'* * * ? m-*!'*- '? hj ' !. ! i , ?? iin i. Tine March Last Saturday's March on Washington drc 300,000 participants. One of them, Nor I Carolinian David Squires, now a copy editor Newsday, reflects on the event and i significance. rvont ragt, e Wm? VOL. X WO. 1 U.S.P.S. No. I c l&iS ''MH ^K:k? l^'? B^t?: >9 v wk - . wt ^K/.' Hli^BH K .... *y^H B 1 ISk. BBP^SSS^^^kj^, . j. > - ^ ^ j-^-^w.w ^^4pV I ? A. ? ' B^^H :j&, f*^''{<_fi.tiir?j?Ij~t^ \?ojm# v5->v# "^v\_.}^_ ?- J mm- I lie uSUSiIy SOHSPOKvIl v*vVlllHlvl? tISv5 ^ .If* VIVC \B | .. ^ Mtthiisiastictl- I ? j Learning From T1 Sickle Cell Victims Can Let By JOHN SLADE Assistant Editor Walter Fitzgerald Myers was diagnosed as suffering ~ fronTsickle cell anemia when he was 10 months old. "I noticed that his fingers were swollen and when I would touch him it was very painful for him/* says his mother, Lillie Chambers. Ms. Chambers, a native of Winston-Salem, has four other children: Darryl, 16, Gary, 12, and 10-year-old twins, Tory and Lamont. She also had a sixth child, who would have been 18 this year. He died of complications caused by sickle cell disease when he was 14 months old. ... ? - ^ " : ? a 4. ??i .? waiter is now iy. Ana ne says nc aiant worry or ininK about the fact that he had the disease until he was 10, when a severe sickle cell crisis brought on a stroke on his left side and left him with a slight limp. Sickle cell is an inherited blood disease in which the red blood cells become sickled, taking on a shape similar to a crescent moon. When the cells become crescent in shape, they tend to clump together and prevent blood from passing through the blood vessel as it should, which causes _ A Community Effort Fittiflc In AH'omnt T IX' uiiut3 ui niivmpi m. By ROBIN ADAMS Staff Writer In an effort to keep radio station WSMX-AM on the air, Bishop Sylvester Johnson, pastor of Macedonia True Vine Pentecostal Holiness Church of God Inc. ~ which owns the gospel music station launched a fund-raising campaign Wednesday, Sept. 241 and will continue the campaign until the needed funds are secured, Johnson said earlier this week. The church purchased the radio station a little over a year ago, but, since that time, has had trouble financing the station's operations, including meeting its payroll. th I Sports Editor Robert Eller dares at I say who will reign supreme Its I CIAA football this season a who will be the "cellar dwellers ton - Sale "Serving the Winston-Salem C 067910 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Hk. B H ' M ^H .^B vfl Kl;-|^| |B *? - $ ^- &? - -^ ^>i4Zr^?5^^RPIiil Arp In StiAfr pm? po' ^ ^ and ^ui4n ^ j he Pain a id Full, Productive Lives t the victim to undergo a sickle cell crisis, the most common of which are painful. "Right after I had the stroke, it messed me up for a couple of years," says Walter, who points out that, before then, he had played football and other sports and had done all the things his schoolmates and friends had done. "I stayed inside a lot," he says, "because I thought the other kids would treat mt different." Both Walter and his mother talk knowingly of sickle cell anemia, a disease that is almost exclusive to blacks. For Walter, the disease has caused much physical suffering, which he says he has learned to deal with. 41 When I have a crisis, it's very painful. And they would last about a day and sometimes two," he says. "The pain would start in my side, shoot across my stomach and then into my back. I cried a lot. "But now it doesn't hurt as much," which Walter attributes to the self-hypnosis that he's now learning. "When I begin having a crisis, I lay down and try to shut myself off from the outside world," he says. "But I used Please see page A3 :: Church Raises o Save Station "Macedonia was contributing money to the station/1 Johnson said,4 'when we should have been applying it to the bond program." Because it invested so much of its capital into the radio station, the church defaulted on a bond it had secured to finance the construction of its sanctuary, and to purchase Macedonia Arms Apartments and the station. In addition, Johnson said, several of the radio station's advertisers have not paid off outstanding debts. 11People owe us between $30,000 and $35,000. We want to encourage those people to pay and to continue to come back on the air," Johnson said. "There is not that much Please see page A12 * ^ '} 0 rs ^StSXSI Debbie Allen shi :? I 'lasanewvoice' I troubles, report *m Ghron Community Since 1974" Thursday, September 1, 198S *35 cents BB At Northwest And < ni Ianopping By ROBIN ADAMS r Staff Writer / s If the logistics can be worked out -- in- c eluding the rezoning of residential land i for commercial use ? Venture Assistance \ Corp., the same company that developed j the East Winston Shopping Center, will I construct its second shopping center in the black community. 1 The center would be built on Northwest i Boulevard near its intersection with j Cherry Street , with an entrance on 13th Street, just north of the Home oT Hope i Drug and Alcohol Counseling and Train- i ing School. t For enmp arpa r*?ctH#?nfc chnnnino f viaiv> vm ? "bfvrf'>a>c 1 I center would be a welcome neighbor, but < Bothers say they have reservations. 4 Mrs. Thelma Small, one of a group of Black Dollar' Assistant The NAACP's Black Dollar Days, a I campaign to demonstrate the economic I power of black Americans, begins today I and will runjhrough Sept. 5. Local NAACP officials are encouragI ing black citizens to exchange at least $10 I for $2 bills and Susan B. Anthony silver ISHjiB Ifl 4 K|^' H ^Kiz 'JF' ?q^HBPPIif!Si|CTi KMfc :5P^MfcS?SS|^i? I a^^ti lit- Ia t? ? A L. M f Af.f _ waner rayers, iy, wno tuners from nciue ceil anemia, says ne tion (photo by James Parker). The March On Some Personal WASHINGTON - As I waited in line for a Coke -- having endured 90-degree weather most of the day - and pondered Qf qUWttffbucking .In whether what 1 was taking part in was more picnic than protest march, I joked with a friend about how 1 would relate to my children what I was doing when Jesse Jackson declared his presidential can I res fitness secrets, Rick James 'or his music that's "higher that 1 Richard Pryor faces new s Joey Sasso in "Broadway Is ' 1 luia j M P?|M Tto W?k Cherry Center ? reposed esidents who met recently with Venture Assistance representative Mark Vieno, ?_ ays she supports the basic concept of the center, but still has some questions that leed to be answered. "We listened to the >resentation, but we told them (Venture Assistance Corp.) that.we would get back o them," she says. Small says the residents were told that he center would be similar to the East? Winston Shopping Center, but more >hysically attractive. Clarence Washington, owner of Washington's Concrete, Stone and Cenent Contractors, and one of the minoriy contractors involved in the construcion of the East Winston Shopping Center, says he's all for the new project. 'It can't be anything but economic Please see page A12 < Days Begin *'? 'v- Vk I fn 4 *" *. *: -v' ,'| dollars and to make purchases with these two denominations during the four-day campaign. NAACP local branches were advised by their parent association to notify area banks to have an ample supply of the two seldom-used denominations on hand. Mcl White, city executive of Mechanics and Farmers Bank in Winston-Salem, Please see page A3 v :,... . y . ''1 ' :::'' 1 ' . . ' ' . . . . _____ ^^jjjjj^^jl^^ has learned to cope with his condi i Washington: Observations Ben Hooks and Harry Belafonte had made stirring presentations earlier in the day. Now it was late evening at the march for jobs, peace and freedom and the man of the hour was in the middle of his spiel. At that point, Jackson's speech had been interesting, powerful even, but not para! % t_ t _ _ a J A t ucuiariy overpowering. Ana ceriainiy icss than my expectations. After all, many of the 300,000 participants had waited - and by now were milling around ~ to hear Jackson. Please see page A3