INATIONALI BRIEFS^ Cops arraigned in Louima case NEW YORK - Two plain-clothes police officers were free on SI60.000 bond Monday after appearing in court on federal charges they lied about what they knew of the torture of a Haitian immi grant in a Brooklyn police station. The bail was set for Rolando Aleman. 28. and Francisco Rosario, 34. three weeks after a Brooklyn jury convicted a patrolman, * Charles Schwarz. in the bathroom assault on Abner Louima on Aug. 9. 1997. Schwarz also was in court Monday for a routine hearing follow ing his'-trial, where jurors concluded he held down Louima while another officer. Justin Volpe. sodomized the prisoner with a broken broomstick Volpe pleaded guilts during the trial. Both await sentencing. Aleman and Rosario were accused in an indictment last week of repeatedly lying .to, federal insestigators about what they saw in the station house the morning Louima was attacked. Both have been assigned desk duty. If convicted, they face up to five years in prison. Innocent pleas were entered into the record on their behalf dur ing a brief appearance Monday before Magistrate Judge Roanne Mann. Rosario declined to speak to reporters outside court but his lawyer. Richard Levitt. said his client was innocent. Aleman's attorney. Edward Jenks, has said his client had nothing to do with Louima. Judge dismisses BCR suit ORLANDO. Fla. - A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit contest ing Dayton? B6ach s traffic plan for Black College Reunion, saying nothing is left to decide because the event is over. However, U.S. District Judge Patricia Fawsett said in Monday's ruling that plaintiffs may ask the court to reopen the case if the city attempts to implement a similar traffic plan in future years. In April. Fawsett ruled that the city's traffic management plan for Black College Reunion was unconstitutional because it unfairly sin gled out the event and restricted the First Amendment right of those intending to assemble. City attorneys later asked the judge to dismiss the case, saying it had no intentiort to resurrect the controversial traffic plan, which limited access to beaches and forced beach residents and workers to carry passes for parking and beach access. Cities to receive help in HIV crisis According to Donna E. Shala, Health and Human Services Sec retary, Detroit, Philadelphia and Miami will be the first of. 11 U.S. metropolitan areas to receive special technical assistance from fed eral Crisis Response Teams for eight to 10 weeks to help combat the spread Of H/V/AIDS among racial and ethnic minority popula tions. ?, Shalala said HHS targeted cities with the largest minority popu lations affected by HIV/AIDS. To be eligible for assistance, cities ? had to have populations of at least 500,000 people and at least 1,500 African-American or Hispanic people living with HIV/AIDS. Other areas scheduled to receive help from the Crisis Response Teams are Atlanta, Ga ; Baltimore, Md ; Chicago; Los Angeles; Washington, D.C.; Newark, N.J.; New Haven/Bridgeport/Dan bury/Waterbury. Conn.; and West Palm Beach/Boca Raton, Fla. Lesbians and gays apply for NYPD The Lesbian & Gay Community Services Center, in conjunction with the Gay Officers Action League, recently mailed more than 55,000 New York Police Department applications to Center mem bers and supporters in an effort to diversify the NYPD. The recruit ment campaign is aimed at attracting more lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender recruits. The deadline to submit applications is July 27. A multiple-choice test is scheduled for Sept. 25. The application fee is $35. For further information, contact The Center at One Little West 12th Street, New York, NY 10014. 212-620-7310, Fax 212-924-2657, E-mail: news @ eavcenter.org. INTERNATIONAL C aribbean leader passes ST. JQHN'S, Antigua - Verc Q Bird. who brought indepen dence to Antigua and founded a political dynasty that continues to rule, died Monday. He was 89, i Bird rose from poverty and overcame a lack of formal education to become a union leader who defied British colonizers in the 1950s hy demanding higher wages for sugar cane cutters. Bird led his country to independence frqm Britain in 1981. Although Antigua began rapid development under Bird, in recent years the nation, has became known as one of the most cor rupt in the Caribbean. . ? . ? The dominant figure in Antiguan politics for more than 50 years. Bird retired in 1994. A son, Lester, was elected prime minister and reelected this year. As leader. Bird introduced free secondary education, island-wide electricity service and building projects such as an international air port and interior village roads. He aggressively promoted tourism, making Antigua a leading Caribbean destination. The island gained international notoriety in the late 1970s for allowing the testing of weapons for South Africa, then under apartheid. It was in the news again in the early 1980s for harboring fugitive U.S. financier Robert Vesco. INDEX OPINION A6 SPORTS ?! RELIGION B6 CLASSIFIEDS ?9 HEALTH C3 ENTER. C7 CALENDAR CIO This Week In Blaeh History... ?July 1, 1991 - Clarence Thomas is nominated by President George Bush to the U.S. Supreme Court Thomas' confirmation hearings will be the most controversial in U.S. history and include charges of sexual harassment by former employee Anita Hill. July 6,1868 ? Eighty-five black representatives join 70 white ones in Columbia, S C., for the opening of the South Carolina General Assembly. It is the first and last majority blade legisla ture in the nation's history. I ? NAACP receives gift to help entrepreneurs I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BALTIMORE - A foundation established by the late owner of the food conglomerate TLC Beatrice gave the NAACP SI million to continue training future budding black business leaders. The money will allow the National Association (for the Advancement of Colored People to continue funding the NAACP Reginald F. Lewis Youth Entrepre neurial Institute for five years. Lewis formed TLC Beatrice International Holdings Inc. in a $985 million buyout funded partly by junk bond mastermind Michael Milken in 1987. The deal made Lewis the first black executive to control a billion-dollar company. He died of brain cancer in 1993, This summer, 120 high school students will take the four-week course that bears his name, which includes classes on finance, team building and etiquette. The pro gram, first started in 1994, will be offered this year in Baltimore; Atlanta; Austin, Texas; Charlotte. N.C.; Columbia, S.C.; Fort Laud erdale, Fl'a; Gary, Ind.; and Rich mond, Va. NAACP President Kweisi ^ ^ ^ Mfume said the program is needed to bolster the number of black entrepreneurs in the United States, something that is "simply not going to happen in a vacuum." "This is a talent pool we're cre ating here," he said. Forbes magazine listed Lewis among the 400 richest Americans in 1992, when his net worth was an estimated $400 million. After his death the following year, the com pany suffered both management and shareholder turmoil. Lewis' widow, Loida Nicolas Lewis, took the helm of the com pany. In May, she announced plans to liquidate the largely European food conglomerate her husband oversaw. Management convinced her it was the best course for investors. Throughout its short life, TLC Beatrice has been hailed as a suc cess story. In 1987, when TLC Beatrice reported revenue of $1.8 billion, it became the first black-owned com pany to have more than $1 billion in annual sales The company then began its reign at the top of Black Enter prise magazine's annual list of the. country's 100 biggest black-owned ?? 4 -4 companies. . associates, hit its peak in 1996 TLC Beatrice, which was close- when it had $2.23 billion in rev ly held by Jthe Lewis family and enue. 4 4 4 ?* ?* ? f~\ . Photo by Greg Nelson/The Associated Press KmW Mfume, pmidbnt of the NAACP, and Loida Lewis sign documents establishing a $ I nigcn endowment for the NAACP Reginald F. Lewis Youth CiOiefMeneurial btstiMe a* a ceremony last week at Morgan Stale Uniemshy in Duiiifiiwrc, branding ocfiffKi rnc rwo signers is Keyinoio icwij i moil kji, \aw^ otyn Fugett. The endowment ts a gift of the Reginald F. Lewis Famdy and Foun 111-year-old woman holds key to long lite ;] BY USACORNWELL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CINCINNATI - Bessie Thomas has spent 111 years living by a few basic rules-principles she believes will work for people of any age. "Work hard, save your money and mind your own business," said Ms. Thomas, in a no-nonsense tone of voice. "You treat everybody alike and be as good to everybody as you can." Thomas, who was born in 1888, said she learned those rules of life growing up with two sisters and four brothers on her parents' farm near Macon, Ga. She said her parents probably were slaves early in their lives, but they never talked about it. "I had a good family, and they brought me up right," she said. "We picked cotton and raised cows, pigs and chickens. When I first started working alongside my father, I worked for a stick of candy and 1 thought that was really something." Thomas' siblings and parents have been gone for many years, but she still has nieces and nephews who look to her for advice. "She has always urged us all to follow those rules, and it's been good advice," said nephew James Thomas, 55, of Cincinnati. "When we would stay with her as kids, she wasn't too strict, but she would always keep us under control - and she always taught us to do the right thing." While James Thomas said his aunt was always there for her family, she never married nor had children of her own. "It was hard enough to take care of myself,. especially during the Depression. I didn't want children if I couldn't take care of them right," said the frail, slender woman, whose .* lively brown eyes still sparkle with spirit and huntor. "1 always worked hard and tried to do what I thought God wanted. If I made a nickel, I saved three cents of it, and I took care of my house and garden. I did n't go running around like lots of folks," Thomas remained in her own home until about six years ago. Now she lives at the Amber Park Retire ment Center in suburban Deer Park, where she still makes her own bed and keeps her small apartment neat and orderly. "I like a clean place," she said "They bring me my medicine and my meals, but I try to do as much as I can myself." Staff members at the center also look to "Ms. Bessie" for advice. "She is amazing," said nursing assistant Patricia Andrews. "You can tell her something, and a month later she still remembers everything you said. When you go to her for advice and help with your problems. * she tells it like it is. She doesn't spare any punches." Thomas never went past the sixth grade in school, but she said she never stopped reading ahd learn ing. ' i* "I read the newspaper every day. but I mostly have to stick to the big print, because my eyes aren't so good anymore," she said. She has a television that she doesa't watch very often, and she says she never cared much for movies. ? "I never had the time, and I don't care much about that kind of frol icking," she said. When it comes to music, she mostly likes the old hymns "1 still sing hymns and fall on my See Long life cm A10 Jffi 8^" ^1 ^r ** i *K**m 1 L^Btfj^BP^-''''V I 9 n^T^if