UNIV. OP KC-3PRIAL3 DEPT. EOO:l 206 VilLSOM LIBRARY 024 A CHAPEL HILL, NO 27314 ■oEPTi—Sriwa—sa._ai ^ Winston-Salem Chr'omcle "Serving the Winston Community Since 1974" Community «n.'W 24 PAGES THIS WEEK WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. ■20 cents U.S.P.S. NO. 067910 Satnrday, December 1. 1979 ome Tenants Due *500 Refund Templeton ;t,ff Writer I Jived in ;ton-Salem plexes be- 1977 may rent itionwide t settle- ive complexes are alills, Goler Me- itan, Holland Homes, Millbrook and New Bethel,! all subsi dized under the Section 236 program of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. There are more than! 700 units in the five com plexes. To receive the refunds, tenants will have to pick up a claim form from their complex office, complete it and send it to the Clerk of the U.S. District Court iiiiiiiiiuiMiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiininiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiitimiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Fairchild, Goler,Holland,Millbrook, New Bethel iiMMiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnHiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniinmiiiiiiuiinMiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiMiiiHiiitiiiiiiiiiMiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiii in Los Angeles, Calif, by Jan. 31, 1980. More than,500,000 ten ants nationally are eligible to receive the refunds due to a $60 million settlement between HUD and Legal Service lawyers who filed lawsuits in 1975. In 1974, Congress re quired HUD to pay sub sidies to Section 236 a- partment owners to offset rising utility and property tax costs. HUD Secretary Carla Hills refused to authorize the payments. Many owners then passed the increases on to ten ants. A federal district jedge certified the suit of a California mother of five as a national class action suit and awarded the re lief. Government lawyers appealed until new HUD Secretary Patricia R. Har ris ordered that a settle ment be reached. Because of the size of the settlement, the largest consumer class action suit in the nations’s history, according to Legal Ser vices officials, and the prospect that many ten ants have moved, extraor dinary steps are being taken to inform eligible recipients. A national advertising firm has been hired to publicize the refunds and a toll-free number (800) 924-7980 has been in stalled. Locally, the Legal Aid Society of Northwest N.C will provide help to per sons with filline out the two-page form. Managers of the local 236 projects said they have the forms available. However, in one project, Goler Metropolitan, the head of the management firm expressed some doubt that, residents would receive refunds. Atty. David H. Wagner, president of Urban Hou sing Inc., said the firm See Page 18 Woman Charged In City Rape Case By Patrice E. Lee Staff Writer down. A Winston-Salem wo man and a man charged in the kidnapping and rape of another, woman are being held in Forsyth county jail in lieu of $10,000 bond each, ,a spokeswoman confirmed Tuesday. Carolyn Copeland, said to be in her twenties, and Howard Gwyn, 26, both of 1408 E. 17th Stv, are being held on the two charges. photo bv Santana Court records also show, that Donald Ray Shelf, 25, of 1663 E. 23rd St., has been charged with rape and has been jailed with out bond. ^M^heerleader dances with Walt Disney’s vSfey World in Orlando, Fla., site of the Bowl. Demon Deacons will be attending on Bowl representatives accompanied several ^Kters to the campus Tuesday. ecords reveal some aspects of RJR utilization of black employees. lerization fights the cold for handi- “imilies, page 3. Jls talk about the golden opportn- ^oard of Aldermeq missed and the (cated volunteers have accom- 'ith midget sports, page 4. hirl captures all the excitement lantry of local events, page 6-7. and Satchmo are the subject of TV specials. Read about it in &ge 9. luit defendant tried to defend dthout a lot of success, see page Lt. Aaron Tice said that the suspects allegedly forced their victim, who had been out drinking with them earlier, to have relations with two other men Nov. 12 while, Gwyn and Copeland held her Tice said that ,a female can be charged with rape if she has, “aided or abetted” another fe male’s rape. The alleged victim told police that she had known Gwyn and Copeland prior to the incident and that the two men paid them to have sex with her,, Tice said. The identity of the two men is still being investi gated, Tice said. Tice, in charge of inves tigations at Dist. 2. said he did not know any details of Shelfs arrest except that, he , was charged with taping a woman at knifepoint and that ,the woman was not injured with the knife during the incident. But contrary to popular belief, most rape victims are not assaulted by com plete strangers. “We’ve only had a couple of cases where we had,a pure innocent victim raped by a stranger,” Tice said. Out of 10 reported tapes in Dist 2 this year, four have beencleared by arrest and three are still being investigated. Tice said that the number of rapes has remained virtu ally unchanged from last year. “We’ll go two or three months and then we’ll get a couple,” he said. However, according to the monthly crime report for the city, from January tljl-oug’, September rapes increased from 53 in 1978 to 61 in 1979, and the clearance rate increased also-from 71 to 77 per cent. di If convicted of kidnap ping, Gwyn and Copeland face a maximum of 25 years and the couple and Shelf face a possible life sentence if convicted of rape, according to North Carolina statutes. There’s a look of determination on the faces of these yonng marchers in the McLendon Bowl parade last weekend. Despite a drizzie, they kept on stepping aii the way from Jetway Shopping Center to the Carver High Staff Photo by Templeton Schooi field where the Boys Club' notched two shutouts to the Patterson Avenue YMCA’s one in bowi action. Marching are Neai Anthony, Nicole Tate and Carla Wardlow. Four Families Displaced by Tower By Yvette McCullough Staff Writer Four families will have to leave their, homes on 15th Street due to the construction of a five mil lion gallon water tank and pump station near Liberty Street. Relocation for the fami lies may mean a chance for them to move out of substandard housing, but at least one family can not find affordable standard housing. Thurmond Ford, a relo cation supervisor in the city’s Community Deve lopment Department told the Chronicle that, one family had been relocated with three families re maining. “We will try to get them moved as soon as we can,” Ford said. “Basi cally all of the families want to go and are very anxious to go.” The water storage faci lity, funded with last year’s water bond issue, was originally scheduled to be built on a 14th Street site and later near St. Benedicts Catholic Church but met with neighborhood opposition. When the city decided to locate the facility at the end of 15th Street, it was said that no one would have to be relocated. One resident is upset that she and her family will have to move. John nie Mae Clifton and her family have lived at 713 15th St. for 11 years. “I hate the idea of moving, but if the city says we have to I guess we have to,” Ms. Clifton said. “I’m very upset because I can’t find no housing unless it’s run down. “I’m not particular a- bout this location but my house is okay,” Ms. Clif ton continued. “The CD people first told us we had to be out by October, two weeks ago they said by the end of December, if we don’t find something they may set us out.” “We have found the location to be acceptable to the community and we haven’t had any com plaints about the loca tion,” said Pat Swann, City Public Works Direc tor. “All of the families have been contacted and they will be relocated depending on what’s a- vailable.” Ms. Wilma McMillian of 712 15th St., told the Chronicle that she was intending to move before the mention of the water facility. “1 knew I was going to move because of the con dition of my house,” Ms. McMillian said. “My house is in bad condition and 1 want to get out before it gets colder.” Ms McMillian and her seven children are having trouble being relocated because of the size of their family. She said she is trying to find a house that’s suitable for her family. fencies Wage War for Mental Health By Patrice E.Ue Staff Writer |[Third of a Three-part Series.] nowing, they are just ordinary buildings ^oughout Winston -Salem. zones. Inside, residents and visitors goal-to emerge triumphant over mental Holism and drug abuse. ^ recently ended fiscal year 1978-79, 2,730 ffity residents were treated for mental illness, 1 nlcohol inebriation on an inpatient/out- at Forsyth-Stokes Area Mental Health ^ county’s public facility, compared to 2,598 ^ore. ^tment for mental illness and drug and 'use increased, the number of court petitions to involuntarily committed also 563 during fiscal year 1977-78 to 588 for ysar ending June 30, ^ l^r agencies - the publicly funded Forsyth- IH the private Forsyth Y Association and the Council on Drug P.y the foot soldiers in the War on mental M'elinies. their tactics are unorthodox. Even after being cared for'at a local hospital, a Forsyth County woman still wasn’t able to begin coping with the emotions she felt after being violated by a rapist. Nurses at the Forsyth-Stokes Area Mental Health Authority helped her wash her clothes and got some food for her and she went on from there. A man still tormented by harsh memories of the Vietnam War finds solace in the Mental Health association’s five-year-old Friendship Club, a support group for people coming out of the hospital. Through REACH, a similar support group for families and friends of the mentally ill or emotionally disturbed, a distraught wife or a heartbroken mother can learn to cope. “There are 70 percent fewer readmissions for people who participate in the social groups than people who do not,” said mental health liason Barbara Muse. Ms. Muse said that the recently formed REACH program which she coordinates has “been a need for a long time. They need help in knowing where to go and what to do during this very trying time. It’s a sharing of feelings...we’re already seeing tremendous help with some of the members,” who’ve participated in the twn-month-old program How do you define success in such a person-oriented field? It’s not easy, says John Shields, executive director of the Council on Drug Abuse. “Everybody is on a continium between wellness and sickness. If the person comes in for treatment..if he stays off for a year..we feel fairly good,” Shields says. Shields says that 20 percent of the 300-400 patients treated yearly are discharged drug-free, rather than being maintained on methadone, a substitute. Defining success in mental health is certainly not easy but ask Dr. George Hamilton about indicators of the status of the Forsyth-Stokes facility and he’ll rattle off five barometers of success; • “We have the lowest admissions rate of a regional mental hospital.” «“We have no need for state services at Butner” for treatment of alcohol abuse. •“There’s somebody available to deal with emergen cies on a 24-hour basis...there’s no waiting list.” •“People are overwhelmingly pleased with what they’re getting from us” according to a sampling of 204 patients who answered a client satisfaction questionaire. •“These mortgages are built on the backs of Forsyth County bonds,” one of the strongest indication! of community support. Although Tm sure many of you may think 1 have an obsession with food, I must return to that broad category for my topic this week. Like the saga of the re-emerging biscuit, this particular item is tied up in economics and the inflation that ravages us all. For those of you who are interested in aerodynamics or physics, there may also be some interest. Around 516 N. Trade and the immediate vicinity, my sweet tooth is legendary. The most effective tool 1 have found for keeping it under control has been the fried apple pie. One can understand my chagrin when I opened one the other day. The package looked and felt the s4me; to my recollection, it was about the right sire, but... Inside, there was a swirling wind current speeding around the apparently shrunken morsel. It was hard to See Page 2 ■o 13 b' I'i e