Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / July 24, 1986, edition 1 / Page 2
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Pag* A2*Tho Chronicle, Thurs< ?WWMWmimHHIIIIHIIIIIHMIMMIIIMtHIIIMIHIIIIIII i Hangout businesses have successfully {sought ordinances to post noparking signs. "But the kids are still out there," he said. "If one business { does it and another one doesn't, then the kids will move to the one that Viai/A c innc " K UWOII i 11C* W 111V 915IM. Sweat said that the problem occurs mostly in the summertime. "They're out of school and they don't have to go to school the next day," he said. "One of the things that concerns me is that most of the parents don't know the whereabouts of their children. I wish parents would take the time to talk to their f . children. 4'I wish I had a solution for both East Winston and the Stratford Road areas," Sweat said. "They need a place where teens can get together. I don't have a solution. It's really a community problem." Sweat said that * 'directed i patrols" were used to discourage loitering in Winston Lake Park following complaints from citizens. Such patrols will be used at the shopping center as well if the ordinance passes, he said. Meanwhile, one area business that already has such an ordinance says it hasn't been much help. Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Gott located in the 'Winston Mutual Building at 1225 Brown F, HMMHMMiiuiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimitii "I have not done anything wrong," Brown said Monday. "There was an accusation that 1 got a loan from the Small Business Administration. The record shows I never received a loan from the Small Business Administration. That was a total falsehood. "I have paid my taxes. I have represented many major comr panies in this country very successfully and very effectively," he said. "I intend to keep on doing that. I intend to keep on being friends with people in Africa and out of Africa who love democracy." Brown said he was not upset with the administration for mentioning him as a possible nominee and then apparently changing its mind. 4Tve worked at the White House," he said. "I know what they have to go through. 1 respect that. I don't feel like I was used." Brown, who has made several trips to South Africa, said he would continue to travel there. His last visit earlier this year with a group of black educators led to the development of a U.S. program to improve schooling for South African blacks. | "It is my belief that President Reasan sincerelv wants n^ar#* in South Africa," Brown said. "My prayers are with him as he embarks upon the task of bringing black and white South Africans together to save that country and bring freedom to all of its people. Until all are free in South Africa, no one will be truly free." Reaction in Winston-Salem concerning Brown's withdrawal was mixed. "His withdrawal is America's loss," said James E. Mack, a close friend of Brown and owner of Human Resource Consultants Inc. "I don't know of any other person in the United States who has the negotiation and mediation skills of Bob Brown." Brown's withdrawal is probably in his and the black community's best interests, said the Rev. Carlton A.G. Eversley, a member of the Winston-Salem Church Committee on South Africa. "It would have been difficult for him not to be perceived as an Uncle Tom by a vast majority of black South Africans/' Eversley said. "He would have been a representative of Reagan's constructive engagement policy, which is anti-black." North Ward Alderman Patrick v ? - - jay, Jilly 24, 1986 ilMMMHMNMMMIIIMMNUMHMMIMIHHIMIIIMMMMIIMNMNI From Page A1 IIIIIIIIIMIMIIIMHinMIIIMIINMMHIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMHIl E. Fifth St., beside the shopping center, posted no-parking signs, but its problems have not decreased, said a company official last week . 4Vandalism is a problem," said Marie H. Roseboro, regional cashier at Golden State. 4They park in great numbers up until three or four in the morning. They're drinking and doing I j * uon \ Know wnat all. "1 I've gotten out of bed and driven up here in the morning and they were having a carnival," she said. * * Mrs. Roseboro said that, the signs prohibited parking in the lot from 10 p.m. until 7 a.m. "We put the signs up five or six months ago," she said. "The kids tore them down." It will cost $370 to put up four new signs, she said. The new signs will be mounted on metal posts, as opposed to the previous ones' wooden posts, she said. On July 7, she returned to work to find that someone had shot a window at the building, Mrs. Roseboro said, costing her company $250 to replace. What's more, she said, cleaning up after the weekends is costing her firm an additional $75 to $80 each week. She said that her tires have also been damaged from broken glass in the parking lot. om Page A1 T. Hairston said questions about Brown's background should not have prevented him from being considered for ambassador to South Africa. 'H'here have been questions about other Reagan nominees' backgrounds and that has never stopped them from being appointed," said Hairston, another friend of Brown. Brown might have been ineffective because he would have represented Reagan's policies, Hairston said. "Unless he could have been his own man, his presence there would not have done much good," Hairston said. * t # - aui MacK aisagreed. "Bob could have been a significant factor in helping to alleviate the conditions that exist between the Pretoria government and South African blacks," he said. i ? mana ^? jl.WH UkJLlJBbJLk IRegisti Children ? Ages Kinder* Hours: After School to 7 * Minimum of 5 C Is Required |90IWater V llllttllllMIIMMtMHMMItlttftltlHIIIIIMilllMlllltMtltlMtlMMMil MWc just don't know what's * going to happen or how it's going I to look on Monday morning," Mrs. Roseboro said. 1 Mrs. Roscbon^said-thar^oung people on the weekend are not l the only problem the company is 1 having. Vagrants also are a pro* t blem, she said. 1 44 Drunks hang out in the back < around here," she said. 4The < back of our building smells like a toilet. We report them to the s police, they come out here and run them away, but they come < back. i 4'We've had reports from peo- 1 pie that they are out there asking for money," she said. 'That's t going to hurt business." i Frederick Douglas, whose s pharmacy also is a Winston s Mutual Building tenant, notices many of the same problems as < Mrs. Roseboro. I 44I've picked up beer cans, chicken boxes and wine bottles," t he said. 44You name it, it's been, a in the parking lot." I Douglas said he returned one t weekend this month to find that the plastic sign bearing the phar- t macy's name had been destroyed, c Mrs. Roseboro said the situa- 8 tion has gotten especially bad over the last year. ? "We had some very nice shrub- i bery planted/' she said. "It cost t a couple of hundred dollars. So- s meone just pulled it up by the roots." t Bobby Crandell, manager of v Burger King on 510 N. Clare- it mont Ave., said that his P restaurant has had a problem Hearing set ii By ROBIN BARKSDALE > Chronicle Staff Writer c A Winston-Salem minister and another resident, indicted on a charges of embezzlement, will a have their case heard Aug. 4 in Winston-Salem.. 1 Bishop Lawrence S. Tate, d founder and pastor of New Faith ^ Chapel Holiness Church .on 'l] Waughtown Road, and Ruth 1 uiane cassaDerry, a teller at the c Lexington Road branch of First 2 Union National Bank, were indicte&June 30 by a federal grand v jury on charges of conspiring to c embezzle and the actual r embezzlement of $15,900 from c the bank branch. t Tate, a former minister at Kimberly Park Holiness Church, c founded New Faith Chapel five I ZULXJJ I ration Will Start \ugust 4th 0 ; V W* pick up ehlk from school * I Tim* to do honM games, swlmmlr Afternoon snook jarten through 12 Years Old p.m. Children from Each School Winston L works Road vith young people gathering in its ot as well. Some of the youth start fights, le said. "It's getting to be such a severe jroblem," he said. "I run the rids from my parking lot, then hey go to East Winston and to Winston Mutual. 1 suggest they [the other businesses) close the ytits off." Crandell said he usually hires a ecurity guard during weekends. But he said a parking oriinance would not be effective 'or his business since it is a fast ood restaurant. "1 would have no problem vith the kids parking if they icted like they had sense," he aid. "They've got to have somewhere to go."* Nearby McDonald's on N. riaremont Ave., is not having a >roblem, said its manager. "I'm aware of the problem hat Bojangles and Burger King ire having," Manager Bryan Harris said. "But here we don't lave that problem." Harris said McDonald's tries o portray a family image and loes not allow young people to ;ather in its lot. Two of the youth who conlegated at East Winston Shoppng Center last Sunday night said hat young people need omewhere to go. "We really don't have nowhere o BO." said nni> 7fV_VMr_r?M u/Ka ? ? w vaav / VM1 VIM i 1V/ wanted to be identified by his intials, J.L.C. "The city should >rovide a place." The youth said he lives in i fraud case rears ago. The Winston-Salem hurch serves as headquarters for he church organization, which Iso has churches in New York nd Alabama. The indictment charges that Tate deposited a large check, Lrawn on a fictitious account at Vachovia Bank and Trust Co., nto his account at First Union. The indictment says he then cashid checks totaling $15,900 on the iccount. Tate has been out of town and inavailable for comment on the :harges. When contacted at her esidence, Mrs. Cassaberry leclined to comment on the mater. A hearing on motions in the ase is scheduled for Aug. 4 at >:30 a.m. in the Federal Building*. E PI J 1 ? ? ? _ E Ages ^ and P Traim Throu inn 5-Yeai ?work, 6rO< ig, (Wd trip* ? pnvhM 6:3< Fee Arr Call for akeFam 1 4 HlltMMftttllllllllMIIIIMIIIIIItlllllllllllMlllliitlllAMMtlllllllll Walkertown, and that he came to the shopping center to talk to his friends and meet girls. Mark Hedrick, 19, said that if young people were prohibited from coming to the shopping f CONGRAT GRANDSI ON WINNING TV 3.5 TENNIS CI | TENNIS an I HANE! I WINSTON-SAL PHONE: (91 We're pr< Grandsl State Volvo 3.5 Tennis Champs I n I LUUIBd North Liberty Street || 767-4950 I CONGRA Tt to the Gran* on Their S j^EfiS? fa ... tpffffni L Ki W | imikwjiim IIIL, mm I Li We Are Accepti nrollments for ! % T7 l i ears ?ttyr-Olds j O a.m. ^ IO D p.m. angements Available Details: Satia Orang flyYMCA Call Today: { % center parking lot, they would just find somewhere else to gather. "I would probably go to *he car wash on (Highway) 311," he said. ULATIONSj .AMMERS IE STATE VOLVO 4AMPIONSHIP d Ski RACK SMALL EM, NC 27103" 19) 768-4344 >ud of our aiiimersi ?2SHi ^flfer.ag. ; "t_L^1 Katie Carter \JLAI # lU/Vd dslammers itate Title G L O U O C D K in the Regional Tournament from the Afro-American Co. Publishers and the Afro-American Newspaper, Carolina Edition FOj^SUBSCR,pT,ON inruNMATION WRITE: Subscription Dept. Afro-American Newspaper 628 N. Eutaw St. Baltimore, MO 21201 I npHHiS ng I Fall I J >G, Director L ; 724-92Q5 i*
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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