I NATURAL HAIR ISSUE African-American women in charge speak about natural hair Editor's note: This is the last part of a two-part series. BY FELEC1A P1GGOTT-LONG, PH. D. pqfrTHB CHKON1CLE Today, it is not surprising to see women sporting kinky twists, locks, Nubian Knots, braids, afro puffs and even afros in the workplace. What's striking is that many of the black women wearing the natural styles are women in charge. Following are a few such women in the Winston-Salem Triad area: Sylvia Sprinkle-Hamlin, library director for Forsyth County Public Library System and Executive Producer of the National Black Theatre Festival, has had many hairstyles. She has had perms, worn wigs, sew-ins, short cuts and long styles. Having grown up in Tobaccoville, she also wore her natural hair in the 1960s, '70s, '80s and '90s. Ayana Harding of Ayana's Glory Locs maintains Sprinkle-Hamlin's Iocs. "Natural hair is easy to main tain, and there are so many styles that can be created with nat ural hair, Sprinkle-Hamlin said. "Hair does n't determine whether you are professional or not. It should always be neat and clean. Wigs, weaves and sew-uis are up to the individ ual. Whatever makes one feel beautiful. Bennett College President Rosalind Fuse-Hall received her first perm in 1977, but her inspiration to go natural came from her bout with lymphoma when she was 25 years old. She was at Rutgers School of Law at that time in 1983 when she received her first diagnosis. She studied Criminal Justice at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she wore her hair in a perm, in curls, an Afro, comrows and a curly perm. Her radiation treatments did not affect her hair loss, but her second bout with the illness and the chemotherapy treatments caused her hair to fall out. For six months, she had to wear a wig because he was bald. When her hair grew back, it was "fine like baby hair, and I wore my hair in a short natural. ... I felt very empowered about going natural. Even though I am no longer sick, it is a conscious decision, and I feel comfortable. I get lots of compli ments