Waging Wai
The battle pl^n has been
Clara Muhammad Schcx
against ignorance.
Feeple, A*.
^ V\
VOL. XI NO. 3
EV Js^H
The Grim R<
North Carolina A&1
frightfully aware that
No dice
Castleshi
By ROBIN ADAMS
Chronicle Assistant Editor
Residents in the predom
Woods housing developi
developers who want to bt
dominiums near U.S. 158
Road.
According to the residen
Luster Burnett and Dan D
"I'm not opposed to qu
resident Harold Holmes,
were exposed to was hot a
"It's hard to believe yc
two-thirds apartments a
dominiums/' he said. "Y<
people for the two types o
Said resident Virgil Sin
?
Walter Marshall, who
Woods, agreed.
"He (Donathan) rei
anything," Marshall saic
rezoning first and then he i
just leaves a lot of doubt i
Could 'he
By ROBIN ADAMS
Chronicle Assistant Editor
In an age of female vie
presidential candidates an
A?tvAnaiife /VMilrl U/inc(nr
cuu wuauM| wuiu uuii/i
Salem State University'
next chancellor be
woman?
If so, she'll be a firs
statewide.
The 32-metn^er Univers
ty of North Carolina Boar
of Governors appointed th
system's first-ever femi
chancellor, Jane Milley, t
head the North Carotin
School of the Arts in Jul]
Still, no woman has ev<
been selected chancellor c
mm kappas
i set in the Sister mm
3l's fund-raising drive
finsti
U.S.P.S. No. 067910
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?aper Wears Shi
f quarterback Atvin Grier ?
Winston-Salem State's Dan Bi
1 117- ^ J
re wooasreswi
"I'n
Hom
inantly black Castleshire nQj {
nent have said no to
lild apartments and conand
Old Belews Creek ?
Th
its, the plan presented by zone<
onathan is "vague." distri
ality development," said dwell
"However, the plan we city's
quality plan."
iu can build a unit with ./J
nd one-third as con- build
5u get different kinds of * cy 1
f housing." planr
ipson Jr.: ''The plan is
u ? desig
WVU AW i&i - ~
also lives in Castleshire
to me
illy hasn't proposed Sept.
1. "He's asking for a The
will draw up the plans. It devele
in folks' minds."
' be a 'she' th
a traditional, four-year in_
stitution in the UNC
system.
And though Milley's appointment
is a
l~ breakthrough, said Dr.
s Virginia Newell, it won't
wssu
j. TNI MAtCH got A CWANCIllOt
d
ie have much bearing on what
le happens at WSSU.
o "I don't think it should
1a have anything to do with
f. it," said Newell, who serves
sr as chairman of the depart>f
ment of WSSU's
J
> TO SELL 1,
The Tw
Winston-S
aulder Pads
appears after him. A&
ryson is prevailed. Stoi
znts oppose coi
i not opposed to quality c
>everf the plan we were ex
1 quality plan."
? He
e developers are asking that the
1 R-5 (a secluded single-far
ct), be rezoned R-2-S (two-staj
ings), said Ronnie Grubbs, a p
planning department.
e new zoning would allow th
the complex in two stages, Gn
could propose a tentative site p
ling board and the Board of A
lg approval from both boards,
n a final plan arid U rug ii back
frfor appiOvM.Ttegtevetepers
jet with the city's planning boai
13.
j two-phase plan is more cc
jpers, Grubbs said, because it
nul.. ... .... A"
noaso see Mayo M
is time?
mathematics and computer
science department. *4Each
school has its own unique
objective and WinstonSalem
State is different
from the School of the
Arts.
"The School of the Arts
is a special school that has
nothing to do with a fouryear
liberal arts school/'
Newell said. "That's a
school for the performing
11 Uaiia
WUI, w C sun Iiavw iiu
chancellor of a four-year,
baccalaureate-degree
school.
"But it's a start," she
said. "It's a beginning. I
Please see page A12
OOP CHRONICLES
P Sophomore Surpl
Two Spartan sophomores took the
-^defense by surprise, giving Mt. Tak
win.
Sports, M.
alem
in Lily s a wara-winning weeKly alem,
N.C. Thursday, Septembe
' +
K "":-i: -: > vffl^H
Hp*'
/T
surged to an early lead but WSSU finally 1
to the planning -x ^
ZfThu?d? Horn Qf p|enfy
>st-effective to Jazz musician Dizzy Gillespie, u
allows them to his ballooning cheeks, thrilled a
12 by James Parker).
Gty receivesfunds
to subsidize rents
Bv GREG BROWN
Chronicle Staff Writer
The federal government has given WinstonSalem
a $141,700 grant to rehabilitate substandard
rental housing, but city community development
officials say the grant could bring nearly
$542,000 to the local economy over a five-year
period.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development awarded the grant for rehabilitating
rental nousing in low- and middle-income
neighborhoods two weeks ago. As many as 28
apartment units could be repaired under the program,
which provides matching grants as high as
50 percent of the total costs of improvements.
Please see page Ab
THIS WEEKB
rise
Glenn
?or a 9-6 jfl
wmrz - vim
ironu
r 13, 1984 35 cents
Food Lit
XT A Art
Nine-week boycott <
with dramatic llth-i
By ALBERT NICKERSON
Chronicle Staff Writer
CHARLOTTE - Though
members of the NAACP had
donned their marching shoes and
braced for a long battle, they
wound up celebrating instead last
weekend, following the signing of ?
a "Fair Share" agreement with
Food Lion Inc.
During a dramatic "Cage the J{
Lion" rally last Saturday in Mt. '
Moriah Primitive Baptist *
Church, NAACP ExecutiveDirector
Benjamin Hooks announced
to a cheering audience
that an agreement had been
reached after a nine-week boycott
of the grocery chain.
"We congratulate Food Lion
for showing a corporate sense of
social responsibility," ' Hooks
said.
Local NAACP President
Patrick Hairston agreed. "I'm
pleased with the agreement, and I
believe we got what we were ask v
<
HQI
iflraiI
I
/
fho is as well known for his soul
udiences last weekend at the anr
Parmon won
By ROBIN ADAMS
Chronicle Assistant Editor
The county's top-ranked
Republican wasted little time letting
his Democratic counterpart
know where he stands.
Shortly after Earline Parmon
was sworn in as the first black
chairman of the county
Democratic Party's Executive
Committee, the GOP's John
Cavanagh sharply criticized her.
Parmon would be spending
part of her workdays conducting
Democratic Party business,
Cavanagh said. And, because
Parmon's job as a tutorial director
for the East Winston Restoration
Association is partially fund
' >
FTAi^^B
m $ ?B3b^I I
^/p
It/
26 Pages This Week
on signs
'pact
of stores ends
hour agreement
ing for," said Hairston.
Hooks and the 64 local branch
directors had scheduled their national
board meeting in Charlotte
to indicate the seriousness of the
Food Lion boycott. It was the
first time such a meeting had
"We congratulate Food Lion
for showing a corporate *
sense of social responsibility."
-Dr. Benjamin Hooks
been held outside of New York
City.
"Get on the phone and call
your local branches and tell them
we have an agreement?" Hooks
shouted to the audience.
Eugene McKinley, vice president
of human resources for
Food Lion, said, in a statement
released over the weekend: "The
Please see page A3
I
r i afj JM
K-v I- 1 m
mm
ful trumpet playing as he is for
lual Streetscene festival (photo
't step down
ed by federal money, he argued,
taxpayers would be financing her
partisan efforts.
?t ., . 1 A_1 ?
inow inai rarmon nas laitcn a
leave of absence from her position
to coordinate a voter
registration campaign, Cavanagh
has again taken the offensive.
If Parmon intends to run the
voter registration campaign, he
has said, she should either resign
from the party and run the cam
paign or let someone else run it.
But Parmon said Cavanagh's
criticism won't affect her plans.
"It's an attention-getting
thing," Parmon said. "What he
said didn't bother me but what
did bother me was the
Please see page A3