saw ?sm Pop Warner Battles Conference Races tighten as the season enters seventh week PAQEB11 The Gospel Truth Five Royales' member, Jimmy Moore, returns to gospel roots. PAGE B1 mmm R Ml&v J 30 Pages This Week Thursday, October 18, 1990 Winston-Salem Chronicle 50 cents - ? - 9 ? "The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekb Step One to close outreach programs By TRACY L. PROSSER Chronicle Staff Writer Step One Substance Abuse Ser vices will soon close its offices in - Winston-Salem's public housing communities. The drug prevention, Catherine Powell education and consultation service agency says it has become finan cially impossible to continue these outreach efforts. Step One's Outreach Services program was funded by a three-year grant from the Office of Substance Abuse Prevention (OSAP), a federal agency. The grant, which was awarded in 1987, runs out Oct 31, 1990. The outreach offices have been in the public housing neigh borhoods for those three years. ? ? Bert Wood, president of Step_ One, said the organization applied to have the funding continued for two more years, but the request was denied. The request for about $150,000 a year for the next two years was one of 700 proposals ?received by OSAP. Only 28 grant proposals were funded this year. "The competition was extreme," Wood said. Having been turned down by OSAP for continued funding of the four workers serving the public housing neighborhoods, Step One asked Forsyth County and the Forsyth County United Way for enough money to fund two outreach workers apiece, Wood said, but both requests were denied. Step One recently received a $50,000 grant from the Governor's Please see page A 12 Steve Neal Ken Bell Campaign '90 Candidates differ on budget debt solution Chronicle Staff Report Steve Neal is the Democratic candidate for the position of U.S. Representative for the fifth district in the elections Nov. 6. A Winston-Salem native, Neal began his career as a mortgage banker before he became the owner and president of a company pub lishing community newspapers in Stokes, Forsyth, and Yadkin coun ties. He joined the House of Repre sentatives in 1975, and currently serves on the House Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs and chairs its Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy, which oversees the Federal Please see page A10 Chronicle Staff Report Ken Bell is running on the Republican ticket for the position of U.S. Representative from the fifth district of North Carolina. Born in Bedford, Ohio, Bell moved to Winston-Salem 25 years ago. He attended Wake Forest Uni versity for his undergraduate stud ies and Wake Forest Law School to earn his law degree. After school, Bell was an assistant United States attorney for the Western District of North Carolina in Ashevillc. While I there, he served as lead attorney for I the Presidential Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force and prosecuted drug importers and Please see page A 10 the BEST CHOICE Center 1521 ? 14th St. IYi 722-0597 T iv V 3" if Photo by L.B Spea* Jr. The Best Choice Center on E. 14th Street was forced to close after nearly seven Inches of rain fell last week, causing the building to be flooded. Photo by LB. Speas Jr. Oh Wow! Five year old Garry Jones is all smiles over the elaborate design he received during a recent street festival in Winston-Salem. Hunt supporters say he 11 ?!W*J *' ? ? 1 * i i Wntn^ii'4 ii? I'll i ii n; ;iii'tii,v ? - ? never stood a chance By TRACY L. PROSSER Chronicle Staff Writer Less than two hours after the jury began deliberating Thursday, Oct. 11, Darryl Eugene Hunt was convicted of the firsniegree" murder of Deboraji Sykes. Sy Ices' body was found in a field off West End Boulevard on Aug. 10, 1984. Hunt was charged with the crime in 1985 and was con victed. The decision was overturned by the North Carolina Supreme Court in May 1989. Hunt's second trial, moved from Forsyth County to Catawba County because of pretrial publicity, was heard by Judge Forrest A. Far rell. H. Dean Bowman, Surry County district attorney, and his assistant James C. Yeates III were the prosecuting attorneys. James E. Fer guson II and Adam Stein defended Hunt. The trial began Monday, Sept. 17, with the selection of the jurors. Eleven whites and one Hispanic were chosen; no African-Ameri cans were selected. For three weeks attorneys from the defense and prosecution made motions, cross examined witnesses. Hunt never took the stand in his own defense. The trial came to an emotional conclusion when Farrell read the jury's decision to the courtroom. After the vcrdict, Hunt said, "I'd like to say in open court, I'm innocent of these charges even though I've been found guilty." He was sentenced to life in prison and was then taken to Central Prison in Raleigh. Ferguson gave notice that he would appeal the case to the North Carolina Supreme Court Prosecuting attorneys- said the jury deter mined that the evidence presented was suffi cent for a conviction and that Hunt got a fair trial. _ The Supreme Court will decide whether or not to overturn the verdict. Winston- Salem attorney Larry Little, a member of Hunt's defense team, said the attorneys will askT that "the decision be overturned because Farrell permitted testimony to be heard that should not have been allowed. After the verdict, Evelyn Jefferson, Sykes' mother, said, "I'd like to see every body who had anything to do with it put in a ccll with Darryl Hunt." She also said Forsyth County was in dire need of a new district attorney. Little said, "What we had in Catawba County was a legal lynching. It was the equivalent of trying him in South Africa.... No blacks on the jury is absurd." He said the juryhad their minds made up aP along ^ "We are disheartened and disappointed by this decision," said Rev. John Mendez, chair man of the Darryl Hunt Legal Defense Com mittee. "We are in no way defeated and don't feel discouraged." "Personally, I think that we didn't get a fair hearing," said Mendez. He pointed to the all-white jury, the white judge, the white dis trict attorneys and the all-white news media. According to Mendez, a white jury cannot understand the "black experience." An African-American would have seen through some of the false testimony made by other African-Amcricans and would have been more rcccptivc to the fact that the policc department made mistakes, Mendez claimcd. Mendez said jury members were seen in Please see page A 12 Claim of a deal to drop charge denied by RUDY ANUhKSON Chronicle Managing Editor An African-American woman who claims she was physically abused by a Winston-Salem police officer says she was offered IT dear - to drop the charges against the offi cer but refused. But neither the attorney defend ing the policeman nor the assistant district attorney assigned to the case say they have any knowledge of a deal being made. The Chronicle first reported the case of Thelina Westbrook in its August 30 issue. Westbrook, who was charged by police with operat ing an unsafe vehicle, Tesisting arrest, and carrying a concealed weapon, filed an assault charge against the officer who charge&her. That officer, D. R. Williams, was reassigned to administrative duties pending the outcome of a hearing. The Westbrook and Williams cases are scheduled to be heard Oct. 26 in courtroom 3-C. Wesibrookra^ single parent and nursing student at Forsyth Technical Community College, wrote in a document she read to officers in the police department's internal affairs division that she had asked officers to move a patrol car that was block _ ing her street. She wrote the car was keeping her from parking near her apartment at 833 Willow Court in the Happy Hill Gardens community the morning of Aug. 17. She wrote she was stopped three times by Williams in a very short time span before she could park her car. The Fast time, she claims, he grabbed her and began slinging her around violently^caus ing injury to her arm, neck; shoul der and hand. Westbrook told the Chronicle that while at the Forsyth County Hall of Justice last week for a hear ing on the charges, her attorney J. Griffin Morgan informed her that the police department would be willing to drop charges against her Please see page A 12 Robert J. Brown Black business expansion urged By PATRICIA SMITH-DEERING Chronicle Staff Writer "We have some laurels, but we don't have any laurels that we can rest on. ..because we had so far to come from and we have so far to go." That was the message from Robert J. Brown, founder, chairman, and president of B&C Associates, Inc. He delivered that message to more than 200 business owners and guests at the East Area Council of the Greater Win ston-Salem Chamber of Commerce First Annual Awards Banquet held Oct. 11 at the M. C. Benton Convention Center. The banquet was held to honor the 1990 Minority Business of the Year and to raise funds for scholarships awarded to business students at Winston-Salem State University. Brown was Special Assistant to President Please see page A 12 Rains close center Best Choice forced to regroup By PATRICIA SMITH-DEERING Chronide Staff Writer Toxic air and pools of water arc the latest problems plaguing the Best Choicc Center, and Dorothy Graham - Wheeler, executive director, is concerned for the health and safety of the neighborhood youth who arc served by the center and of her staff. The ccntcr is located on 14th St. The rccent rains forced Graham- Whcclet to close - the center last week because of the severe flooding that resulted. But, she said, nowadays it doesn't take a hard rain to cause problems. "If it just rains steadily, the whole lower part of the ccntcr is under water," she said. She and her staff were back in the building this week literally mopping up, but the facility is still closed for business. Aside from the heavy flooding that the center has sustained, there is a pervasive stench emanating from the building. "There is a large amount of carbon monoxide in the air," Graham-Wheeler said, adding, "We measured it using a kit from the Environmental Health DeparUnent...Wc are trying not to stay here all ~day." She said that she has been calling around town trying to locate a machine that can clear the air. The currcnt dilemma has Graham -Wheeler trying Please see page A10