Sports Weft Vikings win Frank Spencer ? ? ? ? County B-ball talent on the rise See B ? See A8 See CI Community Youngsters win essay contest ? ? ? ? Pictures from Kwanzaa events ? i , I 75 cents WlNSTON-SALEW GREENSBORO HlGH POINT XXVIII No 18 r , 1 Fo' Reference ??OT22j 'tjt) 7 forsyto any pub lib I I I I I I \| I I 27101-2755 AAV V^/l 1 ^ ?"-rv * | 77;V (Jwice for African-Ameiicaib \ew.\ _ ^ . Road to clash with black heritage in Bethania BY SHERIDAN HILL THE CHRONICLE _____ The descendants of Rev. Joseph Loften Lash want the impossible: to save the family's land from being split apart by a thoroughfare pro posed by the city transportation department. Lash (1867-1953) was a minister, an educator, and pres ident of the 1916 Forsyth Countv Colored Aurinilhinil Fair, back in the day when blacks were not welcome at the main fair. The city has proposed to build a four-lane road similar to Silas Creek Parkway through the Lash family tract, connecting Bethabara Road to Betha nia-Rural Hall Road just east of Main Street in Bethania. This road is a short i ened version of the thoroughfare plan I that has been on the books since 1991, I according to Greg Turner of the city I Transportation Department. A consult- ; ant hired by Bethania is trying to come I up with a plan that satisfies both the I _ i city's desire for road connectivity in the northwest part of the city and Bethania's desire to keep traffic away from the his toric town center. For years, the family has endeav ored to preserve the historical integrity of the land and buildings known infor mally as Lash Heights, a dozen acres of land that has been in the family for more ban 150 years. Walter Glenn, one of Lash's grandsons, recently built a fence iround the foundation of the school-? louse on Walker Road where Lash aught black children reading, writing :inH orifhmpfio Qpvprol uparc ago. the family reluctantly agreed to tear down the origi nal Lash home after receiving complaints that it had fallen into disrepair. /\ Mouse num mai years ago by Lash's son-in-law still stands at the corner of Walker Road and Bethania-Rura! Hall Road, and is home to Lash's granddaughter. Inside are pre cious historical artifacts, including a small, hand-bound booklet believed to be a listing of slaves, in a flowery hand writing that includes dates as far back as Set Road on A8 "This house, this land and these artifacts are a part of who we are and how we see life." - Robert Wayne Glenn Photo by Sheridan Hill Descendants of Joseph Lash are up for 6 fight to save the historic property. Photos by Kevin Walker Kevin and Sharon Johnson brought their two children, Kayla and Tyshon, to Kwanzaa last Thursday night. Below, the kinara is lighted at another Kwanzaa event in the city. City celebrates Kwanzaa BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE Susan Benjamin isn't relying on the school system to teach her three children about their her itage. That's a matter she has decided to take into her own hands. , Benjamin and her children were among the hundreds last week and early this week who took part in city Kwanzaa cele brations. Benjamin hopes that the cultural and historical elements of the fairly new but steadily growing African-American holU day celebration will help her little ones realize they come from a past steeped in centuries-old val ues such as respect and humility and time-proven traditions such as helping one's neighbor and placing elders on pedestals. "We have been coming to Kwanzaa for the last five years," Benjamin said. "I believe events like this are important. If we don't take our kids to things like this, how will they ever' learn about their culture?" Since its creation 35 years ago, Kwanzaa has grown into an international phenomenon. It is . believed that more than 28 mil lion people around the world take part in Kwanzaa, a nonreligious based holiday celebration that begins the day after Christmas and ends on New Year's Day. ? See Kwanzaa <