Marchers
after the Rodney King verdict.
Organizers included the Rev. John
Mendez of Emmanuel Baptist
Church, the Rev. William S. Fails
of LIFT, Alderman Larry
Womble, and the Rev. Carlton
Eversley of Dellabrook Presbyte
rian Church.
"We're not here for any one
particular reason. We're here
because we are sick and tired of
being sick and tired. It's time for us
to raise our people's consciousness,"
said Mendez, one of the groups
organizers.
"For 14 years we've watched
our sons and daughters get kicked
out of school for ridiculous reasons.
We've seen our people graduate
from college with degress who are
still not working. We're sick of peo- 1
pie coming into our communities 1
and instigating fear into our hearts
. . . we're not going to be scared
anymore," continued Mendez.
"The time is right now," he
said, to the applause of the crowd.
Other speakers included Larry
Little, Walter Marshall and a
Continued from page A1
Moorehouse College student.
"Unless we come together one
by one, we can gel picked off. And
people don't realize how (the sys
tem works) until (something) hap
pens to someone in their immediate
family," said Little.
"I hope we learned something
from the King situation. The anger
and the frustration folks had . . . and
realize that people believe in no jus
tice no peace. When they see we
won't take it anymore, then justice
will role down like a mighty
stream," he said.
Student Marlon Millner said,
"I'm not here to make you feel com
fortable. When we say no justice,
no peace, that means they can't
sleep peacefully, they can't eat
[peacefully, until we get justice."
Millner encouraged the youth in the
crowd to get an education.
Marshall added to the issue of
education by stating, "It's time we
stop accepting small class sizes.
Education is one of our major prob
lems because it doesn't identify with
our children."
Courtney Cuthrell, 25, cairiss a sign at Saturday's march.
Black man executed, mutilated
to Hennerson, S toner's family, who
live in Philadelphia, Penn., was
contacted by the police department
1
and was scheduled to come to Win
ston-Salem this week to make
funeral arrangements.
"Stoney was my ears. He never
bothered anybody. He just hung
with the wrong people that day. I
plga^ ? *
KM ? -ImC nifi ##% 1 n qta #ni ww% i i w\ o
wBrJIBk flNHiH QtrQUpS:
byshewoanhiu.
xN , o-^ * - <
:::::-:U i .'iivi i'i'l'A'i'iiiiiVi'i'iii i'N' iCtKV/|V|iisAV<'''V'';vi'''i,!>ii I'i iV;'i .v- I'jvii >' i ... : tvi"'. ?' . vo." ^iri'iv ? i~< ? ??.?? m ,i|i.. :, 0; n Vmnvii if i, ????;?? . ? ; ! ? ? .j i. ? . ; I
N ^Ptetoresqp^lbrtti Carolina: where you can climb our Woe ridges, bask on our seashores ? and join the I
^Jbate group *fyo#fclfeife*$}K* calling North CaTOfina home," fe* refrain sung onstate promotional spots,^
but it could just as easily be sung by the national leader of six hate groups.
||? | ,?sconl% to Nbrth Cardliniaifc Against Racist and &eligiou$ Violence (NCARRV), the Ol^l'terth State
is the center of hate group organizing for the country. And 1991 saw the highest number of K&ri, neo-Nazi,
and supremacist organising in the state since NCARRY began collecting data in 1983.
C*^Ij!j!\^?^*^v!w*^Xi2^%\?5i&N^*^X,^^*^X'X*.fWs^^*^X*X*X^PX,X,X*X\,X^<\\vvXX,X*X,XvXvX,X X*X*X,X,X,X,X,X,X*X\\X\X,X*X\*!vX,X,X,X*XvXvX*Xv.'\-.\- ? ?X'. ?.?.?X\vX,Xv. vXvXvXvv.* v. .
|HSt last year, NCARRV documented 71 Incidents of activity by organized racist and anti-Semitic
groups in 27 North Carolina counties. Those incidents included 39 Ku Klux Klan marches and eight cross
burning s. There were also documented incidents of vehicular assaults by white men against African- Ameri
can men, assaults against interracial couples, white and black teenagers Shooting and stabbing each other to
death in Caldwell County and Gastonia.
m Knights of IWKKKV led by Noah CaroUna's Virgil Griffin, is the state's most visible Klan
inarching 38 times last year and holding eight cross burnirtgllStStc Grand Dragon Charles Beaaiey
|p| Confederate Knights of America, led by North Carolina's Terry Boyce, is one of the most troubljitg
| ||||^^ grt)up#1fl. the state,XaStyear the Confederate Knights operated twtf^pS^
phcaie message lines in North Carolina* The messages are Oiled with racist, anti-Semitic, and anti-gay slurs
v ? v-v ^ ^ ^ ^ c":'' *" w "*? v - "? ' " " " '
!v>?\X\v>>>X'SXvX,X'X,X*SX'f\,'X*Sx?!
$v. ?- V C' . ?>
Invisible Empire U the KIan& uhdergroitfid faction^ led by North Carolina's James Farrand*. Fam*nd$
Kyes InXee County* There are no documented public rallies of the Invisible Empire, but there are constant
reports of activity at a building house describedby Farrands as a meeting house on his property, in Guilford
County, Douglas Malcolm Gamer, previously arrested for distributing Invisible Empire literature at two
Qreerisboro high school wa$ arrested for plotting to kill an African-American man who lives with a white
won^ita Gre^sbdm.Tbund in Gamei's hcnrie weffr-weapongy explosives, books on bomb-maklngrandUlK
from the Invisible Empire. | | | H ... |
i tiii. * 8 ?***** faction W * ** Klassen and based in Otto, N.C. T*e motto of
wblchatands for Racial Holy Wm. Klassen's newspaper. Racial Loyola
MfrWnc* and hasten the day when all-enemies of the White Raw ?
^ ^J?8^??ww?^iwjBW8^-^wiUbft^htpped out of this country/ ,
*"* wWte Aaglo-Saxons are the lost tribes of Israel and the true
,tSn y lewS 84 Ae chlldren Of Satan" and non-whites as "pre-Adamic,"
me^ subhuman. Rdon Stephen Miller and Douglas Sheets, who were tried for the Shelby bootetore
Britohteli m m<5m ^ Christian Identity, also called Christian Heritage. Israel Covenant, or
\ \v s " c, . . >. s s v
Nt.orth China's AX Barker and was fomted in 1984 to serve as the
maw fofeleaoral activity for white supremacists dissatisfied with the Republican Party. In 1988
they ran former Klan leader David Duke as their presidential candidate.
)?
j 'information provided by the North Carolinians Against Racist and Religious Violence. To join or
receive more iifomatioit on NCARRV. call 1-800-253-5812.}
<" " ? ^ "? s * s "* "? % ?? s -
- g- s, - -
EWCDC to hold 'Community
Networking' workshop
By SAMANTHA McKENZIE
Chronicle Staff Writer
Neighbors for Better Neighbor
hoods, an umbrella project of the
East Winston Community Develop
ment Corporation, is holding a
"Community Networking, Capacity
Building, and Empowerment Work
shop" at the Winston Lake Family
YMCA.
The workshop will be held
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Breakfast
and lunch will be provided by
Wachovia Bank. The event is free
and open to the public.
Veronica Bitting, coordinator
for the project said the workshop is
designed to provide information for
residents on building a better com
munity.
"This workshop will be for res
idents who are interested in organiz
ing their community or those who
have already organized and are
interested in strengthening them
selves," she said.
The workshop will be led by
resourcers which will include:
Arthur Milligan, director of the
Winston Salem Housing Authority;
Brenda Evans, director of the child
protection division of the Depart
ment of Social Services; Dr. Willie
Bailey Sr., director for business and
economics office at Winston-Salem
State University; Robert Calloway,
assistant director of admissions at
WSSU; Pam Thombs, director of
the problem center at Experiments
for Self Reliance; Paula McKoy,
director of assessment for GED and
ABE at Forsyth Technical Commu
nity College. A host of community
leaders will also serve as resourcers
for the workshop.
Transportation will be provided
for the public housing residents by
the Winston-Salem Housing
Authority.
We can help.
We're paid only
if you collect.
Practice limited
to serious injury
and wrongful death.
_Michael
LEWIS
ATTORNEYS AT LAW. PC.
~~~t Michael Lewis
/ David D Daggett
Celeste Harris
765-7777
Phones answered 24 hours
285 Executive Park Blvd
Winston-Salem, NC 27103
A HISTORY OP
W tXtiSfc. mun OUADT WM
-??? ????' ? ?
Continued from page A1
still can't get over it," he said. Hen
nerson said Stoner had recently
gotten a job as a dishwasher and
was scheduled to begin work this
week.
Neighbors said they heard
Stoner outside his house around 2
a.m. Wednesday morning talking.
Bishop and Hennerson said the four
suspects were also known "by face"
in the neighborhood.
Several neighbors say Stoner
occasionally drank wine with the
suspects, although they didn't see
the suspects in the area that night
District attorney, Tom Keith
and assistant district attorney Eric
Saunders have been assigned the
case. The four suspects have been
transferred from the county jail to
an unknown location.
The grand jury hearing is
scheduled for June 8 and an arraign
ment hearing on June 22.
I
rs
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Win$ton-SaJem Chronicle
P.O. Box 1636
Winston-Salem, NC 27102
The WlMton-Sahm Chronld ? it
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Winston-Salenf,
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PUBLIC NOTICE
THE HOUSING AUTHORITY AT
901 CLEVELAND AVENUE
WILL COMMENCE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
FOR ITS SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE
PAYMENTS PROGRAM BEGINNING TUESDAY,
JUNE 30, 1992 AND EVERY TUESDAY AND
FRIDAY HENCEFORTH FROM THE HOURS OF
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AND FROM 2 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
APPLICATION DEPARTMENT AT
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ART MILLIGAN
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
f ...k i o ul, ?? jT i' ? >i - '
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