Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Nov. 18, 1978, edition 1 / Page 1
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I ~"J. *_T - .. > *' '' ~ **" * : " ? - ?--i--?. ? .." * ~ T ? f iKKommm, - ~ . ?^ ; ...^ - . .;. 4 v...; * ' Vol. V No. 13 *20 cents "The NEWS| f T*M(IT ^V*^? J^Hvjj-fltt __ Dr. K.O.P. Goodwin, pastor emeritus, thenla Dunlap Home, retiring executive of Mt. Zion Baotlst Church In Winston- secretary-treasurer of the Woman's Bap ? ?w - " ? . w tist Home and Foreign Missionary conSalem Introduces Mr.. Alice Hamilton, . vent|on Nor(h c<trollna 96 ye?r old member who came to lUlelgb ment tegt,moniaJ |n Rlde,gh.s civic to pay tribute to her friend, Dr. Ber- Center. f= 2,000 Sa lute cc /\n I A h /VII SSI ON Lcauci ? 9 By S.R. Johnson (8 as president) has been a moving force Special to the Chronicle for 355,000 North Carolina Baptists from RALEIGH* N.C.-- Two thousand Bap- 1,700 churches. tists came here from New York, the "This is the happiest moment of my life. District ot Columbia, Virginia, fiorida une tenth ot what you have done for me and North Carolina to tell Dr. Bertenia will be contributed to the Lord's work-Dunlap Home, 28 year veteran executive our objectives"- Mrs. Home told secretary treasurer of the Woman's those who had come to remember her. Baptist Home and Foreign Mission Under her tutelage, the women s depart Convention of North Carolina, that they -ment has grown from a budget of love her. $22,000 to last year's record of $278,000. night, Now 10, at the Civic- Center-never?has- there-been a rift within the Banquet HalU to honor Mrs. Home, the ranks during^ the administration among~ Winston-Salem resident, who for 23 years * See Page 18 Sickle Cell Progran Labeled Inadequal by Yvette McCullough The city's only sickle cell didn't diagnose my illness Staff Writer program is run by Forsyth as sickle cell anemia". County. The program first "A doctor from New York She was only 19 years old began in 1971 under the who was at the hospita when she found out she had Model City's program. The took some tests and told me sickle cell anemia* that was Department of Health, I had sickle cell anemia." 13 years ago. Now, at age Education and Welfare Butterfield said. "1 didn'i 32, Sylvia Butterfield granted $100,000 for a five know what it was and nc doesn't feel that the sickle year sickle cell program. one in my family had evei cell program has made as The funds were cut off in heard of it". much progress as she has. 1977 and Forsyth County Her family members were Sickle cell anemia is an funded the program from later tested and it was inherited disorder of the August of this year to June found that her mother had red blood cells. It is of 1979. k the sickle cell trait and hei estimated to occur in ap- "I was 19 years old and father had sickle cell anemproximately one in every pregnant." Butterfield said ia. Her father died from 500 black births tn this "1 was very sick during my the disease. One tn foui country. precnancv, but mv doctor children of parents with the Iffgppi <em defeated in the November Beaufort Bailey 1972-,he Nixon landslide into office, but in 1974, Wa c 9 r paper Winston's been waiting for" Goler Apt ^oitit! frcff ( By Sharyn Brmtcher Everyone agrees that Goler Metropolitan Apartments has a problem. But there is very little agreement on what the problem is, and suggestions for a solution are scarce. "They ought to tear the whole thing down," said Carrie L. Williams, a tenant who has been fighting'eviction proceedings. Ms. Williams explained that she refuses to pay her rent because of the condition of her apartment. "The roof -_ leaks, the refrigerator only stavs on one setting- very cold-- and if I had a penny for every cockroach, I'd be rich," she said. Bretoda Jones, another tenant, agrees that conditions are bad. She and several other tenants have been meeting with Alderman Virginia Newell to try to resolve^ their complaints. "We had a tenants organization." Mrs. Jones said, "Melinda Pace was president, and I was vice-president, and we had a few meetings trying to get something done. Then they (the management) formed their own tenants organization, and put in people t_ ? _ rr? a _ % _ _ _ _____ ? wno wont in me onice ai uoier as onicers. Melinda Pact, after several months of legal battles over eviction, moved to Piedmont Circle. "I'm not entirely happy,??she?says,?"Bat?it's?better than Goler.'-? all for you j *North Carolina's Congressional delegation, includ-?_ . Sing Rep. Steve Neal. rates badly on civil rights e | legislation, see page 2. = *The challenge facing the East Winston branch of the! - g public library, on page-3r- ? 5? = *Why the low voter turnout? See Editorials, page 4.5 5 *Dr. Thomas Dundon, County health director, talks| S about his department and why he favors a mer-* S ger with Reynolds Health Center, in QScA, page 5.5 1 Barbara Phillips is honored at Convention Center,! = Social Whirl, page 6. If *School children are to receive tutoring from a local! zz aui ui ny , jju^C 11. g S 9A new art museum devoted to blacks emerges ins H Winston-Salem, page 8. ^ The Globetrotter's 4'disciple" preceeded them into! Stown^, page 13 and Black on sports describes what al j? tough act the Ramy basketball Teams have to follow. ipage 15. fT fniiiiiiiiiiiaiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirH sickle trait have the Butterfield said that she ^ I has accepted the fact that she has sickle cell anemia, but she is upset at how the t sickle cell program is run. > "I try to continue to live a ^ V * normal life, because I can't v ^Hm| neglect my family," Butter- \ * + s field said. "But what about the people now finding out r * ' *\i,i '> 1 about sickle cell? The .< * ' present program is not educating people enough." 6 x* v ^ v i "I don't want pity, but I'm . v* \ 1 tired of being sick, I'm ? _ . . ' n Svlvia Ru See rage l ~ / Foresees School I n Bratcher Democrats' favor, and Bailey Writer those elected. During his 4 years on the bo y black ever elected to the an increase in black personne rounty school board, was he has been trying to g 7th election, but he didn't predominantly black area, ction until the next morning. He regrets the fact that thei ision," he said, shaking his tives on the school board nov bed. I didn't want to worry are a number of issues of inti ave been up all night." be dealt-with by this board, le as a surprise to him. "I "The black community nee< >me in first," he said, but the black teachers that are replace community cost him much teacher resigns, often a white hed in fifth place, about 280 him." >d. "They also need to watch th n disguise," Bailey sighs. to see that black students are n the value of their vote. If "And they are raising the re ;ht to vote, they don't need t? Teacher Examination. This i< w administration does." of teachers, and the higher r at WSSU, was elected to the down the supply. But it m; a losing campaign in 1972. teachers." tional trends, he recalled. In Bailey also mentioned the lifted Republican candidates Fairview, and Atkins School: tergate turned the vote in the See P V p mmt^fyfllC. WM>MJL JL M M.KJ m# m?# ,-. i?". >\-'r- -i' '*!., ' ' ' '"% ? 20 pages this week Saturday Novc 5. Complai n All Side! Brenda Robinson, the president of the tenants' organization, issued a written statement whicli said in part: "I, as president of the Tenants' Association, feel that the situation with Goler ifc being blown entirely out of proportion by newsmen. They only obtain half of a story, and leave the other half to the readers' imagination, pro or con... We as tenants of Goler Metropolitan Apartments don't appreciate the bad publicity reflected upon our homes as soon as one tenant a , --4? 3? ? gets mad at management and isn't knowledgeable enough to handle it without a scandal." ...J1 The Goler Metropolitan Apartments, 150-unit complex on the Old Greensboro Road, is a $1.8 million project financed under Section 236 of the National Housing Act and built by Coastal Services, Inc. Goler was sponsored by the Goler Metropolitan AME Zion Church, and is managed by Urban Housing Inc. David H. Wagner, president of Urban Housing, complains that: "Folks do not give credit where credit is due. In 1974, when Urban Housing took over the management of Goler it was only 70% rented, and the mortgage was in default. Now it is fully rented." "You also have to look on Goler as a survivor," he pointed out. "Seventy-five per cent of the non-profit corporations under Section #236 of the National Housing Code have gone into defau 11." - See Page 11 RHC Plan Raises ? By John W. Templeton ager. presented the proposStaff Writer to county commis sioners at their Nov. 9 ?. 9 A county plan to keep briefing. ReynoldsHealth Center and Although the Jones plan the county Health Depart- differed with the health ment separate with policy boards recommendation coordination raised hopes ^lat *^e center become part that the uncertainty over health department, the center's status might be Dr. Smith said, We re at soon ended. least starting. Maybe with It s about time we get in the next while we can get something going," pro- . together. claimed Dr. Russell L. --Andrew Yarborough. one Smith, chairman of the advisory board after Ed Jones, senior as^ briefing, ?ai<k "I'm real sistant to the county man- pleased with the direction a_1 - 1 1 f u s lanen. ivir. Jones is to be commended. This situation's been in limbo for i The Jones plan, prepared with assistance from Paul Fulton and Gregory L. Be t^^Drov^es: * There are probably some p< # a new car. Of course, some %> the Bataan Death March, toe i J: j_?i ?:?i 1?i ; i uiun i minu looicing ai y ^ symbols advertised by Mc bands or Bill Cosby. I did i r. trade in my old car-- which it lt0 rtielO a lot of people who would ha^ miles ago. | ?*%. ^ "Who sold you this car? Ge 3 3 %M 3 "You're not going home i mean, it runs?" , a Democrat, was one of \ admit it has seen better hauled the basketball team ard, Bailey has worked for and carried home antique 1 in the school system, and space, and took the dog fo t et a senior high in a became a reporter's car anc and back roads and the o e are no black representa- Street. In the past two ; v, because, he says, there inspection has been like gett erest to blacks which must the Olympics. "Look at the bright side,' is to watch the number of will ever steal your car." :d by whites. When a black Of course by the time it teacher is hired to replace armed with good reasons no miles on it," I say. ^They'l e academic talent program it. And I've replaced pract included," Bailey warned. as wen keep it. iquirement on the National But it isn't going to make it ? because there is a surplus rather than spend every mo equirement is a wav to cut i decided it would have to j ay eliminate a lot of black new car. They don't make that part possible closing of Cook, don't really know what kir s. and the competency test definite on one thing: I'm 'age 2 anybody who sneers at my o ' 3 i ? l 4 imber 18,1978 ints | ?' ?? : P ^ .. JfJhl David Wagner ^ ^ 91 cpM J&r^W v - ?? "' *'"*" ~-it'. a . Brenda Jones Hope^~ ', jj that an assistant to thc . ^. ;;^ county manager be respon?sihle fnr * 'Coordinating the - planning, implementation .; ?'. and operation of health v services programs." The . assistant would resolve (its i ^ .l . > J _ i\ puies Dciween ine iwo ac- v.; partments. ? that a Reynolds Health Center nurse be designated as supervisor of the RHC nursing staff instead of the current supervision by the Health Departments nursling director^ ? JtrayTervrces, now the ~ joint responsibility ot the two departments, would be assigned to Reynolds Health Center; although the unit will continue to handle free public health x-rays. See Page 2 ?ople who enjoy shopping for s people might have enjoyed >. all those shiny new status >untain Lions or marching mind the fact that I have to leans having it sneered at by ve stopped driving it 100,000 ineral Patton?' They chortle, n that thing are you? You days. That was before it around as a teacher's car, china cabinets in its hatch he vet a few times. Then it 1 found out about dirt roads bstacle course on Watkins years, getting it ready for ing George Burns ready for my friends say. "Nobody became semi-invalid, I was t to trade it. "It has 130.000 1 never give me anything for ically everything, so I might through another winter, and rning trying to get it started, 50. So I went hunting for a icular model any more, so I id of car I want. I'm only not going to buy a car from Id one. By Sharyn BrmUher t> .1
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1978, edition 1
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