s~~ Vol. VII No. 31 USPS. No. i Couple safe ?? ? JL Started I *W,'veW I ??1 f<> *"**'"" .4?? * ' %. v^V, A' ; w**... ? n^ ?** * ** ^ Maxtne Sims, left, and Janie Hass, right, sort through t persona/ belongings that were destroyed by fire. WSSU Coach "Tiny'! Wallace Dead At 52 ? ' ' it ' '... .. ? >" *V*M. '.^' *.<4* "'. ?' " xv ,kV?*dl'?hT^i By Donna Oldham Staff Writer ' Clco "Tiny" Wallace, assistant professor of physica education, assistant athletic director at Winston-Salen State University and head coach of the university'! women's basketball team, died Sunday afternoon after i brief illness. He was 52. Wallace, a native of New Jersey, was born April 24, 1928, in Madison County, Ga. He came to WinstonSalem in 1947 to attend Winston-Salem State and made the city his home. Although Wallace is best remembered for his coaching and teaching, his friends and colleagues agreed that his See /utge 2 Fair Housing 1 By C.B. Hauser 5-3 vote after thre Special To The Chronicle members of the delegatioi attended a forum sponsore< The Winston-Salem by the New Horizons Fai Board of Aldermen may Housing Committee, keep fair housing alive by The Delegation indicatet revising its request for an that it could support th enabling act allowing them legislation if the reques to create a local fair hous- were amended to removi ing commission. certain sections of the bill t< T"* l_ _ T""? a 1- ^ - I lit1 horsyIM CcniiTFywnicn mere was QDjectioi Delegation changed its -the provisions grantin stand on introducing the subpoena power and th enabling legislation which section allowing the keepin the aldermen requested in a of its activities and finding H k I ^B v> Ac// liri i inn as Phyllis Wheal Icy "Serving 367910 Clai By I 'J ^mTM HE-?f he remains of the bass family i m * JHwjS C/eo i|||||||||||||||||IIIIIMI??IIIIM?llllllll9ll9MI9f law Not cf e secret. n Rep. Ted Kaplai i (D-Forsyth) made the mo r tion to send the bill back t< the aldermerr for revision, j The original bill a e drafted by the city attorne; t has provisions that an e almost identical to those it 3 ine u.b. eivn Kignts Act o i 1968. The local ordinanc* g would allow local enforce e ment of those provisions, g City Manager Bill Stuar s, said that the revised fail jF ! Prais By Yvon< Stafj 44In Praise of Black Won of the contributions of blac was presented at the Fors> March 14. The program wa the Council on the Status c "Women In History Week The program highlighted made an outstanding contr "Phillis Wheatley, Harrie Mary McLeod Bethune, Hamer and Barbara Jordai through monologues. "I decided to do these w names are familiar, their known," said Dottie Butlet (he Winston-Salem Community ms Fir 7aulty ^ - By Donna Oldham Staff Writer A Winston-Salem couple, whose home was gutted by fire last month, believes that the fire was caused by faulty elec trical wiring neglected by their landlord, even after he had asked them to fix it. e Joseph and Janie Bass of 5018 Page St. I were told by officials of the WinstonSalem Fire Department that the fire that I tOtallv destroyed their sinole fram#? houco I was started by a "warm morning heater." The Basses, however, refuse to accept the firemen's report. "It did not start in the heater; it was an electrical fire that started in the ceiling of the back bedroom. It started at the light 5 fixture," said Mrs. Bass. S Because of the Basses' beliefs about the fire, they have sought legal counsel in the matter. s "In 1978, the city came out here and in The Locfi L I I I cleared the wj 1 M k j Center. KH ? ^ Lewis Ra than center be "People in tl only logical a] I Ray said. He HBMHHHHIHHIHilB -Tiny" Wallace H. Pitt, earlte, HNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiNiMiMiiiiiiiNii interested in i "Now I have be done and h T~\ yJ 'board every rr # yf^Od cross every " He said that Mayor Wayne housing request could come economic dev< n before the aldermen at their that th+ moun - April 6 meeting and that the major food sto 3 revised bill could be in- said, was the troduced in this session of center. 4,In th< s the legislature, although the commissioner y previously announced authorizing th e deadline for introducing ment corporat t local bills, April 1, would The general f have passed. offer or sale : The city of Greensboro securities if ( - got fair housing legislation purpose of passed recently, but it did industrial dev< t not contain the provisions office is locate r See Page 2 / by resolution < Program Highlights ing Black no A VI-11 n-'" tv i r iu^f %3 vn l^^Il ?31 IllVJI f Writer School, portra The creator of man was play len," a musical dramatization storyteller for :k women to American society Belinda Jar rth County public Library on brought abolii s sponsored by the library and journer Truth >f Women, as a celebration of educators. Ma Stapler. seven black women who have jhe life of ibution in American History. Lynne Harper t Tubman, Sojourner Truth, tribution to A Billie Holiday, Fannie Lou Lou Hamer an n were the women dramatized to contempor women's conti omen because, although their activist of the i life stories are not that well , coordinator of the program. ?" .. . _ ^aiuTday, M a r c h 28, 1981 O _ Wiring spected the house and said that somethin was wrong with the wiring.*' 1 called th landlord and he said he'd send someon to fix it, but he never did and that wa three years ago," Mrs. Bass said. The owner of the property, R.W Clayton, Sr., of Providence Churcl Road, said that the wiring , was fixed However, Clayton had another house ii East Winston, rented by blacks, to catcl fire recently. "1 don't care nothing about what the say. I asked them people to move out o my house. 1 told them to move and I'r going to evict them," Clayton said. According to Mr. and Mrs. Bass Clayton had also refused to repair othe things in the house that they had called hi attention to. "He would always come out here with i different attitude. He would ask my hus band to fix whatever was wrong with th See Page 2 ins ton Shopping Plaza :ity With F< n.. ay uonna uianam - "Staff writer*" *** nt of the board of directors of the Eas il Development Corp., Inc., said that fhrei from his board earlier this month hav< ay for the proposed East Winston Shopping y, said that the EWLDC is "stronger nov has been which means that the shopping built." he community feel that my approach is the pproach to building the shopping center," ever since the resignations of three board 1 White, Bishop S.D. Johnson and Ernest r this month, "I've gotten calls from people investing in the shopping center." a free reign to work. 1 know what needs tc ias to be done without havino to run to th* linutc for pcfmission4o-dolevery "i" and f Ray said. his negotiations with the city, including : A. Corpening and Valerie T. B roadie, the slopment coordinator are good. Ray added r is personally helping to try and secure a re chain for the shopping center, which he key to the development of a shopping e near future, we'll be going to the county 5 to get them to pass a resolution e sale of stock as a community developion under GS 78A-17 fttv statute that Ray referred to states, "Any by a domestic corporation of its own 1) the corporation was organized for the promoting community, agricultural oi slopment of the area in which the principal d, (2) the offer or sale has been approved 3f the county commissioners of the county Women Women t, an cnglish teacher at Reynolds High ycd 17th century poetess Phillis Wheatley. ' the Underground Railroad, Harriet Tubed by Shirley Holloway. Holloway is a the public library. nes, also a storyteller for the library, tionist and women's right advocate, Soto life. One of history's great black women ry McLeod Bethune was played by Phyllis jazz giant, Billie Holiday, portrayed by Epps, represented the black women's conmerican music. While the lives of Fannie d Barbara Jordan brought the program inary times while- illustrating the black ributions to politics. Hamer, a civil rights SOs, was played by Nell Britton and former Sec Page // v I * *20 cents 24 Pages This Week ~"~TTWWWWM?MI?? UN ? l 1 i , ?" r Spring Fashions I Fashions for men and women take on a new look as I a local models from around the city demonstrate a I Kt >r-Profit Group in which its principal office is located, and. if located in a municipality or within two miles of the boundaries thereof, by resolution of the governing body of such t municipality, and (3) no commission or other remunerac any prospective buyer in this state." I According to Ray, the EWLDC, which is non-profit, will set up a profit-making corporation, probably called East t See Page 2 . NBN Links Nation > I To Atlanta Probe \ ) Who and why is somebody murdering Atlanta's Black 5 children? This is the question that is gnawing at the 1 Nation's conscience...a question that cries out for an answer so long as a killer(s) stalks the city of Atlanta, I preying on defenseless children. i The revulsion that has swept the country in the wake of I more than 20 killings has prompted WAOK radio, in t Atlanta, and the National Black Network (NBN), to conduct a four-hour "radiothon" this month that will explore possible answers to a series of puzzling questions. ... The live broadcast, which will be available to the nearly 100 NBN affiliates, across the country, will be aired on Sunday, March 29th, from 3 to 7 p.m. (EST). The program will be co-hosted by WAOK's News Director, Ron Sailor, who has been deeply involved in i this tragic story, and NBN's senior correspondent, Roy . Wood. I Their guests will include Atlanta's Mayor Maynard I Jackson; Dr. Lee Brown, Atlanta's Public Safety CornSee Page 2 Hchndo James purtruved Snrjounwi Imlh ferr