ECO’a 206 WILSOH LIBBAF.Y 024 A CHAPEL HILL, 1;G 27314 ■SP^PT. , 1979 60 81 Winston-Salem Chr'onicle "Serving the Winston-Salem Community Since 1974 . WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Saturday, May 30, 1981 *20 cents 22 Pages This Week Planners Base Realignment On Inaccurate Data UPl PHOK) Let It End ■■old Jaelinne Mason (right) and her sister, Jotonya, 9, wait with other volunteers to begin a search for dues in of murders of young black children (April 25). Despite 'the efforts of city police, federal investigators and fill,i combing vast areas for evidence no one has been apprehended for the series of killings. Social Security Faltering Sf C.B. Hauser mide Correspondent »t Social Security i«, the most cherished ite most widely sup ported benefit program of the federal government, is in trouble and measures to shore up the system are be ing put forth by the Reagan Administration and others. Unless reforms are in stituted, the Old Age and Survivors Insurance Fund will encounter a cash flow problem as early as next year, jeopardizing benefit \oard R edra Precin cts SyC.S. Hauser tmiide Correspondent It Board of Elections Forsyth County began laslt last Thursday of [i«ing voting precinct for the two ward iiiitient plans, 1-A and which were adopted lly by the Winston- IBoard of Aldermen, k Board decided that optimum precinct lid contain around 1,500 its and change as few pit as possible. The easiest changes would be made first, and input about changes would be sought from the party chairman, also the aldermen and other familiar with precinct lines, the Board decided. The preliminary planning by the staff indicated that changes would have to be made in seven precincts under Plan 1-A and changes in 17 precincts under Plan 2-D with the largest number of changes to be made in the West Ward. It was estimated that 20,000 voters would be affected. If the court ruling on an nexation is not handed down by July 15, Plan 1-A will be the official Plan. Plan 2-D will be the official plan if the courts rule favorably on annexation by July 15. Input will be secured by Wednesday, May 27. Work session of the Board scheduled for Thursday and Friday, May 28 and 29. The Board emphasized that in put would be sought, but See Page 2 Peler Simms Warren Stewart Michael Wright 1981 Tar Heel Boy’s State irea Delegates Chosen Ptce local high school fitQis were selected as Rales to this year’s F State Convention. Fcled for the six-day Tasive workshop in state r""ient and politics F«er Simms and War- r’ewart from East For- f Senior High and PWl Wright from pland. State delegates par- ' ia a variety of ac- r® which are designed to improve their awareness and understanding of governmental & political organizations in North Carolina, and major areas of state public policies which are being debated in North Carolina congress.. The objective of Boys’ State is to improve citizenship for future and present genera tions of Tar Heels. Candidates for the con vention are carefully screen ed for those boys with outstanding qualities in leadership, character, scholarship and service. Young men who are members of the rising senior class are the can didates considered for at tendance at Tar Heel Boys’ State. This year’s session of American Legion Tar Heel Boys’ State will be held on the campus of Wake Forest University, during the week of June 14-20. checks to the 36 million recipients of social security benefits. vVhen the system was established, 11 workers were taxed to support one beneficiary. Now just a lit tle more than three people are taxed for each beneficiary. By the turn of the century, if present trends continue, it is estimated that the ratio of the taxed to beneficiaries will be 2 to 1. The system is in trouble because Congress has in creased basic benefits and added other benefits with little thought of how the bills were to be paid. The problem has been con founded by high unemploy ment, high inflation, lagg ing economic growth, the trend to retire before age 63 and the generous indexing of cost of living increases -raising benefits faster than wages are being raised. To bail the system out of its present difficulties, disinterested observers have suggested the following: - increase the social security tax to be collected from employees and employers, - shift a number of the appendages of the system to general tax revenue making the welfare instead of a part of a supplemental retire ment system. - reduce benefits. - a combination of the above. The Reagan Administra tion avows that it is com mitted (I) to keeping the system from going broke, (2) to protecting its basic benefit structure, and (3) to reducing the tax burden on the American worker. Reagan has outlined 13 proposals for ac complishing his objectives. Among them are the following: - reduce th welfare oriented elements of the system which duplicate other programs. - relate disability benefits to a worker’s earning See Page 2 . By Yvonne Anderson Staff Writer After heated debate and cries of “Racism” shattered the meeting of the Board of Aldermen last week, it was discovered by the City-County Planning Board that the aldermen used inaccurate figures and percentages for the number of blacks when drawing up new ward boundary lines. The Planning Board found, however, that none of the changes are significant enough to affect the proposed realignments whose plans were voted on by the aldermen last week. Most of the errors were not more than one percent off. However, the biggest change was in the Southeast Ward, which also had the most attention in the debate over the ward plans because, under Plan 2-D, that ward would drop from 45 percent black representation to 38 percent. The figures originally showed that the Southeast Ward is currently 46 percent black and would drop to 42 per cent under Plan 1-A (without annexation). The new figures show that the ward is actually 45 percent black and would drop to only 44 percent under the realignment. A spokesman for the board attributed the errors to the ru.sh in getting the information to the aldermen and to the Adoptive Parents Convention Here By Beverly McCarthy Staff Writer The first Regional Adop tive Parent Conference will be held May 29-31, at the Winston-Salem Hyatt Hotel. The conference is for adoptive parents from eight southern states which make up Region IV of the Depart ment of Health and Human Services. Ann Sullivan, director of the Region IV Adoption Resource Center, and con ference planner, said that the adoptive parents atten ding this conference are special people. “They have adopted children with special physical, mental, and emo tional needs, and are active in a variety of grass roots efforts to ensure permanent homes for other waiting children,” she added. The conference will in clude 20 workshops led by national and regional presenters; state and special interest caucuses are also .scheduled. Laurie Flynn, an adop tive parent of 12 ehildren and executive director of the North American Coun cil on Adoptable Children in Washington, will be one key note speaker. Other guest speakers will be Moses Gray, advocate for minority children and direc tor of Community Rela tions for Detroit Diesel, and other members of the Adoptive Parent Agency. Conference coordinator, See Page 2 elections board in time to change precinct lines. Meanwhile, the Executive Board of the local NAACP met last Thursday to discuss what could be done about the outcome of the ward realignment. Patrick Hairston, Executive Director of the local chapter, stated that the board decided not to pursue plans for a boycott of downtown area business. Instead, the NAACP is investigating the feasibility of challenging the legality of Plan 2-D in court. “We have not ruled out a .selective buying campaign,” See Page 2 Marchers Protest Fed BudgetCuts Approximately 4,000 marchers surged on the nation’s capital last Thursday to protest the extensive budget cuts being planned by the Reagan administration. Culminating a week long “presence” in Washington which began with a lobbying effort for legislation.against the Ku Klux Klan, the march attracted protestors from as far away as Texas and California. The march started at the Washington monument, proceeded down Penn sylvania Ave. past the White House, and ended on the grounds of the Capital Building where a rally was held. The tone of the march and rally was serious and order ly as the protestors listened to Rev, Joseph Lowery and Rev. Jesse Jackson blast the Reagan administration for making cuts that will force over 600,000 students out of college, terminate over 300,000 CETA jobs, end food stamp programs for 55 million Americans who are either children, elderly, or disabled, and cut several billion Fdollars from other social programs. Lowery criticized the Democrats who ‘crossed over” to support the Reagan cuts as having “sold out their Democratic heritage for a pair of cuff links and some jel ly beans”; The rally and march was planned by a coalition of groups including'National Association of F'arm Workers, .SCLC, PUSH, and others. Other speakers at the rally In cluded Mayor Richard Hatcher of Indiana; Congressman Ted Wyche (D. N.Y.); Congressman Jose Garcia (D. New York), Chairperson of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus; Congresswoman Pat Schroder (D. Colorado); and Rev. Jose Gomez, Chairperson of the National Association of Farm Workers. The late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. received a unique posthumous honor as a bigger than life size statue of him w’rrs dedicated at the SYDA Foundation’s International Headquarters in the Catskill Mountains. Left to right are: Mayor Brian Ingber, Dr. Eugene Callender, Dr. Wyatt T. Walker, Maili Shetty (translator), Swaini Muktananda. Dr. William Shane Coffin, Erica Huggins and Maha Coshananda.