[ ? Wiqst x VOL. VIII No. 22 U.S.P.S. No. 067 f BF^ ^yfl B ^KT-y-. v .i:v - * A " ' *?? ,' ^ ^,. A (j., ..'v* ^ - ? L y^f? ?? ?. *. v * '' ' * - ..-. ' " " f VJ? v <=" il^K Cold Arrives, Do, \ . By Yvonne Anderson freshman women and is the Staff Writer newest of the dormitory ./ buildings. * It had been After spending several withouT^Tteat prior to the days in a dormitory with no scheduled Dec. 16-Jan. 11 heat or hot water, students Christmas holiday, residing in Atkins HaH on Students say they were prothe . campus of Winston- mised that the heat would Salem State University fee YtxedT' decided to become more but when they returned, the vocal in their complaints heat was still off although last week. hot water had been Atkins Hall houses restored. El-Amin: Story C By AI lev Johnson Jan. 6 article in the Managing Editor Wins ton-Sal em Journal which mentioned his debts Related letters appear did not fully explain the on Page 4. ci rcumstances surrounding Fleming J. A. El-Amin, a them, candidate for the Winston- 44As a former instructor, I Salem/Forsyth County thought it was very poorly School Board, says he researched," El-Amin said would like to set the record of the article, "and I'd give straight concerning his it a grade of 4F\ financial status. "(The article) was an cfEl-Amin charged in an in- fort to suggest something terview last Friday that a about my character to peoBob Jones Univei Says School Not v > * By Allen Johnson tor Bob Jones University in i Managing Editor Greenville, S.C., one of two schools which had taken the ? President Reagan, sensing government,to the Supreme ( ire among black Americans Court in the que^for tax- < at the Internal Revenue Ser- exempt status, maintains i vice's Jan. 8 granting of that the school is not racist, tax-exempt status to "We have an open admis- i discriminatory private sions policy," said Bob - ' schools, has called for Harrison, Bob Jones I legislation in Congress de- U.'s public relations dirccnying such exemptions. tor, in a phone interview I Meanwhile, a spokesman Monday, "and we admit ( Local Leaders Fu Staff W riter ticc racial disstimination, <. local leaders were As President Rcauan held unanimous in their disan- ; a press conference Tuesday pointment. i to explain, among other "It's an abominable slap s things, his administration's in the face for all black peo- i rnnrprning the tax- pic of this^Pation," said the ( exempt status given by the Rev. Michael Curry, pastor i Internal Revenue ?er\ice to of St. Stephens Episcopal ( private schools and Church and chairman of t y v O f 3 on-Sale "Serving the Winston-Salem C 910 WINSTON-SALEM. N.C. d^jjn|8 U IMMM iWJ^ wJfll %i**M M ^ >>**> x^t' ^v-: >. '^a-M^F''^l j^E . jjB ^^H|pP . 5 SAtow Foolin9 Left, 3-year-old La Sheda Anderson enjoys the reci stuff, at a bus stop, as do these young men on the \ Campus. Enjoy it now, young'uns, because spring I on the way. rm's Heat Leaves To call attention to the here and so some students problem, residents of the got together, about 60 to 70 dorm staged a march last of . us, and we marched to Wednesday to protest the the administration conditions and held a building." meeting with university of- Bobby Brown, chief adficials. visor to Student Govern"When .1 game batik from ment Association President ' I li I "1 111! M ifclll?8* ,a-' * - uiv uvmcray^ me neai was Michael Slitton, arid thai still off," said 18 year-old the SGA encouraged the . Sheila James, who lives on women to make vocal their the second floor of the grievances and demand a dorm. "It was just cold in meeting with tlie adIn Debts Unfair pie who don't know me," an unemployed, ovcrll-Amin continued. qualified minority," the let Bl-Amin, 29, who was ter reads, employed formerlywvith the Ll-Amin says in the letter Chase Manhattan Bank in that he took a number ot New York and now works |obs to support his family-as a route man with the Set- including positions as a cab \omation Corp. said in a driver, substitute teacher, letter to the Winston-Salem teacher's aide, part-time inCfedit Bureau that jobs" s 11 net or at lorsyth were hard to find once he Technical Institute and returned to Winston-Salem. Ciuilford Technical lu"My job status Upon stiiuie. salesman, insurance < returning home was that ot $ee Page 2 rsity.Official W Liiscriminatory minorities." 4tWc do not let any Harrison noted that the in- students date outside their ditution has blacks and race," Harrison said. "It's 1 Drientals among its 6,300 a scriptural conviction." I students, although he if students are caught -souId not say how many. breaking that rule, Har4 4 We don't keep a rison said, whether blacks, ecord," Harrison said, whites or Orientals arc in4We just take them on the volvcd, they will be expell >asis of who they are." ed. School officials will not, 44All races are treated " lowcvcr, permit interracial equally," Harrison said, jating. See Page 2 me Over Policy Education., -fen*?M+e? ' ;hapter of the NAACP. Dr. C. B. Hauser, can- < 4 4 VI # ??, .u i in. j it tai*ni?: tiiuait iui me rsiaie MOUSC < ibout drawing up -legisla- of Representatives. was < ion. Well, that's fine, but it equally outraged when eonbounds like bacTs peddling taetcd at his home. "It is j o me. The Civil kights Act immoral that schools which ( t has nothing to do with receive tax exemptions," ? Christianity and has said Hauscr. "It makes the * very thing to do with See Page 2 < jr . . A I 4 , V 122 GhlT'i ommumty Since 19 74" i ? ???????? Thursday, January 21, 1982 In CD Guid HI Coaliti ^B^Lack i By Allen Johnson Managing Editor The Citywide Neighborhood Coalition and the Winston-Salem Community Development Department have not been getting along very well late--it That fact became apparent *** " at the Jan. 18 Board of Aldermen meeting, in kiiiim which . Community Development Director Gary R. Brown and Ma/ie >taff photo by Santana. Woodruff, co-chairman of the coal it ton of 14 neighborhood groups, cited . ? ?a lack of cooperation and _ ent blanket of tuhito communication Iviu/pph A/inston-Salem State agency and the groups, ike temperatures are The specific point -dT'contention proposed changes in the city's community development guidelines which Woodruff said luck| ed "community input." ^ "We're awful sorry that we had to find out in the ministration. newspapers," Woodruff "The Student government said of the changes. Association supported the Woodruff added that no students and encouraged member of the coalition them to speak out for had been given copies of the themselves," said Brown. revised guidlines. A meeting was quickly ar- Obviously impressed after ranged between student a lengthy debate that, leaders wikI the admtmMfh- whocver's fatrll itAvas. th? lion. Attending t'he meeting coalition and community was Chancellor Douglass development staff needed Covington and V i c c to touch bases, the See Page 2 aldermen voted unanimousJ?i iliil1 i 91 r "\%?Wx- ?&iNMfl ONDF.Vr y A ^ Clifton Graves, master of ceremonies at the Shiloh E have set strategies to realize King's dream locally. After The Dream Winston Groi By Alien //. Johnson meeting," said North Ward Managing Editor Alderman Larry Little, \ "than some big dinner 1 Determined to make Mar- 1 in Luth?L.King Jr.'s birth- "This session was a con Jay the beginning of renew [Jr. King TTTCTmt*TFb&&P*fi :d activism in the black order for that dream to h :ommunity, a number of come together as a 'concerned citizens" , .. . r, political and economic si gathered at Shiloh Baptist Church last Friday night nvd mapped their ? itrategies. event wh?p__JtXK) "people "We got . more ac- cormTmit and ^teave with :omplished in that nothing specific to do." e. % ? 7 f Vqicle J *25 cents / 24 Pages This Week Klines ion Charges Itinnf L/l AllflUl ly for a motion introduced community groups and by Larry Womble that community development, postpones approval of the said Brown, is not so much revisions and allows 30 days what the guidelines say as it for the groups to meet. is how they were drawn. "Is there something "Digging into the C magical about Feb. 1?" substance," Brown told the "There's obviously been a lack of communication and cooperation. Some of the things Tve heard this evening are petty and trifling. The real losers are the people who need the loans and grants." . - . , . ? ?Alderman Larry Little Womble asked referring to Chronicle after the meeting, | ial Hf??rtlir\r? for *' . - - v>t ic 111 agiccmeni. 11 s revision. more of a problem of pro\T here's obviously been a * lack of communication and .?,f ? . ., ... If you haven t gone cooperation, said Alder- . through something, you man Larry Little. "Some of can't feel it," Woodruff the things I've heard this said. "We want to sit down evening are petty and trifl- with the (community ing. development) staff and ,,T. it .? . come up with recommenda"Ihe real losers, Little . , , . . , . tions for the total cornadded, are the people who ... . munity. need the loans and grants. Following the meeting, jus, want t0 see lhings Woodruff and Brown set a run public meeting for Tuesday, Jan. 26, at 7:30 p.m. in the during thu ncip iiiuunui cretc example of what businesses in Winston\xtjittmtf-1hp dream. irr mmtmt* i>? ? ecome reality, we need in8 practices have been community to plan Questioned. f f ,, Although a preliminary fo egies. j|st oj- pusjnesses has peen -Clifton Graves, compiled , Little said, no ?1?1" immediate action vsill be Wednesday, had designated?taken. 2 25 people as block captains "Rather than call for in their neighborhoods. > SVe Page 2 * C^ \ .il \ . ji