? * r ? Economic Injustice ? Guest columnist Edgar Simon Jr. says that black people have done a. themselves and black businesses a q < "great injustice" economically. ~ S ;jj Editorials. Page 4. a: y'y ?! X ijj O ^ > ll r inl TIT* " > Wins ?. 32 U.S.P.S. No. i \ H ^ nMr -' /, " > ^HF^ V- ?, ^ _ > ^Sp^M Pint-Sized Five-year-old Letlsha Jones was the youngest perf State University's Kenneth R. Williams Auditorium professional musicians. The story appears on the i Forsyth Court Vo , By RUTHELL HOWARD Staff Writer < l' . ? 1 The penalv system usually gets youth after they have become too involved in crime. But Forsyth Court Volunteers wants them before they get that far. ? A non-profit operation that was founded in 1974 at the request of a local district court judge and probation of^ ficial, the organization is designed to steer youth away from a life of crime mainly through a buddy system that provides a problem youth with an adult friend. "Primarily, we are a one-on-one program that recruits, -trains and screens-adult volunteers-to work one-on-one with adjudicated youth, youth in trouble or who have been in trouble, youth at risk and children that are ungovernable or undisciplined at home,'* says James Garrett, 25, a coordinator who has worked with the program since April of 1982. I om Kcniey, 3U, wno Degan working witn me program in 1981, explains that volunteers commit themselves to spend four hours a week with their young friends. Through forming a friendship, the volunteer hopes to help the youngster begin a productive lifestyle, "The concept works/' Kenley says. "In fact, the National Council of Juvenile Judges has deemed the single most important experience (for a problem child) a oneon-one relationship with an adult.'' Both Kenly and Garrett are optimistic about the future of the young organization, but they are also concerned about the lack of black male volunteers to work with .black youth. "Out of last year's 350 youngsters petitioned for delin| quent acts, 37 percent were black males," Garrett says. Nurses' Group Still Growing Chapel Hill?Dorothy Cox remembers how inspiring role models can be. As a graduate student at the University of North Carolina at ChaDel Hill School of Nursing, Cox attended the National Black Nurses Association Convention in 1978 and was impressed by the accomplishments of the people she met. *'Those black role models formed a burning image in my mind," she recalled, "and I want to help create that inspiration for others." Cox, a family nurse practitioner with Dr. Sampson Harrell of Durham, has organized the Central Carolina chapter of the National Black Nurses Association, and she said she hopes its members will serve as role models for. blacks who are interested in becoming nurses and for k black nurses who wish to further their education. The chapter, only the second in North Carolina, includes nurses from Durham, Orange and Person counties. Cox said it is-working to promote professional Please see page 3 Y * Y ton-Salt "Serving the Winston-Salem C< 067910 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C?~ "3z^n^zmzziziirznr^zn < i v KB! - ^rP*7 "%, ^ 4^^J^ppp|^^p^ Hf ;^T-'' B k I mmHyB ?v I K lC^M ?^E3 JM I K;- '^ ^K .AIH|HJ ^ ? A *4jn^i jpy ^k~:?~~^l v ^^ v ', M I ?r . I ^ I Km 1 Pianist ormer during a "Jam session" in Winston-Salem i. The event showcased local music students and Second Front (photo by James Parker). lunteers Seek To ] * ? V ? * " * H ?* -*" c?^ >.H |K^ >^. ' ^vj The program presently has 40 youth who ire unmatched, and because there is a shortage of tyack males* some black males ages seven to nine are matched with females 30 or older in a mother-son type of relationship. ?The organization also makes interracial matches, which both Garrett and Kenley say work very well. Youth who want to participate in the program are often referred to the volunteers by the court system, probation officers and social workers or a family member. Each child decides if he wants a particular volunteer for a friend and matches are then made based on the background of each party. Volunteers for the program must be at least 18 years old. have access to reliable transportation, not be on oro bation or parole and be willing to commit themselves to at least one year of service. After filling out an application, the volunteers go through a training session with program staff, a district court judge, a child court counselor and an intake counselor, who often decides when a child has committed an offense that should go to court. New recruits also discuss the program with experienced volunteers and youth who have been through the program. Garrett speculates there is a shortage of black male volunteers because they may fail to realize there is & need for their services. "If black males were to see the need; then a lot more would become involved," He says. "They need to know what's going on with the youth, especially the black youth, in our courts." Aside from one-on-one companionship, the organization gives volunteers an opportunity to help youth in other capacities through its two other components: a "Resource Pool" program and a "Work And Earn It" Please see page 3 Next Week: Next week's edition examines herpes and its effects on the black community locallyincluding why the disease appears to be more prevalent among whites, even though it may not be. Also, columnist Tony Brown, who obviously is no fan of Jesse Jackson, gives us more reasons he feels the leader of Operation PUSH is not a viable presidential candidate. Also next issue: John H. Johnson Jr., publisher of Ebony, launches a new television show. Black churches are examined editorially. Some of Washington, D.C.'s best young basketball players tackle Winston's best. And much, much more. f t Stitch In Time f oung Kenneth Brown likes most ac- T vities that other 10-year-old boys o njoy, but he has another special in- C jrest that keeps him in stitches. S econd Front. S| Ghfi immunity Since J974" Thursday, April 7, 1983 ?? Says Consulting Team East Winst Include Mc By RUTHELL HOWARD \ 5taff Writer 1 ~ 1 East Winston definitely needs more housing. i A group of consultants hired by the city reiterated that < opinion after observing the area as part of a countywide . lour. Noting economic progress that has already taken place in East Winston and the success of projects like the East Winston Shopping Center, two of the consultants said has untapped economic potential and named housing as one main concern. " The two are part of a team conducting a countywide economic growth analysis survey for the Real Estate Research Com. - "Our impression is that there's a lot of land out there i that needs developing/' said team manager David Crane o? CBT/Crane Associates of Boston. "The question is: fpr what kind of market?" Crane said there is an interest among residents in the ' communty in seeing some type of additional housing, Point Youth In Rij A I > Tom Kenley (left) and James Garrett are coon organization whose aim is to provide assistance young criminals out of the penal system (photo bj Apartments Provide Headac By ROBIN ADAMS Staff Writer In a display of anger Over a $35 rent increase, tenant^ of New Bethel Apartments staged an emotion-filled protest in front of the complex last week. But the situation at New Bethel goes beyond the tenants anger; both management and the apartments owners appear to have serious problems of their own. The tenants feel that the rent increase isn't justified because the apartments need considerable maintenance work. "We are not going to calm down until they do something to our apartments," said Betty Harris, spokesman for the tenants. Harris said that if the tenants are given ;i,surances that the necessary maintenance work will be done, they will agree to pay the rent increase. The $35 increase raises the monthly rent for a one-bedroom apartment to $154, a two-bedroom apartment to $161, a three-bedroom apart _1 forth Versus South he best of the North meets the best f the South when the Washington, >.C. all-stars take on the Winstonalem all-stars this weekend. ports, Pmgm 14. V oijicle * *35 cents ?? 46 Pages This Week on's Needs >re Housing whether public, low-income or middle-income, located :hroughout East Winston. Ronald R. Morgan, a principal in the Dalton Morgan & Partners architectual firm in Charlotte, listed several >ther concerns for the area that were developed in the "Our impression is that there's a lot of land out there that needs developing. The question is: for what kind of market ?" first phase of a $250,000 economic analysis and survey of Winston-Salem communities. "I think that there are clearly some implications (for improvement) in terms of boulevards and roadways that would tie East Winston in more with the downtown area," Morgan said. This, he said, would physically link East Winston with the downtown area. There currently is no major street Please see pa%e 3 ght Direction I Br ft* " finators for the Forsyth Court Volunteers, an to youth offenders and to help keep potential i James Parker). hes For Church And Tenants ment to $167 and a four-bedroom apartment to $171. According to Harris, the apartments are in very poor condition. She and many other tenants voiced a number of complaints, including faulty electrical wiring, leaky roofs, problems with rats and roaches and the lack of a fire prevention system. "They promise us things are going to be done on paper, but they never get done," Harris charged. "They have made a lot of idle promises." She added: "I am not rich and I don't pretend to be. I need something to show for the extra $35 I am going to have to pay." The apartments' management says its problems are based on economics, too, but are a bit more complex than those of the tenants. Reginald T. McLaurin, resident manager of the apartments for the past two years, said that the tenants are experiencing "rent shock." "They are complaining about repairs not being made Please see page 5