Page 2 Patrol Car ? by Gwen Dixon Staff Reporter in a p-itrM car can be all Saturday nights are not filled, with ^action. This Saturday-night rider did not witness any shootings, robo beries or slight disturbances. It seemed hardly a mouse was stirring in WinstomSalenr. ^ Whi1<* riHino with It, - e> ~ * Richard Dull (no pun intended), a tinge of excitement did occur when two .officers stopped a car bearing a Texas license plate. Three females and one male were traveling in the car and one male was following behind. Lt. ^Dull drove up and contacted FBI agents in Charlotte. The Charlotte FBI had put out a bulletin on the car Friday - fl? |Tr ^ ?...j.I . * - Dull, a 28-year veteran of the force; said the FBI agents wanted to know if a Harris was traveling in the car. He said the man had some connection with the Patty Hearst case. There was nobody in the car by that name, so the patrolmen could not detain the occupants. However, one officer was very suspicious of the car's / ? I SAVE : I COLD J "SIDE-BY-: I PHILCO 12214 Patterson Ave. Ride Unev occupants^ He?based?his suspicion on the fact that when they signaled for the car to pull over, the driver did not road but pulled into a parking lot. The driver did not get out of the car to find out why the officers had stoooed him. The & A officers had to go over to the car. But the police check found them to be in the clear. A police officer can find out within ten seconds whether or not a person is wanted for any crime in the country. Patrolman Rex Flint covers the East Winston beat. His beat extends to Linville Road. Before going out to Linville Road, the officer stopped at the bus station and forced a middle-aged black' man to leave the station where he sat -eating -prezels. -PatrolmanFlint said that the man has no place to go because his mother put him out. There seemed to be no justice in forcing a man out into the cold when he has no place to go. But, the manleft. As the patrol car left the station he was seen uro 1lr inn liritVl UJr ftttAAM <4?A ? ?? uiniug wiiii mo gl CC11 UI11C1 bag thrown across his back. Like any other town. Winston-Salem has a duke's mixture of everything, Lt. Dull ELECTRICITY D|| WTH w^n GUARD! i SIDE" REFRKE u\ \?Zi?l FEATURIt SEE JIM* REFRIGERATOR i We Service What We St IHIIIilllB^ iini=a=a jnip=^ x=sv / The Winston-Salem Chronicle. entful said. "Vice is more prevalent now J ' the veteran officer remarked. Dull, soon to reture, said passion* take place. "There is little the police can'do," he, said, "because it happens inside th house." T1 11 x A - - i ne lieutenant saia prosit-. tution is not bad around town, but there are some drug users who have a $100 a day habit. "We have had mass arrest for armed robbery and larceny on car lots," he continued. "But as the problem of unemployment gets worse police will have more arrests for the passing of bad checks, larcencies and robberies." The two officers are law enforcers and they are obligated -to-uphold-the-lawr? Thev know what the problems are with many of the people who committ crimes and indeed some situations are heart breaking. But the officers can do nothing to ameliorate conditions. They are only doing a job. I Subscribe to | TheChronicle | IP.U. Box 3154 Winston-Salem, N.C. 27102 | IILCO' 1 FROST FREE I RATORS I i AvdhbliiiSim! ? ir * 2r - 24' H IIG: H ible Shelves ;jj{ jj Saver jj J j nVb Amount of j j j cuy as ^ompeTiuon P TO... !| IN ALLOWANCE I w OU IsMgwntw H IY FOR A REAL DEAL! M ^"2998-1 I >w I 1 FURNITURE I ' COMPANY I JfiJ Charles Lee City Men T Brotherho* Continued from Page 1 children and four foster children. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Munk live on Hope Valley Road and are the foster parents of a five-year-old black girl. They adopted the child, Melissa, when she was five-months old. "The situation has produced no problems," says Paul Munk. "We adopted her because she needed a home and we could provide her with one." Mrs. Munk is. a school teacher and Mr. Munk is an engineer at Bell Telephone. The brotherhood awards go to Charles Lee who was **?*Crime J Carl Davis, of 2724 Greenwa stabbed him when he pulled the < bed. According to police reports been in an argument and when 1 did stab hiin. .William June Hays was ar Culvertson of 2767 Piedmont Cir County jail under S100 bond. ? Allen Jasper Green of 1305 assault of a female. According 1 she had been having an argume angry and struck her with the bt he knocked her to the ground a: was broken in two parts. ** Johnny William of 4722 Jasmin 1 at the Big D Lounge, 1525'Nortl' he left the Big D at 4 a.m. Wh missing from the top desk drawe and windows were secure whei found no evidence of forced et Jack Davis, narcotics officer, _ _ \ 20, of 1954 Facuety Drive and passing of needles, syringes ai *4 George Clark Rigby, 22, ol charged with publidrunkenne marijuana. April 19, 1975 I Hvfe. ^i\A < $* WBjjy^lj^^'g^ :^M r H ^ b* , ^j^HPr ^ I Dr. H. Kembert MaHoy 'o Receive od Award responsible for rescuing a 73-year-old man from a fire and Dr. H. Rembert Malloy. Dr. Mauoy, educated in the public schools here, has received many scientific honors and holds membership in several professional societies. He is a 1939 graduate of Howard University's Medical School. He has served as attending surgeon at Reynolds and Forsvth Memorial Ho?ni. ~ . ? ? tals and Medical Park Hospital. . The guest speaker is Mrs. Erma Davis, national president of the Council of the Urban League Guild of Peoria, 111. Report4"**** iv reported that his girlfriend :over off her while they were in Diane Hampton said they ftd he pulled the cover off her she rested for assaulting Justine cle. Hays was placed in Forsyth * Alder Street was arrested for :o reports, Arschevia Barr said nt with Green when he became ick corner otf TV set. She said nd began kicking her. Her arm i* Drive reported a robbery Of $605 \ Liberty Street. William stated len he returned he found $605 r. William stated that the doors i he opened back up. Officers ltry. i* arrested Debra Carr Stimp^pn charged her with larceny and nd cocaine. (* a a - ? 1BZ1 Kunnymede Koad was , ss and felonious passing of