48 "0805 * * ? * * *f~AP-pT-T TO"1? NORTH CAROLINA ROOM FORSYTH CTV PUBLIC LIBRARY GS0 W 5TH ST WTNSTON SALEM NC 27101-2755 Chronicle 75 cents CELEBRATING 30 YEARS OE COMMUNITY JOURNALISM Vol. XXXI No. 49 BB THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 2 Tabor looks forward to season - See Page Bl Trade businesses will soon shut doors - See Page A 3 Angelou column makes debut . - See Page CI Family event attracts many -See Page CI Photo* by Jaeson Pin Actress Ruby Dee lis tens as Larry Leon Hamlin talks about the legacy of her late husband , Ossie Davis. The leg endary actor was remembered Mon day at the Opening Night Gala of the 2005 National Black Theatre Festival. Below: Actor Mal colm-Jamal Warner speaks at a news conference earlier this week. The actor is becoming a festi val regular. He stars in his one-man show, " Love A Other Social Issues at this year's NBTF. Kaboom! National Black Theatre Festival is off to a blast CHRONICLE STAFF REPORT It is hard to determine who is having more fun this week at the 2005 National Black stars with good memories have actually formed bonds with theater fans they have met over the years. "I have actually watched Theatre Festival - the celebrities or the fans who have come from all across the country to see them. Both groups have been seen chronicling their experiences at the festival with digital cameras and camcorders. And even though many of the people's kids grow," said actress Ella Joyce, who has attended seven straight festivals. The 2005 NBTF officially kicked off Monday, but the patented energy that the event brings to the city was already in the air days before that. Festival founder, producer actors are working in plays and musicals this week, most of them consider festival week to be the best vacation they have ever had. a time to gain energy and inspiration. By most accounts, the fes tival is more like a family reunion. Some celebrities see each other only every two years at the festival. Those and artistic director Larry Leon Hamlin has come to call his festival "Black Theatre Holy Ground." And the event is sacred to many just as is black theater, an art form that the festival has allowed to thrive. "There is a certain swag Sec NBTF n All Photo b> JaeMtn Pill Actor Daniel Beaty (right) shares a laugh with Larry Leon Hamlin and his father ; Danny Beaty, in the lobby of the Marriott on Monday. Actor 's reconnection with his father has been real-life drama Nowfae, Beaty's father had been in and out of jail _ ALKER '? THE CHRONICLE There is a monologue thai Daniel Beaty delivers in his one man show "Emergence-See1" in which he laments about a young boy who loqgs for a male role model, someone to teach him how "to dribble a ball, talk to a lady, walk like a man." Beaty is a Yale-trained actor, but the power and passion that he invokes when he recites the piece is no act. Beaty spent much of his life physically and emotionally separated from his father, Danny Beaty. The elder Beaty has spent much of his 58 years of life behind bars, a fact that he is not proud of but not ashamed to talk about. "I gave my life to crime. I thought I had a right to do things my way," said Danny Beaty. who was locked up for the very first time when he was only 10 years old for stealing watches. Danny Beaty just finished his most recent - ami what he says is his last - stint in prison. He got out in November after serving nearly 10 years for aggravated assault. Danny Beaty kept up with his See Beaty on A7 In Grateful Memory of Our Founders, Florrie S. Russell and Carl ti. Russell, Sr. " Growing and Still Dedicated to Serve You Better " Jiussell ffimte rat jMomc Wishes to Thank Everyone For Their Support 822 Carl Rust* (at Martin Luther I Winst oil -Salem, N< (336) 722-3 Fax (336) 631 Sit-in hero to take on Burke Carl Matthews is upset that the city demolished his daughter's house BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE It will be legend against legend in the Sept. 27 Demo cratic primary for the North east City Council Ward. Carl Matthews filed late last week to run for the seat. He will face longtime Council Member Vivian Burke and Rasheed Bey, who has fre quently run for the council over the years. Others could file to run in the ward before tomor row's 5 p.m. deadline. Matthews is a well-known local civil rights pioneer. In I960, he led a group of Win ston-Salem State and Wake Forest students in a sit-move ment aimed at forcing down town five-and-dime stores to integrate their lunch counters. Matthews was jailed and threatened along the way, but the movement was a success. The department stores buck led to the pressure that the sit-ins created and opened the lunch counters to blacks. Sec Race on AlO Harrell School coming to town Teens will learn interworkings of state government BY COURTNEY GAILLARD THE CHRONICLE V Winston-Salem will host a two-day legislative seminar for high school students Aug. 27 28. The fl arre 1 1 School of Govern m e n t promises to give local young people the chance to experi ence the inner workings of the N.C. General Assembly. A slew of state and local elected officials - including For Reference Not to be taken from ? his library