Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Feb. 6, 1986, edition 1 / Page 3
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Chronicle y> The (Fredericksburg, Texas) "I'd like to subscribe to the G it's that good - even though I Ih across the country." As for the first-place awai pearance and design, Paul Durh Diboll, Texas, Free Press, noted have we seen a weekly with su clean layout throughout." Diboll, in awarding the top spc photographs, praised C photographer James Parker "technical competence and c while saying that the Chronicle cellent example of how photog and should be used in weekly new In the feature writing categor Chronicle Assistant Editor Robi Ronald Mcl showing together our grief and sadness, perhaps we may find the strength to bear our sorrow and the courage to renew our hope.Words will never suffice to measure the horror and sacrifice of those we have lost. They were very different, yet in their mission, their quest,? they held so much in common with one another -- and with us." Mayor Forbis also read from a Greensboro City Council resolution that praised McNair as an honorable man who loved his country. Although each speaker remembered McNair in his own personal way, each stressed that McNair's struggle for excellence must be continued by today's and tomorrow's students. 4 4The greatest tribute we can give him is to be as great as he was," said Dr. James Gooch, president of A&T's national alumni association. Hsdale's frk January that charges could be filed against Tisdale pending the outcome of the Oakley case. Whether to charge Tisdale in a case such as this, is the decision of the officer at the scene of the accident M/wmh said. As in any case, he said, the officer may receive advice or guidance from superiors. Capt. B.R. Pearman is Setzer's superior. Pearman said he is referring all questions about the case to Assistant Chief Sweat. Sweat was unavailable for comment at press time. Tisdale, whose office prosecutes all drunk-driving-related cases, has been personally involved in such cases before. In 1991, he pleaded guilty in Greensboro to DWI charges, received a suspended 29-day jail sentence and paid a $100 fine. He also paid $31 in court costs and at$10,000 rais< w arrested to satisfy an angry white public and then prosecuted on no real evidence. Stennis said Conference members have decided to let the numerous checks collected during the program clear before sending the money directly to Hunt's appeal lawyers. Hunt is being represented by James Ferguson and Adam Stein, of the Charlotte-based Ferguson, Stein, Watt, Wallace and Atkins law firm. Stein, who works out of the firm's office in Chapel Hill, said Thursday that a proposed record on appeal is due to be filed in the climpmvui PaiiH War F#>K 1A SIBIC wJlipiClllt vvUIi Uj I vU? 1^# Stein said the defense team will file appropriate motions before then. An overflow crowd of more than 2,000 packed the church Jan. 20 to hear speakers and choirs commemorate the life of Dr. King on the first national holiday in his honor. They also entertained a special appeal by the Rev. John Mendez, the co- ^ chairman of- the Dairy! Hunt Ins seven aw: Standard. who is now a part-t hronicte - paper, won first pla it halfway "Alzheimer's Diseai Medical Mystery." d in ap- Professor Martin am of the University of Texas at , "Seldom Department judged tl ich sharp, that Ms. Adams "doc us about this disease t >t in use of us - one of the towns hronicte Gibson also judged for his vice entries and aw* ireativity" third place for its exte is "an ex- Deborah Sykes murd< raphs can trial of Darryl Hunt, s papers." case. y, former "In our opinion," In Adams, newspaper, gave its re Voir From Page Dr. James Johnson, chairman of the faculty senate, called McNair a great American and compared him with Booker T? Washington, Denmark Vessey and Mary McLeod Bethune. The struggle and spirit of * 1? 1 mwnwi miui oc conunuca ai AAT and around the world so other McNairs may come into their own, said Jackson, himself a presidential contender in 1984. 'There are some potential Ronald McNairs out there,'* said Jackson. "There are some Ronald McNairs all over this building today." As a tribute to McNair, Fort presented the students in the space shuttle program a plaque in honor of McNair from the Guilford County Board of Commissioners. The plaque will be permanently enshrined in the building where the space shuttle program is housed. In addition, Ahrens told the audience that aid tended a state-sponsored DW1 school. Aiding and. abetting a drunk driver is called "allowing" in police terminology. It is a common-law violation that refers to helping someone commit a crime. According to police war rants, allowing DWI is "unlawfully and willfully allowing another person to operate a vehicle while subject to an impairing substance." Allowing violators are charged under the DWI statutes but are punished under separate statutes. The violator may be a fined up to $100 and must be sentenced to prison for from one to 60 days. The term of imprisonment can be suspended and community service, one day's sentence and special probation, or loss of driving privileges for 30 days, or any combination of the conditions i ed From Page A1_ Defense Committee. Mendez asked the audience to remember Dr. King by supportins tk? vu. v~i: i J HM? HIV VflllMC IUII? UCUCVCU 1X1 most: justice. Mendez led off a roll call of the Conference's member-churches with a $1,000 check from his own church, Emmanuel Baptist. Mendez said the Conference had asked the ministers to gather collections from their various dK Volu Frt CALL EXCH/ 7484 L ards From Page i imc reporter for the coverage t ce for her story on from oth< se: This Century's newspaper ingness u J. Gibson of the might anti ; Austin's Journalism . . B tie category and said ^ ^ r , L T. ,, ty Times s a fine job of telling awarded ? >y focusing on one of Chr0niclt ipeople." I the community ser- "1 don'i irded the Chronicle many not nsive coverage of the heck. I be ;r and the arrest and Bishop sai< the defendant in the Ms. Adi place awar Gibson wrote, "the called "Li adership the kind of Cold A1 McNair's name will be engraved on the two payloads the students are preparing for a future space shuttle mission.? Ahrens told the audience that, during the weeks when McNair was preparing for this shuttle mission, he asked the school to send him something with A&T's name on it. McNair, said Ahrens, had an Aggie pennant and a picture of the school's mascot, a bulldog, on board with him when he died. Dr. Samuel Massenberg, university affairs officer for M ACA an/4 an A AT ~ unwn cum oil rux>i |^l tlUUttlCt said McNair was a Renaissance man. A&T's memorial service for McNair and the six others who died aboard the Challenger was carried live by several television and radio station^. For many, it was the only way to see and hear the program. may be required instead. Tisdale was unavailable for comment on Wednesday morning. Assistant District Attorney Walter Holden appeared in court on Jan. 7 to prosecute the case. Miss Oakley is beins represented by attorney Dan Johnson. The accident occurred at the 1700 block of Reynolda Road at 12:16 a.m. Tisdale*s car collided with a 1979 Honda driven by Todd Apperson Mercy of Charlotte, causing $3,000 damage to Mercy's vehicle and $1(200 damage to Tisdale's car. Tisdale suffered a cracked bone in his foot. Tisdale said in January that he was not drunk on the night of the accident. He said he would have been charged if the police thought he had done anything wrong. IIIHIWIIWIIIIimilWIIIWIIIIIHIIWII?IWIIIIIIIIIIIIH congregations before the program. He estimated that 80 percent of the money came from the churches. 'This should send a message to (District Attorney Donald K.) Tisdale and others downtown that you can't just railroad someone and then expect people to sit by and do nothing," Mendez said Friday. "It's particularly Please see page A15 ITO a il f nteer tp event Child Abuse sip Families to Cope ?e Your Care and cperience timbur?#m?nt for mltoQa and oth?r expenses.) INGE/SCAN >Q28 V I I M hat readers probably did not get rr area media sources. ... This showed enterprise and the will> reach beyond coverage one cipate in light of a major crime." ill Bishop of The Bastrop Counin Smith field, Texas, said he le third place in editorials to the on "guts alone." t think this writer will win over < already believers, but what the t he/she has a lot of readers," i. uns also was awarded a thirdd for news writing for an article vingstone Students Give Jesse ption." The words, "I can't believe they didn't use the bigger Corbett Sports Center/' were said over and over. One lady standing just outside the gym's interior door, drove from Dunn, approximately 150 miles away, to attend the service. And, although she could hear only bits and pieces of the service, she stood the entire 90 minutes. After all, it was a fellow Aggie she was remembering. / j i } EIHHlikeanlR I I don't war I to a long ^^^ rtoestratE f f nl *Es **' ^'kmB Ki WL A VWVI V V you can short-tern Interest rates all Wachovia optio including the examp shown, are among t highest anywhe - * Choose the one that si: ? you best, or combi them for greater fie bility. A Personal Ban! can tell you mo PdtriliylittaM r>qqir? wbrtantial toterwit penaitm for tarty witkdnwtl of uim dkpowti ffcctteasof 1/30/86 (wbjact to chcaftdaflyl 1 ^ T' W w w V m V The Chronicle, Thursday S SUBSCRIBE P. D/IV A ^ - otrn, ^-| g ONLY I I * rj. * \*4 >'l .?/> iji:" r l ' AND M, Fill Out & Mail with Pa CIRCULATION DE WINSTON-SALEM P.O. BOX 3154 WINSTON-SALEM 722-8624 I ~ Enter my one-year subscription Chronicle. Enclosed Is my checl | amount of $18.72. (Add $5.00 foi ! Name Address | City - Sta I Mwmm> ! V'-.t* 'rMl ' *: ' j3T51 tCFll! -gggggftfkJfl V/, / 'F.#? ritha^k:havK icxxnbinelong 1, and no-term nn i 1 ns! Long-Tferm Short-Term les Annual Annual :he Percentage Rate Percentage Rate P ? 9.05% 7.90% m Annual Yield Annual Yield _ 9.47% 8.22% CCT Fmr yrar fiwd-rttr deport One ywr drprwit ^0 S500 minimum 1500 minimum Wachovia Bank&frust [ Rates > W m m t ? y ? I > v % r , February 6, '1986-Page A3 A/0I/V | 872 ! * II 1 ?? v 5 lyment to: ^ PARTMENT CHRONICLE , NC 27102 J to the Winston-Salem (/money order for the r out-of-town delivery J- - . i te Zip | -?: I K j ? i Ivt iIRA, -term, options. 4 No-Term Annual ercentage Rate 6.90% Annual Yield 7.14% Variable rarr rtcposjf So minimum Member F.D. I.C. * 4 < ?- ' t ( 'VP /" '?*. * <> ? < * ? - - '
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Feb. 6, 1986, edition 1
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