' ••••• ‘ **7 ' 1 ,' M ■" jgfl Raleigh, n.c., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1991 VOL. SO. NO. 24 4 15, r* ^ I DEDIOk 5 uj 2 . n w - CO w . UJ o *< 'SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST SINGLE COPY Or IN RALEIGH fcvC ELSEWHERE 300 < ISTORY Special Salute To Black Month, Pages 19-26, On African-American Ksomrwutions In Business & Government. Reasons Varied African-American Lifestyle Today Faces Threats BY MANNING MARABLE Stvanl monthe ago, a Phlladelphii editor luggested tha! couraged” to atop reproducing m ually, by Implanting In tbalr arma th< now, flvo-yoar birth control device To many Afrlcan-Amerlcana, thli wae yot one more indication that thi black imw—iWv waa attack, targeted by a new, aori aopUaticated form of wMte radam. In politics, the Bush administration ifDw«Q uw ifme© oi prominent blifik Republican* such it former Secretory of Transportation William T. Coleman and Secretary of Health and Human Service* Louis Sullivan by vetoing the 1990 Civil Right* Bill. Tv* excuse given by Bush mat the ttioa made it too difficult for to defend themaelve* charge* of racism in effect to the white *upremaci*t wlngof the Republican Party. On this issue, Bush wu closer to David Duke than to the majority of Americans. The Ink on the vetoed bill waa bare ly dry before the next racial con troversy, the new policy which would deny federal funds to colleges which awarded scholarshipe to minority students on the basis of race. Black and Latino educators pointed out that colleges had allocated special scholarships for decades to athlets and others with special skills. Nearly all scholarships for minority students were not baaed narrowly on race, but on economic need as well aa other Im portant criteria. The iharp reaction against this new policy forced Bush into a quick turnabout, declaring that scholarships specifically for racial minorities could be drawn from private funds. But in effect, the entire episode implied that blacks, Hispanic* and other people of color should be excluded from higher education. For African-Americans, these two incidents seemed to symbolise the end of an entire historical period, the civil rights movement for democracy in America. For many years, a sense of optimism and hope pervaded black politics. The movement from radal segregation to full participation within the American mainstream was taken for granted. Now, all the evidence points to a deterioration in the economic and social status of (See THREATENED, P. 2) DAN BLUE Blue Seeks To Move State Forward ■Y DANIEL A. YOUNG, 8R. A crowd of about 1J00 invited guests and (Ugnitertea attended the Salute to North Carolina’* Blade Legislators on the campta of St. Anguethw’e College where former “Pioneere of Peace” were acknowledged and a Rhode Ialand Proclamation was presented to Dan Blue, Jr. Speaker Blue was given an honorary doctoral degree from St. Augustine’s College and accepted a We can look back 60 year# from now and •ay that there came a team of leadership In North Carolina in the '60s, that made it go forward, that was sen sitive to history of deprivation and discrimination, but at the same time look forward to take the state where It ought to be going. Police Say Warning Shots Fired The total shooting of an unarmed man this week by a police officer has left African-Americans gravely con cerned about the need for a new policy on the uae of deadly force by law enforcement agencies in North ' Carolina. Franklinton police said Officer An tonio Caldwell ahot 24-year-old DaryQ Wyche of 3 Sterling St. while he was “acting deranged” and threatening the officer outside a convenience store. Wyche died later at Franklin Regional Medical Center in Lotdsburg, said police chief Ray Gilliam. Caldwell is married to WRAL-TV 5 news anchor Renee Mc Coy. Mice said Officer Caldwell sta>| Wyche Tuesday in froot of the Snack Shack at IMS. Main St. darks at the convenience store had called potato for help shortly after Wyche had entered the store, Weeding profusely, "Here he is slinging blood everywhere. He was Just hollering and cursing.” A clerk at the store called for an officer. “He said, ‘I’m going to kill you!’” Chief Gilliam said. “He said it over and over several timea. The officer began to retreat steadily by backing up, trying to calm the guy down, say ing* ‘Calm down, talk to me, what’s your problem?’ The guy continued to advance. “The officer, with the last attempt, turned around and said, ‘Please stop or I’m going to have to shoot,”’ Chief Gilliam said- “Hie guy continued to advance