Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / April 11, 1985, edition 1 / Page 2
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I . Page A2-The Chronicle, Thursd I I \ ?jVt jfej4^] M ' vjSRfi "\ |- v,; I .;, } ^HJP >4K^*;/' >*^*J lll^ fl jfV^I Black former ^ Compiled by DAVID R. RANKIh Chronicle StaffWriter ARLINGTON, Va. - Joseph L one of the first black military pilots buried in Arlington National Cemei April 8. He died on March 31 of i his San Francisco apartment. He v Elsberry was the winner of the A Distinguished Flying Cross and was blacks to receive flight training ; stitute in Alabama. At Tuskegee, b ed for service in all black squadroi KlaQsmen and CHARLOTTE - According to si authorities, larger numbers of Nort right anti-black and anti-Jewish g ting more militant and open apprc Janet Caldwell of the National work in Atlanta says there are ties I and neo-Naxi organizations. <4Wh like to know is how close and ho are," she says. Robert L. Pence, head of FE North Carolina, says his agency disciplined, paramilitary operation neo-Nazi groups. "They openly admit training IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Triple-A IIIIIMIIIINItlHUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIUI WAAA. Evans suggested: that listeners send in donations. "No gift is too small," she said. Public donations will provide help in the short run, she added, but will not completely solve the station's financial problems. that listeners patronize businesses that advertise on WAAA. that listeners urge firms they regularly do business with to advertise on the station. Evans then suggested that those people, in turn, call the station and tell them where they shop and the name of the store official they spoke with. that listeners sign one of the many listener survey sheets being circulated in local churches and clubs and by numerous individuals. Signing the survey sheet will be one way WAAA can prove to potential advertisers that it has a substantial listening audience, she said. Potential advertisers determine WAAA's listening audience based on data supplied by Arbitron and Burch, both radio-survey companies. Neither, said Evans, accurately indicates WAAA's penetration of its market because the surveys lump the station in with .larger stations in the Greensboro/High Point/Winston-Salem market; ----- ? ^ * ? ay, April 4, 1985 MflBl JL^B I djl i > I B^^ | . -.-^pl j*'--yijk fl- c>" -yf1. ^ ,tB ^ M^j vwmCIJi f**PGH r^ '1 JBUMyjiii* ; . ~--; * I d%^ . :'^__ ...' ? _ &ftCiI I B I , iviiWl^ v ^B ' jW^ m.^i Lft- "i in?^ Vin; r'ii :*B B -1 T -ntVi'^ V V 1.1 ft#. ' y i m-jifw^ I/O py i/jumy f(p^|yw - 4 ck^lB A^W II flying a< I Elsberry becai """ ?- America in 1942 ^ . . C1 u During World )ubois Elsberry, , ? A man destroyer u in America, was A1 . . , X4 , Also, he snot do ery on Monday, ' t heart attack in one a^' ^as 61. Elsberry serve irmy Air Corps' from the U.S. A > among the first After his retir it Tuskegee In- several years. In lacks were train- where he work< ns. operation for ca t Nazis more so{ tate and national have more sop h Carolina's far- uniforms and co roups are adop- _ Qenn MiUer c aches. Carolina's best Anti-Klan Net- former state Na2 between the Klan lat we would all Miller says th< w involved they about 300 to 500 State Bureau of I II operations in ^ much smaller, is seeing more could be violent, s from Klan and Klan leaders movement. They operations, and and method of o iiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiimtiiiiiimttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiMiiiiiiiM From Page A1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimiiiiiiMitiiiiiiiiitiMHHMiiiitmiiiiiitii! smaller stations like WAAA, with only 1,000 watts, that don't reach into Greensboro or High Point, are at a disadvantage, she said. that listeners encourage "qualified" applicants to apply for jobs with the station that each listener "talk up" WAAA and "be an active supporter of the station." Evans also asked that people who owe the station money settle their accounts. "Do what you can, but by all means, do all you can," Evans told the audience. r ? - * * tvans couia not De reached for comment, but said during the program that she felt it was "absolutely essential that you (listeners) get the truth.'* Severa times during the broadcast, Evans made reference to "published reports" and "several untrue statements" conrprnino c: : -? e> *"V -oaiiuil 3 IIIIHIICIHI problems. "We all must be careful not to accept something (just because it) is in print," Evans said during the broadcast. "There are many destructive and negative forces about us." in tc :e dead at 63 r ne the 37th black military pilot in I ~ - - ?] War II, his squadron sank a Gersing only 50-caliber machine guns. ; wn three German fighter planes in d d in the Korean War and retired ^ ir Force as a major. ement, he lived in Oklahoma for * i 1962 he moved to San Francisco j ;d for Western Electric until an taracts forced him to retire in 1978. t )histicated )histicated equipment, weapons, I mputers," he says. >f Angier, head of what was North I known Klan organization, is a :i party leader. e White Patriots Party (Klan) has ' members statewide. However, the nvestigation says the Klan is actial with about 20 to 30 members who are sympathetic to the neo-Nazi 1. _ - ? - say, nowever, tnat the Klan's style perationis less harsh. iiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HlllllltllllllilllllllllllllllltllllltlltltlllMltltltltlllllltlll I Another local, black-oriented I radio station made a similar appeal a year ago for public support. Bishop S.D. Johnson of Macedonia True Vine Pentecostal Holiness Church Inc. asked the community for support when WSMX-AM, a gospel station owned by the church, faced financial problems. Several months ago, the Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Court ordered Macedonia to sell the station to the highest bidder. \lthough Bishop L.E. Willis from Norfolk was the high bidder at $125,000, the sale is not final. Corrections I In the April 4 Chronicle story entitled 4<<I thought the police I would be there': Protester recalls I Nov. 3, 1979, violence,Marty I Penn was incorrectly identified as | a "black socialist organizer." Penn is a black social worker. Also, the story said Frankie Powell is not one of the 16 plain- S tiffs in the $48 civil suit filed by I the survivors and wounded H demonstrators in the November 1979 "Death to the Klan" rally in I Greensboro. Powell is a plaintiff. H The Chronicle regrets the er Fair housing We CHy's Human Relations >epartment. The celebration began with an pening ceremony on April 1, jiiiiuuiug wun a nousing lour or ie Greenway community April 3 that focused on the imporince of public and private parterships in housing. It will conclude April 25 with n awards ceremony for local :hoolchildren who have parcipated in a local poster contest. "Open minds plus open doors juals fair housing," Grueninger lys. "Fair housing means people e free to live wherever they loose. People are accepted in ieir neighborhoods, regardless F their race, sex or national rigin. This is what we hope to >mmunicate during April." Grueninger said she hopes the ousing celebration and orkshops will create public inrest in housing and in ways to iprove housing in Winstonilem. _^During the last five years, UD has strongly suggested that ties set up public and private artnerships in housing," Gruenger said."This is so cities won't tally depend on public funds The Winston-Salem Chronicle is published every Thursday by the Winston-Salem Chronicle 517 N. Liberty Street. Mailing \ddress: Post Office Box 5154, Winston-Salem, NC >7102. Phone: 722-8624. Se:ond Class postage paid at Winston-Salem, NC 27102. Subscription: $13.52 per /ear payable in advance [North Carolina sales tax included). Please add $1.00 for out-of-town delivery. PUBLICATION USPS NO. 067910. ? ? E\citeinj BEGINS AT h bllV AMY MEUf 1 CAVALIER AND ( Pte* your Cavalier from a super salaction o vartaty of color*. 2-4oora, 4-door*, wagons ait and thay ail ara pricad to mova. EsampH 1985 CAVALIER SEDA ONLY *7150 Sal $16981 299 Cash. PER MONTH '6856 To FINANCE CHARGE % < ON APPROVED CREOIT * PLUS TAX & TAGS ] HE saai?: PppMMMwv i 11 f|i ^ | I j I From Page A1 MIMtlMIIJIIIIIIItlMMMMMMttMMMMMMIMtMitlllilllliHIiM but will also seek out private funds." Grueninger said the celebration's main event is the statewide conference. National, state and local housing experts will discuss housing discrimination and what can be done about it during the two-day series of workshops, whose topics will include: ''Racial Discrimination in Housing," "A Review of Fair Housing," "Prejudice, Segregation and Discrimination," "The Consequences of Housing : ??:??> 1 ? ?? i^iav.1 iiuiiiaiiuii anu an jyipuaie on recent court cases on housing. Dr. George Galster, a nationally known writer, lecturer and former HUD consultant, will present information in four of the six workshops. Local citizens who will express their views on housing include the Rev. Jerry Drayton, chairman of the state Human Relations Council, Louise Wilson, executive director of the Experiment in Self Reliance Inc., and Thomas Elijah, executive director of the ?local Urban League. Judith Washington, assistant director of the state Human Relations Council, will discuss the state perspective on fair housing on April 15 from 1:45 to 3:15 p.m. I SUBS< I to I I Winston-Salt I TOE I 722*1 ? 1 * *v ';. *. |k dR* sMHr^ .J ^^y^~2^S' ^0qbbi 1985 SET... m r owt 120 inod?l? in wtd* , convertible*. . we've got them N STOCK NO 2233 BHM King PH<?" >r Trade i Finance 1300 88 ^' 8 8?'? APR . U SAVE OVER $2000 ON FINANC >40 ON YOUR MONTHLY PAYIt 2 IIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIUHIIMHIIIIIIIIIIllllllHlllttltlllilltttlltlllll Nathaniel K. Smith, director of HUD's Office of Voluntary Compliance, will discuss "Fair Housing in the 80s: How Far Have We Come?" at a 7 p.m. dinner at the Convention Center the same day. Smith will also review the federal perspective on fair housing in one of the workshops. The month-long celebration will conclude April 25 at 7 p.m. in the Sawtooth Center with the awards ceremony. All children ._ i wno participate win receive certificates, with first-, second- and third-place cash prizes given for the best posters. The winning posters will be sent to Atlanta for regional competition. The timing of Fair Housing Month has historical significance, Grueninger said. "The reason HUD proclaims April Fair Housing Month is that the federal fair housing law was passed in April of 1968," she saidT t4HUD has been trying to focus national attention on housing through a fair housing month in April." For additional information, call 727-2429. ;ribe I the I 111 Chronicle I >AY 3624 I , v I mk- X&i i. Jii'r ?| ?: " ;;<v mmymm I Andre Joyner Cfc y/ I :e charges, save over 1ents. I
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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April 11, 1985, edition 1
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