Johnson from page A1 by almost S700. Conrad, who got 31 percent of the vote to Burke s 69. also outspent the alderman. Btfffces largest contnburorwas Logan Burke, her husband, who gave S200. Conrad had some of the city's best-known African-American busi nessmen in his corner with Lafayette Jones, president of SMSI, leading the pack with a SI, 000 con tribution. Thomas Trollinger, owner of Contract Office Furnishings Inc., donated $300, and Chandler Lee, owner of Classic Cadillac, gave $250. Alderman Larry Womble of the Southeast Ward, who trounced bis two Democratic rivals by cap turing 65 percent of the vote, raised slightly more than $1,400, of which he spent only a third. Most of that was on printing and postage. Womble had a total of 29 con tri bu tore. ?The IsrfeW contributor ? - was Weston, who gave S500. Cooper, from the board of elec tions. said that what candidates do with any money leftover is entirely up to them. In the past, she said, some candidates have thrown par ties for their campaign workers. Johnson, with about SI. 600 left in her coffer, said that she will use that money to finance her campaign as it heads toward the general elec tion in November. Johnson empha sized on the night she won the pri mary that she will have to face Republican Wilbert Andrew Allen 'Sr. and wasn't about to take the rest of the election for granted. List of Contributors and Amount Joycdyn Johnson Sie wan Carter Pauline Jackson .... Feicia Mack Sylvia Pinyan - Dinah McNeill Frederick Johnson. .54.00 ?.45.00 55.00 55.00 55.00 jssm Louise Davis.. $5.00 Individual Donations ...410.00 Ella Whitworth - 515.00 Mark Cowan - 520.00 Lelia Vickers Eariine Parrnon . . . .. H.B. Oliver Sr Ola Ashford .... Billy Fnende..? ? Odessa Freeman ... || Charlotte CundifF.. Clark Brown Jr. .._ Robert Cundiff ..... Nat Watson Lydia Sparrow ? Luther Jones. Dorothy Johnson... H.B. Oliver Jr Sarah Oliver ? Millicent Oliver ... Martha Wilson ? John Collin* ?. .525.00 ..525.00 ...-.525.00 ...525.00 -550.00 550.00 ?.450.00 ? 550.00 550.00 550.00 ? 5100.00 ..$100.00 ...$100.00 ..4100.00 . ? 4100.00 5100.00 ? 5100.00 .....4 100.00 Joycelyn Johnson $100.00 Individual Donations ....$125.00 Elite CoUins $200.00 Rally at Ml Zjon 4309.55 T-shmsSak 4400.00 Johnathan Weston- 4500.00 Norma Tanner Smith Cash -? ? ? $ 40 Daniel Loves? $20.00 T. A R. Welch -425.00 Eariine Parmon.. ?...?.425.00 William H. Tatum Sr.? $25.00 Mary Jane William 425.00 Conrad & D. Forbes -.$25.00 B. Hill -425.00 Victor Johnson .- -425.00 Geneva44ilW...... -425.00 H. Scales Brown- $25.00 Cash 428.00 Naomi Fuller 435.00 Arthur Grey ? $50.00 Alice R. Smith $50.00 Robert I Neal $50.00 Cash 450.00 Elvira R. Caldwell 450.00 Evelyn Terry ? -.550.00 Marie Roseboro 450.00 N Marsh O. Rooks-. 454.00 Dons Herrel..? -....$100.00 David H. Wagner $100.00 Merdis T. McCaner 4100.00 Ins Edna Officer $100.00 Ruby Griffin $100.00 Eastward PAC $150.00 Dan Wishnietaky $150.00 Rome Russell ? 4100.00 limrm Bonham (Candjdaiaa muai Ma County Board of Backo m oooMbubons of mora than $100). Janice McLendon ..-.....$10.00 Laveme Rucker $20.00 Millie Davidson $20.00 HameMaUoy- .425.00 Ronald Shorn $25.00 David Hinton - $25.00' Minnie Ervin $25.00 Jay Ervin 425.00 Milton Allen - 425.00 G. Bowman $35.00 Michael Buckland $50.00 Al-Ammeen $50.00 Todd Burke $50.00 Constance Johnson $50.00 Billy Friende -....$50.00 Eddie Carpenter $50.00 Joseph Hannon $50.00 Fannie Bonham $50.00 Bracy Bonham $50.00 Patrick Grimes...? $100.00 J.R. Yarbrough ...- 4100.00 Faye McBroom... 4100.00 Vivian H. Burke Contribution Contribution Contribution Contribution C o*MrHition Contribution Contribution.... Contribution.-. Contribution Contribution ... Contribution.... Contribution Contribution Vivian H. Burke 4150:00 J. Ray Butler - - $ 1 50.00 Logan Burke - ..$200.00 $20.00 ?430.00 $40.00 S42.50 $45.00 ...450,00 ....450.00 $50.00 $50.00 $72.50 ?4100.00 ....4100.00 ?4100.00 Jim Courad Naomi Fuller Paula McCoy ? ? Victor Johnson...'..?. Constance Johnson Contributors P. Wayne Chamber Chandler Lee '. Thomas Trollinger... Lafayette Jones ....$30.00 ...450.00 ...450.00 ...450.00 ...480.00 .-$100.00 -4250.00 ?4300.00 -.41.000.00 Larry W omble Janice Ramadan ? $2.00 Charles Hubbard $3.00 D. Smith 53.00 Wallace Smith $4 00 Rev. Pender Cate& Sr. ...55.00 Jenmal McPhearson ... .45.00 Rev. Carlton Eversiey . 45.00 James Rolliaon ?.48.04 'Hazel Brown?.?: 48.96 Phyllis Booker ... $10.00 Joe Felmet $10.00 Rev. James Fulwood... .420.00 James D. Branch $20.00 Jacob S. Johnson $20.00 John Cuthrell $25.00 Gene Mabe ?.425.00 Gail Favors ?..425.00 Ethel Evans $25.00 John Elder $25.00 William Tatum $25.00 L.E. Anderson -$25.00 Cathv Chapman $39.45 Tom McCloud -..450.00 Victor Johnson ?450.00 Nat E Watson Jr ?.450.00 Betty McDonald 4100.00 Rev. Paris Favors Jr $100.00 James E. Hoots - $250.00 Jonathan Weston $500.00 Whitaker Elementary .from page ai came to get autographs of Winston Salem State University and Wake Forest University athletes. Also on hand were: former WSSU coach Clarence "Bighouse" Gaines; Char lie Davis, a former basketball great at Wake Forest and former profes sional basketball star, and the men's and women's basketball coaches at WSSU. The WSSU cheerleaders also signed autographs and then per formed two routines. Barefield said that because Whitaker Elementary is located in Buena Vista, an exclusive, predomi nantly white area of town, African Americans may feel uncomfortable visiting the school. She said that a - third of the student body at the school is black. The Parental Involvement Committee, an ad hoc outgrowth of the PTA, sponsored the event, Boyefield said. Gaines, who was the win ningest active basketball coach before he retired this year, told the audience of abou| 75 people ? of them children ?*- that : parentSNjivolvement is the answer to a lot of the "neighborhood prob lems." He said that white raising his two children "there wasn't a single evening when I didn't know where ,they*were." "I've been trying for 49 years in East Winston to get parents out to support their children," Gaines said. He applauded those whites who came outlaying, "There are a lot of people on the other side of (U.S.) 52 who don't know what's on this side." Jaffee Ferree, a banker at Wachovia Bank of North Carolina, who is also a single parent, was one of the event's organizers. "I think it was very positive," she said, "but I was disappointed in the attendance." Ferree said the organizers are going to meet soon to discuss the next meeting, which will be held in November and in the same location. They will also discuss ways to get black parents involved. Ferree sug gested that they may have to go into the neighborhoods and knock on doors. . The reason the church was picked as a meeting place, she said, was because most of the children who attend Whitaker live in the - church's neighborhood. She said that two black children from the neighborhood came to last Thursday's meeting without their parents. Organizers had to take them home when the meeting was over, she said. Two Slain in Bloodbath from page ai tipped off to his whereabouts. Lyons, 21, whose last known address was 2066 K Court, Apt. G, in Greensboro, and Hall, 23, of 222 Motor Road, Apt. 59, were charged with murder and were being held last night in the Forsyth County Jail with no bond allowed. No arrests have been made in the Fender grass case. The police have issued Ogburn Station busi nesses photocopies of the two suspects. Police Capt. Linda Davis said officers responded to a shooting call and found Stafford lying on the floor of his store with multiple gun shot wounds. A small-caliber handgun was used, she said. A medical examiner pronounced IN OUR SCHOOLS Educational Briefs ? The Budget, Finance and Audit Committee of the Board of Education will meet today in room 369 of the Administrative Center, 1 605 Miller St Items on the agenda include the teacher supplement schedule and frozen step increases. ? Parent Involvement Week will be held Oct 3-9. ? All schools will dismiss early on Oct 4 for staff development and planning for teachers. Mid dle and high schools will dismiss at 12 p.m. Ele mentary schools will dismiss at 1 p.m. ? The West Forsyth High School P.T.A. will hold an open house on Oct. 4. There will be a general business meeting in the old gym at 7 p.m. Parents of West Forsyth students are encouraged to attend. The campus is located at 1735 Lewisville-Oemmons Road in Clemmons. There is no charge for admission. ? The Board of Education will meet Oct 7 at 6 p.m. ? The SAT will be given Oct 9. Stafford dead at the scene, she said. A suspect was spotted running from the store shortly after the shooting. No car was used, she said. Davis refused to say what led investigators to the suspects so quickly after the murder. How ever, Lt. T.L. Reavis, one of the officers who worked on the investigation, said that witnesses who had seen the men running from the scene helped identify who they were. Shane Ashburn, an employee of the store, said most of Stafford's customers were African American. Stafford was white. Ashburn and other business owners in Ogburn Station expressed disbelief Tuesday afternoon at Stafford's death. None of those who talked to the Chronicle said that they had had ""] any serious problems with robberies or break-ins. Carl WiTIiams. who once owned the Ogbum Station Hardware store next door to Sam's, said he had known Stafford for about 10 years and described him as an "easy-going person." "I'm sorry he's gone," he said. Williams said that during the 47 years he ran the hardware store he had been robbed five times. He said Stafford's store sold a "lit tle bit of everything. It was just a general store." The wire-mesh fence enclosing the storefront Tuesday afternoon had been deco better if the man died while trying to save some one's life. "There's a lot of stuff going on that there's no call for," he said about the violence that has plagued the city this year. Ashburn, who worked for Stafford for two years, said that Stafford kept a ledger in which he recorded the debts of his customers. When peo ple didn't have any money, or had run out of food stamps, Stafford often let them make purchases on credit. Sometimes they would pay him back, she said. She described Ogburn Station as a small community of blacks and whites where every body knows each other and everybc^y gets along. She believes that the two men responsible for Stafford's death were from outside the com munity. She said she also believed that Stafford had no warning that he was about to get robbed or shot, because he had a gun and would have used it, and the silent alarm had not been triggered. She said that a group of black neighbors, who were on subsistence, pooled their money and presented it to the Stafford family. Last Halloween, she and Stafford bought small paper bags and filled them with candy. "All the kids came to us to get candy," said Ashburn, choking back tears. rated with flowers and a reef. Just inside the fence sat stacks of car tires, and on a window was a neon adver tisement for beer. . On the ground in front of the door, in blue chalk, someone had scribbled "We Love You." Sam Sim mons, the manager of Ogburn Station Hardware, said Stafford was a real fine man." He called the killing "senseless" and said he could deal with his death A wreath is on the door of Sam's Curb Market on North Liberty Street. Winston Salem Chronicle The Twin City's Award-Winnning Newspaper 617 N. Liberty Street Wlnston-Selem, NC 27102 (919)722-9624 Mall In County 2 yaart ....$40 96 1 year 30 72 Bmoi.-....- J0.4i 3 met ........10.24 om af County/mm* 2 yen $45.96 1 year .36.72 6 me* 2S.4I 3 moa .. 16.24 O v#?, pi*Mt Mod mi trm Chronicle. Nmmm Addi?t? City St _ ChNkwdOMdlv UlrtM O 1 ymm Qlwwfti Q) Mall to: Win* loo- ? atom Chronicle P.O. Bo 1630 Winaton-Salem, N.C. 27102 The IHitaw' Smtom ChevnMe rg pufdioU ivory Thunday by the \Mnatoo-3alom Chmnida PuWiah>ng Co. Inc., 617 N. Liberty St Mating add reee: P O Box 1636 Winston Snlont ? ( NC 27102 Phono: (019) 722-6624 PAX: (919) 723-6173 Sooond daea poatago 051 paid at fflnaton-SMom. NC 27102 The WlnettmSmtom Chronicle is a of: > Audit 0u?eau ol Ckcubdton PuMlaheraAaaadaton > ILuMi ^ - n not* i vvOini rrttt PubNahera Aaaodatfon National Advoriatng Representative Amalgamated Pubtohari, Inc (212) 669-6220 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING REZONING OF PROPERTY CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM The Board of Aldermen wl? consider reauests to amend the City o ( Wiftston Salem Zoning Ordinance by rezoning property as shown below: ^ DATE: October 4, 1993, TIME; 730p.m. PLACE: Board of Aldermen Chamber, City Hall 1. Petition ot Keith P. Phillips and Sylvia S. Bryant (contract pending for Keith P. Phillips) ; property located at the northwest corner ot Country Club Road and Stonebridge Drive; trom R 5 to R 2 S (Planned Residential Development). W-1833 2. Petition ot Foy S. and Evelyn M. Fletcher; property located otl the southwest side ol Helen Avenue approximately 700 leet northwest of West Street; trom R-4 to R 6-S (Manufactured Homes not In a Manutactured Home Park; and Dwellings: Single-Family). W-1843 3. Petition ot Brenda S. Spicer; property located on the north side ot Nicholson Road appro *i matety 215 leet east ol where Nicholson Road turns to the north, trom R-5 to R 6 S (Manutactured Homes not in a Manutactured Home Park; and Dwellings Single Family). W 1844. 4. Petition of Eugenia S. Dull et al. Hanes Point Partners, and Home Depot USA. Inc.; proper ty located at the northwest corner of Hanes Mall Boulevard and Westgate Center Drive and at the southwest corner of I 40 and Westgate Center Drive; Irom B 3 S (Arts and Crafts Production; Day Care-c; Dental Laboratories; Eating Establishments; Libraries Public, Medical Laboratories; Medical, Dental or Related Offices; Motels, Hotels, Offices: Parfcinq -Areas; Parking Structures, commercial; Services; Signs Ground (On Premises), Projecting ? Roof. Wall; Warehouses, Bulk Storage, or Wholesale Distribution Centers; and Wholesale Storage or Sales. Including such Uses as Are Provided for Utilities TWO PHASE) and B 3 S (Stores or shops, Retail-TWO PHASE) to B-3-S (Stores or Shops, Retail TWO PHASE) v9 1845. '? Prior to the hearing, Interested persons may obtain any additional information which is in the possession of the City County Planning Board in that office at city Hall on weekdays.' 8 00a m to 5:00 p.m.. Interested citizens will be given an opportunity to be heard All requests for appropriate and necessary auxiliary aids and services must be made, withm a reasonable time prior to the hearing, to 727-2056 OR 1 800 735 8262 for Voice to TDD or 1 800-735 2962 for TDD to Voice. THtS MEETING WILL BE BROADCAST LIVE ON CITY TV 33 Marie Matthews, Secretary THE PICTURE OF QUALITY PH.. \ Hi. fcA.c. Lis. A Rheetn Criterion Cms Furnace and a Rheem dealer? both arc a great sourt c of contort for millions of homeowners who need .1 quality heating dilution. l et us show you the picture of qu.ilitv tod. iv. ?ti ki I x 1 1 v v ? 1 1 uv.aiv.1 ? EVELYN DCANE ?UMWWS DCVCLOmiMT ft nNAWCC MANAOtft FORSYTH MECHANIC \L v & CONS I Kt fl ION Ct ? 1 "M . ? I ' " ? Sh'Vin S ' K \ <* \V. ;?1 .*< I|. v t ; 1i \l 1 V J ?, . C all Mis. L\c!>h L)can I ? k !? . - "*;?.??? .. You know it's riuht. it it's Rheem.

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