fang's = 9SBE! 'Take a White/Black Person Home Week* begins Monday. ? 1 New generation Three young comedians give insight on making people laugh. PAGE B4i Winston-Salem Chronicle 75 cents ? "77ie Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly" ? ? VOL. XVIII, N*A?T*l*0?N?A?L NEWS Black Republicans for Congress Spurred by a desire to reform Congress and promote government initiatives thai witt sratfl&eii urban communities, this * toed bt|J|| Republicans are seeking rtjrijiCT " ' V M VL 1 1 ' " ' ' JM ? -? 1 *' 'Sf-'T"? ~'ifc * y "? "It ? w-m ? m It succcssful, the candidates will foISolpp footsteps cast in 1990 by Rep. Gary Franks of Con necticut's Fifth District Republican The House candidates are seeking to represent their prospective tfbfftets have majority black vot ing-age populations. Others are mostly white. One district is mostly Hispanic. elected to the House of Democrats have control ? since 1932. since 1955. Integrated cast, crew on N.C. film WIILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) ? In the midst of the nation's recent racial unrest, an integrated cast and crew in the Wilmington area was busy constructing something positive with "Simple Jus i ice," a PBS film based on the life of the first black Supreme Court justice, Thurgood Marshall. "Simple Justice'1 starts with Justice Marshall's early years as a law student and ends with his suc cessful drive to end school segregation in the Brown vs. the Board of Education of Topeka deci sion (1954). Set primarily in the South from 1932 to 1954, the film is adapted from Richard Kluger's book of the same name. < C * Stage actor Ptfcer Franc is James stars in the film and James Avery, best known as Uncle Phil on TV's "Fresh Pri nee of Be! Air," is Justice Marshall's mentor, Charles Homton. After shooCtBlfem May 11 to June 13, the film will air in late Januaryas the first drama in "The American Experience" series, which uiitil now consisted solely of docu mentaries. r;;V:. * Court ruling hurts black colleges WASHINGTON. (AP) ? Black public col leges face an uncertain future after a Supreme Court ruling that such schools in Mississipgii were unlawfully kept separate and inferior. Some predict the ruling will bring increased {muling and upgraded degree programs to histori cally black colleges in states that would rather close them than improve them. In its ruling, the high eouart also held that lower courts should decide how to remove the effects of past segregation from historically black, state-run colleges. It was the court's first broad rtduig on segrega tion in colleges, even though it dewed segrega tion in elementary and high schools unlawful near ly 40 years earlier. There are at least 117 black U.S. colleges, 75 of which are state-run schools. Thirty-eight are his torically balck, as in, built explicitly forblack stu dents. , ? .0 ?? Blacks likely to be refused loans BVANSVEXE, Ind. (AP) ? Several Vander burgh County banks are puzzled by a publish*^ report claiming black applicants are more tfljlj three limes as likely to be turned downfor home mortgage loans than whities. In 1990, blacks received less than 1 percent of the money the area's nine banks and thrifts loaned in 1000 to families to buy or renovate homes or to refinance existing loans, The Evansville Courier reported. About 12 percent of the county's popula tion is black. ; \ V The newspaper reviewed 3,43?|ioan ^plica tions submitted to the banks and savings and ldiii in 1990. It found that, in EvansviHe, the ovetjjft rejection rate for white applicants was 8.1 percent, while the black rate was 25.9 percent The same data was used by the Federal Reserve, which last foil released its report showing that blacks nationwide are rejected for mortgage lo ins twice as often as whites. ~~T"~ National News Briefs Compiled from stqff and AP reports Civil disobedience blocks board vote ? School board forced to delay vote on redistricting plan By SAMANTHA McKENZIE Chronicle Staff Writer In a jolting and unexpected speech last Thursday, the Rev. Carlton Eversley told the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County school board that continued discussion on redisricting without black representa tives seated as voting members will not be tolerated. , "We will not allow this board to make a decision without black represen tation. It is illegitmate. It. is not courte ous. It is not right You are not our mas ters and we are not your slaves," began Eversley. His first outburst apparently left the board members stunned and shocked. "We will not sit by idly and allow six people to make our destiny. We are men and women. We are not children. We will not go away and will fight to our dying breath for democracy/ he contin ued Eversley interrupted the meeting on two instances, forcing the board to call for a quick vote to table the issue until the next meeting. During Eversley's first speech, board members Tom Voss and Gloria Whisenhunt abruptly walked out, but quickly returned for a vote to recess the Please see page A2 Together again ! I Ma Marvin Halrston (left) and Fred Chavls couldnt wait to get their feet wet and talk about old times dur ing the recent Atkins High School Class of 1953 reunion held at the Holiday Inn-North. The Class of 1952 held their reunion last weekend. (See story on page A6.) A concerned parent told the Rev. Carlton Eversley that the white communi ty supported him on the redisricting Issue. Death penalty sought for one of four suspects A Community leaders question accounts of the death of Lt Aaron Tise and offer to conduct their own investigation By SAMANTHA McKENZIE Chronide Staff Writer District Attorney Thomas Keith said the investiga tion into the death of Winston-Salem police officer Lt Aaron Tise has shown that only one of the four suspects was on the motor grader at the time of the incident As a result only one of the four black teenagers will face the death penalty. According to police reports, Tise died after being struck by a motor grader on Friday, June 26. Four black teenagers, Conrad Crews, 19, Jamarus Crews, 16, Der rick Frierson, 19 and Theo Witherspoon, 19, were all charged with first degree murder and are being held without bond. Keith said he has received a number of conflicting stories from witnesses; one account stating that at least Please see page A2 Word on the street . . . A On July 9, 1868, the 14th Amendment was ratified and blacks became U.S. citizens. More than a century later many blacks feel they are still not treated equally in this country. * Realistically we are full U.S. citizens, by the ratification of the 14th amendment. But actually there are people of differ ent races and religions who are subjected to an imbal ance in the application of the principles o! the 14th amendment. We can go wherever we want to go, but when we get there we are treated unfairly. . - La volte Roberts, 40 * We will never be treat ed like full U.S. citizens because of the color of our skin. Not as long as we have a white President. Put Jesse Jackson in there and then things will change. When it's time to get a job and to pick up our checks, you see the difference. In reality, we are still slaves. It's just a bunch of bull. . - Reginald Smith, 39 vmm * We are not treated like citizens like we are sup posed to be. Other people come over to this country and get better treatment than us. Some of it is our fault, but not all of it. The white man will never treat us the way he treats another white man. We will never get justice and equality under this sys tem. - Juanlta Howell, 59 L ( I do think justice (for blacks) is unequal and unfair. When my mother went into the store, she gave the woman a $100 bill and the (cashier) looked at her like she stole it. The other person in the store followed me around, like I was going to steal something. I don't see why skin color should have anything to do with it. j - Tamlka F??mo?t#r, 15 f I think we are treated half and half. Sometimes we are treated fairly, but then other times we are not. At least now we can ride the same buses and drink from the same water fountains. Sometimes a white person witt get the job before a black person will. That's when you start noticing the differences (in treatment). I - Ricky Rowland, 34 TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 722-8624, JUST DO IT!