V - \ THURSDAY JANUARY 3, 1991 NEWS HOTLINE 723-8448 28 PAGES TH!S WEEK ' " Academics wins! Harold "Happy" Hairston establishes youth fund. PAGE B1 wm '91 Recession could signal opportunity By PATRICIA SMITH-DEERNG * v - 1 Community News Editor " . ^ ? . ? * ' ? ' i This New Year finds economic analysts finally con ceding that the recession everyone feared is, in fact, a reality although many feel it is of short duration; But for vthe local African-American community, that news, while gloomy is not necessarily rejjsonlor pessimism according to some business leaders Jt is estimated that one million jobs will be affected; Economic Forecast nationwide. Nationally, the economic downturn rs afferting banks, and savings and loan institutions with a total of 169 commercial and savings banks failing in ? ?? ? y ? > - \ , . ' * Photo by Lester Davis Lewis Tyrone Tate was in need of medical assistance New Year's Day. A deceased person call came into the police dispatch office. But when police responded t<o the call in the parking lot of^ local restaurant, they found Tate and another man semi-conscious in a car. BothTnen were taken to Baptist Hospitaf/out Tate was kept and is listed in satisfactory condition. Police are continuing their investigation of what happened to the men. 1990, as well as 211 savings and loans turning up insol vent, according to Federal pcposit Insurance Corpora tion and the Resolution Trust Corporation figures. Although not as high as previous years, it still does not bode well for the halls of finance. The U. S. Commerce Department's Index of LeadT ing Indicators, the government's primly economic fore Please see page A 12 Black students ampuses Ohrbnicle Wire Service GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) _ If JJ. McEachem had it to do over again, he says he wouldn't .attend a predominantly- white university. He'd probably pick Howard University, a histori cally-black institution, instead of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. ! f ' "There arc a lot of changes that need to be made at UWCG that have taken such a long time. It's really frustrating," said McEachem, president of the school's .. J^eo-QJack Society. "A lot of bl^ck students arc dissatis ficd.T f ; ;? : _ ; , Among minority students in the Southj4hat dis ^ satisfaction is widespread. A report issued last week says black studentgon predominantly- white campuses, v^and white studcnts7)Tr*pccdominantly-black campuses, are more likely to feel undeNs^rve^and underappreciat ed. In fact, aboul half the students in both groups - said they would not select the same college again. # This is one of the key findings in the report, "Racial Issues on Campu?: How Students View Them." Please see page A 1 1 r Grand Jury to Qontinue term Federal probe could be v reason for extension . By pUDY ANDERSON Chronicle Managing Editor 5 - In an unusual move, the chief U.S. District Court . Judge for the-middle district of North Carolina has signed an ordfcr to hold the present federal grand jury beyond its usual year-long term pt service. Judge Richard C. Erwin confirmed that he-signed an order in early December that had come from the U.S. ^ .4- * rrf* Please se&$?ge A 1-1 " The Haiti work has paid off for me. " -Capt. Richard W. Holden- ? Highway Patrol gets first black commander Chronicle Staff Report For the first uync in the 61 -year history of the N.C. Highway Patrol, an African- American has been made a captain and commander of troop that covers an 11 -bounty area in the southeastern sectton of the Richard AY. Holden, who had been a lieutenant based in Raleigh, * V received the proituxaoiv-Thursday, Dec. 20. His promotion means his new base of operation will be out of the Payette vi lie area. Fayetteville is_^ /here Holden began his career with te patrol. He will command Troop Holden, v^ell aware that he is the patrol's^first African-American troop commandcr, i s W& mm high visibility the position has brought him. "The hard work has paid off for me," Holden said , "I hope this will sfcrve as an exam . Please-see page A10 Local sailor's safety in tfie Gulf is mother's worry ByRUOYA^ERSOH Chronicfe Managing Editor For Marjorie E. Evans, the last three months have been extremely tough on her. But the new year may prove to be even tougher She, J ik%, so many mothers of servicemen and women now poised for battle in the Persian Gulf, maintains an uneasy vigil as the January 15 deadline for Irac*?ro withdraw its forccs from Kuwait approaches. . ^ Ms. Evans has three children. Two are in the military. Her daughter, Angela Eaton, an Air-Force milit^pdl iceman, is . <e ?soon to be sent to duty;: nf< Panama, Ms. Evans' said. But her son; Nayy Petty of IV ' * cer 2nd Class Thomas M. MeLendon, is on board the amphibious assault ship U.S.S. Iwo Jima in the Persian Gulf as . '.v ? parvof Operation Desert Shield. "6ach time the phone rings, my heart v::, ???'V . x > "I really don't understand all of it. Whyrdoes it have to be \ - like this?" -Marjorie Evans skips a beiftT.Ms. Kvans said during a recen tan tcrvi<? w. $hc said her son, a 198 \ gradual? of North Forsyth High School, has been in the Navy for 1 ^ years, is mar ried and has three children; They Itve'in Nor folk, Va., where he is stationed. She ;said she isn't the only one in her family sweating the* dangerous situation her son . J* in. .? ' : "His wif^ keeps the television tuned _ to CNN, like 1 do. The children keep her bu$yf but at night when everything slq&s down^she starts to think about him and ^ cries. Bui she's "holding up, " Ms. Evans' said. y She explained that strcuhd her daugh tcr-in-htw have already gone through^tygX hcart-stopping experiences since her son was sent to the Persian Gult in October.'," Thcitrst was Oct. 31, she sakfcr when an ^explosion in. a boiler room, of the I^jro ?. Please see page AW 2 iLii ? v ?? - ? 1 ' 1 Thomas Mc London

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