V Q3B33Eia?1 PAOf ^ 1 Wrnsi I* - . ' ^ 'M ? Vol. XII, No. 52 U.S.P.S. No. 067910 Parlrino finac onH 1a? - UllVkJ IU1U IV( . ' . V By JOHN HINTON mote Chronicle Staff Writer rath( Drivers who park downtown illegally will pay more for tickets beginning Jan. 1 , u rThe Board of Aldermen voted 7-1 Mon- an ddy night to approve a package of increased wcrc parking fines recommended by the board's ~ Tt Finance Committee. Fines for people who inert over park at meters will increase from $2 to aldei $3. . V So People who park in loading zones, commercial areas and no-parking areas will pay a on dowi ?The present fines are the lowest of any major city in North Carolina," the Finance "I ?Committee said in a report to the aldermen, beca *The low fines make it tempting for dowi * v' ^ 1 I H . y jj I f * mm. "1 pSg^ :<^, i? B< u r > a * "*< Mormon missionary James W. Bates discusses h Ri 'Tenacious' Mormons an By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer :_ THE TALL, GRAY-HAIRED man leaned forward in his chair as he spoke of his church's plan to attract black members. Wearing a white, shortsleeved shirt, gold suspenders, black slacks and a red, dotted tie, the man smiled often - with his mouth and his eyes - as if enthralled by his work. * His might be a common sight in the Bible Belt, where denominations often go from door to door to save souls and swell congregations - except that this man's church, until 1978, prevented its black members from holding one of its highest and most tfrfcrished positions. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, ii- 11. j it %. m ? ? ircquenuy caiiea uie rviormon v^nurcn, aiiowca black members to become priests only eight years ago. But that was then and this is now, as far as Elder James W. Bates and his wife, Ellen, are concerned. -The Bateses, both of whom are white, are now ; encouraging Winston-Salem blacks to become not ;bnly members, but leaders in their church, in:eluding priests. Mormon doctrine gives priests the authority to j act in the name of Ood. Worthy males 12 years of age and older are eligible to hold the office and * r \v Icnrbmy: WXn*s HHH ton-Salt The Twin Citv'c A^ni ? - ?- ^ / a rry/ Winston-Salem, N.C. an income guidelines >rists to risk getting a parking ticket are penalu sr than pay for off-street spaces." fines." le aldermen also increased meter rates to Downto' ;nts an hour. The current rate of 5 cents shopping i our has been in effect since the meters Womble si installed in 1950. But Nor le Finance Committee recommended the wo?d sai ased fines and meter rates to the meers<4?fr pers. Of! men. , . regulations uthcast Ward Alderman Larry W. pers away ible voted against the increases, saying In other the higher fines would drive away issue $1 itown shoppers. bonds for don't want to punish downtown ... Winston n Luse?we?are?trying?to?revitalize _ atown," Womble said. "I wonder if we I - y >. *, ^PM m. JmtB H.fl| v jk. Jh H| is church and Christian issues during a visit to th SCRUITING TP e spreading their Word in : m 41.,, Piwcir^.. .." :-, Elder Cook, left, and Elder Barlow listen intently i (photo by James Parker). responsibility. Until less than a decade ago, only worthy white males could be priests. Blacks couldn't be Mormon priests because, according to the church's holy writ, the "Book of Mormon," they are descendants of Cain and therefore not eligible for the priesthood. The fearrA U- ' Ella Jenkins1 'rainbow* arrives p PAOi i *m Chn % *d- Winning Weekly Thursday, August 21,1986 I will rise |. ling the shoppers with these new wn shoppers are likely to go to [nails where the parking is free, f lid. thwest Ward Alderman Martha S. I d people who overpark at the k t driving away downtown shopfenders who violate the parking hL > are the ones keeping the shop not the parking fines," she said. business, the aldermen voted to million in urban redevelopment community development loans in rly Park, North Winston and East eighborhoods. The loans are in . : _ I Please see page A13 Womble: Loan: * ' ? 7 ~ >S-V \ TJmttki -*l: 1 J^K"' ? ~YT+s~* \y -"i ' fLk^Hnwm. H ^Tr JB ? LAa^ . M J^f liv fl lf^/^ \ ^ * ' ^M[ pm 'Q^Tv/^-^t^Hi . '*v 'fiQSSj Eiri^^^^' v J/M |^*V_ - *3r (photo by James Parker; e home of Janie Belle Durant. p the black community I {9^Br#G9^^fc .i&W ^L ^>:~ ?i?r^y is a Castle Heights resident discusses scripture ing of blacks could only be lifted by a revelation from God, which church leaders say they received in 1978. Originally from Price, Utah, the Bateses were sent to North Carolina as public communications Please see page A2 % b ? i Garber-Lash tourney results M. PAOIB1. r onicle 9 50 cants 30 Paget This Waak T? ^ ' I | WW I ;^Wr^ ifl I i should be for the poor (photo by Jftmes Parker). Bailey criticizes reassignments Says black guidance counselors may have been treated unfairly By CHERYL WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writer Beaufort O. Bailey, the tone black school board member, expressed concern at Monday night's board meeting about the reassignment of some black guidance counselors in the city /county school 1 system. The system's recent reassignment of some counselors prompted several phone calls to him from black counselors, said Bailey, chairman of the board's Personnel Committee. Bailey told the board that at one middle school, where there are three counselors, one black and two white, the black counselor, whom he did not name, is being assigned as a "floating" counselor. The counselor will spend her time between Kennedy and Paisley middle schools. She was assigned solely to Kennedy last school year. "Because of this, I called the administration office and asked what criteria were being used to move these teachers," Bailey said after the meeting. He said that he was told by Bill Albright, an in- . structional coordinator for guidance, that, because of new funding guidelines, vocational counselors, who are paid with state money, must be vocational counselors only. In the past, they had shared various duties with other counselors. But Bailey said he still wondered if some Please see page A12 1^^ A A "*1^ MrmJrcUrk#* ? 11 TT VI IWSlIUp to be held Sept. 6 > - By CHERYL WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writer The NAACP's Education Committee has been busy lately. Not only is it putting the finishing touches on plans to operate more than 10 tutorial learning centers in the city, but it is also planning an all-day conference on education next month. The Conference on Educational Excellence, which is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 6, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m., will be held in the Communications Center on the campus of Winston-Salem State University. The theme of the conference is "Our Children, Our Greatest Resource - Our Community's Greatest Responsibility." Dr. Beverly P. Cole, the national director of education for the NAACP, will be the guest speaker at the luncheon that day. The workshop is free and open to the nublic. I Bessie Allen, chairman of the local NAACP's i Education Committee, said that the NAACP particularly wants to attract parents, guidance counselors, ministers and the learning centers' tutors. Planning for the workshop was begun in February, Mrs. Allen said. "The Education Committee decided to have a Please see page A11 A