Newspapers / Winston-Salem chronicle. / Sept. 3, 1987, edition 1 / Page 1
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B? p.? || .. . I i r vvci 2|ii I I jr ^ ^ I ^ w;?~< VVlll&k Vol. XIV, No. 2 U.S.P.S. No. 0 S ff mil n win ii I mmm y Murder I j***1,6 suspect . charged Hj By MARDELL GRIFFIN Chrooicte Staff Writer tK | and charged him with murder in the -death of an East Winston man-H , -i V whose body was found Aug. 23 on ? xU Dunlieth Avenue. pgr Edward Oliver Tolliver, 38, with addresses listed on East 21st and East 17th streets, is charged I fj|yp| with murdering James Fredlaw, 29, | SB of 1917N.TradeSl U l^f Fredlaw's body was found a Ip , few minutes before 7 aim. on Aug. jg 23 in bushes next to a sidewalk in IE the 1700 block of North Dunlieth P? ^ Avenue. He had been shot. - IS Francis Wanda Bryant, who ^called polfceTsaid she sawthe body . while sitting on her front porch fixing her hair for work that vjp5555555 morning. "He was lying on his back wiui ma "gin iiuiiu u};-unuci mm, Sfihflol SVfil she said of seeing Fredlaw's body. paftfon^PlLni Please see page A13 . Kimberly Park is stop for drug pro By CHERYL WILLIAMS Ws made a prop Chronicle Staff Writer funds to addn received funds A local drug abuse prevention outreach progran agency is bringing its programs The ce directly to Winston-Salem approximately communities through an intensive community-base outreach program, and the first stop to establish pro* is the Kimberly Park residential Freeman said, area. The outre Step One: The Center on Drug targeted towarc Abuse and Alcohol Prevention held their parents, he its first family workshop last Anita Dunsi Wednesday at the Kimberly Park Services counsel Housing Office at 1400 Oak St. the outreach pre The workshop was co-sponsored by Park. Kimberly Park Housing.. The prograi "We do a lot of work with Mrs. Dunston schools and the community," said alcohol/drug Dr. Larry Freeman, coordinator of intervention and adolescent -services-at -Step 4Jne^?for -adolescents"We realized that a lot of people have difficulty getting down here. Please sei One Triad Park Y The two best spots from which?downtown area to view the new multimillion-dollar shoppers, offi city-financed plaza and water tourists to enio fountains at One Triad Park are the dimension to the off-ramp at the Cherry Street exit. But instead of 1-40 and the parking lot behind literally has turn \bgler's Funeral Home. central business Is this really what the city l0 show off its intended when it joined forces with and tumbling v the Webb Cos. to raMMENTAPV develop ftyjEdward Shanahan the ice- - &- " * blue office building and surrounding t0 somewhere e land on the so-called "Superblock" attending calling across from City Hall in the heart of downtown? Occupants c _ . . lL . within One Triac Tb the layman itappears that vjew of lh the developers and the architects --^..jans whr ..d affiliated planner, made a gSS ,1* major-league gaffe in the placement fountains have , of the building and plaza. way evcn l0 g. Logic and tested plaza area. It is environmental planning principle, around the two-! it seems, would have dictated that then you have a s the massive plaza and expensive come in throi waterworks display face the entrance, rather V , a ? ton-Salen The Twin City's Award-Winnin 67910 Winston-Salem, N.C. Tr a - ^ .;^p t jT^^WBbr" K *8 ,.JI " gram No $20,000 in PEOPLE A6 Winston d alternative funds f?tjfSfrtM schools trams at four sites, ? " . "r ? . 1 11 ""?> aware of, lach program is adopted 1 adolescents and QUOTABLE' "Knowledge Is ^car* mo: ton, an Adolescent ag(K 101^^ ^^^^^ in regulai or, will coordinate |f| the COmfftg toiler's labor Alth >gram at Kimbcrly market, ^the^ effectively gloves z ^Ths. eeB&sk^ Mi wj uvmivih hsrtdduts." " teachers ircaunent services County h andnhcir-families ?? x RAGE A4~ Hhe-sehoc 9 page A13 ' Nori ias turned its back o , thereby enticing front door. ce workers and To fully appreciate the ^ W ,y this brand-new elaborate complex and the sheet of cily water that spills from a shallow One Triad Park man-made pond on the upper level ed its back on the to the smaller pool below, it is district, preferring necessary to descend a stairway gijg& multi-level plaza 311(1 ^cn ,ook ^ack at the waterfall ater to motorists a?d the modern glass structure whizzing which looms behind it. past That's a good deal of work for P9Q95 Winston- casual visitor to the plaza. Salem on Aml what's the pay-off for the Motorist! their way persistent urban explorer? Standing only the Ise and to people on the plaza, such a person is Parker), hours at Voglcr's. offered a panoramic view of a low brick office building squatting on So far, sii if smithsirie offices First Street, a towcrine steel uioe nt\mi ? - w ? UO WI 11 I Park have a good doublcd-sidcd highway billboard, people hi awling plaza, but an elevated section of Interstate 40, and as th ) might enjoy the the Foundry Building on Liberty their ne of the circulating Street in the distance and parking puddles c lo go out of their lots to the east and west sides of the the plaz ain access to$he plaza. dwarfed necessary to walk Like the building itself, the space occ itory structure, and waterfall and the banks of water It mi iense that you have jets on the south side of the a politica ugh the service massive,plaza seem out of scale Aid cone than through the with the rest of the surroundings. a place t V a mmammm mm * i Chronics % Weekly lursday, September 3,1987 50 cents ?iW?> irrr<MT? rnvpo <;mDv $55 million be set for publ 1 WSjgm^m | By MARDELL GRIFFIN I Only two Winston-Salem aldermer |j| publicly that they intend to work to ge by -J proposed $55 million bond package. 1 The board, however, voted unanimo || closer to reality, even though tour residi I meCt*n^ and s^?^c a8ainsl lhe boi I Meanwhile, the head of the local c || South Ward Alderman Frank Frye ai S. Northington were not available for cor The other aldermen, Martha S. Wo Harpe, Southwest Ward; Virginia K. Ne^ M0&>A W- Burke, Northeast Ward, all reserved ann< until afterheai ing from voters at a publii However, most of them said the items ca kindergarten Class at Hairston said, after Monday night's r ooks and note pads for il ^lhc k?n(* PaclcaSc)-1 m soing10 w( ResFWkif^P' "W:)mble also ^aclcs lhe b?n(*s>ol officials believe ?: 'J i AIDS in the public i * DELL GRIFFIN 3 that all children in the state be Staff Writer ^ provided with an education. "And no 1 the law does not exclude children the :hildren with AIDS have with AIDS," said Susan Carson, Pro> 1-classes thus far in community relations coordinator man -Salem/Forsyth County for the Winston-Salem/Forsyth that school officials are County schools. P?ir said a system spokesman. "Obviously, we are out to havt cording to guidelines protect all our children, including ?thc by the system earlier this the child with AIDS," said Mrs. thei 5t children diagnosed with Carson. "And that doesn't mean just >uld be allowed to remain physical protection, that means nec( ly scheduled classes. emotional protection, too." hav< theii ough disposable surgical The system guidelines, " ire available in several published by the North Carolina .?. s on area campuses, Department of Human Resources ' in the system are not being ' Division of Health Services, say w 1 carry them at all times, as that AIDS "is transmitted sexually ai in neighboring Guilford 0r through blood and blood ave been instructed to do, products" and "is not transmitted by ^?rc A official -said. casual contact." ;h Carolina law dictates "Most children with AIDS or n downtown Winstor ^1 ? ^SjtlfP il i 1-40 Faces downtc 5 whizzing by on 1-40 are treated to a pleasant view of the One Ti rear side of the building is most visible to patrons of the downl ice the construction work lack of benches or seating put pleted, only a handful of accommodations other than the unt we discovered the plaza, stone-capped concrete retaining lan ey wander about, craning walls discourages lingering, ane cks and sidestepping picnicking or visiting. Not only are acr >f water accumulating on benches lacking, but there are no shn :a, they appear to be tables or kiosks, no sculptures, no the by the vastness of the gazebo and hence not a speck of Wh Hv/ th/? nlo-jo ??k/*< !/? ?? ?U ?? t-? -? uk.vu xjj tuv piu/'U. Miaut vjii uicsc uruiai laie-summcr is ght be a great location for days. pla 1 rally, a circus or a Farm Finally, for all the expense, crt, but hardly inviting as both public and private, that went o spend leisure time. The into the building and the adjacent V fe""" 38 Pages This Week . ^ wwiiwaB?iiuiLwii >nd issue ic review \ out of six contacted will say t citizen approval of the city's usly Monday night to bring the hearing, thus moving it one step_ L\ ents showed up at the Monday id package and its attendant 6hapter of the NAACP says his e bond package, while other lity are backing the measure. Hairston and Southeast Ward bin the record in favor of the fid West Ward Alderman Robgrf nment. / od, Northwest Ward; Lynne S. well, East Ward, and Vivian H. ! Duncing their stand on the issue c hearing scheduled for Sept. 9. lied for in the bond package are neeting, "Yes, I'm going to vote irk for it." is is the first bond issue I feel A 12 | schools ' >S-related conditions represent hreat for AIDS transmission in classroom and should be rided an education in the usual ner. The Health Service guidelines it out that people with AIDS 5 not transmitted the disease to 1 x people they live with unless ir housemates were sexual ners or drug users who shared lies. However, infected mothers ] s been known to pass AIDS to r unborn or nursing children. , "AIDS appears to be more icult to acquire than hepatitis B, ch is transmitted in the same iner," the Health Services dout says. And, while only 1 :ent of health-care workers who C stuck with Please see page A12 i-Salem Ligggte^'lJ RSiMBifTl1 >Wn * riad Park waterfall, left, while own area (photos by James >lic spaces, including an lerground parking garage, the dscaping is quite ordinary mic trees march in orderly rows oss grassy patches and tiny abs hug the retaining walls and ground at the front entrance, lat is missing in the landscaping any sense of surprise or yfulness to entertain or amuse. In short, then, there is little Please see page A13 ' j *
Sept. 3, 1987, edition 1
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