mXSWEEK ms advance to iregionals •••• See >14 See B1 See AS See Cl in a row for iKams? Tavis Smiley returns to Winston see page A3 X Community HRC honors local activists ••• Black men offer advice to teens Winston-Salem Greensboro High Point Vol. XXVI No. 29 275 62201 1938 Chronicle THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 2 als for justice impassioned speech at the end of Sunday worship services at Emmanuel Baptist Church. “It was murder.” Four officers were acquitted of all charges Friday after a the jury - made of four blacks and eight whites - deliberated more than 20 hours over the 24 charges the officers faced. The officers all contended that they fired in self-defense on Feb. 4, 1999, after Diallo, 22, reached for an object they thought was a gun while standing in the vestibule of his Bronx apartment building. The object turned out to be a wallet. Diallo was of demonstrators j down Broadway aBet, not a gun” in prdict in the shoot- dou Diallo, dozens Jers fired up their heated messages ility. . was to the wallet grant reached for they mistook for a what it was,” said iendez during an See Pulpits on A8 Jazz Photo by Cheris Hodges lef John Gist indulges his love of jazz each week by hosting a show on WSNC. Gist has been a disc jockey for a little ion two years. Mef fights fires, spins discs tS HODGES ONICLE bg the week, John Gist bs days fighting fires, every Saturday morn- 6 Winston-Salem fire jJulges his other love ~ •hing sounds of jazz. Q 11 a.m.-l p.m.. Gist found at a soundboard fC (90.5 FM) spinning rite jazz tunes, eally enjoy smooth said. started volunteering at the station two years ago. Gist plays artists like Kim Waters and Kenny G on his two-hour show. He often brings in records and CDs from his own extensive collec tion. “I play music that people can identify with,” he said. “Sometimes a jazz artist will remake an R&B song and peo ple will call in .and ask me about the CD I just played.” Gist decided to do the radio show when he heard an advertisement on the radio calling for volunteers at WSNC. He contacted station manager Joe Watson and the rest is musical history. The only thing he lacks, he said with a chuckle, is an on- air handle. “I thought coming up with one of those names would be kind of young,” he said. Even without a hip DJ name like MC Fireman, Gist has developed a cadre of loyal, listeners. “Some days I get around 10 to 15 calls,” he said. “Some days I don’t get any, but that is just par for the course for any one.” When listening to Gist’s show, listeners are treated to all styles of jazz, including vocal artists and futuristic jazz with a lot of synthesizers and bass. “I don’t go too far back with the music,” he said. He says he doesn’t use his show to teach a class on the history of jazz. Instead he plays the freshest and most current music. See Chief on A12 thews hailed )it-in efforts -KER ws paid an exorbi- soda he drank at counter in 1960. a sip, he had to intimidation, jeer- ^ stint in jail - all ired the drink at a rich counter. ‘ inter, Matthews what type of soda it was, though he vividly recalls the store’s staff throwing away his glass afterward as if it were contaminat ed. There was nothing extraordi nary about the soda, he said, but it was the most filling drink he has ever had. “It was a good soda in the fact that I had defeated the system,” Matthews said last week. What his drink at the lunch See Matthews on A12 Photo by T. Kevin Walker Corf Matthews, far right, talks about his role in the Civil Rights Movement during a panel discussion. Diallo verdict a ‘wake-up call’ BYT. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE Photo by Kevin Walker A woman lights a candle during a vigil for Amadou Diallo held at Goler Memorial AME Zion Church. There were not enough peo ple at the noon service at Goler Memorial AME Zion Church to light the 41 white candles that were erected near the pulpit in the top of a cardboard box. Even after each of the more than two dozen parishioners took turns lighting one of the candles, nearly an entire row stood useless. The situation was a little too ironic for the Rev. Seth O. Lartey, the church’s pastor. “All of us can’t even light 41 candles,” Lartey said, “but this man had 41 bullets shot at him.” The man to whom Lartey referred is Amadou Diallo, the unarmed African immigrant who was slain by four white New York City police officers last year as he stood in the vestibule of his Bronx apartment. The acquittal of the officers last week by a racially mixed Albany jury has caused nation wide outrage among many. Sev eral demonstration marches See Shooting on A9 NAACP calls for boycott of hotel BY CHERIS HODGES AND T. KEVIN WALKER I’HE CHRONICLE Officials with the Adam’s Mark Hotel chain are happy theii problems with the Department of Justice may finally be coming tc a close, but the NAACP is calling on economic sanctions against the hotel chain anyway. In a statement released last week by the NAACP, President Kweisi Mfume criticized the hotel chain for refusing to meet with the NAACP or the Florida attorney general. Both have filed sepa rate suits against the chain claiming it has an established pattern ol discriminating against African Americans. The NAACP suit involves five African Americans who said the} were discriminated against by the Daytona Beach hotel during last year’s Black College Reunion (BCR). NAACP officials are angry that the chain is only attempting tc settle with the Justice Department, which launched an investigatior Yee NAACP o« A12 West talks census BYT. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE Head count. Short form. Long form. Confidentiality. The census is a concept that most adults have difficulty fully grasping; it’ rocket science for most young people. But help came Tuesday as one of Winston-Salem’s most successfu native sons came home to teach Census 101 to middle school students. Togo West Jr., the U.S. secretai^ of veterans affairs, told the studen body of Atkins Middle School that it should take an active role in gettin; parents and neighbors involved in Census 2000. “Something big is coming to town,” West told several hundred student in the school’s gymnasium, “something very big.” West explained to the students that the state and federal governments us census information to determine where to build schools, draw congressiona districts and allocate funds for such things as road improvements. He als< told them about the census’ history of undercounting the nation’s popula tion, especially young people and minorities. West - a Winston-Salem native who graduated from Atkins when it wa a high school and lived on the same street as the school - relayed a local even to demonstrate how avoiding census forms can be to the detriment of a com munity. “\^y do you think (Fourteenth Street School, which was once locatei beside Atkins) is not there anymore?” West asked before answering his owi question. “Because somebody took a census and determined there were nc enough youngsters (in the community) to support keeping the school open. Census 2000 has been given much attention in Winston-Salem and man other cities. Mayor Jack Cavanagh formed a Complete Count Committe several months ago to develop ideas to achieve an accurate local count. See West on A Activists: Continue to fight racism The panel of whites, blaci and Hispanics included Cai Matthews, leader of the Wir ston-Salem sit-in movement; 1 Smith, president of the Winstor Salem Urban League; the Re’ Nelson Johnson, a witness to th 1979 Klan and Nazi massacre i Greensboro; and Richard Bow; ing, chairman of the Southeas Economic Developments. “If you reject a dog, h BY CHERIS HODGES THE CHRONICLE Forty years after students from Winston-Salem Teachers College and Wake Forest College forced down the walls of segre gation, community activists warned current students that the battle is not over. Wake Forest University was the site of a panel discussion on race relations. See Activists on A1 FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS CALL (336) 722-8624 • MASTERCARD, VISA AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTED