Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Dec. 9, 1978, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
I Pigc 2 Hm Chronicic-Saturday, December 9,1978 [MMSDDOOGB RATPir.U-lf ? ?._ir i_ V, .. ^ .ujuu aic uu wcimrc in mortn Carolina and working but not reporting your income, you stand a good chance of being caught, according to Robert Ward, director of the Division of Social Services of the N.C. Department of Human Resources. The Division has started a computer "match" with the Employment Security Commission to detect welfare fraud. The "match" compares the welfare rolls of the state's Aid to Families With Dependent Children (AFDC) program with work records from across the state kept by the Employment Security Commission. Ward said the initial result has been an increase in discovery of AFDC recipients that are working, or have worked, and have not reported their employment to their local departments "of social services which adminRALEIGH -- Joe Grimsley, secretary of the North Carolina Department of Administration, will attend two * a- j: '* * . ? . ^ . imi-iinaing meetings wnn local government otticials in December to discuss suggested boundary revisions affecting the planning region which includes Forsyth County. The meetings are schedules for December 11 in Greensboro and Winston-Salem and December 15 in Wadesboro. petitions concerning two changes in regional boundaries. Orimsley has until February 15 to decide on the changes. The Piedmont Triad Council of Governments will host a meeting on December 11 at 1:30 p.m. at the countil of government's offices in Greensboro. N.N. Fleming III, chairman of the council of governments, has been requested by Grimsley to invite interested persons to the meeting. At 7 p m. 05, .December 11, Grimsley will meet with officials from the municipalities and county governments in the five counties which have requested to withdraw from the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments and form a new region. The counties include Surry, Stokes, Davie, Yadkin, and Forsyth. KICK From .Page 1 "I've checked with my lawyers, and I Jtnow you have no choice but to rent them the building," Hairston told the _Winston-Salem /Forsyth County School Board Monday night. "I'm going to encourage black people to stay away from the school...but I'm not too sure they're goins to do it." Hairston said that many people do not understand that the laws of this country entitle any group, even one such as the Klan, to the same rights in using public facilities. ^ Superintendent James A. Adams quoted a recent court decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals, which said, in part: "...Selective denial of apublic forum...does not forward the public interest..." That case also involved the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the rental of a school auditorium. James Rawlinson, the parent of a child at Philo Junior High, asked the board members to state whether they belonged to the klan or agreed with its beliefs. Board member Nancy Wooten, who replied that no member of her family had ever been involved with the Klan, explained to Rawlinson that the school board did not vote in regard to renting this building or any other cl?i ^ -? ? -- 7 : r* r~ r uuuuuig. jnc jiisu menuonea a policy wmcn states til at it board members vote contrary to the advice of the schools' attorney, then they may be held personally liable for any expenses incurred by that decision.? - Parker From page 1 "I just take my grades home, and don't worry about it," sighed Dr. Parker. Lafayette Parker was born in Richlands, a small town in eastern North Carolina. He decided to go into education because:"What other images did you have? 1 didn't see a black doctor untu I was grownr"? The idea of education in the thirties conjures up pictures of all six grades in a one-room school, and a teacher making $90 a month. "That would have been my first job," Dr. Parker agreed. 4'But I didn't get a chance to accept it." He went instead to the United States Army, was made an officer, and was sent to Europe. In 1946, with a Master's Degree from Columbia University, he returned to his alma mater Fayetteville State University, as a professor and assistant principal at the training school. "I taught everything in the curriculum except science,'* Dr. Parker recalled. With a PhD. from the University of Pittsburgh, Dr. Parker came to winston-Salem State University in 1961. Since that time, the faculty has increased from 59 teachers to almost double that amount. Forty per cent of the faculty now have PhD.'s rather than the eighteen per cent in 1961, and the degree program has expanded to 21 selections instead of the original two: nursing and elementarh education. Dr. Parker has chaired every self-study conducted by V/SSU from 1963 to 1977, and served as chairman of the North Carolina Evaluation Committee on Teacher Education. He is past president of the National Association of Deans, and is presently serving as president of the North Carolina Dean's Association for the second time. If Dr. Parker has one regret in retiring, it is that WSSU has not yet established a graduate program. "1 would like to have seen the graduate program." he said. Then he pointed out that the state legislature meets this spring, and after all he doesn't retire for six more months- the hope is there. > 1 ? . * Ghanian Chemi By Gloria Jonet B.S. degree in chemistry at the University of Science Africans may one day use an(j Technology in Kumasi, paper made from a plant Spent two years in Norway common to their part of the Working for his master's world because of research degree. He has almost comdone at North Carolina pieted work on a doctoral State University bv a. degree jn pulp and paper Ghanian scientist. science at NCSU. Nicholas A. Darkwa, who Plantain, which bears a is associated with the For- banana-like fruit that is est Products Laboratory in edible only when cooked. Kumasi, Ghana, has been grows profusely in Ghana, A..'. - aiuuyiug tfi since but is largely confined to 1975 to learn how to make USe as food. - paper from plantain, a cou- " ? *in to +he> Kana plant anrl a W.Q.rkin^Under Prof. "^maj St mingswas* country. of the pulp and paper-. science program at NCSU, Darkwa, who earned his Darkwa has found that Who' From i A#. ? agreed, saying that many bla VVnO community have sentiment? Atkins. The COmmunit>' Uself' e ^^evolved aroundthat particula The 1978-79 . edition of scnooi, Womble said. Who's Who Among Stu-. meetings, everybody in the Hen?? in Amorirnn TInivor. some attachment to it. sities and Colleges will cary Womble said that the scho. the names of 35 students from Winston-Salem State I University who have been selected as being among ^^ the country's most outstanding campus leaders. Cam- ^ pus nominating committees and editors of the annual v directory have included the I AVAU/A names of these students trr^D uni ni based on their academic FOR HOLIP/ -achievement, service to the .. community, leadership in I extracurricular activities They join an elit group of 01 students selected from B1 I more than 1,000 instituAT/aI I | tions of higher learning in the District of Columbia and several foreign nations. Outstanding students h*ve bc^rr honot I ed in the annual ui rectory since it was first published in 1934. Students named this year from WSSU are Leonard Abdullah, Teresa 1. Ander son, Tony L. Bellamy, Gloria M. Cornell^ Anthony ~ Farmer, James A. Fennett^, V John N. Foster, Ronald ?Gaither^ Duncan C. GrayT JL Ml?WL I Phillis hardison, Annette Lynn Hansley, Dorcas Har- If yc per, Frances Hill, Cecil Started in Hilliard, Carmen Denise Jackson, Angela Teresa^ James, Marilynn Lennon,? JVC Stereo Cassette Dec Pamela Lyons, Linda Mc1 Spectro Peak Indicator Swain, Annie McKeithan, The JVC KD-65 has the excl Jeanette Moore, Elizabeth Indicator system 25 flashi Newton, Beverly K. Powe, adjust the levels '^e iova Anita E' Powell Jo Ann ranQ^s Prevent tape sa Anita t. roweu, jo Ann t)Qn guper ANRS no,se Sawyer, Brenda K. Scales, tapg hiss and also mprove - Deborah-A. Simmons, Cyn? -hiyli fiequencies thia Thomas, Evern Thom- head for long life and sen pson, Linda Thompson, Unique recording equalize1 Cynthia Timmons, Luke To- 'une different combmator ri,n Mario Waii?>r An frequency response an. Mane alker, An- from any (ape you v toinette Remel Williams, ,use. A musical Dresand Sheila Worthy. ent with a great fu ture An outstanding jl; WINSTON-SAliEM value " ! CHRONICLE j L The Winston-Salem Chronicle is published ^ ^ 1^ y every Thursday by the ^ ^ ^ , Winston-Salem Chronicle Publishing Company, Inc. 603 Pepper Building -102 W. 4th St. Mailing Address: KS799SH1 P.O. Box 3154, Winston Salem, N.C. H ^'Tl III 27102. Phone: 722- f J |{j| 8624. SernnH Hacr I postage paid at Win-| ^ W* A ( | ( < ston-Salem, N.C.I 1 '7? * Ik. 27102. I Subscription: $8.32 KD65 advance (N.C. sales tax included). L ^ J Opinions eiprened by I columnist tn this . newspaper do nocessarfly represent the policy of this Paper. I I Member N.C. Black JPVPMVPIMV Poblteber's Assorta<*? PTTBI.irAl ION 4 V I ist Tests Substitut ^T^ntain stalks have fibers ment has been reforesting that are similar to soft- with some softwood. Since woods used for paper pro- forests take time to mature, durtion However, the fi- plantain could provide both bers have some cells that a more immediate and reduce the strength of pa- plentiful supply of paper for per if left in the oulo. Ghana's 12 million citizens. In the laboratories at Darkwa says people have NCSU, Darkwa found a way found some auxiliary uses to remove the undesirable for plantain. Stems are cells. When he returns to dried for use as toliet his country in mid- tissue. Older people in the December, he will attempt villages peel and beat the to process the plantain on a stalks and use the pulp as semi-commercial basis. sponges, and leaves are ?' - - ? used as shields from the He says that Ghana's heavy rains. hardwoods which are not The idea^of using plansuitable for use in making tain to make paper originapaper, but that the govern- ted with a Ghanian working Page 1 cks in the seemed determined not to abide by have Be i\ ties to "the unique system of 4-2-2-2-2-". ache's "Indirectly they were saying if you verything want integration you're supposed to Bailey r carry the burden, it means your intendei Athletics, schools" Womble said. "We have had pretty g< city had to suffer the burden of the busing here "Adair in 1978." intentioi jl system Womble saia that the blacks used to olsr"~Ba 9| PRESE wcmNG CHRISTMi a ^ HHr n\ "Best Bit Components >u already own a siereo system and want to upc high fidelity, here's your chance to a'dd new life t< selected components from JVC?the quality r k JVC PC Integrated Stereo Amplifie with 6.E.A. Graphic Equalizer us've Spectro Peak you ge^ cieaner more accurate: soui ng LEDs he'o you cjuctiQn with the JVC JA-S44 becaus /-to-high frequency free p^wer amplification circuit has n turation and dstor- output capacitors to ~~i* f?"*3 ~~ reduction reduces ge^ pgtween you s dynamic'ange at ^ncj music This -1 j vtS JvG1^ sen-a^oy ni it^tanrlinn unit Hp. . - S'tive performance. |IVers 45 watts per r-circuit lets you fine channel. min RMS. is to get best htgh at g ohms, from 20r 20.000 Hz. with no more than 0 02% ^ monic distortion Features dual powe X.X-^ a Triple Power Protection circuit a ~~ X "rf * "I wic<e^V acclaimed bu?it-rn 5-zc " Z! 1!^'= contro'?the SEA graphic equalize S % f amplifief for the money n - " - i -:rii i v' y AVC for the best* 1 r*, JA S44 % c - . ??-* - ? ?- ^ZT1 : ? e for Paper with the New York Health take her place among the Department. He conveyed more developed nations of the idea to his government the world. At present, and the Forest Product Darkwa says, Ghana exLaboratories assigned ports a large part of her Darkwa to NCSU's program resources to the European in pulp and paper science Common Market nations. on a visit to the Research Exports are headed by Triangle. jocoa, and include gold, ~ , . . . , diamonds, manganese, Darkwa, who is married , .. , . , . r . bauxite and timber, and the father of two n . . . . . ^ r . But, the greatest redaughters, is a native of the f f ^ source of anv nation fanning village oi Bom- pe0piCf like Darkwa-pata. He learned English in provide the greatest benehigh school, a requirement fits. The expertise that for a high school diploma in Darkwa takes back his Ghana. - ; country from the laboraThe African nation, NCSU, will not only provide which is rich in natural economic benefits, but culresources, is struggling to tural benefits as well. aufort Bailey fighting for them not there now''. m*Xw'Jpjk said that he believes ^'p^it Adam's plan is basically a 4 3od one. ? ?^ anything to lally close down black scho-^^ ^SfiXSRS ilev said. H NTIHG JVC " jMH 1 w. (VS SPECIALS} ^ r x: L . ys" ' f?AM. nrr jrade it, or if you're getting 5 your music with these specially * lame in high fidelity. >r JVC Quartz-Locked Direct-Drive "TUrfJtatol* with Automatic Return nd repro- The JVC QL-A2 is a precision turntable e its drift- platter that's connected directly to a coretess, o input 6? DC servomotor. The Quartz-Locked ^ ]}' servo system maintains, monitors and MM'.' ; adjusts speed rotation with total^Jflt . accuracy and stability. JVC's uni point"f^+mbal suspension Tracing-Hoid tonearm is tops, too, SBsjj with adjustable anti-skating, oildamped cueing and direct-reading total har- tracking force calibration. Features au- u >r meters, tomatic tonearm return and power 11 nd JVC's, shut off Built-m illuminated strobe II >ne taoe: 33V3 and 45 rpm speeds Jjf jr. A lot.01 Resonant-free base and hinged dust cover. deal in the Triad! I ~~~~ "" ~ jj i it# 3 mMi *' * mBBSSmm ^? I
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 9, 1978, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75