\ SWDHTS REMARKS DISMISSED Entertainer BIU Coeby Myi •porta nnalyit Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder didn’t deserve to be Bred by CBS for laying blacks make better athletes because of •elective breeding before the CIvU War. Cosby, In a tetofibone' call to The Associated Press, said . te "didn’t want people to hang the man. It’s not that I think he’s wonderful guy... but hangings that are going on don’t nuke ns better human beings.” New York Gov. Mario Cuomo •aid Synder’s remarks about blacks in sports were not unique and reflected what “other people say In Uving rooms.” Speaking • after a two-hour tribute to Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Albany, N.Y., Cuomo condemned : Synder’s statements as “stupid, 1 stereotypical. Ignorant talk.” But he'added, “Jimmy the Greek is not one person In millions who made this up.” VEIL OF SECRECY People for the American Way called on PreaMent Reagan and the presidential candidates of both parties to commit to reverse what it described as an "extraor dinary explosion of secrecy in government over the last seven years." PAW Chairman John I. Bachanan cited examples of the group’s report, “Government Secrecy: Decisions Without De mocracy,” released recently, and called on the candidates and the president to "make a commit ment to lift the veil of secrecy." The report documents anmerous examples of excessive secrecy Including the nse of secret presidential directives to Justice operations that con travene the law, a secret Pen tagon budget that asks nearly 930 billion in weapons systems and special operations, and lifetime censorship agreements forced on public employees. YOUTH LEGISLATURE High school students, herei your opportunity to try your hand at lawmaking. The annual Youth la live Assembly has been for March 4-0 at the Mar I. Registration leadline ■j.h Pah. A,■ -The pampas* of the meek legislature into give you enough to vote -in opportunity to voice their op tions and recom mendations on important current issues," said Administration Secretary James S. Lofton. The youthful legislators will par ticipate in one of 10 committees— apiculture,’ civil rights, educa tion, environment, government operations, human sexuality, In ternational affairs, substance abuse, transportation and youth rights. They will draw up bills, vote on them and report the. results to state leaders. Representatives of more (turn TS groups at a strategy session on South African sanctions hove vowed to lobby both in Congress and among grassroots consti tuents to make apartheid’s hor rors a i#88 campaign issue. The Capitol Hill meeting was opened i by Rep. Ronald V. Dellums (D-Calif.), sponsor of HR ISM. a sanctions Mil that he calls a "moral and political imperative." MAKING APARTHEID AN ISSUE RACIAL VIOLENCE PROSECUTOR About 3,SM people rallied Mon day. calling for a permaaent special prosecutor for racial violence cases. The peaceful marchers la a Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday protest shouted, “No Justice. No Peace.” The holiday came amid heighten ed racial tensions here. Three white Howard Beach youths were convicted la a black’s death and racially motivated violence Is on the else. “If people of good will fall to speak out... the silence could be interpreted as condoning racial or bias-related bigotry,” said Norman Siegel of the New York Civil Liberties Union. WEATHER The forecast far the Tar Heel i for partly cloudy skies j in the Ms and aearte _coast. Lews will range from the mid-Ms to W l the mountains. Lews win be _ mixed with rain or j cast. Highs will be la s. Iowa In the Ms and Ms. y will be fair with highs la thetesand lows In the I ' Mu ML M Mykij w RALEIGH, N.C., THURSDAY-SUNDAY JANUARY 21,1988 .. Mini, ii ml* N.C, s Semi-Weekly DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST ■ . VOL. 47, NO. 16 SINGLE COPY Of? IN RALEIGH ^*S0. ELSEWHERE 300 A Spirit Of Warmth Prevails From CAROLINIAN Staff Reports As part of the Martin Luther King Week celebrations, officials, hard working men and women, students and others, numbering approximate ly 2,000, gathered in the Raleigh Civic Canter after a march down Wilm ington Street to observe leader’s birthday. At the Civic Center, y»»r_ Hurst Adams, during his keynote ad dress, warned that too many people lisrin the past and that the “good Old are gone. ■ Mgr ‘Dr. King is stilt a force L. apd.the vision lives on in the hearts arid minds of people of good will of all races and creeds. Dr. King was, Dr. King is, a man for all seasons. He is * human being for all eternity. He is an affirmation of the beat in our'own humanity.” The governor also said, “It is for us to help the politically, the «See DR- KING, P. 2 ) Founder's Day PlannedFor The campus of St. Augustine’s Col lege and the city of Raleigh are buss ing with excitement as the college plans homecoming activities and its 122nd Founder’ Day during the week of Jan. 28-Slr' On Tuesday, Jan. 26, Brigadier Gen.. Fred A. Gordon, the ,61st com mandant of the U.S. Military Aoademy, will be the keynote speaker for the Founders’ Day con vocation. Gordon is the first black military officer to hold the post at West Point. The Founders' Day convocation will be held in the Emery Gymnasium at 10:30 a.m. on Jan. 26 and is open to the public. On Wednesday, Jan. 27, there will be a homecoming pageant in Emery Gymnasium at 7 p.m., and on Friday, there will be several events including a president's reception from 7:30-0 p.m. at the Martin Luther King Student Union, an alumni hospitality session hosted by the National Alum ni Association at the Holiday Inn Downtown at 0 p.m., and a student dance in Emery at 9 p.m. On Saturday, events will include the homecoming game where the Falcons will meet Fayetteville State University at Enloe High School and a Founders’ Day banquet at the Raleigh Civic Center. Marshall B. Bass, senior vice preel < See FOUNDER’S. P. 2> Drug Addicts ASHEVILLE - As many as four out of five inmates in the state prison .. mrfthaieohoio. Official who to prefmmtoald into a room of how many of them Hi I •] Educators hold an annual Martin Luther King, dr., mtmortat banquet speaker Rep. Daniel T. Blue, Jr. In the bottom photo, the audience loins hands in staling “UR Every Vetae and Communications Dept Photos) Study Urges Police To Promote 2 Slack Females As SergeantM The Raleigh Police Department should promote two black male of fleets and two female officers as sergeants within six months, accor ding to a report endorsed by Police Chief Frederick K. Heineman. On Tuesday, the report was discussed by the Raleigh Cl tv Council and it wai decided that It should be sent back to the Law and Finance Committee for some clarification. That body will examine the study again on Tuesday, Jfan. 26. Currently, the Raleigh Police Department has six blacks and no women among it* «4 supervisors—of ncers bolding tne ran* ai sergeant or above. Several large North Carolina police force* have more black* and women (uparviaon. The report wa* commissioned in October 1917 after the department iuued a promotion Uet that pome of ficers challenged a* unfair because it virtually guaran^ed jar M or female officer* would he named ierg**nt la the next two yehnt' ^ Thit Wnk't Approbation Monay RUSH ST. FOOD MART "YOU* COMPLETE CONVENIENCE STOHE” Brave Youth Makes Heroic Fire Rescue From CAROLINIAN Staff Reports A six-year-old responded quickly and saved the life of his sister when a fire started in the house in which he lived. The house was located on Watkins Road, which runs off Old Milburnie Road on 64 East, next to Jones Store. According to Clyde Hedgepeth, a tax icab driver who drives the youth to school, the mother of the children had stepped out of the house to visit her mother’s trailer and the father had gone to the store. After leaving the store, the father noticed a ball of smoke coming from the house and went running to save his children. His six-year-old son, An thony Hinton, had their one-year-old daughter, Claudette, by the arm and was coming around the house. Hedgepeth said that everything in the house was lost, including the son’s pet rabbit and puppies, and the fami ly escaped with only the clothes on their backs. Anthony Hinton attends school at Garner Elementary School and is considered a hero. In an effort to help, drivers of Associated Cab Co. are making and collecting donations and food for the family. Much more is needed. All their belongings were destroyed. Peo ple who would like to contribute to the family should call Clyde Hedgepeth at Associated Cab. “Some donations (See BRAVE. P.2) Judges' Bench DRUG SMUGGLING CHARGES The manager of heavy metal group* Bon Jovi and Motley Crue pleaded guilty Tuesday to a federal charge at importing marijuana in connection with the smuggling of 19.5 tons of marijuana into Carteret Coun ty in 1962. Doc McGhee, 37, of Los Angeles, entersd the guilty plea in U.S. District Court in Raleigh under a plea bargain in which prosecutors agreed tdo recommend that he receive a five-year sentence, the minimum for the charge. The govern ment also did not oppose the dismissal of a related marijuana possession charge against McGhee. U.S. District Judge W. Earl Britt allowed McGhee to rafeiain free on1' bond until April 4, when he is schedul ed to be sentenced. McGhee is among' numerous defendants who have been - indicted in Florida, Michigan and- r North Carolina in a federal investiga-' tion of a drug ring accused of smuggl ing II billion worth of marijuana and' ■ cocaine from South America between 1962 and IMS. N (See JUDGES’ BENCH, P. 2) Appreciation Feature Has Three Winners There were three winners in last week's Appreciation Money Feature, sponsored by The CAROLINIAN and participating busineses. The winners who found their names hidden on the Appreciation Page this week were' , Ms. Elaine DUlahunt, 2316 Keith \ Drive; Ms. Rowena Holt, 3939 Wake .V Forest Road; and Hubert Holmes, 190 E. Peace St. After coming into The CAROLIN IAN office at S18 E. Martin St. and property identifying themselves, win ners were awarded 910 checks. iStv APPRECIATION. P. 21