Coble's a good olv boy IT should now be clear to a lot of people why Larry Coble was selected the new superintendent of Forsyth County schools. Actually it should have been clear to anyone who was Hhere when all four finalists were presented to the public. Coble was certainly not the best qualified, neither was he the most visionary. But he did come across as the most mal leable. He grinned a lot and offered a lot of circuitous answers to some very important questions. From the beginning it was clear that Coble would fit very well into the good ol' boy structure. He would not rock the boat, he would perpetuate the status quo. He was the one candidate the school board could control and count on to implement their racist policies in the hiring and promotion of school administration personnel. And he's off and running. He started a couple of weeks ago when he named four white females a$ principals, one replacing a retiring black male. \yhen questioned about the move, Coble'said that he should not be judged on those appointments as there were more appointments to come. ? This week Coble assigned four more principals. One is a "black: male; the other three are whiter So- farTthe Atro-Amen ~~Can community has gained nothing under Coble. In fact, we're losing a lot. We're losing the most qualified and talented Afro-American administrator in the school sys tem. Although Coble calls the transfer of Dr. Barbara Phillips a "lateral move," it is in effect a demotion. She is being required to report to someone whose experience in the school system is vastly inferior to hers. Whereas Phillips is currently overseeing community . schools, information services, school-community relations and volunteers, under Coble's plan she will be responsible for guidance, health services, drop out prevention - areas that don't make the best use of her skills and experience. T But making use of the skills of Afro-Americans is appar ently not an interest of Coble's. Under his reorganization plan, the key decision makers are white males. Coble's statement that he will not be "held hostage" to black concerns is interesting in that during the selection pro cess and in a subsequent interview wnh the Chronicle > he emphasized his concern about the state of race relations in the school system. But Coble is proving to be quite the hypocrite. On Wednesday morning he invited a member of the white media to what was supposed to be a closed meeting with central office staff. When questioned about his neglect of the black press, Coble called the incident "an oversight." It was reported that Coble plans to bring an Afro-American in from outside the system to fill one of his deputy superinten dent slots. Such a move should be an insult to every Afro American in this county. Rather than make use of the homegrown experienced Afro-Americans that are already in the system, he would be bringing in a token in an effort to prove his "sincerity." Coble is anything but "sincere". He has proven with every move he's made that he intends to keep black educators in inconsequential positions and that the administration of our county schools will continue to be handled solely by white males. Coble need not be "held hostage" by black concerns, but the school board's bond referendum can be held hostage until the new county election plan gives black voters the clout to remove some of the racists from the system. Civil, constitutional rights pendulum swings back To The Editor: | ? Stand on any comer. Knock on any door, and ask a black American to comment on the Reagan years. If a person happens to live below the poverty level or is a member of the working poor, you will hear that they were the worst of times. If he or she happens to be a member of the black middle class, you will hear that they were not exactly the best of times. But both groups will readily admit that we survived. It has been less than a year since Ronald Reagan departed the White House, and already his legacy is being felt through the federal judicia ry that he put in place, which shall remain in place long after he is dead. In recent weeks, the Reagan Supreme Court has performed master surgery on court-ordered civil rights decrees and court-ordered mandates that have been in place and working successful ly for nearly two decades. . These civil rights rulings were designed to provide America's blacky minority access and opportunities once denied them, as well as to reme dy past wrongs perpetrated against this group for generations. Ronald Reagan came into office . saying that he was unaware that America had a race problem, and he left office declaring that America was now color blind and the playing field was level. Anyone who believes this is either naive or foolish. What we are witnessing now by the Supreme Court represents not chance but design on the part of the conservative right to turn back the clock - something that Ronald Reagan could not accomplish ""dufing His eight-year tenure in the White House. Now he has left it to his hand-picked jurists to implement his legacy. I find it ironic that a huge majori ty of Americans are infuriated over the Supreme Court decision concern I am a graduate student from the People's Republic of China where, as everybody knows, a great tragedy has taken place. As a Chi nese, i was shocked by the brutal killings and bloodshed. I cry for the dead and wounded students and all the demonstrators in my hometown. I cry for the oblit eration of the nationwide patriotic and pro-democracy movement. I cry more for the darkening of my country's future. No government has been found so cruel, totalitarian and monocratic ~ as to have killed thousands of bare handed students and residents call ing simply for democracy and free dom. In some way, the killers are like fascists. The leading killer is even worse than Hitler, because Hitler did not kill his own people. Nevertheless, the practice of the Communist Party and dictator ship of this government are not new to the Chinese people. The case of my father is a living example. He had not lived with us for more than 20 years before he was sent to a far away labor camp in the 1950s. He was suspected to have joined a non communist party even before the Communist Party came into power in 1949. Our family was torn apart. He was only allowed to visit us in Beijing once a year. I do not know my father. Today O1H0? FORMS of PESECRATING WFLfiGMmU ? mm wp. rnncs WlHITm hiwns mm. ITm ing the desecration of the flag, the symbol of our democracy for all the jgeople, yet there's very little hue and cry when the elementary rights of some of the people are being whittled away by that very same Supreme Court. Black Americans have fought and died for the flag (even before they were considered citizens) and have remained loyal to that flag in spite of the fact that their civil rights are still being curtailed in some instances. This makes the flag issue" a bit hypo critical. Peter Moore Watt . . VA Medical Center CHRONICLE MAI LB AG Our Readers Speak Out sity family congratulates you and your staff for the recognitions you received recently at the National Newspaper Publishers Association's convention in New Orleans. Having walked the hallways of your building, I know at first hand that the awards received this month merely demonstrate that your paper's high level of excellence has continued your award-winning ways. Winston-Salem State University our campus in order to cover it better. But I also know that it is the commit ment to excellence of every person there, from the front office to the press room, that maRes your paper excellent.'. We also congratulate Chronicle publisher Ernie Pitt on being elected the NNPA's second vice president. He has become an important figure in the newspaper business, which certainly speaks well for our city. Asheville Congratulations To The Editor: The Winston-Salem State Univer appreciates the coverage we get in your paper, and we feel proud that we can pull clippings from a publication that has been judged by its peers year after year as one of the best in the nation. I can personally attest to the hard work of the people in the news room who have spent time learning Again, congratulations, and the university looks forward to continu ing its good relationship with "The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly." John Slade Acting Director of Public Relations Seeds of de mocracy will grow despite tragedy A. STUDENT S VIEWPOINT By QING S. WANG he is still a stranger to me. We do not have any father-daughter feeling with each other. It is not because I do not love him, but because he has not been living with us almost since I was born. No one could count how many families throughout China have suf fered the same tragedy. Despite my own family's suffering, I still had placed high hopes in my country's new reform and open-door policy. Every Chinese person was expect ing and working for a strong and prosperous China. However, my hopes were destroyed by the ruth less government's massacre of its own innocent people. This is the biggest shame for China and great est disaster for her people. I was in San Francisco when the massacre occurred in Beijing. Nobody could control their anger and disappointment at the Chinese government's inhuman action. I par ticipated in the demonstration con cert and protest rally in San Francis co on June 4 and 5. I wrote the two words "sadness" and "hatred"' on a white band and put it around my head. I thought these two words were the only ones to represent my feelings at that moment. No one could blame me for the sharp turn^ ing from showing no interest in the Communist Party in the past to hat ing it right now. Most of the dead and wounded are students, including those from my former university. They are young- and braver and like my brothers and sisters. They are the ?future of China. Although their death is a big loss for the Chinese people, they will always be remem bered, and their heroic deeds will be written down in the first chapter of Chinese history. I believe the current govern ment is not going to last long, because it does not represent its people. Instead, it murders its peo ple who demand for their basic human rights. Everyone knows that the students' initial demands were simply for dialogues with the gov ernment, free press and getting rid of official corruption. They are rea sonable by all means. The killings in China are still going on. Some student leaders and other dissidents have been sen tenced to death. Massive arrests have started. It's conceivable that maltreatment, persecution and tor ture will follow. Obviously, this power is trying to root out and smash any vestiges of "capitalist liberalism and democracy" in order to solidify its dictatorship, a regime without humanity and legfchty of existence. From phone calls to some friends in China, I feel that most of the citizens are afraid of talking or even thinking of this painful event. Having grown up in that territory, I can imagine How fearful they would be after the witnessing of the dread ful scene of hundreds and thousands of students being machine-gunned down and beaten to death by their own "People's Army." But I believe that the seeds of democracy have been sown in China, where the blood of the stu dent martyrs permeates her ground. A larger-scale movement will even tually break out. I hope that all the people in China and the world are united against this evil government. I also hope that those compatriots who are temporarily cheated out by the massive Chinese government's propaganda will soon sharpen their vigilance and join the forces of peo ple fighting for a free China. I would make my contribution, how ever small, to this just cause. Qing S. Wang is a Chinese graduate student living in Win ston-Salem. -. . . He should be retried because I don't seem to think he's guilty.' Gwendolyn Smith Nora Love "I think he should be irled again, ^mwhit I've read, I don't think he's guilty." conviction. Others have claimed that he was railroaded and when the state Supreme Court overturned his con viction in May, his supporters again rallied demanding that the murder charge be dropped. The state Supreme Court said Mark McMIMian "I don't know too much about it. If evidence shows that he needs to be retried, he should be. If not, leave villi enough afbne." CHRONICLE CAMERA In June 1985 Darryl Eugene Hunt was convicted of murdering Deborah B. Sykes, a copy editor with the now defunct Winston Salem Sentinel. Shortly after his conviction, attorney Larry Little organized the Darryl Hunt Defense Committee and many Afro-Americans rallied in Mr. Hunt's defense. Churches sponsored bake and plate sales to raise money to pay for Mr. Hunt's legal fees. What many called uncredible witnesses were major factors in the state's case leading to Mr. Hunt's "They ought to let the man go. I dont believe he's guilty." prosecutors in Mr. Hunt's case improperly used hearsay evidence, particularly that of his then 14 year-old girlfriend. Presently, District Attorney Warren Sparrow is trying to decide whether he will dismiss charges against Mr. Hunt or retry the case. Because two prosecutors in the dis- Hunt's case. trict attorney's office worked with The defense committee has begun Hunt's defense team, Mr. Sparrow a new fund-raising effort, Mr. Sparrow is asked the attorney general's office still in the valley of decision, Mr Hunt is to take the case. serving a 40-year sentence for a 1983 The state attorney general's stabbing and local residents think the office recently notified Mr. Spar- murder charges against him should be row that it could not take Mr. dropped. Herman Strickland 4 "1 think he should have another trial because it wasn't fair the first time. I think he wasratt" roaded." Scenardo Douthft