T I SPORTS In Review SPECIAL SECTION: Year In Review ■ PEOPLE In Review Announcing lyiale, Female Athletes of Year PAGE C9 Quotes, reflections and (put on your thinking caps!) a quiz on the events of 1987 PAGE C6 Announcing ^ Man, Woman ^ of the Year PAGE C2 ':lAi c[ !;ii 2-Salem Chronicle The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly bl.XiV.No. 24 U.S.P.S. No. 067910 Winston-Salem, N.C. Thursday, February 4,1988 50 cents 50 Pages This Week Chronicle wins NCPA award Named state's best weekly From Chronicle Staff Reports For the fourth consecutive time the Win- \-Salem Chronicle has been designated the best weekly newspaper in North Carolina. It has received this honor for four out of five years. The Chronicle was announced as the first place winner in the general excellence category for weeklies at the North Carolina Press Associa tion 1988 Newspaper Institute Awards Ceremony. There were a total of 26 entries in the category. Judge Johnny Solesbee of The Winder i^ews commented: "Obviously a newspaper with a plan because it shows from front to back. Neat, well-packaged and, I bet, a pure delight for its readers with each new edition, Definitely an award winner." Gov. James Martin presented the award at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Brunswick Beacon of Shallotte won second place for general excellence and the Davie County Enterprise Record of Mocksville won third place. "It was a lough decision on the lop three," Slated Solesbee. "They all have their good points and very few minuses." The Chronicle also won second place for appearance and design; a total of 25' entries were 1. The judges commented on the "attractive teasers at top of front page." They cited good color Please see page A14 Black firms face loan foreclosure By KEITH WILLIAMS Special to the Chronicle Father's Son Jonathan Jackson, son of Democratic presidential candidate the Rev. Jesse Jackson, speaks on behalf of his father at Winston-Salem State University where he participated in a student voter registration drive (photo by Santana). Two Afro-American businesses have failed to make payments on city business loans and city officials are now taking steps to seize collateral used to secure the loans. The two businesses that have not met the loan guidelines of the city are Miller the Printer at 549 N. Trade St. and Pri-Artie Coach Lines, which operates from the F. Roger Page Business and Technology Center on S. Mar shall St., said Allen Joines, director of development for the City of Winston-Salem. Miller the Printer is owned by James Miller and the owner of Pri-Artie Coach Lines is Artie Campbell, said Frieda Williams, the city's economic development coordi nator. Joines said both companies have not made payments on their $30,000 loans m more than 120 days and have not answered city correspondence sent to find out what kinds of problems they were experiencing. 'We've made efforts to make them aware of the delinquency," said Joines. "We have offered to meet with them to look at the problems they might be having...but nothing has been forthcoming." According to the city finance office. Miller has not made his required $594.04 monthly payment since Aug. 19, 1987. Campbell has also not made his monthly pay ment of $594.04 since Sept. 2,1987. Campbell's loan was secured with a third mortgage on his home and second mortgages on two pieces of rental property^ said Williams. Miller's collateral was various pieces of equipment that included a camera platemaker, Please see page A3 Jackson keeps eye on the prize: The White House THE NATION'S NEWS Compiled From AP Wire Max Robinson released BLUE ISLAND, Ill. - Max Robinson, the first black to tnehor a daily network news ^w, has been released from a hospital in this Chicago suburb after nearly two months of treatment. Mayor's autopsy sought CHICAGO - A Chicago television station has ed a Freedom of Information lawsuit in an attempt obtain the autopsy report and related medical Mrds of the late Mayor Harold Washington. Blacks asked to donate blood BALTIMORE - The Red Cross and Baltimore abor unions are teaming up to encourage more slacks to give blood to counter a trend of propor tionately fewer blacks than whites making blood donations. By LAURA KING Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - Hours after Martin Luther King Jr. was cut down by an assass in's bullet, his young lieutenant, Jesse Jack- son, appeared in public clad in a shirt stained, he said, with the blood of the slain civil rights leader. Some of King's senior associates were incensed by what they saw as grandstanding by a brash upstart. But it was in some ways a classic Jackson gesture _ to seize the day, to brandish a symbol, even a bloody one. Nearly two decades after that April day in Memphis, Tenn., Jackson has preserved his penchant for the dramatic. But Jackson, now running a second time for the Democratic presidential nomination, is seeking to shed his image as a divisive force. "In 1984, there was the perception that he was running against the party," said press secretary Frank Watkins, a longtime Jackson associate. "Now he's reaching out to others." Jackson entered the 1988 race with polls putting him well ahead of the pack of announced Democratic candidates, although many voters remained undecided. But he was a front-runner only on paper. He has made it a point to openly confront the opinion, stated by some observers, that the nation is simply not ready to put a black at the top of a major-party ticket. "He got a different kind of coverage (in 1984) because he was black. ... A candidate that is black is thought not to be able to win," political analyst C. Anthony Broh of Princeton University said. But this is not the first time he has set out to defy the odds. Jesse Louis Jackson was born Oct. 8, 1941, out of wedlock in Greenville, S.C. His was a childhood of the segregated South _ riding in the back of the bus, drinking from separate drinking foun tains, selling soft drinks in the whites-only stadium. Some friends and associates have said one familiar Jackson rallying cry _ "I am some body!" with a crowd shouting it back, revival-style _ grew out of those times. But his youth held its successes, too. He was a natural athlete, a bright student who went on to college at North Carolina A&T and then to the Chicago Theological Semi nary. He has never held public office. But he has met with Mikhail Gorbachev and Fidel Castro, traveled to Central America and southern Africa, scored diplomatic coups such as bringing a captured American flyer home from Syria in 1984. He ran the economic arm of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and later, as head of the Chicago-based civil rights group PUSH, used black economic buying power to do battle with major corporations Eyeing The Prize The cornerstone of Jackson's 1988 campaign is a call for econom ic justice (photo by James Parker) ly to do things no other candidate is doing. Last year, for example, he offered to help mediate the Nation al Football League strike. But in many ways he is running a over hiring practices. Jackson and Gary Hart are the only Democrats in the race to have run for president before. And Jack- son is using what he learned the last dme around. He is still like- Indian leaders: Hostage-taker serious, articulate, intelligent Lumberton (AP)- People who know one of the fnen charged with taking hostages at Lumberton s daily newspaper say he is a serious, articulate man upset about the way Indians and blacks are treated in Robeson County. Eddie Hatcher, .30, is a member of the Tuscarora Tribe, a group that distinguishes itself from the Lum- bees. a 70,000-member tribe concentrated in Robeson County. It is the largest tribe east of the Mississippi River. Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs, 19, both of Pembroke, ’^ere charged Monday with federal hostage-taking and violauon of the federal Firearms Act for possession of sawed-off shotguns, said FBI agent Paul Daly. They '''ere scheduled for a hearing today. Robeson County is one-lhirtftndian, one-third blac und one-third white. But like many county residents >0 recent years, Hatcher and his partner Timothy lacobs were angry about what they saw as a white- eontrolled power structure. The leader of the Tuscarora Tribe told the News and Observer of Raleigh Monday that Hatcher, who also identified himself as Eddie Clark, was a straight-A student at Pembroke State, traditionally an Indian school, and had talked about becoming a lawyer. Brawlcigh Graham, whose tribal title is Chief Young Bear, said "He seemed to be a very articulate, intelli gent fellow. He just didn't condone things that went on in the county: the killings, the murders related to drugs." Graham said Hatcher had told him Sunday about some information he had about the county sheriffs department. Blacks and Indians have been criticizing the Robe son County criminal justice system since November 1986, when a Lumbee Indian was fatally shot by Kevin Stone, a sheriffs deputy and the son of Sheriff Hubert Slone. Cummings was unarmed, and his family said his Please see page A3 THIS WEEK CLASSIFIED B12 EDITORIALS A4 FORUM A5 OBITUARIES B7 PEOPLE A6 RELIGION B6 SPORTS B1 SPECIAL SECTION C QUOTABLE; "One reason there is no minority is that there is no majority. And the term "minority" itself diverts our attention from America's true ethnic heritage.... In a pluralistic society, it Is suicidal for Africanized Americans to think like a minority." PAGE A4 Please see page A14 Bus contract dispute over By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer After eight hours spent in fed eral mediation, the Winston-Salem Transit Authority and the Transport Workers Union Local #248 have reached an agreement which appears to. have averted a strike by the company's drivers and mainte nance workers. Contract negotiations between the two parlies had been stalemat ed over the issue of a drug screen ing program since the union's orig inal contract expired last Novem ber. James Ritchey, the authority's general manager, wanted to have the drug screening program written into the union workers' contract. However, union officials protested the stipulation on the grounds that having any type of screening pro gram written into the union's con tract may subject its members to random drug tests. The union, which said it had no problems with the screening program itself, pushed to have the program written into company policy rather than into the union contract. Mediation ended Tuesday evening when Ritchey and the authority agreed to the union's request to place the drug screening program into the company's offi cial rules and regulations. "Ritchey agreed to implement the program into the rules and poli cies," said James B. Dunlap, presi dent of the local union. "We're now on good terms again.” Dunlap said the current com promise suggests that union mem bers agree to have annual physical Please see page A2