p Page A12-The Chronicle. Tf O 1 1 atcona Dai IMMMMHMtMIMMIIIIIIMIHIIIHIIIHIMIHMNMMa or not," she said, "because, it' they hadn't been there, it wouldn't have happened. So 1 don't know it' they're guilty or not." When "questioned further, she said, "Yes, 1 think they're guilty of murder." Court: "... Do you have any opinion as to whether they might have violated the civil rights of the ..." Ashburn: "I don't understand what that means. It seems obvious to me these people were guilty. I saw it on TV. 1 saw what happened and I couldn't understand why they were found not guilty." Jack Thomas Johnson said he also saw television accounts of the shootout, but had a different opinion on what happened and who was responsible. "Well, I've always been taught that communism was against the American way of life," Johnson said. "And I've heard of the Ku Klux Klan. I've never had any contact with them or anything like that, but I've heard that they always want to do what was right. But then, I've heard that things Fair Hous llllllliaiMIIIIHIimMIIIIIIIIIIINMNMItMMMIIMI ordinance that has obtained HUD's official recognition, they must go directly to that agency in , reporting complaints. Some of them can only do as HUD would do, investigate and then conference, conciliate or persuade the people to change. But some localities have stronger ordinances than HUD's" Fair Housing Bill. If an area has no such ordinance, then they would report to HUD and they will permit the individual to IHINIIHIIIIMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIimillHHIHIIHI Crime Fr< IIIIIIIIINHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIHIIIHIIIliiaillll Five sheets were taken. 500 block, Claremont Ave Meat was taken. 1600 block, Liberty Street Cia<; wac taL#?n This column is brought to vice of the Chronicle and Department. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmiimmiiiiiiHiiiHiimiiiii Fire Prevc IIIIIIHIIIIIIIItlllHIIIIItllllllllllllllHIIIIIMIHH power mowers must not be r it down and wait for hot i Gasoline should be stored o containers - and even then ; need, and never store it in y Any flammable liquid whenever possible. If you m windows (yes even in winter explosive, and possibly toxic ItllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllll Fair Frow Pago AO#" iiHiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin own communities. "The economic highway of power has few entry lanes for black folk," Graves said. "Most black businesses, like most black folk, are struggling and the success stories are few. But we can do it all, if we put our minds to it." Graves told his audience to "stay black and in the black, pool your resources and utilize what you have to get what you need." He also advised black businessmen to battle myths that portray black firms as inferior, unprofessional and disrespectful to their clients. Entertainment at the luncheon included a performance by singer Archie Ball, formerly of Archie Bell and the Drells, and a silent fashion show directed by Chandra Vaugn. lursday, April 5, 1984 NtHNNMMNUHHWMNNMINHHHIMttMIMttHI tch in jury MINIIMIIIIIINIIIKMMIMIMIIUIMHMItMMIIIMII like thai had got out of hand at times, so 1 don't know. According to the papers, and what that I've heard and seen, I predict they were not guilty." Johnson was excused from the potential pool of jurors but Thomas J. Keith, attorney for defendant Edward Dawson, a former police informant, said, "I'd like tn have mnr? lik^ him." The government also had its favorites. Chief Prosecutor Daniel Bell wanted Willie McCormick Jr. as a juror. Said McCormick of the Klan: "I don't like them period. 1 don't even like the word Ku Klux Klan." The Nazis also got their share of criticism from the jury pool. Said Don Wyatt Johnson, a security guard at Globe Security Co. and a graduate student at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, concerning the Nazis: "My understanding is that they were similar to the Klan and they believed in a superior race. They believed that people (who) belonged to ing Week file a complaint and go through the same process. (~^h mn if! o ' /~) i/rinn th0 f ? t i/firv II . L/ i?' int; I Reagan adminisiraiion, new housing projects for low-income families are non-existent and existing projects are being sold to private buyers. Does this mean that HUD is getting out of the housing business? Fulton: This administration has determined that we can no longer afford to proIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIHIMI >m Page A2 aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaiiaaa nue ' you weekly as a public serIX' tnc/iOM-C/i/rtiii D/A/I'/VI miv rw ri/MIC IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIINIMHIIIIIMIHIIHIIIIIIII ;ntion F,0^ iiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiaiii efueled while running. Shut Darts to cool to the touch. >nly in approved, red safety itore only the minimum you our apartment or home. should be used outdoors lust use it indoors, open the ) to prevent the build-up of vapors. CXI On This Satur to one p.m.So > IRA. And reduc Federal income We'll estirr you. Show you up a loan for th Take the ti Offices Belc ForNe\ Winstoi I pool more tMHIMIIMMMMIMHIIHIMttltMltMIIHMIMIIIIMtll their group, their organization, were superior to other people and they acted accordingly.** When questioned further on what he thinks of the Nazis, Johnson said: "... It's a group that 1 wouldn't join, simply because I don't believe in one group being supreme over another." The three groups involved weren't the only ones who received criticism from potential jurors. The media nr\l chirn tr\r\ UIVII JllUi V) IUVJ. Said Johnson: "I don't trust newscasts all that much myself. I know how they get distorted " The transcripts don't indicate the races of potential jurors, but one of the 19 who may be black was Audrey B. Farrow, an employee at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine. Farrow graduated from predominantly black North Carolina Central University and said she was in school on Nov. 3, 1979. Farrow was not excused from the jury pool after her initial questioning; instead, she was held for further questioning. And, as extnntmiinnmuimimnntniunninnntnntnn observed f MiMiimiiimiimmmiimiiiimiiiHiimimiiiiii vide the varied types and volume that has been produced in the past. We now have new types of program. These programs will enable a locality to utilize the existing housing stock. We are now advocating rehabilitation of housing as opposed to new construction. Under the new program, housing will be provided to a person through a voucher program. Direct assistance will be given to the applicant. They in turn will go For The Re From Page A1 off its best" called the < Club the Winston-Salem C Also, Kiwanis member rectlv referred to as Lione The Chronicle regrets th readers to call Executive 722-8624 when they occur, i Page A2 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiitiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimi A final not: Would you c your car? Many people do tl extra gallon of gasoline in tl the best safety can is less im tank and more prone to exp This column is brought to vice of the Chronicle and the ment, [axR Sattu rlD\7 \IC\TR \irlll Kn rvrv/ aujr i ^tL> vv til ut WJ^/v 'ou'll have another ch; :e the tax you have to ; tax return, late how much tax an all your IRA options a ie money to open you me this Saturday to t, rjcrse tw Open9TblSal v And Existing II n-Salem: Parkway Plaza, Reynolda, Stratford, Kernersuille. 4 i educated IIIMIHMtltlMMMIIItUIIIMtMIMIMIHniMMMMM pected, the government wanted Farrow on the jury, but the defense didn't. Neill A. Jennings Jr., attorney for defendant Jerry Paul Smith, asked if Farrow may have known Matt Sinclair or Edward Boyd, both black newsmen from Durham and government witnesses, because she was black and went to school in Durham and they were black and worked in Durham. Several members of the jury pool asked to be excused. James L. Moser wanted U l_ _ l\J UC CAV.USCU UCtdUbC up knows the family of defendant Virgil Griffin. "Oh, I know his parents pretty good," Moser said. "Oh, we been knowing the parents for a long time. They live all around up in there. I used to live around Winston and out in Rural Hall and King, all around there." Sarah L. Cooper wanted to be excused because she said people who live near her or in her community were involved in the trial, though she didn't say to HHIIIIIIIIHHIIHIHimiUHHHIIIHIIIHIHIfWIM rom Page A10 on the free and open market and obtain housing. Frankly, this gives the person or family a broader and open range of choices for housing. Under the old programs, wherever the project was located, that's where the person had to live. Chronicle: Is this a better program ? Fulton: It's a bit early to tell. It has only been conducted on a pilot effort and not fully adopted but it has been looked at carefully cord Greater Winston Kiwanis ireater Kiwanis Club. Larry Upshaw was incorl Upshaw? \ese errors and encourages Editor Allen Johnson at iimiimmiiiiiiimiimmiiiiiiiiiMifiuMiitMi t iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiMiiinititiiii arry 14 sticks of dynamite in ie equivalent by carrying an he trunk. Don't do it. Even pact-resistant than your gas lode in a rear-end collision. ' you weekly as a public serWinston-Salem Fire Departr elief jjuxy. ?n from nine am ance to open an pay on your 1983 IRA can save tNCNB.Even set ir account ake off some tax. r KhlnhcrhTiK' urday,April7, lAsOnly. Sherwood, I From Page A1 mmmmmmmmmm ^ what degree they were in- I volved. Others may have wanted to serve on the jury but were excused because they read the newspapers, listen to the radio, watch televi- I sion and discuss news events with other people. James Conner Kennedy 111, a graduate of Emory University in Atlanta anH I an employee of R.J.J Reynolds Tobacco Co., was I excused because, based on I his knowledge of the trial, the court felt, he had already formed as opinion I as to guilt or innocence. Kennedy said he discussed the case with some of his friends and 44we were embarrassed that a situation like this would come, and just ... bring up the fact I that people from the South were racist ? and that's what it seemed to point to, you know ? that we were 1 racist and we were always against blacks and that we were violent people Only portions of the | transcript have been released with additions made as H the court reporter types H them. To date, 912 pages H have been filed. and evaluated. Chronicle: What progress has HUD made as far as changing the segregated housing patterns? Fulton: The tradition has been that you can tell where the black people live in any community and that's usually on the east side of town. Since 1968, there has been a significant change upon where new assisted housing did and did not go. HUD has worked hard to change these patterns and neighborhoods. But where a person lives is a very sencitiup icciip \uitli mAcI non. Jill * V IJJUV TT nil IIIUJ1 ^VU" pie. Lately HUD has formed community groups compos- I ed of citizens, the local governments and HUD to form partnerships, m Together, we are working ^ to achieve fair housing. The m government can't do it all. 1 It takes people working together. |i i 5'' ^ m ^ JD3.. . >v.. ijp* yMp'-Mi. You arrive dressed incomparable t Smirnoff, nc Take Smirnoff* Vodka 80 I I COME TO LIBE '84 MARQUIS BRO LIST PRICE $12,528 DOUBLE DISCOUNT $2,53C (Factory discount - 1.210) / I A - ' ILiuony uiscuunt - ?i,JZU ) YOUR PRICE FEATURING: Air Conditioning * Tln,,fl ?ltM Automatic transmission * J"'**.TJJiTu Power ttooring. brakes/window * )7. : ' Power driver s 8-way soat * Dejroster-etectric n Powor loch group * unJj*,CMMn9 Spood control ' Tilt wflMl * T*"n com,or1 >Mt> Eloctromc digital clock * I'?** ' mo'* Front carpot matt '84 COUGAR 2-DOOR LIST PRICE $13,1 J DOUBLE DISCOUNT $2,01 (Factory discount $695) (Liberty discount - $1308) YOUR PRICE $ 1 (Only title, taxei WITH. steel belled radii Factory ait$ Vinyl body side i Powor steering/brakes/windows * Bumper stripes Individual doth seats 40/40 Seat bolt remind' 3 1 V-6 engine Interval windshie '84 GRAND MARQL LIST PRICE $14,8C DOUBLE DISCOUNT $2,0C (Factory discount $500) (Liberty discount $1,509) YOUR PRICE $ 1 COMPLETE WITH: WSW radlals Factory Air Convtntional spa Power brakes/steering/windows TUt steering Twin comtorl seats Single control po Electronic fuel injection Front/rear winde Deluxe belts AM/FM 4-speaki Warning chimes/coach lamps Right hand remot Heavy duty bettery Pivoting front ver Coach vinyl roof Cast Aluminum V Front and rear floor mats Rocker panel mol Illuminated entry system Vinyl bodyside m '84 LYNX $ #DEI Or Basei Advance payment $124.97 plus security deposit of $1 license and title fee due to delivery. Total $5,998 96. I Lcome see rOURS toda\ 500 Peters Creek Parkway ^Hjj jjjjt '1 & \ : I 'M> -ymirn in your finest, bearing the finest gift. Smir aste and sensational smoothness make thing less, because you and your friend > a taste of th< i 100 Proof from Gram St P*rr? Smirnoff flS (Ovrjior of H?ut w \ RTY'S APRIL UQHAM 4-DOOR I 15 AVAILABLE U U M SEE'EM TODAY! I Dual visor vanity mirrors Pivoting Iront vont windows wipors 6-Wly powor soot idlols Eloctric roar window dotroster ar window AM/FM cassotto Powor lock group c protection Dual powor romoto mirrors with dual rochnors Powor sido windows mirror tMiro Whool covers 16 AVAILABLE DICK VOURt TftBAV 1,136 I I, and destination charges extra.) II tiros Tin steering wheel Holdings Paint/Interior Fabric protaction Fun undffcoatlng ir chima Lfitbar wrapped steering wheel ild wipers Fingertip speed control MS4-POOR I ^L I , Great S?l?ctlon. I 2,796 I es and destination charges extra.) Tinted glass re tire Convenience group light group wer seat Power locks w defroster Hood Accent stripes ir stereo/ cassette Automatic overdrive transmission I le control window Dual recUnors it windows Dual note horn Fhools Electric clock Idings Paint/interior Fabric Protaction oidings Full undercooling [ktm I rw WW LIVERED (Plus tax) lease It now with CAR*TERM d on 48 months r $125 I PER MONTH I 125.00 Payment includes taxes and local tees. $25 :ord Motor Company Red Carpet Lease Plan ) LIBERTY^ r! LINCOLN-MERCURY 725-0411 NCL 4268 l ) E: . $??: H& SHPTOKI 1 ImmhB T