Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / April 16, 1977, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page 2 The Chronicle - S ^k^cvwn 009s rrofw ewe# 1 ^ ?- <.! < > ? >r*m~m ^SB^^HHH SS ?)Sergeant* the petcare people O 1977 M titer -Morton Company, ? uUww-'v of : ? . A. H. HobintCo. Richmond, Virginia 33230 J? - 9339 _ .Ibqb _?33^B76D0DGE $4995 I fully, equpped. FACTORY AIR. I luggage rack. AM-FM. 7.000 miles, almost new. I '76 T-BIRD SO AO C 2 door fully UU m J I equipped. - FACTORY AIR. all power, stereo tape. 009 owner. 11.000 miles. light blue. 17* TORINO $C1 QC Squire Wagon. *3 I W J ... \ fully equipped FACTORY AIRt I luggage rack, stereo tape, one I owner, low mileage. 173 VOLVO $QA0C 4-door "144". ?JU# J I fully equipped. 4- speed, bucket I seats, yellow with black interior. I '7A CODft CtfilAr1 #v runw #AV i ^ ton Pickup Mm ww J camper top. short bed. V ? 3-speed, blue & white, extra I clean. LTD 300 ^^ '65 DODGE *300 70 DODGE *650 ^^|'71 GALAXIE *700 ^^B73PINTa *1200 ^^HOpen 8:30 AAA to upen aii way ?c | Nt ITheV 6< ? . , * aturday April 16, 1977 NOTICE United Methodist Women, Winston-Salem District - the _ At Konnoak Hills United Methodist Church on Weis- ner Street. Guest speaker will be John K. Bergland from Duke University. A ^ 11 1 H; 76 PlYNt MAQC^I Sport 2-dr. fully equipped. FACTORY AIR; con-1 sole, vinyl roqf. like new. AMFM '74 Comoro M4QCI Z-28. fully equip- I ped. FACTORY AIR. automatic. sport wheels. AM-FM. extra I '74 HIT! SOQQCl 2-dr hardtop. J77JI fully equipped. FACTORY AIR. vinyl rodf. AM-FM. 29,0001 miles, almost new 74 PINTO s 070c I Squire Wagon. V# m ?# I fully equipped. FACTORY AIR.I luggage rack, extra dean. . '72 BIIICK *9?? ttecira zzo 4-ar..<a^v m ^-m fully equipped. FACT. AIR. all power, vinyl roof. AM- FM. tilt I wheel, speed control, like new. '69 MERC. Wag. *400 '67 PONTIAC *4001 '69 MUSTANG *7001 72 TORINO *8001 '71 TOYOTA *11751 '73 MAZDA )8i30PMMoii!-FT^H-: iturday 8:30-5:00 W AVAIL ABLi at REI ^ -1 ^ CRBJ>S " Custom9 Cards In Set Winston-Salem Chro DAnnnv DaiiMinn i wppwi UUIIUIII^ Phone: 722-8624 Northwest Continued From Page 1 cording to their report, released by Rev. Gilbert, no substantiation was found for the charges made in the letter. Their investigation was based on ?a random sampling oT 5% "of the lo lie interviewed by the team.'' In all,- six employees from "^For^j'tu .GCuiibjr n ^ ulU?t viewedr Regarding unfair and discriminatory personnel practices, the report nni/4 in part: no evidence was found to support allegations of discrepancy in pay among individuals under the same job description; of the allegation that hiring the daughter-in-law of the director's husband's boss was an act - of favoritism, the investigators found her qualified for her current position; the employees interviewed 'in regard to discrimination in pay, promotion, and equal opportunities for advancement were enthusiastic about the program and its opportunities. The report said: "Two employees were less enthusiastic: however careful -questioning did-not-reveal a legitimate basis for a need" for the team to recommend any action." Rev. Gilbert disclosed that several of Northwest's employees have received threatening telephone calls recently.? He- declined - to? specify which employees, bilt said that the matter was iir the~harids of ~the polices Concerning the NAACP charging against Northwest, Rev. Gilbert contended that these charges had been made despite .-Northwest's disclosure t^6, them of pertinent information. Objecting to a public statement E III DUCED COST! I Stop By Our Office ||| l& Look At Our ||| L" J -Designed ||| _ /M f- /N J A /N ^\lll s ut ouu or iuuuii| nicle II 1 . ' a ft Responds To by NAACP president Patrick Hairston;' 'There is no way a program serving that many black people should have whites in control," Rev. Gilbert stated that a letter has been sent to the NAACP "t^'stetem^t^and'^ '^tract ' 'the false charges made by a variety of its members." Northwest ChiM ment director Susan Law, who was present at the press . ^ _ i 1 * ? conierence, aec lined to commeni on the firing of Barbara West. When asked about the suspension of D. Bonner of the Fourteenth Street Center, Mrs. Law said that it an "internal personnel matter" to be dealt with by Ms. Bonner's w . Feb Continued From Page 1 would-be killers?or let him -virtually rot in prison. "The opponent wants to reform him?which in most cases cannot be accomplished until psychotherapy advances much further than it U?? IV uno au icu . "Medical science needs ?live human bodies?for its research in pathology?diseases of the heart, kidney, blood, bone and tissue. ?Animals and human cadavers fall short of filling the need. ~ '' Society is not repaid when it takes a life for a life. It may be repaid when it uses a degraded life to find ways to promote life. . "Thus, a Richard Speck, who killed eight Chicago nurses, would"be offered an option of submitting to medical research. ' 'This procedure would be WINSTON-SALEM CHRONICLE UlA Wlnfi^An.Calam w ? r Mltftvu ~ umviti Chronicle is published every Thursday by the Winston-Salem Chronide Publishing Company, Inc. , 603 Pepper Building - 102 W. 4th St. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 3154, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27102. Phone: 722-8624. Second Class postage paid at Winston-Salem, N.C. 27102. Subscription: $8.32 per year payable in advance (N.C. sales tax included). Opinions expressed by columnist in this newspaper do not necessarily represent the policy of this Paper. National Advertising Re- , preventative - Black Media. j Inc. j Charges supervisor, who is "on vacation this week". She did state that the suspension . was due to "insubordination .'' A source at Northwest said that Ms. Bonner was suspended after she went to a van which did not come because the driver was ill, which had elicited concern _____ ,-fe-ora -_p,?Tflnga with = childreruin heE_center. At presstime, Patrick _Hairston, president of the NAACP stated that he had not received any letter from Northwest Child Develop-. ment Corporation. He is withholding comment until he reraivflri tha lattar ? Northwest claims to have sent. met protected from sadistic judges and juries by the same compulsory legal appeals that now protect criminals condemned to die (insofar as fallible human beings are capable of providing such protection). "Such extraordinary sacrifice might well do more to rehabilitate ifluller than any" previous psychotherapy that ?he may have undergone. ? "If, even after he had submitted to research, psychological studies show?ed that he would still be? homidical, he would still * have to be kept in prison." Felmet said sjaecific op?tions for the criminal would Jiave to be analyzed by qualified bio-ethicists, but he suggested either a lifetime n prison or a 20-year sentence with a choice of submitting to research^ ' "My position has been compared to Nazi concentration-camp procedures," Felmet said, "but this is a fallacious comparison. ' 'The option ' would be voluntary (which the Nazis did not permit) and would serve bona fide - research / _ 11 11 ! *1 (wrucn pracucaiiy au 01 tne Nazi research was not). "The proposal has also been criticized as being cruel and unusual punishment, but would it be so if, in fact, it gave a killer a reason for being? ' "Nor would it be a form of torture because all accepted anesthetic procedures would be followed." Di-GcL The AntHBH Antacid.
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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April 16, 1977, edition 1
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