,1 5portsWeek fount Tabor jy ives off adyersity k>bcats excee< expectations Black Histon .Month celebrations continue page Cl Community See A8 See Cl Diynise cniiids attoids Fire addresses SSAH ts Winston-Salem Greensboro High Point Vol. XXVI No. 27 ill 062201 *******»»,» serials department 3-DIGIT 275 ® DAVIS LIBRARY UNC CHAPEL HILL ™PELHILLNC 27514-8890 The Choice for African American News THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, Photo by Cheris Hodges nan, second from right, and Carroll Burgess, in hat, light candles gil for their son Chris Holman. Chris was killed when he was struck rcycle six years ago. Family mourns lost childhood Six years after Holman’s death, family still in mourning BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE Imagining what could have been still brings a smile to Tonya Holman’s face, six years after her 7-year-old was killed on a busy East Winston street. Christopher Holman was just beginning to develop a love for sports and an interest in girls, his mother fondly remembers. Often she envisions him running down a football field, waving and smiling at the young girls in the stands as he makes a fantas tic play. If he had lived, Chris would be 13. He was born on a chilly night the day after Christmas in 1986. “He was my Christmas pre sent,” his father, Carroll Burgess Jr., managed to get out before tears overtook him. A new Happy Hill is is a sketch of what Alder Street would look like after the improvements. Drawing and photo courtesy of Urban Design Associates. 'acelift for community unveiled PAUL COLLINS IE CHRONICLE After more than 100 years, state’s oldest African Ameri- I neighborhood may be get- g a facelift. A revitalization plan for ippy Hill community - devel- ^ during a six-month com- inity planning process - calls improving the entrance to the ighborhood; building more m 50 new houses on vacant s and renovating existing hous- ; where possible. The plan will 0 reclaim some park land and ild an expanded library and ritage site. The focus is to attract new me ownership and improve the sting housing stock and the mmunity’s image. The plan- ig effort is guided by three local inmunity groups; Tire Happy II Community Association; the uthside CDC, a nonprofit mmunity development organi- ion; and the Local Initiatives Dilapidated and unmaintained rental properties along Alder Street's park edge help give Happy Hill a negative image at its principal entrance. Support Corp. (CISC), an orga nization that assists local organi zations in community develop ment efforts. Urban Design Associates prepared the plan. The effort is focused primari ly on the Happy Hill single-fami ly neighborhood but included the See Happy Hill on A11 )mble facing ^soccer mama’ in 66th LODGES ICLE :e for the seat in the 66th s a “soccer mama in ten- against an experienced ' has garnered the respect rt of the public, lep. Larry Womble has id to the N.C. House of tives time and time again, has proven to the people net that he is willing to ice for his constituency, s year, there is competi- 3mble. Her name is Tere sa Mason - a self-pro- claimed soccer mom. A virtual unknown in political circles, she began her campaign with attacks on Womble’s record on education. “Despite the fact that all parents should be able to choose a safe and effective school, my opponent is the archenemy of parents and children who want a better Womble school,” she said in a release from her campaign. Womble denies the charge. He said he has been in the comer of people in his district through out the years. “The people know I will speak on the issues,” he said. “People want some one who will bring action on their issues.” Chris died Leb. 9, 1994, after being struck by a motorcycle. He had just gotten off his school bus. The motorcyclist was being pursued in a high speed chase with police at the time. As the 30-minute chase made its way down Cleveland Avenue, Christopher became an innocent bystander. His mother was at work at the time, but she remembers all the commotion on the street as she made her way home in a taxicab. “I thought that the drug dealers had gotten into it again,” she said. Police soon came to tell her about Christopher; it was a moment that changed her life forever. “Valentine’s Day is not a day that I like very much,” she said solemnly. “It’s the day we buried Chris.” Monday night, Tonya Hol- See Vigil on AS Milligan back in Winston-Salem? HAWS Board chooses former directors firm for massive Hope VIproject BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE The chairman of the Housing Authority of Winston-Salem Board of Commissioners says he knows more than a few eyebrows are raised now that the board has decided to contract with a company that employs a former HAWS executive director. But Bill Andrews said the deci sion was made because H.J. Russell and Company has a wealth of expe rience and is best suited to handle the last three phases of the city’s Hope VI project. (Hope VI is a grant from the U.S. Department of Hous ing and Urban Development to revi talize public housing.) The fact the Atlanta-based com pany is where Art Milligan works had absolutely nothing to do with the decision, Andrews said. “We have not talked to Milligan Milligan See HAWS on A9 Commissioners debate funds for nonprofits BYT. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE Womble added that his track record proves that is the kind of leader he is. But Mason disagrees. “I’m running for the N.C: Gen eral Assembly because parents deserve a choice and children deserve a chance.” She went on to say Womble doesn’t care about a system of pub lic schools “that crushes lives of chil dren, black and white, and instead stands in the schoolhouse door of educational opportimity.” Womble said he has always See Womble on A9 Lor the seven members of the Lorsyth County Board of County Com missioners, the issue of special budget appropriations for outside agencies has always been touchy, often eliciting lively discussion and debate. The county for years has annually doled out hundreds of thousands of tax dollars to more than a dozen organizations, ranging from the Arts Council to social service agencies like Experiment in Self-Reliance. Commissioners approved about $2 million for such agencies during the special appropriations budget process last summer, some grudgingly. Sentiment on the board toward special appropriations run the gamut. Some commissioners - mainly the board’s two African Americans - are staunch supporters of special appro priations; others feel it’s not the gov ernment’s job to play good Samaritan with public money. The commissioners’ search for common ground is currently under way. Commissioner Walter Marshall, a black Democrat, and Commissioner Debra Conrad-Schrader, a white Republican, have been charged with investigating the issue of special appropriations. Over the next few weeks they will contact agencies that receive county money to determine whether the funds are essential and are used effective ly They will report their findings to their colleagues. Marshall said the board is considering many options in regards to spe cial appropriations, everything from continuing to fund the agencies, to reducing the amount of money the county shells out every year or dis- Marshall See Appropriations on A10 • FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS CALL (336) 722-8624 • MASTERCARD, VISA AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTED