Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / March 10, 1983, edition 1 / Page 2
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* p?i* *-Th? Chronic!*, Thursday. March 10, 1983 f ^T;k XI I _ ^ <C V 1 Jg^^L a^BH^ 4.,,, ^ I < - . jv^Hagt, iWL^ vm viB) ^1 SHKi \ ^r: j^3fi?SE H jfc. ; James Garrett (left) and Tom Kenley are coorc organization designed to keep youth from becomii Parker). A| l|llll||| l'l jfi^ Today is the last day for entries for participation in the ! Triad Tar Paws Cat Club. The clubis_sBonsoriri?. aTen-J Ring Cat Show on March 19 and 20 at the City 1 ake / Gymnasium in Jamestown. For further information, call Cindy Rhame at 274-7286 or Mary Hannah at 272-7423. FRIDAY, MARCH 11 > I The Young Salem Symphony, Winston-Salem's youth t orchestra, will give a concert at 6:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall at the North Carolina School of the Arts. The orchestra is composed of 63 students from Winston-Salem * and the surrounding areas in grades 6-12. The public is * invited. SATURDAY, MARCH 12 i ? r r Home rehabilitation and neighborhood sidewalks will t be among the featured topics at the Morningside Corrv^ munity Development meeting at 3 p.m. at the Recreation Center on Sedgefield Drive. City government and Com- v munity Development representatives will provide infor- 1 mation regarding federal loans for community rehabilita- * tion. SUNDAY. MARCH 13 . v & The Winston-Salem Lupus Chapter will meet at 2:30 p.m. at the Highland Presbyterian Church Activity Building. G. Thompson Miller, attorney in Lexington t and legal advisor for the city's chapter, will speak on ^ "Disability, Job Rights and Other Legal Questions Relating to Illness.M For information, call 724-6303 or 768-1493. The annual Charter Day Dinner for the local Howard University Alumni Club will be celebrated at WinstonSalem State University in Kenneth R. Williams Auditorium at 5 p.m. The Honorable William Thompson, U.S. District Court Judge, will be the speaker for this event. Tickets can be purchased from any alumni member. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shields Sr. of 2901 Apt. E in ' Eastgate will celebrate their 58th wedding anniversary at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Daisy Moore, at 4222 Orchid - Drive. ? MONDAY, MARCH 14 The YWCA Contemporary Women's Lecture Series will present the film, "Women's Rights in the U.S." at 12:15 p.m. The series is open to the public. Call 722-5138 for further information. TUESDAY, MARCH 15 Sandy Tilley, owner of White Oak Farm, a nursery specializing in perennials, will give an overview of growing perennials in a home garden from 10-11:30 a.m. at the Education Wing of the Reynolda Gardens Greenhouse. Call 761-5593 for information. The Otesha Dance and Music Ensemble will present a Tye-Dye Workshop at South Park High School at 8:30 a.m. The group will also present an African Dance Workshop at the school and at 10 a.m., a mini-concert featuring the Otesha Dancers will be helH Orientation for perspective volunteers for Big S Brothers/Big Sisters of Forsyth County Inc. will be held at 7 p.m. at the organization's office at 113 Fayette St. r Interested persons are invited to attend. t s The YWCA Teen and Youth Program will sponsor a a "Summer Employment Workshop" from 3:30-5 p.m. h Nancy Gans, youth specialist with the Employment Security Commission, will discuss "how to" and "where v See Page 3 F L> <>: "?^SfP(B Hr M fefetaj Mk m B fl K H MadHM k llnators for the Forsyth Court Volunteers, an ig involved In the penal system (photo by James Crime Prevention Man Assaulted With Crowbar The following "Crime Box Scorfe" is designed to keep /ou abreast of criminal activity in your community and o help you protect your family and property from crime. Armed Robbery 3800 block, Patterson Avenue The complainant was beaten with a crowbar and robbed of ash by two suspects. Suspect No. 1 is described as a black nale, 5'8M-5,10M, 145-150 pounds, thin build, late 20s, nedium brown complexion. Second suspect described as )lack male, 5'7", 130-35 pounds, dark complexion. 1700 block, Cherry Street The complainant was attacked by two black males and obbed at knife-point. No description of suspects is available. Strong-Armed Robbery 200 block, Glenn Avenue The victim met the two suspects at a restaurant. When he eft, the two suspects followed him, beat him and took his noney. The victim later identified both suspects out of a picure lineup and they were arrested. 4400block, Rural Hall Road Black male tried to get complainant's purse. When she vouldn't let go, the suspect pulled her to the ground to get it. There is a suspect and the case is still under investigation. itorebreaking 2400 block, Greensboro Road Cash and candy taken. 3900 block, Patterson Avenue Microwave oven and stereo equipment taken. 600 block, Fifth Street Two typewriters, two tables and various office equipment aken. Mrceny 2700 block, Wauahtown Street Beer taken. 500 block, Sprague Street Gas taken. 3400 block, Patterson Avenue Pocketbook taken. 2900 block, Gilmer Avenue Social Security check taken. 1200 block, East 25th Street Cash taken. 2300 block, Marble Street Weed-eater taken. Housebreaking ? 100 block, Granville Drive Jewelry stolen. 5000 block, Rural Hall Road Oil drum and furniture taken. 3300 block, Greensboro Road Cash taken. 500 block, Dunleith Avenue Handbag and food stamps taken. 4utobreaking 100 block, Cherry Street Wheelcovers taken. 3000 block, Waughtown Street Camera and money taken. 400 block, Cherry Street Fuzzbuster and typewriter taken. 2600 block, Woodland Avenue ? TWA fliaht baff tak#n 700 block, Sprague Street Duffle bag taken. 1000 block, Montgomery Street Rifle taken. 1000 block, Apple Street Battery taken. Securing Your Motorcycle You don't leave your car unlocked, so treat your notorcycle the same way. Motorcycles are expensive, so hey require additional security measures. They must be ecured with a mated three-eighths-inch hardened steel Hoy chain and padlock of equal strength. Sheathed cable tas not proven a satisfactory deterrent to theft. This column is brought to you weekly as a public serice by the Chronicle, the East Winston Crime Task orce and the Winston-Salem Police Department. I Black St Can a black radio station successfully harness the white listening market without sacrificing its racial identity? "Tony Brown's Journal," the nation's premier black-affairs television series, tackles this question on "We're Number One!" which will air Sunday, March 13, on WUNL-TV, Channel 26, at 6:30 p.m. Host Brown examines how a black owned and operated radio station in New York City, WBLS FM, ascended to the number one spot in the largest market in the nation Nursing & The Student Nurses Association of WinstonSalem State University has | contributed $S0 to the Rainbow House of WinstonSalem. The money will be used to help buy a house at 419 Hawthorne Road that will be converted into lodgIkeES Elect rentes tkpptu |m?t HiUii til /come in / for a fl I TO DIStil IwASHERS Beginning At Color TV's Beginning at W RENTAL This advertisement is The offering is made New Issue EAST \ LIM 480 Lin Mir. I The partnership has a shopping center as Neighborhood of Win* uon, a iNortn Carolina Copies of the O 4 ation No where blacks only constitute approximately 11 percent of the population ? and retained its ethnicity and commitment to the black community. Chairman of the Board Percy Sutton talks about the future business plans of Inner City Broadcasting and the numerous problems that faced the company during its infancy. In addition to WBLS-FM and its sister station, WLIB-AM in New York, Inner City Broadcasting has purchased five other radio stations in the San Francisco/Berkeley, Detroit and Students C ing for the families of chronically ill children. Expected to be in operation by late 1984, the facility will accommodate families who do not live in the WinstonSalem area. It will be located near North Carolina Baptist Hospital. 5R5T I AN J REGISTERX REE TRIP FOR 2 \ TWORLD, FLA. J TiTbRYERS SC99P R n?? WEEK W RENTAL 1 I Microwave Ovens Beginning at I S099 pcrweek | RENTAL neither an offer to sell nor a only by the Offering Memor * $48C IVINSTOl [ITED PA A North Carolina lited Partnershif limum Investmei been formed as a North Caro identified in the Offering V ton-Salem, North Carolina. Corporation. ffertng Memorandum may bi Venture Ass! Si Stock 411 N. Winston-Salem, r1.1 In Na Los Angeles markets. The corporation also is i ranked 20th on Black > Enterprise magazine's list i of the top 100 black businesses in the United i States. It grossed more than $22 million in 1981, more than half of that revenue generated by WBLS alone. Sutton, however, does not feel that the firm's success is a case for the capitalist system working for black people. "We have trapped the system and made it work for us," Sutton tells Brown. "Obviously, the system doesn't work for a lot of ontribute 1 The facility will provide a supportive setting where parents can privately share their thoughts and concerns with each other. Additionally, Rainbow House will reduce the travel and room costs that are often a burden for these families. WASHER OR DRYER " Mri'ldilhW FuilStweoSystemsT Beginning at $j99 KI ' *T RENTAL wmmmmaam J4SEI I solicitation of offers to buy c andum. >,000 IN A5SUI tRTNERS Limited Partnership ) Units ($1,000 p tit ? $1,000 (1 u lina Limited Partnership to de' lemorandum which is locatec The General Partner is Vcntui r obtained by contacting: tance Corporation uite 200 ton Building Cherry Street North Carolina 271 . . ..? t i - ? iinii ? ? r white people, but it works-~ for far fewer black people. I want to move from .being one of the poor people, but1; ; I never want to forget that 1 was 4 part of that group ^ that it poor. So, no, I don't " believe that capitalism is the solution for all black people. 1 happen to be a.;, Democratic Socialist who is .,, enjoying the capitalist way of life. 1 want, as a black person, to leave a legacy." ' Sutton also served as the chief elected official of the Borough of Manhattan in New York for almost 12 ' years. vo House Winston-Salem State's student nurses participated " in this project because of their frequent contact with chronically ill children.:r: Their past projects have in- ;' eluded blood pressure screening and the American * Red Cross blood mobile. mm ^ m ~ H ' || 1 I I t *. Televisions^? Beginning at ^H.*' W PtCtiTAL Mi? 1444 jMM H a MH 1 k ^H> A 4 .T~ ^^^SS^SS2STS5I^3SSSSSS^^^^^^SS3ISSI^S^3H ^ |B * i "V of these securities. October 14,1982 ' :iates hip l I er unit) 1 nit) 41 /elo^, own and operate U1 I in the East Winston re Assistance Corpora- llj 101, 1 1 1
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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March 10, 1983, edition 1
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