Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / March 12, 1987, edition 1 / Page 1
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II Hi III H ? E I I. W. Shopping Ceritar. I [j #There to bom hw?? 1 ~a8ET Wins Vol. XIII, No. 29 U.S.P.S. No. 067t PEA4(4ri uShIb Myron M. Chenault: Headed for the business world (photo by James Parker). ^ * Golf course PR campaign W pivpUOUU | By CHERYL WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writer I James E. Mack, a local public relations consultant, says the Winston Lake Golf Course is a diamond in the rough that needs polishing with an intensive promotional campaign. I And the Recreation and Parks i Commission, at its Tuesday I afternoon meeting, agreed, ap; proving Mack's proposal to dp Just that. ^ ~ The DroDosal must now on 8 I before the Board of Aldermen's Finance Committee, which will meet March 16, and then to the I full board. Mack, president of Human Resources Consultants Inc. and a golfer who frequents the course, :LOCAL resit said he wants to promote j ^ the Hya Winston Lake through^ a 4 help the CI marketing campaign that, if ap- I outstandir proved, would begin around the ? j the COmmi end of this month and continue I < annual av through September. - Alderman M Some of the campaign's goals, * Chronicle he said, would include making | ' Year at the public more aware of the golf | j NAACP Pr course, increasing the rounds of 4 Marshall, Ch golf played there, attracting Year', bel players who have never played 5 #mong the It the Winston Lake course and ! 1 at the j enhancing the reputation of the | pictured witl course. ! ^rom the left Another objective would be to j Krista develop the course as a tourist at- \ Paulette. H traction in East Winston, Mack the lunct said , i A nnoui nnr /?Vy 1 1*5** Ol IV. "Needless to say, East <j pap Winston needs a tourist attrac- ^ Pemaie / tiofi that will help make East J year (ph< Winston an integral part of this - Ptease see page A3 ?L 1 East Winston Sh * ? V * *' Jenkins: Addition of a deps By CHERYL WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writer This article is part of a continuing series on the East Winston Area Plan. W Related articles on A4 and A12. A VIt may not be perfect, but the East Winston Shopping Center is ^^^^ the 5-year-old Jenkins may have a point. Before the center was completed in 1982, there was only a vacant field on the site and no .major grocery store in the black community. Now the center's Food Lion store is otie of the chain's busiest, ranking consistentTyln the top three in the Winston-Salem area -- and surprising even Food Lion officials. i o Iggles win 2th MEAC title ' PAMI1. t_L ' WW MP! ton-Salt The Twin City's Awat 110 Winston-Salem, N.C. inr^/M ! - - By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer " Related story on A14. * Myron M. Chenault will leave Winston-Salem State University at month's end to open his own business. Chenault, 38, WSSU's vice chancellor for nounced his resignation at an executive session of the school's board of trustees last 1 hursdayTHIs resignation becomes effective March 31, when tM 1 m i Marshal l^e,^ , his daughter, |-^| *' * i, and his wife, Vjm ? onored also at l?' v teon were Ray JMbWBT )er's Male and g^jP^ iiTiiviug v/t it to lopping Center: i irtment store is unlikely 4 4We have exceeded all expectations as far as sales are concerned," said the store's manager, Waverly Martin. What's more, nearly all of the center's other stores are doing well, Jenkins said, and not one of them has had to close or relocate for lack of business. ?^?^MTangela Battle, assistant manager I EAST WINSTON "f ,he Rev,c" TU- drugstore in the AT THE shopping center, CROSSROADS said her store is do ing "pretty good." one saia sne reels Unsatisfied residents Still, community residents want more, says .he draft of the East Winston Area Plan, which was based in part on residents' concerns. Please see page A9 r t % Lady Eagles alp win sectionals : PAGE Bl. 1 _. >*.' " '** '?- . V: *V ,*> . I . - I ^ _____ ?m C/irc 'd-Winning Weekly Thursday, March 12,1987 cellor to resign p Chenault will leave the university to open Triad Leasing Inc., of which he is the president. He says he felt the time was right for him to explore oppor tunities in the business world. "You might say I've been bitten by the entrepreneurial bug," says Chenault. "Probably for the last year or so, I have thought about going into business. It's tough for me to go that direction something I've considered for more than a year now." Chenault's firm, whose offices are.located on mm |P^i I , I r,^l#if%r ? _ joNO^EH^MnJ^ jflBBBra^S^^ JB ! ir^ jr n<. ? ?i?? ??i ??ww w??"i' ?hi. ??ww "i umiwwh?frGood, but reside Wil Jenkins: The East Winston Shopping Center i Parker). I jmmmmmmrnm mtmmmrnmmmmrnmmw?wi?w ?.. m mm? Moneta Sleet Jr.: Picture-perfect PAGE A6- 3 > >:, 'ty-'w V V V" ? <: **$'< ? ** . % * . '* >nicle 50 cents 34 Pages This Week nst next month North Point Boulevard, will specialize in leasing heavy-duty equipment and preparing long-term leases, but he says it will also lease "anything from cars to computers/' Local businessmen George Atmore and Jim Bramer are Chenault's partners in the venture. Chenault, who received his law degree from Valparaiso University in Valparaiso, Ind., says he is not enterlagibg_business world blindly. He has conducted extensive research, he says, and found a favorable market. Please see page A14 COVER STORY "... We may never get a black mayor. Blacks have never gotten anything out of the overall city.'" - Alderman Patrick T. Hairston Annexation would dilute^ black votes By ROBW BARKSOALE ?-- ? <. and CHERYL WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writers BLACK voting power will suffer if an annexation resolution passed by the Board of Aldermen Monday night becomes reality, say three of the city's black aldermen. North Ward Alderman Patrick T. Hairston, Southeast Ward Alderman Larrv W. Womhle and Northeast Ward Alderman Vivian H. Burke say blacks stand to lose voting strength and possibly black elected representation if the city redraws its boundaries to absorb new, predominantly white communities into its jurisdiction. 'The proposed annexation plan will cause me or whoever will run in this ward some trouble unless black people come out 100 percent (to vote), which we really don't do," Hairston said Wednesday of the resolution, which passed by a 5-4 vote, with the board divided along racial lines. Mayor Wayne A. Corpening cast the deciding vote. Mrs. Burke said that only her ward and the East Ward would be assured of having black representation if the annexation occurs. The other two wards now represented by blacks - the Southeast and the North - would be "shaky," she said. The plan, which proposes to annex more than 21 square miles of Forsyth County, would require the city to redraw its ward boundaries, reducing the percentage of black residents in each of the four wards represented by black aldermen. j Please see page A3 nts want more 1 |gj i T m v Jmrnm^k |L%V * ^I fly ?$?; , ^fljPIPH ^ES3j L A s an accomplishment in Itself (photo by James \ ?? ?. i ?- i ? *
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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March 12, 1987, edition 1
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