Watt: same man in different district I Md Watt ? the mine man who has reprc sented the 12th Concffwumal Dietrict for the pert n yean, bat its touch to oouwler bin While the )2th ie ctiO overwhelmingly Oeamnl, makeup chanced Gone ir the dm when the 12th mean dered from mid-Mecklenburg County to Durham. Over the taut, it has gone from being a predominantly Mack dietrict dngncd to elect an African American to juet over 35 percent Hack. Writ, a Charlotte attorney who Mis on the House Judiciary Committee, ? bang challenged by Roma County dentist Scott Kndk. KhA. who upset two Meck lenburg BfpfHfrsriu in the ptf f^rr prinm ry, did not return a request for an interview From his Rowan County base; Readie s viewed a strong challenger for Watt in a majority white district. -This is Watt's strongest challenge" said stale Rep. Frank BaOaacc. "He is running as hard as he can to make sure he will be safe but you don't know until the night of the elec tion." Watt's campaign has been hampered by a shortened election season due to the legal maneuvering by opponent* of ? majority Hack d'tfri*'! Coo|/m' extended Marion. But aa Nov )mui. thecampaign n hant ing np. 1 im. candidates boat had two tclrvncd debates tfaw week. Kendk waa joined by tri Repubhean't No. 2 man in Coopm* Kept. Dick Armey for aeveraJ tton Monday Hi* campaign rhetoric Uhwi the Repob Ikan lie*, "irwca^me for Nmjntjw UJL SaSagatdewMd drbatr with Wari laat week. Keadk a a native of Wmt Vmn who moved to Rowan Coanty in the 19&9 He's a member of the Rowan Coanty Bootd of letHMwAII Winston-Salem Greensboro High Point srf.xxv n^i Jta Chronicle FORSYTH CNTY PUB .. 660 w 5TH ST #2 Choice for African American News and Information ?Mmiil oddre??: wschronO??tunliii?BwJ.n?t Audit details HAWS' financial problems By KEVIN WALKER It started with a bang but then abruptly ended. The restoration of Oak Creek Apartment*? located in a aeduded sec tion of Ogbura Station? was supposed to provide over 40 Section 8 units for city residents But construction on the project, which was started as a joint venture between HAWS and the city of Winston-Saiem, came to a complete standstill last summer during its final stages Neglected lawns and parking lots, boarded-up windows and doors along with unfinished electrical wiring have rendered the complex unfit for human habitation. According to documents seen by The Chronicle, the Oak Creek debacle and HAWS' attempts to reduce the city's role in the effort, was one of many issues the board of commissioners considered before firing Executive Direc tor Marie Roseboro hut Tuesday According to documents, HAWS failed to adequately communicate with the Winston-Salem Housing A Neighborhood Services Department on the project And last summet; for reasons undent; HAWS boarded up the units just as they were hemming to be wired for electricity. . ' . , * ^adUPhfoBkooks^mveotor of the drpartmsal for thf Winston-Salem Housing A Neighborhood Services Department, said his agency will now complete the project with HAWS, but that HAWS did stop the project "The housing authority stopped all activity on the project for a couple of months .I don't know why thty decided that," Brooks said. Brooks said that once William Andrews became chairman of the HAWS Board of Commissioners, work on the year-and-half-old project began again. SKHAWSomAIO - uroup set to take steps to bring Roseboro back By KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE With a little help from her friend*, Marie Roseboro may soon rebound from her firing last week. Monday night during a meeting held at First Baptist Church, Rose boro supporters laid out a plan of attack aimed at possibly getting Rose boro her job back. According to sources who attended the meeting, Roseboro ? the for I mer executive director of the housing authority? was noticeably absent, r But many pmmi?nt city leaders were on hand. According to sources, included among the 15 to 20 people who attended the meeting were members of a local Muslim organization, Forsyth County Commissioners Walter Marshall and Earline Parmon; board of education member Victor Johnson; Dolores Smith, head of the Winston-Salem Urban League; James Grace, head of the East Winston Community Development Corporation; D.D. Adams, a former HAWS commissioner, community activist, the Rev. Lee Faye Mack; and Ellen Hazzard, who sits on the current HAWS board which dismissed Rose boro. Supporters were urged to contact members ot the board of aldermen, the mayor, Housing and Urban Development officials and members of the U.S. Congress to voice opposition to Roseboto's dismissal. The group also discussed the formation of a "legal committee" to advise Roseboro on possible legal matters and sites for future picketing, sources said. Roseboro was terminated after a majority of the five member HAWS Set Oroup on A3 Board's only blacks vow to serve city By KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE It angers Sharlene Davis that most of the members of the city/county school board don't look like her or her children. As an African American resident of the Northern side of the city, Davis feels there is not anyone to speak up for issues unique to black children in her area. The board is just not fairly representative," she said. "A white person doean't know how to talk for our children, most of them want to see our children expelled or put out of school." Davis says she is not overreacting. In fact, she said many board members were unresponsive when she tried to move her kids out of a "pearly white" school into one more racially diverse. And although there are three at-large spots on the board - for which every citizen in Forsyth Coun ty gets to vote - they are continuously filled by whites, Davis said she is so fed up that she doesn't know where she will choose to send her kids in the future. "I really don't want to be bothered with the Win ston-Salem/ Forsyth County Schools and their prej udices...We need our own representation, we just can't keep bombarding Mr. (Victor) Johnson and M& (Geneva) Brown with all our issues," Davis said. Come Nov. 3, unless Davis moves many miles and several zip codes away, she will not be casting a vote for either Johnson or Brown. But voters in their mostly black East Winston dis trict won't have to make any hard choices; they are Sh Faction on A10 Alston running V for seat % | %y DAMON FORD ffi THifHIWttiai Wj It WW a proud Nigel Alston I who came to his grandfather J with trophy in hand and haad held high. ? - * - i The high school senior had , just received the athlete of the year award from RJ. Reynolds and couldn't wait to tell his grandfather. /. "I expected a pat on the i back," Alston said. B u t that wasn't what he received. "He looked at me and said 'I'm not sur prised you received that, I would have been sur prised if you had not,*" Alston /. said. r.j Alston's inflated chest sunk ,'l a little then, but today the 46? [ t year-old - who's vying for one ' V of three at-large seats on the K Winston-Salem/Forsyth County School Board - says those words could help solve the prob lem of underachieving students in classrooms. 1 "We should expect our chil dren to do well in school," Alston said. "Our children will achieve more once teachers begin to expect more out of them. Children are our ftiture, * but I don't think we put enough interest in it as we should." * This is the second go-round f. for Alston who's spent the past 24 years at Integon Insurance. Alston lost a hotly contested school board race in 1994. See Alston on A10 ' k Black voters crucial in battle for Senate By JOHN MINTBR African Americans voters could very well send Democrat John Edwards to the U.S. Senate and elect other N.C. Democ rats in dozens of political races on Nov. 3. That's assuming enough of them vote. With Election Day fast approaching, political pundits are predicting a low turnout in an "off year" election. That makes the state's black voters, who usu ally vote Democratic, the margin of vic tory in any close race. And a grassroots effort is underway to mobilize blacks, especially for Edwards, the Raleigh trial lawyer chal lenging the stage's junior senator, Lauch Faircloth, a conservative Republican. Edwards, a boyish political newcom er, has been run ntng a careful cam paign since announcing last year his run for the senate. But he's been unable to appear too pro black and liberal in a state known for electing conserva tives. Some blacks Mwvnfs wonder if Edwards strategy has been able to excite blacks, though. Edwards, for his part, says he speaks for all voters who have not had a voice in Washington with Faircioth and Jesse Helms, in the U.S. Senate. Both are con servatives. Since the white vote in N.C. often splits about equally among liberals and conservatives, the black vote is the bal ance of power, particularly when it approaches SO percent. "Basically I'm out there working as hard as I know how in all parts of the community, also in the African Ameri can community. I've got to get the mes sage out there," Edwards said Tuesday. "Me doing it in person is the best way, the most effective way. "We're also organizing the most effec tive way we can in all parts of the com munity from a grassroots perspective. We have put together a great 'get out the vote' effort. The grassroots effort is very important. This election is going to be decided by turnout...getting people to polls." Edwards said Faircloth's negative ads are aimed at depressing the turnout of Democrats, particularly African Ameri can voters." A Faircloth aide was quoted recently as saying the negative ads worked because many voters were not smart enough to discern truth from innuendo, half truths and untruths. Faircloth, who has lost ground in { recent weeks, has hired Arthur Finkel- J stein, a hard-ball strategist from New York to replace pollster Neil Newhouse, just two weeks from Election Day PoHti- ? cal pundits think Finkelstein, who has * ?' . s? Mwwrds m At i . . Opposites attract WIM?T0M?BAIEM/fopsv HCOUJ CAREER ANO AOrvu^ie ^ . .ajia*. . :a, ? ?^j * MHmn fawrtem lywMhw. nt?i>yit>? nm? m4K-tfm!Lr Ahfn I ? MASTERCARD, VISA AMD AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTEDM X ?:. : - : * 7