i Red Cross: blood shortage is severe. See page A3 DAVIS LIBRAkY Li NC 27dj.4-8890 I le is slowly ticking away for census 2000 /ALKER LE Linning out and soon cen- go down in history as the t exhaustive effort ever to living man, woman and fFicials are making a final h those who did not fill 6 nsus; questionnaires and ited at home by a census cy has set up a toll-free eople who have yet to be counted. Officials with the local census office, which covers Forsyth and seven surrounding counties, say the hotline is the last resort for locals to be count ed before the census machine shuts down until 2010. U.S. Sen. John Edwards made a stop at East Winston Primary School last Friday to address the urgency of the matter. “There are probably people who have still not been counted and we want to get the word out,” Edwards said before giving out the toll-free number. Edwards made his remarks in front of several dozen youngsters from the school’s summer enrichment program and nearby Shiloan-St. Peter day care center. After the senator quizzed the children about the relevance of the census, he told them that an accurate census count could lead to more financial resources for schools. Historically, the census has under counted the nation’s children, espe cially minority children. Edwards, U.S. Rep. Mel Watt and other politicians jumped on the census bandwagon months ago, holding press conferences to promote the effort and making public service announcements for radio and television. Census officials said this year’s all- out effort to make people aware of the census paid off The local office wrapped up the door-to-door phase of this year’s cen sus operation last week. During that phase, nearly 1,700 enumerators attempted to complete census forms for those who did not return them. Marshall Jefferies of the local cen- See Census on All Photo by Kevin Walker Sen, John Edwards, left, talks with Jimmie Bonham and Victor Johnson after a press conference. Board amends GPA policy for athletes BY SAM DAVIS THE CHRONICLE • .. '■ ters of the audience listen to a talk by businessman Joe Dudley, Photos by Paul Collins A controversial measure passed late last year - designed to raise the standards for attendance and grades by Students participat ing in extracurricular activities in Forsyth County’s public high schools - has been amended. Last Thursday the Winston- Salem/Forsyth County School Board voted to change the new guidelines before they could ever be implemented. Citing a need to stress acade mics to student-athletes and others participating in extra-class activi ties, the local School Board decid ed last November to institute poli cies more stringent than those imposed by the N.C. High School Athletic Association (NCHSAA). It included mandating that stu dents could not have more than 10 days of absences during a semester and all students had to compile at least a 2.0 grade-point average in the quarter immediately preceding their participation in sports or other extracurricular activities. However, after much delibera tion and debate among principals and coaches, the School Board decided to reconsider its position. According to several sources, one influential principal brought the attention back to the board after one particular student-athlete in the system failed to achieve a 2.0 grade-point average and would have been ruled ineligible for the fall athletic season. That incident See GPA on A9 piritual Gathering Activist group may er Memorial hosts Western N. C. ME Zion Church Conference set up branch in city BY CHERIS HODGES THE CHRONICLE 'l|, COLLINS ONICLE rst want to share with you ajtod has done for me....He illy changed my life,” busi- |q Joe Dudley said as he •ijed a crowd of several hun- :‘people Friday at Goler 'filial AME Zion Church, the ' I ■the noth session of the ill North Carolina Annual ihnce of African Methodist tjlial Zion Church. Dudley is Wsident and chief executive ^f Dudley Products, a hair uty products company in Kernersville. “I have built my business on the trust of God and teachings of Jesus Christ. I want to tell you when you put your hands in the hands of the Man...you cannot help but succeed. He brought me from ... mentally retarded and told me that you could make it with the help of my mama. He said, ‘Joe, I know that you are retarded but that’s OK.’” Dudley later said, “Integrity is the doorway, gateway to wisdom, which is creativity:” See Goler AME on A11 Joe Dudley, president and chief executive officer of Dud ley Products, gestures to make a point about how God has helped him overcome obstacles to success. The National People’s Democ ratic Uhuru Movement is a social organization that wants to change the system for poor and minority people across the globe. The group was founded in 1991 in Chicago by the African People’s Socialist Party. There are more than seven branches of the group across the country in cities like Philadelphia, Baltimore, Chicago and Tallahassee. Now there are plans to bring a branch to Winston-Salem. NPDUM is a group that mir rors the ideology of the Black Pan ther Party. The group’s national platform includes “demands” for community control of the police, democratic rights for African Peo ple in the United States, control over schools, mandatory African history in public schools, end to the court system and prison system, / and other demands. • The local branch of NPDUM - will focus on problems unique to 1 the city, said Storm Foreman, ” membership coordinator. The problems the group identi- ’ fied in Winston-Salem are police ■{ harassment and housing. * According to Scimel Loyd, a member of NPDUM, the group ’ gives a voice to the poor and ”, minorities. ' “No one speaks for Africans, See Activist on Alo; HAWS wants to narrow digital divide BYT. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE end. Photo by Kevin Walker rk with SuccessMaker software at the Happy Hill Gardens computer lab. first HAWS has opened so far. When it comes to people living in pub lic housing, the so-called digital divide is more like the Grand Canyon. The divide has come to symbolize the growing schism between the haves and the have-nots in terms of access to computer technology. The term was first coined when it became apparent that access ramps to the Information Super Highway are too few in minority communities. The disparity is greatest for the nation’s poorest citizens. The Winston-Salem Housing Authori ty is in the middle of an initiative to lessen the technology deficit for public housing residents here. HAWS recently opened its first com puter lab in the Happy Hill Gardens com munity. Plans are to open a lab in the other three major public housing commu nities - Cleveland Avenue Homes, Kim berley Park and Piedmont Park - by year’s “Many residents do not have access to computers because they do not have trans portation to get to the libraries,” said Oscar Pilson, director of management information systems at HAWS. The lab has been a welcomed addition to the after-school tutoring program that HAWS has had in place in Happy Hill and other communities for years now. The lab caters to young people, though computer software is available to help adults prepare for the GED test. HAWS is hoping to expand its services for adults as the program matures, Pilson said. “We are starting first with the children, but this program is really in its infancy,” he said. All the labs will offer SuccessMaker, innovative software that measures stu dents’ learning levels in math and reading and then prescribes exercises tailor-made for them. Pilson believes that HAWS is the first housing authority in the region to use Suc cessMaker. The Happy Hill lab has a com puter instructor who leads the children in various applications. Three teachers are also available to the students. Pilson said once SuccessMaker pin points trouble spots for students, the teach ers can “target teach.” With the analysis reports from SuccessMaker, teachers can also group students together with similar difficulties. “(SuccessMaker) allows the teachers to move faster and the students have fewer questions,” Pilson said. After completing a brief series of exer cises, SuccessMaker can quickly determine at what grade level a student is function ing. Many of the young people who use the lab test below their grade level. Pilson pointed out several of these students as he scrolled through analysis information last week. Some students tested at several grade levels below their actual level. “We don’t panic here,” Pilson, who See HAWS on AlO