on every in .
There w re even (7) ta
bI which consisted of, Ta
bI 1, Mis ion; Table 2,
Mother Board; Table 3,
Junior
Vh
Music
You h
bI 7,
Dan W t, report r
with WSJM/WRIX Radio
station w th Mist bf
Ceremony for the pecial
event. -
port oth r ckups in the
a at the time.
• Be ponsibIe for inquiring
about wh ther th person making
the claim has home owner insur
an and whether the insurance
will cover the claim. If the owner
. nsuranee the inv tigator
wih report the name and address
to the in' urance com-
p.rn.
Ms. Buchana will ch Arts
and Crafts to youth t Sterne
Brunson on Monday; Calvin
Britain on Wedneed y; and
Morton Hill on Thursday. Each
ion will be from 8:80 to 5:30
p.m. The program is broken
down into two 10118, WIth
thl· ...... ion. starting·No-·
T G floor
xsrci and a and crafts will
ught 0 youth ages 8
through 12 yea 0 , with
c limited of 15 to 20 par
ticipants per class.
The programs are to th
youth. AetXn:dilli to City Man-
Be rly B , both De-
laney and B will d
a total of 1,035 each from th
City' Community Develop- .
ment Block Grant Funds for
tionfort 16-w 1m
sio .
Deloney and Buchana have
n working with y uth in th
noon Harbor Bch system
formanyy
Brew informed Commis
sioner George Wysinger ·that
bo h programs ould be paid
through the City' COBG f\m
and not the City's neral fund,
but • both
lu' .
TEA POURER - Th lme William, It
tlng, wa. tea pourer for Tabl No.2,
Moth r 80 rd, at th Annual Lurl an
Wllllame Tea. Standing I B rnlce
Bogan.
ment.
port ny special matters
which th in igator may ob-
rv or may I rn of
Report on whether there is
ny indication of pre-existing
or other s ial oondi-
ENJOYING THE FUN - Flordla Lloyd,
left, laughs long with Mrs. Racine
Davl , center, and Rosetta Chears.
TASTING THE GOOD I S - Gu s that
attended the Annual Tea went from ta
ble to table tasting all of the goodie on
each table. Individuals paid a small do
natJon to each table as they went·
around. (Phot�. by Bern ce Brown)
Broo
ulitzer
•
nze
,
et to p esent rea g
Gwendolyn Brooks, Pulitzer Prize winning
poet, will presen r ding of her poetry in the
Mainstage Theatre at Lake Michigan College's
Mendel Center at 7 p.m. Tuesday, December 7.
The r ding i m de possibl in part by a grant
from the Art Council of Greater Kalamazoo.
Tickets are $5, and may be obtained by call
ingthe Box om at (616) 9Z7-1221.
Brooks' 43-year ca r includes 12 books of
poetry, as well children's books and a novel.
Her latest books are "Winnie," dedicated to
Winnie Mandela, the wife of political dissident
Nelson Mand la, and "Children coming Home. "
She won the Pulitzer in 1950 for "Annie
Allen," the first Black writer to win this award.
In 1968, she was named poet lau te of Illinois,
ucceeding the late Carl Sandburg, and -she
holds that post to this date. She also erves as
a consultant on poetry to the Library of Con
gress and has won numerou other awards,
including two uggenheim Fellow hips.
She has rived mor th n 70 honorary
degr , and w ppoint to h P idential
Corum' ion on th a ional Agenda for the
Eigh i by r id n Jimmy Carter.
GWENDOLYN BROOKS
uch topi
abortion, apartheid, uicide and capital punish-
ment. .
Her poetry transcends Black and white, y t
she i consid r d ask pe on for Black
autho .
A qu tion and a w r riod nd p blic
reception will follow her poetry re ding.
For more infonnation, call Linda Loomis,
d n of liberal arts and gen r 1 tudi at Lak
Michigan Colle , at (616) 927- 167 .
racism,
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November 28, 1993 - Image 9
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- Michigan Citizen, 1993-11-28
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