Not Ready For Although he received a warm r convention in Boston, Ted Ke Brown's favorite people. B "trumped-up white liberal" (ai week's column. Editorials. Page 4. o* VOL. VIII NO. 46 "S-V . I "; *'::vS.; I I r Being a television host m< | stantly being in the llmell r Statewide * By LaTanya , Staff Wr f- The North Carolina Human proposed a statewide fair hou Dr. Jerry Drayton, chairma pastor of Winston-Salem's j ChUrch, said the group's lega sd that Gov. James Hunt may package to be presented to t next year. The Council persuaded Gov. I Beaufort ] : Frontrum J Warns Th By Ruthell H< i Staff Wril Two days after the June 29 pri; still there for Beaufort Bailey. "When the first counts came second place," says Bailey, who in the Winston-Salem/ Porsyth < tion race, "and when 40 percent place. But I didn't worry." . Bailey's confidence stemmec Ward Alderman Larry Little say black precincts hadn't come ir Bailey says, "I felt very good." "It is a joyous feeling to see p pie vote for you," says Bailey, total of 12,297 votes total that status. "If I get the same type of St Benedi By Ruthell H< Staff Writ A convent in East Winston th; would be occupied by emotional I violent youth, will be used instea for the elderly and handicapped The East Winston Restoratioi faith Housing Alliance have been facility by the St. Benedict the N At a press conference held las Father Morris Boyd, pastor of th \ t Teddy The 1 eception at the NAACP's School be nnedy isn't among Tony an impri town calls Kennedy a primary, mong other things) in this mination election. Front Pag< f rinsto II S P ? No DA7Q1 H W . W . 4 1V/. V/ V/ / A V > tl I ^ : ' i mj , .... I tB| Behii eans being recognized in public p Ight of the show. But, what abou icers? How do they deal with s mtmrnfr.* . > Fair Hons A. Isley agreeme U? * T I r imsi uroan l sing act. to fair h< n of the Council and * A task New Bethel Baptist represer 1 staff drafted the act participa put it in his legislative "failed i he General Assembly "Volun He sai< Hunt to enter into an state ha> Bailey ?er Analyzes Jut at Job's Not Do award November 1 ? Nonewi and the n< maries, the euphoria was school syst "I have be in, I remember I was in out there,* led the Democratic slate but people County Board of Educa- citizens in came in, I was in second representai Bailey is 1 from hearing North nout this > on the radio that all the countywidi i. With that revelation, black votei to know tY retty close to 13,000 peo- Bailey, \ referring to the official lost in the earned him frontrunner disillusiom support I got this time in ct me Mot )ward, decision. at many residents feared ly disturbed, potentially fronj Me d as low-income housing M. vvtfS / 1 Association and Interi awarded the lease to the 4oor Catholic Church. ____ t Wednesday afternoon, "After r e church, announced the of Chariot Leader >ard candidate Beaufort Bailey, who racked i jssive victory in the June 29 Democrat discusses the key to his success and his dete to get voters out in November's gener r. ? n-Sah erving the Winston-Salem Communi WINSTON-SALEM, N.C I ^|^PP HK ? T" iBSBBi > :f 3 sS&SSlS* ssSS$R$^ ' '< . t Jffi' %?%% -v . jKgkfi :'sV ' I % pxs -|; :< ^ % f rnmmmmm^ 1 Tl_ _ r? /\ trim, m% ma ine ^cene un rn places and con- shadows of the hosts? 1 t the directors, an interview with Isao< landing in tfie on page 10 in the Arts .. . ing Law Prog ;nt with the Department of Housing and )evelopment a year ago so that the state e ''committed to a principle of commitment ousing." force was set up of realtors and other itatives to get people to volunteer to ite in fair housing, which Drayton said had niserably." teer compliance just doesn't work," he said. i that although some communities in the /e fair housing ordinances, the state should ie 29 Primary, me Until November , I'll lead it (the general election)." :omer to politics. Bailey says name rccognitio eed for qualified black representation in th em prompted blacks to support his campaigr jen in politics for a long lime and my name ' he says. "Everybody doesn't know my face know my name. And I think the majority c Forsyth County see the need to have blac lion." i i ecstatic about the improved black voter tui 'ear. "It was exciting to see the support I gc s," he says, "but, most of all, to see that bi r turnout. That's what really got me excited lat we can get it together again." *ho was among the black candidates who a : primaries in 1980, says some blacks wer id with the Democratic Party and with Presi See Page 2 )r Convent W k the decision was because of pressur city. The church finally realized Willi lot what the community wanted." ? Geneva Hi President, East Wins to Restoration Associatio eviewing many proposals, made to the Dioce: :te for the use of the property of St. Benedi ~ " " { * ***** * _____| , ^S8Sfesj^W?oW??K-:-v>:'.v:s4(.p n IPFMfflfi *tn Cly^i tv Sincp 1974" J ...... Thursday, July 8, 1982 I ^ 1 wj ????^sBPB^^BP ^B W ^1 I v :::5||pWr v :|KMHI v>v w=; | V HF>-?'|f.s ? Find out the answer to this question and many more in elle Johnson; one of the producers of "PM Magazine/' and Leisure section. Photo By Santana have a law that would protect all of its citizens from housing discrimination. ? "Although Winston Salem and ^fecnsboro have fair housing ordinances, so many communities don't have it. The only way we can get it is by state law," he said. The Winston-Salem Board of Aldermen passed a fair housing ordinance in May by a 6-2 vote. Attorney Beverly Mitchell, an advocate of the local ordinance, said a statewide law would be effective Cd/i Drtrto "J UCC I M5t * Beaufort Bailey (photo by Alan Guthrie), riff m w ww ? ill Not House Wil the Moor Parish," Boyd said in a prepared statement, ? "Father Joseph A. Kerin, chancellor of the Diocese and e Father Morris Boyd, pastor of St. Benedict the Moor Parish, are pleased to announce that the diocese has entered into a written agreement with Inter-faith Housing // Alliance Inc." y ^ The East Winston Restoration Association, in partnership with Inter-faith, presented the proposal to the 2m church several weeks ago requesting use of the convent, se The Forsyth + + Stokes County Mental Health Center ct had also requested us the convent to establish a group A Piece Of His The convent that sits on the Hattie Avenue and also recei dispute over who would be h< its own. Second Front. oqicl *25 cents I SavxHp's #3 Lane i * Resp ToC By Ruthell Howard Staff Writer "You see, I keep some candy in here for my friends when they come by so I pan give them some," explains Sheriff Manly Lancaster as he doles out lollipops to three little black children. "How many do you want? Six? Seven?" The children thank Lancaster for the goodies and hurry out of the office to meet their mother. For the sheriff-elect, the pressure is off. He took a decisive win in the primaries over challengers Robert Woods and Bobby Carter but readily admits that this wasn't "the nicest campaign I've been involved in. It got a little dirty at times. all my life for about 37 years and somebody said I drink too much and just crazy stuff." T.anraster, who was np^~ - posed by the Black Leadership Roundtable, (a newly formed coalition of black ^leaders), becau-se of his record in hiring and promoting blacks, says he has been "fair" to blacks and minorities and feels he was Public H On Scho Set For, By LaTanya A. Isley Staff Writor The committee which is studying the plan to reorganize the city and county schools proposed by Winston-Salem/Forsyth County ' School Board member Nancy Wooten, has decided that it would like the community to have Inm.) in i?n ? - - 1 ui^ui 111 us icvicw 01 me plan by holding public hearings, the first of which will be Monday, July 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the School Administration Building. lieM. Yo, home for Willie M. youth, wl and have a potential for viol Geneva Hill, president of tion Association, said the gr the decision. "I think the decision \sas b city," she said. "The churc was not what the community "I think they would have Mental Health Center have i See P ? ' h story comer of 14th Street and n11 y sat in the middle of a Dused there, has a story all sI e m ? 24 Pages This Week ken Fair aster * onds Hties opposed by only a small segment of the black community. , 4 * I think I've been very fair/' he says. 441 really was surprised^fhat some of the black leaders indicate I've been unfair. I think I've been very fair in hiring* promotions and '7 don't think I'm as near a racist as some of the people in the black community who have labelled me a racist. In fact, I never have considered myself racist at air." , Z -zManly Lancaster everything." Larry Little, spokesman for the coalition, said Lancaster "disregarded the hiring and promotion of ~htartrsTh 1 rinpffc party yrars as sheriff." Of Lancaster's 32 last promotions, the NAACP's Pat Hairston noted, only two were blrck and 21 of 153 employees in the sheriff's department are black. Five are in food serSee Page 3 [earing iol Plan July 12 Dr. J.L. Wilson, chairman of The cnmmiiirr :fTTi1 pastor of Ardmore Baptist Church, said the committee wants the community to know what the plan B about because it has not been thoroughly exposed to it "We want to let the community know the implications because it (the plan) o putting in a concept ot what.,# the community has not had," he said. Wooten's plan calls tor the restructure of the school system by changing elemenSec Pave 2 uth \ 10 are emotionally disturbed ent behavior. the Fast Winston Restora*oup is "very pleased" with >ecause of pressure from the h finally realized Willie -\1. ' wanted. let the Forsyth + a Stokes , t had we not gotten in there 'age 2 t

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