OlMHi Andra Horlwi (vf bnd wAm h? was u?ot>?d by ? dof April 7. Mother fears boy bitten by dog may be traumatized By PAUL COLLINS TMCWMWKXE Six-year-old DeVante Andre Horton has been so frightened since he was attacked by a dog April 7 that he has been sleeping with his mother at night. Monica Lattice Thomas fears her son might be traumatized. He's also experiencing pain. Doctors prescribed morphine and some other medicines to help ease the pain DeVant? was wearing a large, white bondage wrapped around his head during an interview at his home at 1609 N. Patterson Ave. late Friday afternoon. He had missed school since the dog attack. During the interview, he hovered around his mother, some times sitting on her lap. Several well-wishers came to the home to bring DeVantt balloons and candy. DeVantes mother told a reporter, "He's a little better; but he's still frightened." As a result of the dog attack, DeVante had 19 staples on his head and 11 abrasions on his leg, back and buttocks. The dog attack happened about 4:39 pm. April 7 at 1515 Patterson Ave., less than 150 feet from DeVante's home. Officer R.K.. Canty of the Winston-Salem Police Depart ment said that (me of the officers that responded to the dog attack shot the dog in the leg when the dog charged the officer. The dog, a pit bull mixed with Rottweiler, was taken to a veteri narian for treatment and placed in quarantine. The dog's wound was not life-threatening. The dog was current on its shots. Canty said that a witness, Tracy Lavern Pratt of 310 ?. I6U1 Street, reported that earlier in the afternoon on April 7 she saw two children playing at the dog pen at ISIS Patterson Ave., and she tokl them to leave the dog alone. Pratt said she came outside again about 4 p.m. and the boys were kicking the dog pin and poking a stick in the gate, according to Canty. Pratt said she told the boys to leave, according to Canty. About 4:23 p.m., Pratt saw two kids running on a path and a dog running behind them. Pratt said that Lydia Jackson of 1313 Patterson Ave. tried to hold the dog back by beating it with a stick. Canty said that Dennis Phillip Jackson of 1313 Patterson Ave. owns the dog. Lydia Jackson is his mother. Ste Dog M* on A11 ? . ?? ' yr ' ^ | ,*^=j Not to bo taken til ;1?6^ car-rt-sort" "co 2 Jf \SS^M 44\\^4 1 "i from this library =6 forsyth cxty pub lib 1974 - Celebrating 25 Years - 1999 |^ jtftnston jktkktkkm A ray of hope * ... ' ' i'- . v * Photo by Jen Young Claire Colaman and Justin Mirabel participate in a "candlelight" service Monday. The two were winners in Crossing 52's annual essay/poster contest. For full story, see A3. * > : ? - - a ^ ^ '*? ^ m mm ^ Guiltord moves closer to redistricting plan By DAMON FORD THE CHRONICLE . HIGH POINT - With the April 27 deadline looming, the Guilford County School Board crept aUittle closer to finalizing a redisricting plan for the system Tuesday night. More than 40 people attended the three-hour work session, including members of the N.C. Racial Justice Network, who said a few days before that they would confront the board about their concerns abput the plan, though residents arel ndt allowed to talk with board members during these sessions. More than 25 law enforcement officers from the sheriff's depart ment and High Point Police Department, including a SWAT team, were bn hand. But nothing happened. Net work members waited until a break in the proceedings to discuss their points with board members. The most pressing issue for RJN members is new schools in the black community. For months the Network has been adamant in its efforts to get the 11 -member board to consider adding a new high school on Franklin Boulevard near the city limits in conjunction with renovat ing Dudley High School. After much debate, the board decided that there were not enough students in the area to support two high schools. . "I have looked at your num bers, I looked at numbers we gen erated and the justification is not there," said board member Calvin Boykin to Network member Ervin Brisbon. * Brisbon pointed out that black chifdren at Smith High School could be moved back to Dudjey High School and white students who live in Smith s district could be moved from Ragsdale High School, which is in Jamestown - a small town located between Greensboro and High Boint - to Smith. "JJ?hy should (black children) have to stay at Smith when you let the same white (children) right near Smith go down to Ragsdale?" Brisbon asked. > Boykin acknowledged the dis crepancy but also said there were too many other conditions tieki into the Network's proposal for it to work. f . "We have to accommodate all the folks in this county," Boykin said. The board also discussed mov ing Dudley from its current site on Lincoln Avenue to a site a couple of miles east on Franklin Boule vard. Because of the historical sig nificance of the 70-year-old school, the city's only remaining See School Board on A10 > ? _' i | Eversley: Board 'racist and reactionary' rr?s*i By T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE Van Lawrence brought with him a stern warning for African Americans Saturday when he came to Winston-Salem from Alexan dria, Va. With implementation of the U.S. governments 2000 census effort just months away, Lawrence, a government partnership special ist with the Bureau of the Census, told a group at Winston-Salem State University that it's imperative that blacks respond to all census related correspondences in a timely manner. "Census data is used for nearly every allocation of resources in this country," he said. Lawrence added that the federal, state and local governments also use the cen sus to decide where to build new highways and schools and how to draw school and congressional dis tricts. African Americans cannot afford to be left out of the census count; it will be politically and eco nomically detrimental. Lawrence said. "If we get a bad count, we have to live with those numbers for the next 10 years," he said. It has been estimated that the last census missed 129,000 people in North Carolina alone, a large portion of whom were believed to be minorities Democrats, spearheaded by President Bill Clinton, had tried to change the method in which the census is conducted. They argued that a scientific sampling would be more successful than an actual head count at gauging the nation s population. But Republicans balked at the plan and the U.S. Supreme Court eventually dis missed the sampling idea. African Americans are notori ous for being left out of the census, Lawrence said. "There are a lot of reasons we don't answer the census, starting with the fact that, historically, we don't trust the government," he said. But he urged blacks to put such misgivings aside and return their census forms when they begin arriving in mailboxes next year. The census questionnaire will ask citizens to reveal personal informa Set' Forum on A10 HHl ? FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS CALL (336) 722-9624 ? MASTERCARD, VISA AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTED ? ? * . * ? Mouse bill would payHBCUsfor past discrimination THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RALEIGH - The state would pay historically black North Carolina universities millions of dollars to compensate for past racism and fund ing inequities under a bill proposed by a Durham legislator. Rep. Mickey Michaux's measure would give the five historically black schools and the University of North Carolina at Pembroke, which has a large American Indian enrollment, an extra $21 million a year to sup plement their budgets. Four years ago, a General Assembly-ordered I study concluded five state universities, all predomi- I nantly white, were underfunded and said the state's I five historically black universities were overfunded, along with six other schools in the system, includ- I ing UNC-Chapel Hill, The five underfunded schools have split an I extra $21 million a year from the state since-the H study was done. Michaux said he wants to do the same for UNC-Pembroke and the historically black schools Michaux - Fayetteville State, Winston-Salem State, Eliza beth City State, North Carolina A&T and North Carolina Central. Legislators support the idea, Michaux said, "but it's going to be tem pered by a realistic look at what our budget is." He said Appalachian State University and UNC-Asheville could be added to the bill because they are smaller schools with extra needs. Michaux said the historically black schools judged to be underfund ed by the study started further behind the other schools because of decades of racism and neglect. f "We brag about having one of the best university systems in the coun try, but the system could even be better if we didn't always pour vast amounts of funding into the top three schools," Michaux said. "Put it into some of the ones lower down and bring our whole system up to be the best in the country." Angela Bassett to be guest of honor at benefit By DAMON FORD ' ? THE CHRONICLE ' . * Academy Award nominee Angela Bassett, who spent her early child hood years in Winston-Salem, will be the guest of honor at an evening gala on April 17 to benefit Best Choice Center, a community-based, child-development education program in Winston-Salem. \ "We are very excited to have a celebrity of I Angela Bassett's fame and stature to join us for this j very important fund-raiser." said Dorothy Graham Wheeler, executive director. "This promises to be a I very special evening." The gala is a community celebration of Best I Choice Center's 10th anniversary. The fund-raiser I will be held from 8-11 p.m. at the Wachovia Linden I Building, 401 Linden Street. Tax-deductible donations to the gala festivities Baiftt range from $125-$500 and the pre-gala reception is . ' ? $1,000 per couple. Contributions to the pre-gala reception with Bassett from 5-6 p.m. include a photograph session with Basse| and two histori See Bassett on A10 Geneva's softer side . Owwvo frown ditcu*??? why *ho likot "Rood Horno," on# of sovon of hor paintings that wiM bo on dispiay at Tho Doha Art* Confor noxf woob. For full story, coo A3.