Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Dec. 11, 1986, edition 1 / Page 15
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I Black youths ;By The Associated Press 1 JOHANNESBURG, South (AfricaScores of black youths 'shouted down Helen Suzman, a white anti-apartheid legislator, at a memorial service Tuesday for a .black activist couple killed by masked gunmen last week. She was trying to address : about 1,000 mourners at a service > at St. Raphael's Roman Catholic ; Church in Mamelodi, a black township near Pretoria where Dr. j Fabian Ribeiro and his wife, ! Florence, were shot Dec. 1. ! The youths chanted "Down j with the PFP!" ? a reference to jMrs. Suzman's opposition Proi gressive Federal Party, which ) many black militants view as in! effectual in its campaign for i ' .... Jesse Jackso ! By The Associated Press ; BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - The I Rev. Jesse Jackson said the pro; spect of a Southern presidential ; primary in 1988 will require can- ... ; didates to focus on the region, . | where they "will find the richest ; soil and the poorest people." | Jackson, who formed the ! Rainbow Coalition in 1984 to run ; for president, has not said ; whether he will run again in 1988. S But some 500 people attending j the Southern Christian Leader; ship Conference's state conven! tion last Friday night cheered i urlwn state Dr?ci/1?n? Irm mmmmm wmw m > ViliMVIU J V/lill 116IU93 * said Jackson "may be the next president of the United States." ?j Looking to the election year, I Jackson said that when presidential candidates visit the South, "they will not find Wallace standing in the school doors. "When they come South in '88, they'll not find dogs biting Black med scho< py The Associated pr?a MILWAUKEE - The number of blacks seeking spots at R; Wisconsin's two medical schools M! has increased overall, but school BT official? cav e#iii ? ? - - i? wiv j auu iivvU IO boost minority enrollment. ; "I've only been here a year, I and we have a long way to go," said Robert H. Brown, academic ; services specialist *t the Universi; ty of Wisconsin Medical School. "We have just started to get real; ly out there." He said 34 blacks had applied 1 I h . ; \ + Jk i ^H; *?Vk i nv Vk |# an is Parks O < j jKTo all my cu?tomar? and frlan I ? -??? rmneaw miow, sand a euili i and aam tha rafarral faa. I >1 for you." *25 REFERRAL CE Cuatomar rafarrad Rafarrad by Salaaman to s* Good for $28 upon dolhrory $25 _ it ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ -^ ^ i 1 t 4 i heckle Hele racial reforms. The Mamelodi Civic Association, a leading anti-apartheid group in the township, later issued a statement e?tpressing understanding for the youths' action and calling on the Progressive Federal Party to quit Parliament to protest the government's racial segregation policies. Mrs. Suzman, 69, said she had been heckled many times in her political career but rarely by blacks. Heavy security forces were deployed around the church and at roads in Mamelodi. Some journalists were turned back, Iiikiu wiiu? unici? gui 10 uie service through back roads. . The service was first set for Sunday, but the government bann speaks at I children in Birmmgnam. When they come South in '88, they'll not find blacks going in the back of movies. 'They'll find in their place farmers, black and white, who fed the nation and fed the world and who now can't even feed .l *? ?? - uicmsciYcs ... wno now nave tneir backs to the wail with no one to help. "Don't say we can't restructure their debts, because we restructured the debts of Europe and Japan," he said. Jackson said the problems in the U.S. steel industry can be traced to the apartheid regime in South Africa. "When they come South in ^8Sr they'll find coal miners in Bessemer, Alabama, unemployed because coal miners in South Africa have taken their jobs. Slave labor in South Africa has undercut organized labor in ?1 applications ui #/ to the school, and five had enrolled this year. Last vear. 48 HaH #n. plied and four had enroled. At the Medical College of Wisconsin, 196 blacks had applied this year, compared with 165 last year. Three enrolled this year, compared with two last year. Brown said he tried to help students even if the UW Medical School did not accept them. If the school can't offer a spot to a black prospect, he says he tries to "send them someplace where Season's S Greetings 9 Linwood i Gerald | levrolet I de: Cut out tho referral ft ?mer to buy a vehicle fromWk hiVt m "LiHU ChMMr J? RTIFICATE 525 * Linwood Gerald JmS of votrielo to roforral. P - ? ] J IftNKI VILLI, N.C. TP 40 at Rout# M IxH A >3-2101,724-7014 Mk londay-rrfday 8:30-*00; Saturday 8:30-5:00 NCL3%kdlkdNlX I n Suzman at ned weekend funerals in Mamelodi. Restrictions in effect for Tuesday's service included a prohibition on displaying political banners or posters. Many black civic leaders say they believe the Ribeiros were killed because of their opposition to apartheid. Neighbors say the killers were two black men who drove away from the scene, then exchanged cars with two white men. Apartheid by law and custom establishes a racially segregated society in which the 24 million blacks have no vote in national affairs. The 5 million whites control the economy and maintain separate districts, schools and health services. Meanwhile, the predominantly VCLC's state Bessemer, Alabama," Jackson said. "When they come South in *88, they'll find steel mills closed ... by corporations that made a profit while they went out of business." Jackson said the South needs to "move beyond the race agenda." He said sexual equality is vital to improving the region's economic outlook, and women must be paid fairly for their work. Poverty is also an issue that transcends race,> Jackson said. Of the nation's 41 million poor, 29 million are white, he said. "The poor are mostly white, and female, and young," he said. "White, black or brown, hunger hurts. - "Most poor people are not on welfare. Most poor people work every day. They'll clean these tables when we leave." Jackson, a vocal critic of Presi), say officials -> they wilfbe tilf?? Jose 6. Torres, tfie director of minority affairs at the Medical College, said the outlook for minorities in medical schools is bleak. "There is the national trend in the drop of blacks and most minorities in general (in medical school applications)/' Torres said. "The big issue is still going to be cost." r' y \ I \ Classe Soot E0R6ES: MERCHAI SECRETARIAL SCIENCE DIPLOMAS: DATA PROCESS MEDICAL ACCOUNTING COMMERi MANAGEMENT MEDICAL CALL r \ funeral black Chemical Workers Industrial Union said thousands of its members stopped work Tuesday to protest the possible deportation of Chris Bonner, a British woman who works for the union. Companies, including Mobil Oil Corp. and Swiss-based Ciba Geigy, reported sit-ins and stoppages ranging from two to four hours at factories and depots. The union said in a statement that its members also were protesting detention <of a union organizer, Vusi Mavuso. Mrs. Bonner's husband, Philip, a Briton who taught history at the University of the Wit water srand in Johannesburg, was served with a deportation order Monday and taken into custody pending his expulsion from South Africa next Monday. convention dent Ronald Reagan, took a jab at the administration and the Iran-Contras scandal. "He told all those lies while Carter was the president," Jackson said, referring *to Reagan's criticism of the previous administration during the Iran hostage crisis. "Now he's shipping arms to Iran. That same Iran. That same ayatollah." LaShanda's Boutique For the lady wno wants to look unique i in/? ? -? i ** yyg now nave UULU 1CHAIN by the inch." - LaShanda Millner ONE-OF-A-KIND FASHIONS Open 10 am-6 pm Mon-Sat I Tobacco Square 836 Oak St. 723-7482 Open Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 1-5 rcrro mk Mil s Start 1 For 4DISING EXECUTIVE MICRO CO! OFFICE AOMIN. ASSIST. WORD PRO CIAL ART DATA ENTF OFFICE ASSISTANT CLERK TYP JQWI ( The Chronicle, Thursday, December 11, 1986-Page A16u I he Discount Uniform I "first Quality Uniforms at C.L I ! #fiW Discount Prices SHOD I | , yTr-'SL-"^ ?? n. Cfc?r, s?. * l ill V Wla?to?-S?lt?. N.C. 27105 H#JJl 9:3^|| 5t3i J I'l \ '} } Telephone <?1* 74440S1) M?* " *" ^EYECAREshoulont ycxj TAK^ i!Riousm^B, I DR. F. BRUENINQ. M.D. ophthalmologist ootmrmo to MtNabimiotM about you* maun EXTENDED WEAR CONTACT LENSES tAAAA w "WW"" includes lensas, fitting, car* kit and Y follow up. I 765-6900 3746 v*at Mill Road I ???? WMM By Joe Black A group of famous people in the entertainment world caipe together and blended their voices in song and said: "We are the world We are the children We are the ones to make a brighter day.** This unselfish act was motivated by the famine and starvation in Ethiopia. It is a classic example of: "Black and White ' ; together, we shall overcome.** Ibday, I want to remind you of a challenge to Black Americans. It is finding a cure for Sickle Cell TVait and Sickle Cell Anemia. Why? Because one of 12 Black Americans has Sickle Cell Itait; one of500 Black Americans has Sickle Cell Anemia. Sickle Cell Anemia does not affect ones intelligence, ; but it can cause growth retardation, leg ulcers, pneumonia, pain. If you are born with this tendency from one parent, you h$ve Sickle Cell TValt. If you are bom with this tendency from both parents, you have Sickle Cell Anemia. You will not know whether you have Sickle Cell Itait unless you take a simple blood test. So help combat and support the fight against CioUU rr-.il ni- ?? wnvms VCU UlSCdSC Oy*. 1. Having a blood test to learn If you have the TVait. 2. Riding Greyhound, because in 1966 a percentage of each ticket will be donated to the National Association for Sickle Cell Disease. 3. Mailing a contribution to your local Sickle Cell Chapter, orto: . \ The National Assoclation for Sickle Cell Disease 4221 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90010-3503 JoeTZhck - Vice President The Greyhound Corporation vv v>JP^ ^v ^ . mMXf '*, : } : * ImI^^IEj^ ' ' ^V' ] Blk< V-vyBp .<^ 11 k v* ^mfmwSaMM Am2^J I Well help you answer the questions... I and leave the decisions to you. I Rutledge College I 820 W. Fourth Street I *puter*operl P.O. Box 3138 I cessinq Winston-Salem, NC 27102 I 1st 919) 725-8701 .H I
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Dec. 11, 1986, edition 1
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