HURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1993 READ MAYA ANGELOU'S POEM PAGE A4 Sharing The Joy African-Americans are needed to visit first-time mothers. PAGE A10 Lethal Weapon v Stage and screen actor Danny Glover performs at WSSU on Jan. 28. v PAGE A6 Winston-Salem Chronicle 75 cents 'The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly" VOL. XIX, No. 21 Bethania Landowners Won't Talk Now By SHERlDfcN^ILL Chronicle AtsisUnt Editor A Dec. 3 Chronicle article about a black' family in Bethania has incited conversations and arguments across town, and prompted an article in the daily paper ? but the landowners themselves don't want to talk abou| if now. ? ? ? : ? In November, Bfetty Conrad Byers and her son. Ali Shabazz, told the Chronicle thai a white landowner was forcing them to.abandon the land they and their ancestors have lived on for 127 years. Winifred Speaks, the white woman, said she was just trying to sell the land she rightfully owned. ** After the Dec. 3 article was published, Speaks' attorney, K. Clay Dawson, said he feltjh s^Chrenicle had misrepresented the true story about the land. Byers, 71, will not allow her attorney, Keith Tart ot Womble Carlvle Sandridge & Rice, to speak with the Chronicle. Instead, she gave him per-, mission to speak with the Winston-Salem Journal. Byer^ and her son then refused to speak with the Chronicle. Speaks' attorney maintains that Speaks has a clear deed to the four wooded lots that Byers says have always been used by her family. Both attorneys agree that Byers' father, William Conrad, left his heirs a clear title to a .67 acre triangular lot. The Forsyth County Register of Deeds lists a 1900 deedjto William Conrad for "2 acres, more or less." The description of the land makes its boundaries difficult to locate. There is also a 1907 deed to William Con rad for the small triangle-shaped lot on which he built a house and raised a family. Dawson says Speaks has never claimed the land on which Byers lives, nor has $he tried to use it. She is trying to sell her four lots, through which Byers has built a driveway. Dawson says Speaks is having diffi culty selling her land because of Byers' driveway and the family's attitude toward prospective buyers who venture out to the property. According to Dawson, the Byers family history is intertwined with Please see page \2 Byers and her son, Ali Shabazz, refuse to speak with the Chronicle. ON THE TTTant^garde BY TANG NIVRI A Main For The Ages They said he was 81 years old, but nt>body thought he was. They said He was pastor emer itus of Ml Zion Baptist Church where he had served for some 31 years, and still pastors at a little ol country church in Davie County. Kelly O.P. Goodwin stood up* like he'd done thousands of tirpes, before a huge crowd gathered for the 13th annual WAAA celebra tion honoring the memory of Dr. Martin Lirther JCing Jr. The theme was Strategies for Survival. I sat back with my three young children, watching, listening, pondering as this grand old man stood and opened his mind's heart, opened his life's treasures and shared them with us. Wrapped in a beautiful kente cloth- head encircled by locks of beautiful gray hair, look ing down over his glasses, he spoke of the poWer of the mind and of slavery: what it was and what it wasn't He is a preacher, but his delivery was not like that of so many others who search for clever words that strain to rhyme. His message didnt stir people to run from the isles declar ing, "What must I do to be saved?" His was not the kind of message that makes people jump and shout and moan. But, in my mind, I shouted, for it way a message that only men who have live4,-rang lives of righteousness can deliver. / Ever so gently, he reminded us to seek the truth of our being. To know ourselves. He reminded us of who we are. of the need to feed our souls and to nourish and replenish the spirit. He admonished us to never forget the wisdom of who made us, to never lose sight of the ultimate plan for our lives, whatever it might be. For a brief moment, it looked like the old man almost "got happy," swinging his arms back and forth, rocking irt his place on the podium, smiling broadly. He was among friends. This grand old man stood smiling before us, as one who had dedicated his life in service to others, and who knew that there was still work to be dope in the' fight for justice, peace and truth. I envied him that he could stand and look out on a crowd so large, and not have to won der if life is worth living. It must be wonderful to walk with the grace and dignity and style of one who knows that God is certain, who is sure of himself because he knows who he is. Perhaps his message was not so much i what he said about life as in what he did with his own life. "Just be yourself," he said. "You some thing, ain't you?" Mortgage Lending: How Banks Try To Insure Fairness ? NationsBank " actively looking" for branch site in East Winston %*Q9WW John Hopper joined in the celebration of his ancestors and beat on an African drum. Hopper is-c fifth-grader at Moore Alternative Elementary School. I ?? African Market Intrigues Students By SHERIDAN HILL Gallery at Winston-Salem State dishes at an African market spread O ir,"-u_u Aslant Editor University. Students froni^oore out in the auditorium of Moore and Latham were j*Trmt*rsed in Alternative Elementary School. The spirit of Africa came to African culture: touching sculpture, town la>t week, courtesy of Diggs trying on robes^and eating African Please seepage A3 By MARK R. MOSS Chronicle Stiff Writer Just what are two of North Carolina's lMgest banks doing to insure that all mortgage applicajRs are being treated fairly? The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, which became law in 1975, was strengthened by Congress in 1989. It requires mortgage banks to report in detail information about the mortgage loan applications they receive. That information includes the number of applica tions from African Americans, aijd the number that were accepted and rejected. Thanks to the HN4DA law, the public now has some idea of who gets mortgage loans. Because of that information, which was reported by The Wall Sireet Journal, the Chronicle was able to ascertain how banks were serving their minority cus Related Editorial Page A4 tomers. The figures for Wachovia of North Carolina and NationsBank reflect room for improvement. Both banks claim that's exactly what they're doing. Herbert Wayne, a Wachovia senior vice president and head of the mortgage unit's statewide operations, said the bank has started a neighborhood revitalization program that is targeted for low-income mortgage applicants. The bank provides a 30-year fixed rate mortgage and will finance 97 percent of the value of Please see page A3 JThey Came Out To Honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ? "You don't have to reject King to ? j embrace Malcolm," said Judge. i I Imiji; ' .f~> r I'lJ?.-... ?-** b>\urkrmoss ? c > 1c Staff Writer They marched, hundreds strong, :roro Mt. Zion Baptist Church on Martin Luther King Blvd. to the. Benton Con vention Center Monday morning to com memorate the legacy of a man who. aroused the conscience of not only his ovmi race, but of all Americans. They gathered at the convention centcr to pray and cele)>rate. and to hear the thoughts of others on what has been done, and what needs to be done, in memory of this man who ended up giv ing his life because he raised the nation's conscience. They went their separate ways an hour or so later, somewhat satiated by the spirit and camaraderie that enveloped the huge room because of this man who refused to let America gojitinue to turn ;tf ? ck on its racial problems. That man was Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the "they" were the people of Winston-Salem, whose very presence on the chilly streets and in the warm hall of the center was a statement of solidar ity for what the civil rights leader left behind. ?"~We are here to remember a man who helped change the thinking of a whole generation." said Mutter Evans, owner and general manager of WAAA. "He preached universal love and brother hood." Please see page A 2 On Jan. IS marchers walked along Fifth Street in honor oj Martin Luther King's birthday. \ TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 919-722-8624 ?