Hopkins moving up grfT *^\ New art" gallery will in tennis rankings P"" <sf\fPf JHtJKKiS 1FI Mf? j | f I helP relicf efforts th^.^nnuA.'v 'Xia: 75 cents WINSTON-SALEM GREENSBORO HlGH POINT VII No. 48 j^myd For Reference Tuth PuDnxTTri - ? .. J r*J-j V/illvUlN 1LJ FOf&ynffc ^-st-lot *-0022 77rf Choice for African-American News. winsTOw?a5I#wc Photos by Bruce Chapman Actor and burgeoning poet Malcolm JamaI Warner gives the crowd a sample of his work at a news conference. Legendary actress Cicely Tyson evokes the spirit of Jane Pittman as she recites the words to a Langston Hughes poem. " ' a ? 1 'Holy Ground' 2001 National Black Theatre Festival off and running BV T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE After months of hype, twists and turns, the National Black The atre Festival began its biennial week-long stay in Winston-Salem Monday. The celebrities, the dozens of shows and the excitement of it all has transformed the city into something that many local folks do not recognize. "I can't believe this is Win ston-Salem," a woman said as she left the Stevens Center in the wee hours of Tuesday morning. The area around the Adam's Mark Winston Plaza, which is again serving as ground zero for the festival, has been transformed into something much more cos mopolitan than natives are used to. Local restaurants are staying open late to accommodate the thousands expected to descend on Winston-Salem this week. Bur geoning entrepreneurs have also gotten into the mix. setting up shop outdoors in heavily traveled areas to sell everything from trin kets to fried fish and chicken. "We want to take advantage of this situation with all these people in town." said one hawker when asked about his roadside setup Theater lovers from as far away as Michigan and Ohio have come to the festival. SheFry Roulettte-Mosley and her friend Kim Ford came from Chicago. Ford is longtime attendee; she has attended several festivals. Roulettte-Mosley stayed behind in the past, but she said she wanted to see what all the fuss was about. "I have wanted "fo come for years but this is the first time I'm able to do so," she said. They arrived late on Tuesday and quickly snatched up tickets for a few plays. But even after only a few hours. Roulettte Mosley said she was experiencing something unique, a good, warm feeling that some call the festival magic. "I love the feel of the city. I love the feel of everything that is going at the Adam's Mark," she said. "You can tell there is lot a bonding that everyone is experi encing, It's unspoken, but it's there." The national furor over the Adam's Mark has not seemingly put a damper on the festival. The festival's producer and creator. . Larry Leon Hamlin, addressed the S, NBTF on A6 Oss/e Davis, left, and George Faison pose for the camera before Monday's Opening Night Gala. Fai son was honored during the event for his directorial work. Steele, new face of Republican Party, wants more talk Maryland Republican chair says party is silent on issues that it shouldn't he BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE GREENSBOkO - The first and only black man to head a state Republican Party told a roomful of the party faithfuls that Republicans are not doing enough talking, resulting in verbal TKOs by Democrats in the fight to gain the upper hand in the court of public opinion. "This is our form of communi cation." Michael Steele said, hoist ing a piece of paper. "Tear up the paper and roll up your sleeves and tell your neighbor I have a party I \iant to take you to. and you are gtaing to have a damn good time.'" Steele, chairman of the Mary land Republican Party, was in Greensboro last weekend to keynote an awards dinner held by the Guilford County New Majority Republican Council, a wing of the county's Republican Party made up of African-American Republicans Steele told a crowd of about 100 people at the Greensboro Cultural Arts Center that silence on behalf of his party has stifled Republicans in their recruiting efforts. As an exam ple, he cited the NAACP's contro versial 2000 election ad that featured the daughter of dragging death victim James Byrd talking about George W. Bush's lack of support for hate crimes legislation. Steele v:iiil hpp'inco the Republican Party did not furi ously argue against the ad, man^ blacks were "scared to the polls"' to cast ballots for Bush's opponent. A1 Gore. A corporate attorney, Steele has become somewhat of a posterboy for the new Republican Party - a party for the new millennium that is Si < Steele on A3 Steele Liberian boy gets desperately needed medical care in city BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONIC LE f Stanley McGill is like any other 2-year-old. His attention switches from a coloring book to a toy truck and then back again several times with in a minute. He has big. bright eyes that grow brighter when he smiles or when he is embraced by his mother; and he possesses the kind of energy that makes older people tired just by looking at him at play. But Stanley's smiles quickly turn into agonizing frowns. His youthful exuberance has changed to complete helplessness and pain many times during his short life. His playtime and development have .been tamed by an obscure, but common, medical problem that does not allow him to pass stool. Stanley was born with an imperforate anus, a condition in See Stanley ?'//A4 Little Stanley draws a picture as his mother looks on. Many blacks in the City of Brotherly Love don't love bank Bogle BY SHERIDAN HII.L TtffiCHRONICU Tomorrow at 10:30 a.m., Wachovia shareholders w ill till Ben ton Convention Center to vote on the proposed merger with First Union, if they have not already done so by proxy. Since April, there have been heavy rounds of lix.al and national advertising, urging shareholders and the financial community to support the merger. Both banks, as well as SunTrust, which has made an unso licited bid for Wachovia, have bought full-page ads in newspapers across the Southeast, in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. Nevertheless, some folks find it impossible to overlook First Union's bumbles in its 1999 acquisition of CoreStates Financial Corp. and its involvement in subprime lending. During a luncheon here on July 10. First Union President Ken Thompson promised that First Union had'learned from its mistakes in the CoreStates merger, a $16.6 billion deal that earned widespread criticism. "First Union's acquisition of CoreStates was one of the worst-con-. ceived and worst-executed bank mergers in the last two decades," said Matthew Lee. director of InnerCity Press, a merger watchdog group in Washington. D.C. "First Union closed so many branches and so dramatically reduced services that, even by its own account, it lost the deposits and cus tomers that had been the business rationale for the acquisition." At the time of the merger. Philadelphia's African-American community raised concerns about losing its good relationship with CoreStates. In response. First Union sent its then-senior vice president, John Georgius. to visit Robert Bogle. Sti First Union on A4 A whiter Wachovia? Some fear merger will not help diversity BY SHARON BROOKS HODGE SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE "The things that really matter won't change." That is the last line of a television advertisement pitching the merger of Wachovia and First Union, two of the nation's largest banks. That idiom may be comforting to the souls of the dead white men whose photos line the wall outside the board room on the 28th floor of the Wachovia Center. But it could be cause for concern among the diminishing number of African Americans who work for and do business with the N.C. financial institution that is on the verge of becoming the fourth largest hank in America. Friday/ Wachovia stockholders will vote on whether to merge with First Union. If the deal is rejected, a marriage with Atlanta based SunTrust could follow. Although thousands of African Americans in the Carolinas and across the Eastern Seaboard will be impacted by the outcome, many wonder which partnership would be most advantageous for people of color. "Together our companies are better." Wachovia CEO Bud Baker said in a May news release pur ported to announce the "commu nity commitment for the new Wachovia." The release went on to laud the two banks' generosity to lower-income families by plcdg Sre Wachovia on A3 McEachern ? FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS CALL (336) 723-8624 ? MASTERCARD, VISA AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTED ?

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