Page C6-The Chronicle, Thursday, January 31,
iHfmilllMMIMINMIMMUIIIMWimtHOtlHIHMHWIMHMUMHtmMIMMMmMMNIIM*
Quotes From Page C1
IIIMMIIMItMIIMIIIIMMIMillllllllltllltllMMMIMIMIMItMMMIHMIMMIMMMMMIMNMMM
the blacks is less; in fact, it's greater. They lack the
; intellectual capacity to succeed, and it's taking them
; down the tubes."
I
i
Black Republican Slate Senate Candidate
Lafayette Jones, on why blacks should join the
f Republican Party: " As tar as I'm concerned, blacks
j should be a part of e\ery group - including the Ku
; Klux Klan, if we could get in - so we'll know what's
[ going on."
?
i
^ ietnam I eteran Jerome Johns, on the lack of
j respect he received when he returned home from the
i J war: "Thad done nn fair share of killing. What did
i 1 do wrong?"
!
? T ?-AUtyw M'uvjui-Ciur,f^rnfm rit\umki..thALMUMlUeLJlL
"T)foc~far*T)/i citV^trffiit 'iWwmi*
with finances is lagging: 44I'm not saying blacks are
I dumb, but you need someone who can handle
I monev."
i
i
i Ex-Miss America Vanessa Williams, on her con1
cept of beauty: "Every btack girl wishes that they
i could have long, silky blond hair - 1 mean I do."
?
j NAACP Regional Director Earl Shinhoster, on
j why blacks should boycott the Enod Lion grocery
chain: "Kroger (a company that signed a Fair Share
; Agreement with the NAACP) didn't have to be
! brought down kicking and screaming.... The Lion
will understand."
npmtH'rntit -J. - - n- A 1 ^ '
unuiuuie nujus HOmisten,
on gubernatorial Democrat Eddie Knox's
support for the Republican Party: "There are
numbers and numbers of Knox supporters supporting
me. I think we have to move forward and not
worry about who will endorse whom. I have a lot of
Republicans who are gonna vote for me. I bet ... 1
have as many Republicans who are gonna vote for
me as he (Gov. Jim Martin) has Democrats who are
gonna vote for him." .
Food Lion i'ice President fdr Human Resources
Eugene McKmlev, on the NAACP's announcement
that a Fair Share agreement had been signed by his
firm: 44It was not a Fair Share agreement because it
doesn't commit (Food Lion) to certain timetables,
quotas or dollar amounts. It shouldn't be confused
with their (NAACP) standard Fair Share
agreements because it doesn't call for any promise.
It represents the company's basic principles."
i
m Sen. Jesse Helms' Press Secretary Claude Allen,
1 Alter
!The
provid
native
to res
_ neutro
^ The nr
/ /j tensivi
/ Lm time t<
#SHBMPP
K&
Dr. MoNoy contributes hit tlm? and hit tiptrltnc
Neighborhood Justice Center.
After two years of retirement and and allows them tc
I the death of his wife, Dr. Renbert own solutions. "It
I Malloy found himself very depressed, lasting when they r
I with a lot of time on his hands. So agreement," he sa>
| hi* KeraniP a unliint... ?J ? -*
... ? 'w.umhu mcuiaiur ai ters from people I
the Neighborhood Justice Center. makes my day."
"My profession has been aimed at The progress at I
helping people all my life," he says. astounding. Dr. M
"I thought 1 could use my experience creased number of
and continue to do just that." successful because
At the Center Dr. Malloy listens to don't return with t
people's problems and disagreements ed problem. He ha
??^ ^DyOIK
Neigt
1209 E. I
1985
tllllMMItllltlllllHIIIMMtMIIMIIMtllllllllltltltMMMMMMHMMMMMMMMIMMMMMMMMM
on why he wouldn V schedule an interview for
Helms with (he black press: "I'm not going to
schedule an interview with someone who won't be
fair."
\AACP Stale President Kelly Alexander Jr. on
the \AACP: "This organization functions of the
. theory of the credible threat. We cannot be about
the business of bluffing. We have to be about the
business of sure 'nnffino i inc? ? or,* ? ?
- - - - - ?..?. . ? juji ?am iu ici inai percolate."
Sen. Jesse Helms at Livingstone College on why
he didn 't support a Murtm^Lather King Jr. holiday:
"I oppose a holiday for anybody. I would1 oppose a
holiday for my hero, Thomas Jefferson. Martin
1 uther Kinp would he elevated to thp of
Ou'WjjL* 11 .Ww*fWnji tun {ivfflrn iidtlcCt
It's a holiday so you can take off and go fishing."
Larry Little on Jesse Jackson'3 negotiating Lt.
Robert O. Goodman Jr. 's release: There are people
in this country who don't get beyond his color. He
could walk on water all the way back from Syria
with Goodman on his back and not get the
support."
Forsyth Association of Classroorh Teachers
President Willie Anderson, on Helms saying he supports
the Livingstone College students: "The kind
of support he (Helms) has for these students is the
same Velma Barfield has for her lovers."
IHM?MtlHMHUMIHHIHIIHUmHtHUHUHIHmi?t???UIHIIIHIIIMHHHMHHIHIHtU
Elwanda From Page C3
IIIIIIHMIIItllllllllHIItllllltlllllllllllHIIIimillllHMMMttiaiHUIIIMMMIMMMMHttl
"I'd like to BO Hark aoain " cone
__ . - juj J uiwanud.
"There is something about being there among your
own kind. I felt very comfortable there. It was one
of the highlights of my life.
"I saw so many familiar faces just walking down
the street. The women are so regal. I was impressed
with the beauty ofjthe people."
Another reason Elwanda says she liked West
Africa so much was that it served as an extended
classroom for her.
4Tm a professional student," says Elwanda. "I
would rather go to school than go to work. I'm
always learning."
Yet, this educator, world traveler and community
activist sees something still missing from her life.
Please see page C8
native T
Neighborhood Justice Center
les a free and voluntary alterto
the courts and is designed
olve disputes through media
liation is a process of resolving
es with the assistance of a
il third party called a mediator,
lediators have completed ex&
training and volunteer their
) the Center.
i Nelght
fU* Justice
Centei
: being a volunteer mediator for the
> work out their wide variety of cases: domestic
is much more disputes, emotionally or spiritually
each their own abused children, quarrels between
/s. "I receive let- friends, property disputes and
mediate and that neighborhood disturbances.
-Noting that volunteer mediators
the Center is are just that -- unpaid workers who
alloy sees an in- mediate because they want to help
cases and feels -Dr. Malloy says he receives paymost
participants ment enough in knowing that he
he same unresolv- makes a difference.
s been a part of a
interested involunteeri
lborhood Justice Centc
Minth Street, by 5:00 i
V
j?Av
7
? >
^ft~
. v . . mtw
o The C
There are two goals in medic
first, to help the disputants rea
mutually acceptable agreement
second, to attempt to open the
of communication between the
parties (to avoid future disputes]
Most important, we are free, ar
communications made auring
? ?
iiiBuiuiiuii sussion are neia si
confidential.
lii
>orhood
"It toktf d+dtecrtton to bm a medtotof," soi
h? wonts to do It.
As an employee of the Housing each one has their o>
Authority for many years, Audrey mediator serves as a
Lowery is familiar with the various party and we help th
problems of local residents. When it out themselves."
the Neighborhood Justice Center was Audrey believes th
formed, she took the training session worthwhile and sees
and got involved as a volunteer results at the Housin
mediator. "Mediators are listeners," "To see people try tc
she says. "Families or neighbors each other," she say!
come in really mad at each other and it's all about." Being
ing his/her services con
>r, Mrs. Gibson, at 724-:
).m. Monday, February
??A C+ _
? />
v
.O- J*
ourts |
I I k
^[? I ; ? H: .
H&< Jy jH
5^ ^
:f' ' m
np:r?
Audrey Lowory. th? trt?t to h?4p poopto 6?coum
vn say! Each rewarding to Audrey, but she knows
neutral third everyone isn't interested in or
ese people work qualified to be one. ,4It takes dedication,"
she emphasizes. "You have to
e Center is care for people to be a mediator.
its positive You've got to be for real, put
g Authority. yourself into it and do it because you
> get along with want to do it. I'm a people-person
i, "that's what and it's a natural thing for me."
1 a mediator is
tact the
2870,
4,1985. J
/' >