés the VA
operates both inpatient and
outpatient clinics in most VA
medical centers for honorably
discharged veterans.
QUESTION: |
Government Life Insurance policy
and also receive VA disability
compensation. | often worry about
forgetting to pay my premiums. To
avoid this possibility can my
premiums be deducted from my
compensation payments?
ANSWER: Yes. Deduction of
premiums from your comp-
ensation check can be established
by completing an Insurance
Deduction Authorization and
mailing it to the VA Insurance
Center. You can obtain this form
from your nearest VA office.
QUESTION: My brother is having
some personal problems. His wife
says he often has nightmares
about Vietnam. What can the VA
do to help?
ANSWER: The VA has a network
of Vet Centers throughout the

country stafed by counselors who

have been specially trained to help
Vietnam veterans. Vet Centers are
located in most larger metro-
politan areas. To find the one
nearest you, call a VA facility in
your state.

QUESTION: My husband is a

have a VA:

World War | veteran who does not
receive any VA benefits. Is he
eligible for VA outpatient
treatment?

ANSWER: Yes. A World War I
~ veteran may receive VA outpatient

treatment for any disability even’

though he is not receiving VA
benefits.

QUESTION: Are prisoners and
parolees who are otherwise
eligible, entitled to VA benefits?
ANSWER: Veterans in prison or
on parole may still be entitled to
certain VA benefits.

ANSWER: Veterans in prison or
on parole may still be entitled to
certain VA benefits.

It's Your PSC

WELCOME ADDRESS TO SEARUC

Regulatory theory is amazingly consistant through the United States,
although its application varies widely. The consistancy of theory is
largely the result of cooperation among the various states’ regulatory
commissions. A vast quantity of information is exchanged regarding
common problems and solutions. State Commissions have formed
together in the National Association of Regulatory Commissions to
facilitate these exchanges. In addition, regional associations are formed,
one of which is the Southeastern Association of Regulatory Utility
Commissioners with member states, as the name would suggest, in the -
Southeastern United States. | have the pleasure of welcoming this year's
convention to Florida. That welcome message is reprinted here.

"Good morning ladies and gentlemen. On behalf of the Florida Public
Service Commission and of the citizens of the state of Florida, | welcome *
you to the Sunshine State and to its unique province, the Magic
Kingdom. We are extremely proud of our state and this year we expect to
welcome approximately FIFTY million visitors. Everywhere you turn,
you'll find the red carpet extended t6 you and your family. We are very
happy to have you here. Utility folks are frequently impressed by
statistics, in fact, our calling attracts perhaps the greatest number of
bean counters outside the hallowed halls of the return on equity experts.
With this in mind, | would like to provide some,information to you about
yourselves, as tourists in Florida: First &f all, there's more of you than
there are of us. For each of our ten million folks who live here, five visitors
will be welcomed to the state. You'll be served by about 700,000 people
employed full time in the tourist industry--and you'll pay their salaries of
some twenty-four billion dollars. On their behalf, I welcome you too. By
the way, as an employee of state government, | should relate their joy as
well: tourists furnish about one thousand million dollars to keep up our
government. Including salaries. Thanks.

What attracts folks to Florida? As you might imagine, our tourism
people were curious so they asked a representative sample of you all:
‘Climate, rest, recreation, and beaches are what most of you say and it's
apparent you like the Magic Kingdom as well: about twenty-five percent
of our visitors will see the Disney Complex. So having welcomed you to
Florida, and provided you with a bit of insight of all: About 90% of the
visitors to our state have visited Florida previously. But best of all--and |
think each of you will soon find yourselves i in this category--a stunning

98% plan to visit again!!

Welcome to Florida, the Sunshine State, the Magic Kingdom, and to the
1985 convention of the Southeastern Association of Regulatory

Commissioners.”

CHAIRMAN JOHN MARKS
101 E, GAINES STREET
TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA 32301

MAYOR'S YOUTH JOB CORPS

Ae

ADMINISTERED BY TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENT:
ALL DUVAL COUNTY YOUTH, 16-21 YEARS OF AGE,
ALL APPLICANTS MUST PRESENT PROOF OF AGE,
A SOCIAL SECURITY CARD, AND PROOF OF
RESIDENCE.
HIRING DATE: JUNE 17, 1985 8 A.M.
APPLICANTS WILL BE SELECTED FOR ALL JOBS ON A "FIRST- COME, FIRST-SERVE”
BASIS AT BELOW LISTED SITES.
PROGRAM OPERATIONAL . PROCEDURES:

JUNE

24 THRU AUGUST 2, 1985

A DIVISION OF THE HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT

ALL YOUTH WILL WORK FORTY (40) HOURS PER WEEK AND WILL
"BE COMPENSATED AT THE RATE OF $3.35 PER HOUR.

DEPARTMENT) AGENCY

POSITIONS

DEPARTMENT/ AGENCY

POSITIONS

; DEPARTMENT/ AGENCY

POSITIONS

DEPARTMENT/AGENCY

POSITIONS

Riverview Community Ctr.
9620 Water St.

13 General Laborers
1 Engineering Aide

Regency Square
900 Regency Square Boulevard

2 Grounds Keepers
1 Gardener
1 Canning Center Worker

South Area
2915 Parental Home Road

: Agriculture
1010 North McDuff Avenue.

2 Library Aides 2 Recreation Aides

Jacksonville Beach

Murry Hill Art Center
Lm First Avenue, North

4327 Kerle St.

West Ares 2 Recreation Aides

2637 West First Street

. 2 Genersi Clerical
“<1 General Repairmen
6 Stockroom Clerks
1 Mail Clerk :
1 Duplication Clerk

Central Services |
“Public Bufidings : -

: 14 General Laborers
903 Liberty Street ~~ - .

Northside

1 Library Aide Sunny Acres

3725 Pearl Street :

4 Recreation Aides

‘University of North Florida 1 Research Aides

; 9424 Ft. Caroline Rd.
5 Mechanic Helpers ‘Southside Library Ala 4367 St. John's Bluff Road 3 Clerical : :
5 Auto Body Helpers . 1568 Hendricks Avene’ dbrary Aide Personnel Building No. 9 1 Maintenance : " d
Hi 4 Service Garage Helpers ya an : Room 1103 y ra Deve) Community CW. 2 Reer Aves

12215 Palm Ave.

- Eastside eh ;
: 1390 Hendricks Avenue

- Transient, Youth Center

; : Eniployee Relations : i
3015 Parental Home Road

1010 East Adams: Street

Ray Greene Community Ctr.

"1 Receptionlst/ Typist
Hays 2149 Leonid Rd.

© 2 Recreation Aides

- Dallas Graham

University Hospital

: : EE Ee 2304 North Myrtle Avena H : PRT :
Housing 8 Urban Development % 6 Clerk Typists y Sous “658 West Eighth Street 3 opt Rides Dinsmore Community Ctr.
23 Grounds Keepérs - {seepery 7330 Civie Club Dr.
rounds Keepers . - Memorial Building :
: h oh BL . Willow Branch ¥ Libn har ; ;
2875 Park Street dusty Aide

iti hr rr ral ed

EPI III TIT IDI LER IIS ERIINL, HEI

po



PAGE 16

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

pel

‘Elmore Gains a
World Kick Title

second title June 1 by defeating
Bill Morrison for the vacant KICK

NORMAL, Alene: The Lady .
Bulldogs of Alabama A&M
University captured third place at
the 1985 NCAA Division Il Track &
Field Championships held at Cal

i 3

\ ony O8.
ANTHONY ELMORE ,
MEMPHIS, Tenn.--The Electrify-
ing Anthony "Amp" Elmore,
Karate International Council of
Kickboxing (KICK) World Super
Heavyweight Champion, gained a

Six Held For

Six men charged in a federal
probe of alleged cocaine sales to
major league baseball players

World Heavyweight belt.

Elmore stopped Morrison in a 12-

round, unanimous decision,
improving his record to 28-1.
Although the fight
distance, Elmore punished
Morrison for much of the fight.

The Amp caused Morrison to take

a standing eight count in the sixth
round with a right upper cut
followed by a spinning back kick.
In the 11th round, the Champ
actually knocked the 6'2", 210-
pound Morrison completely out of
the ring.

"My experience as a World
Champion helped me to dominate
the later rounds,” said Elmore,
who is sponsored by Adolph
Coors Company. Elmore now
holds both the KICK Heavyweight
and Super Heavyweight World
Crowns and plans to defend them

in upcoming bouts scheduled later

this year.

Drug Dealing

have pleaded innocent in

Pittsburgh.

went the

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SIRE:

Lakers Hold Boston Tea Party In The Garden

State University in Los Angeles,
California.

Alabama A&M, which finished
among the final four teams for the
fourth consecutive year, had ten

The Lo. Angeles Lakers are tne "Kareem" of the crop in the National
Basketball Association (NBA). The Lakers were “Worthy” of the crown
after using their “Magic” of their offensive talent and defensive prowress
to clip the wings of Larry Bird and the Boston Celtics, 111-100.

The NBA champion Los Angeles
Lakers were honored at the White
House Monday. President Reagan
made out pretty well, too. He received
a Los Angeles Lakers’ jersey with the
number one on it, a world champion

eshirt, a hat and a basketball. °

Los Angeles beat Boston at Boston
Garden 11-100 Sunday, June 9 to take
the NBA Championship back out to
the West Coast.

Coming into Boston Garden with a
3-2 advantage over the Celtics who
defeated the Lakers for the 1984
championship, wide spread belief had
it that Los Angeles would get no
respect in Celtics, Country.

But the boisterous Garden crowds
14,840°0F them! told het -derail the
Laker’s victory train.

The Celtics, behind 86-82 midway
into the fourth period, made a
desperate run at the Lakers, butclutch
play by L.A.'s Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
James Worthy and Kurt Rambis,
jetisoned the Lakers on to their ninth

season?

career?

League.

1985 NFL draft.

park?

SPORT
SHORTS

Baseball

New York,

Sports LL.

1. What active player had caught the most
major-league games at the start of the
2. Name the only horse to win the Kentucky
Derby in less than two minutes.
"3. What player rushed for an NCAA-record
63 touchdowns during his collegiate

What college did he attend?
Name the only pitcher to hurl a complete
ame in the 1984 World Series.
hich Edmonton Oiler scored the last
g World Hockey Association goal?
7. Name the only National League batting
champion now playing in the American

8. Name the first quarterback chosen in the

9. What team chose him?
What is the oldest major-league basebal/

people say San |
Francisco Giants outfielder Dan
Gladden is the best the Giants |
have had since Willie Mays retired. {
... Speaking of Mays, the man does

have a fondness for real estate. He
| maintains homes or apartments in {|
San Francisco, ||
Birmingham, Ala. and Greens- |

NBA Championship title.

Adul-Jabbar, 38, and named
series Most Valuable Player
second 29 points to lead L.A. in
scoring, one more than Boston's
Larry Bird who netted 28 points.

Earvin “Magic” Johnson avenged
last seasons series performance with
his. balanced game. Johnson had 14
points, 14 assists and pulled down 10
rebounds.

Worthy scored 28, and Byron Scott
added 14 for the champions. Kevin
McHale,who fouled out of thegame
led the Celtics with 28 points, Robert
Parrish had 14 and Dennis Johnson II.

The Celtics, favored to win the title
and repeat as champions, opened up
the series in Boston Garden by
thumping the Lakers 148-114. The
Lakers then beat Boston 109-102

II.

Boston came back to win 107-105
and the Lakers won game five 120-
111 "before the return trip to
Boston. :

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FANGS OND OS

athletes earn All American honors
during the meet.

Junior Dannette Young was the
highlight of the meet in the

Jax Coed Defends Track Records

women's division. Young, a native
of Jacksonville, Fla. easily
defended her 100 and 200 meter
dash crowns in 11.39 and 22.92,
respectively. :

In the qualifying round, Young
posted times of 11.35 in the 100
meter dash and 22.85 in the 200
meter. In addition, she joined

teammates Cherylann Bourne,
Cefornia Polk,
Wright in setting a meet record in

the 400 meter relay in the

qualifying round with a time of

44.93. For an encore, the quartet

broke that record in awinning time
of 44.83 in the finals.

In the 200 meter event, Young
broke her old NCAA mark of 23.38,
the meet record o0f.23.38, and the
stadium record of 22.97 held by
Sherri Howard of Cal State L.A.

In the six races that Young
participated in (including relays),
she bettered the existing meet
record in each event.

Despite the outstanding
performances of Young, A&M's
efforts were far from a one-woman
show. Freshman sensation Jearl
Miles won the long jump with a
leap of 20-3/4, while Fredricka
Wright and Millicent Rowe
captured third and fifth place
respectively in the 400 meter dash.

Despite the third place finish in
the meet, the Lady Bulldogs’
search for national-prominence is
over. Coach Joe Henderson,
‘entrusted with a young team, led
the Lady Bulldogs to 10 All
America selections with only 12
athletes participating in the meet.
Moreover, 11 of the 12 A&M
athletes advanced to the finals of
the NCAA meet.

before returning home to win 136- |

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RACE 7:43

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| SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985.

Michelob And Black NFL
Greats Tee Off For Charity

SINKING A PUTT is a lot trickier than catching a long pass for Paul
Warfield, former star receiver for the Miami Dolphins and Cleveland
Browns. Warfield is one of the many pro football celebrities who play in

the NFL Alumni Charity Golf Classic Series, sponsored by Michelob
beer. More than 75 youth-oriented charities benefit from the annual
program which includes golf outings in 30 cities across the country.

ST. LOUIS, Mo.,--Many black
former National Football League
greats are participating in the 30-
city NFL Alumni Charity Golf
Classic Series which benefits local
youth charity organizations. in
each city. The tour is sponsored by
Michelob beer, a product of
Anheuser-Busch, Inc.

Among the former NFL stars
participating are Paul Warfield,
Dick "Night Train” Lane, Drew
Pearson, Lydell Mitchell, Bobby
Mitchell, Leroy Kelly, Ollie
“Matson, Franco Harris, Joe
Greene, Lynn Swann and Lenny
Moore.

The golf tournaments are held in
the 30-chapter cities of the NFL
Alumni Association, which is
based in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. In
each city, NFL greats team with
local amateur golfers in an 18-hole
team scramble format to raise
money for local youth-related
organizations and charities. In lieu
- of an entry fee, the golfers make a
tax-deuctible contribution of $300.
The NFL Alumni have set a goal

Spinks Floors
"Diamond Jim”

Michael Spinks, the undefeated,
undisputed light-heavyweight
champ, retained his title last week
by defeating “Diamond Jim”
McDonald. Spinks won with a
technical knockout in one minute
30 seconds of the eighth round,
after knocking down McDonald

+ for the third time. McDonald
staggered to his feet but was
unable to continue.

Wiggins Gets
Health Nod

A panel reviewing the drug abuse

problem of Alan Wiggins says the
San Diego second baseman is
ready to resume play from a
medical standpoint. Wiggins
voluntarily entered a drug
treatment center in April. Shortly
after that, San Diego president
Ballard Smith said Wiggins
wouldn't play for the Padres for
the rest of the year.

Forsch Is Out
For The Season
A sore right elbow will keep

California Angel pitcher Ken
Forsch on the sidelines for the rest

§ of the season. The righthander

had a large bone spur removed
from the elbow last week. Elbow
and shoulder injuries have kept
Forsch out of action since April of
last year.

~ Bears May Sign
3 Buckeye's QB

. Not being picked in the NFL draft
hasn't kept Mike Tomczak from
. working outa contract. The former
. Ohio State quarterback says he'll
| sign a three-year contract with the

Chicago Bears after agreeing to
for 16-hundred-62 yards last
season, despite breaking his leg in
Spring practice. -

vgs ¥

to raise $1.5 million from the 1985
charity. golf classic series, taking
place now through October. The
1984 series raised $1,086,000. The
charities are selected by the NFL
Alumni.

BASKETBALL...
COLLEGE

Former Tulane basketball star
John "Hot Rod” Williams has
asked for a state in Louisiana to
throw out charges that he
conspired to have shave points in
games, claiming the law in the
case is unconstitutional. William's
attorney maintains the state's
sport bribery law is too broad and
vague.
A survey taken by USA Today
says student athletes who get
college basketball scholarships
have more trouble receiving
diplomas. Most of the survey
focused on Memphis State

> University. The paper says that

school graduated only 10.7
percent of its basketball
scholarship students = between
1972 and 1981, well below the
national average.

22222

NBA

Utah Jazz officials and agents for
Mark Eaton have opened
discussions on whether to
renegotiate the center's contract.
Eaton, who set an NBA single-
season record for blocked shots
last season, has two years
remaining on his deal. Last season
he made $133,000.

Eaton, who is 7-4, has been
recuperating from knee surgery he
underwent in April after being
injured in the final of the Utah-
Houston playoff game.

Former Utah Jazz forward John
Drew pleaded guilty last week to
issuing bad checks. A judge in Salt
Lake City then sentenced him to a
year's suspended jail sentence
and ordered him to enter a drug
rehabilitation program. Drew must
also make good on the more than
$300 in bad checks written in
March.

» The Jazz waived Drew last

December after he failed a drug
test.

E2222 2

{

another school post at a later date.
Wilson cited stress-related illness
as one of the reasons for his
resignation,

ThE An

Philadelphia 76er owner Harold
Katz says he'll decide within two
weeks on a replacement for Billy
Cunningham, who resigned as
coach last month.

(22223

The University of Florida has the
backing of governor Bob Graham
in its efforts to hold onto the
Southeastern Conference football
title. Graham said he agrees with
the basic position that the
University of Florida won the
championship on the field last
November and "nobody's going to
take it away from them.”

League presidents have voted to
strip the club of its title. Last week
school president Marshall Criser
said that UF would not give up the
1984 title and would study quitting
the S.E.C.

The Detroit Pistons have taken
head coach Chuck Daly out of the
running for the coaching opening
in Philadelphia. Detroit general
manager Jack McCloskey was
looking for a first-round draft pick
from the 76ers as compensation
for letting Daly out of the last year
of his three-year deal. Phila-
delphia refused.

Steve Mix, who played 13
seasons in the NBA, has quit his
job as University of Toledo
women's basketball coach. Mix
cited personal and business
reasons for his decision. He led the
Toledo team to a6-and20 record in
his only season of coaching the
Rockets.

Akh hh

NFL

A spokesman for the NBC
television network says Sam
Rutigliano, who was fired as head
coach of the Cleveland Browns
last season, will be a football
analyst for the network this
season. Financial terms of his
contract were not released, and
he'll start at the beginning of the
| Season.

(222227

NBA center Sam Bowie of the
Portland Trail Blazers has
undergone surgery to have bone
spurs removed from a toe. Bowie's
doctor says the seven-footer won't
be able to work out for ten to 21
days.

22222

(2222 23

The NBA says league expansion
for the 1987-88 season will be on
the agenda when owners open
their summer meetings June 23rd
in San Francisco. Miami currently
heads the list of possible
expansion sites, followed by
Tampa-St. Petersburgh, Toronto,
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Santa Ana,
California and Charlotte, North

The president of the Green Bay
Packers franchise in the National
Football League says the team
plans to clamp down on player
salaries in the next fiscal year.
Robert Parins says if the plan is
successfully carried out, maybe
the team can be saved. He told the
"Milwaukee Sentinal” that Green

Carolina. 2 Bay salaries are the second
aki highest in the league.
FOOTBALL , Defensive back Ray Griffin

reportedly will sign a one-year
deal to play for the Seattle
Seahawks. Griffin was released by
Cincinnati after seven seasons.
The 28-year-old Ohio State
University product is the younger
brother of two-time Heisman
Trophy winner Archie Griffin.

KARR ER

COLLEGE

Florida A&M University athletic
director Roosevelt Wilson
confirms his resignation after
meeting with the school’s
president, Frederick Humphries.
Wilson says he'll be reassigned

Former

BOXING...

PRO

lightweight champion
Alexis Arguello now is studying
acting and dancing and has signed
up with a Miami agency.

Arguello already has made a beer
commercial and has had a guest
appearance on the NBC television
series "Miami Vice,” In addition
actor Robert Conrad has written in
a part especially for Arguello was
featherweight champ in 1974.
junior lightweight champ in 1978
and lightweight champ in 1980.
Two years ago he became an anti-
Sandinista fighter in Nicaragua.

TO kwAnew

BASEBALL...
j PRO

The Pittsburgh Pirates’ general
manager Joe. L. Brown has
confirmed that the club is trying to
accommodate left-handed pitcher
John Candelaria by trading him,
and at least eleven teams are
interested. Officials of the Atlanta
Braves and the New York Yankees
have confirmed they're interested.

A national magazine, “Sports
Illustrated,” says that a Pittsburgh
grand jury probe into drug
trafficking has brought forth
evidence indicating cocaine was
sold to baseball players in virtually
every city in the national League.
The magazine quotes law
enforcement officials as saying
durg deals involving players were
routine.

The Kansas City Royals have
moved up to July first the date
righthander Dennis Leonard can
resume throwing. The veteran
hurler has undergone four
operations since injuring his left
kneecap two years ago. Kansas
City general manager John
Schuerholz says the projected
recovery date of August first might
prove too late for Leonard to help
the Royals in a pennant drive.

1222223

terms over the weekend. He threw

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You. If our words aren't enough-



SORE TF RETR SEE PR RA Ss G5 0

PAGE 18

A EE TE Sr a A eG i lo ha cut

STAR PAPERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1985

State Puts 2.5 Million In
Blacks Endowment Fund

Continued From Page 1

AN YHEIHE

are interested in being employed as Police Recruits.

|The starting salary is $11,000 -Recruits will be
| elevated to Police Officers at $18,541 annual salary

upon satisfactorily completing necessary training. No |1
‘experience needed, but you must be a High School |
Jriduste and in good plitsieal condition. Apply
tween the hours of 8 AM. and 1 PM.

For more information: Contact the EEO Office, City

| of Tampa, 306 E. Jackson st, 7th Floor Norn, (813)
|ase92.

Bring a Bar of Soap and your VERY BEST DONATION

SATURDAY, AND TOTAL

NUMBER.

bs "NOTICE"
1 will have UNCROSSING PACKA(
LOVE PACKAGES $35.00 and

ALSO A CUBA &

REV./DR. DEVINE P.O. ne

Ease

EEO-F/ M/H

and I will give you the STRAIGHT DOG TRIFECTA FOR:

FAMILY BLESSED TALISMAN for. $10.00 and}
many : : '
1 WILL BE BACK TO DO IT ALL OVER / AGAIN!

BORDENTOWN, N.J. 08505

i you, or anyone in your family or friends are
interested in TRAINING or work as a

NURS SISTANT
PLEASE ENT EDIATELY

354-0773
*Financial Aid Available

Rice Institute

Morning, Afternoon Evenin
333 Laura St Jax., FL
; 23302,

Classes

expected to put an additional $2.5 Gainesville Consortium in 4 — : : ; S—— CARPETS
million toward the fund in 1986. = Gainesville. : UISES ARM Cy AC : :
"This guarantees Blacks that McKnight is also footing the cost a, Bars Shi AHOY : Nour JEST THOMAS RUMMAGE Homes & Rental
there'll be funds in perpetuity for of three programs aimed at JOOrs PLUMBING Trailers/Van/Office
perpatuyy lor 9 prog 4-6178 *Monthly Services* : 836 W. Church St
Black scholars,” Tribble said. boosting interaction between all | *Free Estimates 384- hidiiidind 4 SPECT aL *Repairs* 2 we . CARPET MART
When the fund is fully established levels of education and getting *Reasonable Prices LOW RATE Clearing torerooms | 1179 S, Edgewood Ave.
next year, it will also finance the business and community leaders 765-1951 RAIN 264-4461 764-9852 355-3967 (Near Roosevelt Blvd.
five "centers of excellence” involved in the push for 1 : PROOF Car Painting by dian If no answer call after 6
designed, to enhance the educational excellence among OFING AAA p.m.
education of Black grade and high ~~ Blacks. AUTO RO Wreck Rebuilding ARE YOU DRIVING 389-5361
school students to better prepare “In time when meritority is more INSURANCE 22 yrs. exp. Free Estimates BROKE? SCHOOL OF :Open Mon-Wed-Thur-
them for college entry. the rule than the exception, thisis | As low as »All Work Guaranteed” | Insurance Claims BUSTED? Fri
The center that serves the like a bright light for Blacks,” $30.00 355-8524 Lang's Paint & DISGUSTED? JAX BARGAINS GALORE
Jacksonville area is being Tribble said. 6 MO. FL. PIP Bod And need work done » 100 Remnants *Lay-.
. : or oay ) Now offering tutoring: '\Away-Plans*
operated by the Alachua GATOR AUTO on your home? We g g
: 764-1392 1416 McConi form a alliance with | course for Learners | "A Will Save You
g Alabama Black Persons 1606 N. Main nest. our customers. 100% | Licenses. 724-2332 Money”
€ A oe 356-6305 If You Need » 26% | Financin d
Park) g, no down [.
: Ni tiny ST ‘ollowi t. Bad credit | (aL VET-LRE- S.No E:T d {10-14} €3
Accuse DOJ Of Harassment The Following PH: 354-1106 | Oro”
. WE BUY usually no problem. | (EM Tela al 10 I dT: ] I=)
MONTGOMERY, Ala.-Nine Black Luther King, Jr.'s former chief JUNK CARS *Painting *Roofing Roofs, Siding, Cut
persons in West-Central Alabama, lieutenant in Alabama. & *Plumbing *Carpentry ROOFING | Brick & Stone, Energy FOR SALE ;
including four elected officials, have Albert Tumer of Perry County, his TRUCK '_Call: DAVID DICE ALL TYPES [Efficient Windows, ROOM FOR
filed suit charging U.S. Justice wife, Evelyn, and Spencer Hogue- | po °C S Financing Available No 40% OFF Central A/C. Any job CHURCH "RENT
Department agents withconductinga scheduled to stand trial Monday, ay "50 o Interest 0 $2000, or more. Your BUILDING 764-1739
racially discrimanatory investigation June 17, on charges of mail fraud, 00 5.5920 Fria Eolimees Choice TV or Micro-
designed to keep blacks from voting. . conspiracy to commit voting fraud 641-5800 768- D.D. Roofing Co ane Oven. WITH | southside-Central Heat & N
The suit was filed Tuesday in U.S. and voting more than once. -— SMALL PD er. | THIS AD. Otter Expire, Air. Call for info.| oo Naw 9.8% 3
Detiot, Cou hi rine. Sony wes @ major ue in Je : Berome A Notary LAUNDRY Financing Aveiabic NG ALLIANCE 389-9780-398-6152 go
intiffs claim in the west- ma-to- ma ; ;
canal ea of Alabama, ars boing led 0 the Voting RIGS Act of 1965. | Renew Your ih Interest INDUSTRIES 399-0530 Announced.
selectively harrassed and intimidated Officials are questioning the large | Notary JE0 Yeashers, 3 Dryers 768 389-0510 MUST SELL | pivervi Cornes
by U.S. Justice Department number of absentee ballots cast by | Also: All Forms Of a Owner 168-8929 *Free Estimates* Tyerview rea, Lomer
investigators conducting wide- blacks. Federal investigators cha Insurance hy 0 apers. 24 Hr. Answering | 3BR. Concert Block | po oo :
ranging. "with hunt-type. probes” that members of the black power | GEORGE F. CARTER |$25.000.'Ask for: Frank | Home. Only $33,000 | First time home buyers
ranging : uy 3 Parrish. at's ’ eligible. Call us for more
into alleged vote fraud. structure have been changing the | INSURANCE Y Applian great starter home. Good | ; co
The suitseeks to have a federal judge selections on ballots of coercing illor | AGENCY CENTURY 21 pphance Investment Buy. Ask for; reaaen
order the Justice Department tocarry elderly individuals into voting for 5011 Soutel Drive ATKINS Re air Service Frank Parrish, :
o* its vote fraud investigation in a specific candidates. (904-764-0025) REALTY, INC. Electric Stoves ®, CENTURY 21 Magnolia
non-discriminatory fashion.” Blacks now control school boards 399-0404 ’ Refrigerators Kings Road ATKINS Arms
Persons named in the civil suit are anid county commissions in Perry, Washing - a 8% REALTY. INC A AL
U.S. Attomey General Edwin Meese, Greene, Sumter, Wilcox and i : Machines usiness ’ . par ments :
two of his assistants and three U.S. Lowndes, five of the 10 Alabama HELP WANTED Call: DAVID Center Inc. 399-0404 4813 'Moncrief Rd.
Attomeys for Alabama. Black Belt counties, where federal a 764-0849 { ~| ‘Under New Manage-
Among persons indicted since the = investigations have been launched. HELP Ab *Photocopies Biscayne Beauty mint Al AP. Be
investigation began are Dr. Martin City Civil Service 3 STyping Service modeled HUD
YOURSELF Child Support *Job Proposals Just 5 yrs. old, near nial
a ‘*Contracts schools & shopping. | /ccepted.
Alpha Phi Alpha Takes Leadership [the cost Guwd o Investigator py *Forms Filing Ass. §f Good equity “buy. 764-2246
Coast Guard Reserves *Resume
In Launching National Memorial provides great op- Ii Repair *Church Programs Bl 3 words describe this FOR RENT
To Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. portunities to get career | ¢/54/ss *Notary 3BR, 1BA. Best-
training in navigation, CITY OF JAX *Washers/Dryers *Stamps Economy. Room, : 118 W. 18th St.
WASHINGTON - A national Dr. King, himself a member of | electronics, mechanics, PERSONNEL *Refrigerators Office Supplies Ri privacy-All For just | 2BR. $275.
campaign to raise $300,000 to Alpha Phi Alpha, would be the first | communications and a| RooM 102 CITY HALL | ‘Ranges *Obituary Biograpny {1 $22,000 ; hbddds
establish a memorial to Dr. Martin to honor a Black man in the | Whole lot more. Best of | 3.09 AM4:30 PM MON— | Air Conditioners |} "Secretarial Services Qi Call us for more info. | 117 E. 4th, No. 3.1 BR,
Luther King, Jr., in the Nation's Nation's Capital. A statue | all, we'll pay you to help | pry jacksonville, FI 32202 ii Ang ering Serves $165
Capital, is being spearheaded by honoring Dr. Mary McLeod | Yourself. Full or Part-| gpog vp. M/F/H 3554146 = Sings Rd, THERAL
: : Bethun Ww r in time. For more in- 1 Year Guarantee Corner Of Tyler St. GEORGE A. BARNES | 235 E. 6th, No. 1, 1BR.
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. une as erected 4 :
The proposal for the Fraternityto Washington, D.C., in 1974. | formation, contact your City Civil Servi 24 Hour Services 354-2106 REALTOR $175.
assume the leadership for the The first public announcementof | local recruiter today. S id M wb Ce lik : 765-5505 or 23449
project was adopted at the the project was madeattheannual : chool Custodian |, gr=p auty Salons & Solis es 765-3310 10 W 42nd, No. 3 (Effic.).
organization's 78th anniversary Martin Luther King breakfast on | HELP OTHERS. II = = $125. 8
convention in Cleveland last January 15, Dr. King's birthday, in P la a RIND TIFC TH eorge A. Barnes
August. The effort is being Silver Spring, Md. This event is VOLRAE LH $9,759.38-513,648.46 "CURL" NORTHSIDE ~ REALTOR 266 Watts St., 1 BR. $100.
planned to coincide with the first sponsored by lota Upsilon > LAST DAY TO APPLY "SPECIAL" HAIR Rentals Aa.
observance of Dr. King's birthday Lambda Chapter of the Fratern- | 1he Coast Guard | ¢/17/ss DESIGNS 1631 W. Union st. [311 W. 17th. Apt. 4
as a national noliday and the ity, and is attended by Alpha | OF Cast Guard CITY OF JAX Care-Free Curl 9321 Lem Turner Rd. | 2BR IBA. $240 2BR. $210.
Fraternity’s 80th “anniversary = members from throughout the eserves PERSONNEL ONLY $35.00 764-9564 : oni
convention which will be held In WashiHgtor metropolitan area. | (904) 724-9388 ROOM 102 City Hall | friendly Barber Shop | FREE Style Cut With | 040 pois. 331 Plummer St.,
Washington, D.C., in 1986. The fundraising effort has 8:00 AM-4:30 MON—FRI | + 1444 N. Myrtle Ave. | ‘any Chemical Service. | p otessional Bldg. 3BR. $175.
Congressman Walter E. Fauntroy received unanimous backing up Group Health Jacksonville Fl 32202 356-8306 Ask for: OZELLIA or (UtiD), not inel.)S400. TTT
of the District of Columbia has Washington area chapters. v EOE. V.P. M/F/H Ask for: Virginia - LUCILLE : 16 W. 42nd. 1BR. $140.
introduced a bill inthe U.S. House ~~ George H. Sealey, Jr., project | Claims Approvers z 1716 Whitner St. Baa3s2
of Representatives in support of director, has appealed to groups in , LES 2BR. 1 BA. $250. 1616 Liberty St. =
the project. Senator Paul recent public appearances to |Gulf Group Services has IS PECIALS” "CH ARMETTE 1BR. $225. (incl. utilities)
Sarbanes of Maryland has entered support the national drive. Sealey, | openings for experienced Beauty Salon 1562 Windle St. idea
similar legislation in the U.S. former president of the |Health Claims Ap. Curl Perms .:... $35: y 2BR. IBA. $250. 1929 Perry St. 3BR.
Senate. Both have indicated Montgomery County, Md., Branch proves wit as of SPECIAL Body Perms...... $22. "June Specials” (Available 7/85) $250,
that they will urge their colleagues NAACP and retired protocol | months experien Frances Hair Sivies'.) Curls... $30 Shown By Appt. Only.
to endorse their respective bills. officer of the U.S. Department of | Paying health claims on} RE Evi : MEL COHEN &
A majority of the members of the ~~ State, pioneered in the area to | the CRT tohospitalsand | = 050" © Beauty, 765-5247 S/Sets10. 2313 N. Myrtle Ave.| ASSOCIATES
Congressional Black Caucus have obtain honor for Dr. King. In 1976, | doctors on a group "Sh Franses. J orp No. 1, 2BR. 1BA. $225. RE
indi i i b Positions offer op Ask For: Frances S/Press..... ’ ALTORS
already indicated their en- he chaired Montgomery County's | ase. : Tre. 1823 Myrtle Ave. ” Call 17 ¢ yi 939 § | (Available 7/85) 701 West Uni
dorsement of the project to honor - first Martin Luther King | excellent starting salary. 358-9150 Shown By Appt. Only) nlon
Dr. King. Marion S. Barry, Jr, Committee leading to the |Incentitive pay for] 5 : ; | Ask For: Altamese, hi '| St.
mayor of the District of Columbia, declaration of a County holiday for | Production, full com- 3 ALL AROUND | Arthur or Mary. 765-5505 or 765-3310 354-4912
and Andrew Young, mayor of Dr. King. pany benefits, flexible TITTETTYNEG * BEAUTY :
Atlanta, both members of the Assistant project directors are | Office hours and ex- SALON ; : UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS
Fraternity, are serving as John A. Harvey, Sr. and Oscar | cellent working con- ‘ DAY CARE
honorary co-chairmen. Once Little. Sub-committee chairmen | ditions. If you qualify. WEEKLY TRIPS 5567 Moncrief Rd. ;
initial funds have been raised are Eddie L. Madison, Jr., | Calk Curls. $30 Two for $55. This is our advanced notice that Applications will be
through Alpha Phi Alpha, theplan Communications; Thomas Donaldsonville, Ga. To 768-3454 DAY CARE accepted on July 15, 1985 by:
calls for taking the appeal to Marshall, Finance; Harold Navy, Gulf Life D, he fe ". Walk-ins hg RIMSCO, INC.
national Black organizations, Memorial; and Alred Bailey, Site. Co. r. Dalias ivioore. (With Ad Only Open For The Summer
corporate groups, private Other Committee members are Invupanes < Call by. Thurs. . S Ax Age, . 1102 Edgewood Ave., So.
institutions, religious bodies, and Harvey Brinson, Ludwin Branch, 765-6547 All Curls Jacksonville, Florida 32205
the general public for additional Ryle A. Bell, Wuhan Dansby, E.O.E. M/F : : On 764-8366 (904) 389-2083
financial support. For example, Samuel Yette, A. Gilbert Douglass, [leeeserssereiserte eo PEPPY Special 7 57 509 “i Por Sevpancy ina I Ear eaves
other Black Greek-letter and John Williams. - ) ommunity, in
organizations will be encouraged Sealey said a blue ribbon panel : Mrs. Patricia Only $25.00 FR —, Jacksonville, Fla. Rental Assistance available. Equal
to back the project through their will be available for technical Horoscope & Palm Reading 1273 Kin s Rd LITTLE LAMB'S | Housing Opportunity
national leadership and through assistance and participation in the Meiptus or o2d your Batt; AFESeN OE TITS ss. 8 > ., KINDERGARTEN
the Pan-Hellenic Council. selection process for a sculptor. tell your lucky davs and numbers, 355-4758 . | Summer Program -—
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nS Why be Wor ried abiou! the: fyjure When this Psychic Available C A R R E N T A L
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find tin th y Hi Atthe FLORIDA STAR | | Just sou of Black Creek Bridge Elasta Curl..$40.00 From 0 vio Schock ne ; ;
ind It in the classi ieds News Reporters with PEOPOIPOCEPOOCTD Carefree..$35.00 also after school’ 1 No Credit Card Required
writing experience. Full or " ; (Call: 358-9356 “ Tle CALL NOW ;
- — parttime. Top pay for | BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND 1912 King: Rd. By Appr. | $25.90 per week and up Out Of State Use (New Cars)
H E { P Yj A N T E ») Ba Ashes ‘REV /DR. 'BLESSING” DEVINE, II New Customers oD TWO LOCATIONS
; us| Guaranteed - pay. bows [YOUR MODE A ptieT WITHA |__ vay i | ee ask about our
: Florida Junior plan. VISION FOR THE PEOPLE Borrow Up To $1,200.00 Cash Special Discount Rate
CLERICAL ge Circulation ~~ [YOU ARE INVITED 10 MY 3RD HELP & : —— SE
OPPORTUNITIES | oriers A wide Variety |' Supervisors | Cu TURDAY Jone 15, 1985 ny oluteral Needed AUTOS FOR SALE.
Of Employment Easy part-time work. Car or ; Cf
Opportunities. EE erty 1c FROM, : £00 AM. 10 500 PM. “No Co Signer | 85LTD6 To Choose From......
For Informat : o Hassles
responsible for per. ll | Cunt 504-612-3161 Apply er Lxpitin oe » Out Financial For |"Quick Approval 85 T Birds 2 To Choose From.. |
forming secretarial/staff § | FIC is an Equal | FLORIDA STAR [goog Saighten Out y er x gk Specialize In Rough Cases” :
- Opportunity/ ; 2616 N. Myrtle Ave. ALSO: 1 Got A Guaranteed Trif |For a ple application, send a self-addressed
7 ects Numbér And The Race
AMtmative College in | (near Jom S12 ux FIa. kro Play For The Saturday Matinee & Saturday Night ""ECONOFAX, Gulf Lif BR empos 2 To Choose.
l= Education and SEE ME AT: The Holiday Inn (West) Riverside Area u e Tower, | PT RA
_ Employment 5 Equa Opportunity $58 Stockton Street, Near Edison Street Where 1-10 & 1-95 Suite 200. Jacksonville, Fla. 32207 :
- —— “Police Rec oC op EE (Please dos apply at Corporate Headquarters in | / & Deslor Involes We also Sell and
: Jacksonville, Florida person. : : nance Used Auto s.
| the city of Tampa is looking for Black persons, both | READ AND OBEY IF YOU WANT TO BE NOTICE
{males and females, between the ages of 21 and 35 who BLESSED

RENTAL
1298 Cassat Ave.
ci 384-1000 :

ED TILLMAN AUTO
RENTAL
2nd and Main St.

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