REV. JESSE b. JACKSON Jackson Plans Commencement Speech At A&T GREENSBORO-The scheduled 1988 A&T State University com mencement, with U.S. presidential candidate the Rev. Jesse Jackson as speaker, is expected to attract a record crowd to the Greensboro Col iseum. Jackson, a 1964 A&T graduate and one of its most distinguished alumni, will speak at 11 a.m. to the nearly 1,000 graduating seniors, their parents, the A&T faculty and staff and friends. “We are extremely fortunate and grateful to have the Rev. Jackson, the internationally prominent human rights leader, to address our com mencement,” A&T Chancellor Ed ward B. Fort said. “The reality of the situation is that he is very much en route to becoming the next president of the United States.” The occasion will take on additional meaning for Jackson as two of his sons, Jonathan and Jesse Jr., will be among those marching in the com mencement exercise. Jackson’s wife, Jacqueline, also attended A&T, and will be present for the graduation. Jackson is a native of Greenville, S.C. His distinguished cateer in public service began while he was an AltT Student. He was a quarterback on the football team and was elected president of the Student Government Association. While in Greensboro he led student demonstrations against segregated facilities. After gradua tion from A&T, be moved to Chicago where he attended Chicago Theological Seminary. In 1967, the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. appointed him director of SCLC’s Operation Breadbasket. He remained in that position until 1971 when he founded Operation PUSH. Jackson has been much honored for his humanitarian service to the na tion. He has more than 17 honorary degrees. He has received the Golden (See JESSE JACKSON, P. 2) Candidates Speak RWCA Begins Selection Process BY R.P. CORNWALL CHUNN SUIT Writer A political forum at St. Augustine’s College sponsored by the Raleigh Wake Citizens Association heard statewide candidates making pro mises ranging from putting the Bible back in schools from a labor commis sioner aspirant to giving Rev. Jesse Jackson a campaign donation if he should be the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee. A host of statewide office-seekers led by gubernatorial candidates LL Gov. Robert Jordan and Bruce A. Friedman, and the candidate for the Fourth District congressional seat, faced questioning from a panel of ex aminers and a fair-sized audience. Edward T. Smith, chairman of the RWCA political action committee, was moderator for the event, with Margaret Rose Murray, Oscar Smith and attorney Geoffrey Simmons serv ing as the questioning panel for the 2^-hour session on Wednesday even ing. A second political forum will be sponsored by the RWCA on Thursday, April 14, at 7:30 p.m. at St. Ambrose Episcopal Church. The organization’s endorsement meeting is scheduled for Thursday, April 21, at7:30 p.m. at the Hargett Street Branch of the YWCA. Democratic and Republican can didates for Council of State positions, lieutenant governor and governor at Wednesday most freqi I- C JI - I I . their willin 1 p top decisioi ~ _ r - - state depan respond to bwiiiiuiut; tumn us vm drugs, black economic development, education and consumer issues. State Attorney General Lacy Thornburg said combatting drugs'in the state “seems to be a losing battle, but nevertheless we’re contindTiig it.” “The first thing we had to do was get at the demand side... why and how to say no... it’s working beautifully,” said Thornburg, who is seeking to return to office on the Democratic ticket. “We’re working on it at the international, national and The Carolinian RALEIGH, N.C., MONDAY APRtL 11.1988 ATC's Semi-Weekly DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST SNULEi/urr rrjr IN RALEIGH ELSEWHERE 30* VOL. 47. NO. 37 Assaulted After Jogging Woman Raped In Home Police Look For Suspect Police were searching at press time for a male suspect who reportedly raped a Raleigh woman in her home last week. The woman was raped after she returned to her East Raleigh home after jogging, police say. Police say the man grabbed the woman as she was getting her house kee out. The man forced the woman into her East Cabarrus Street home and lock ed the screen door behind them. The woman said the man indicated he had a knife and pushed something against her side. Police describe the suspect as a black male, about 5’7”, 180 pounds, chubby, with a medium complexion and a medium Afro. He was last seen wearing a burgundy Shirt, blue jeans, a blue jacket and a red cap. In related events: Army Spec. 4 Ronald Adrin Gray may face a death sentence after he was found guilty of all 14 rape, robbery, attempted murder and murder charges leveled against him by the Army. Unanimous guilty verdicts by the general court-martial panel on the murder counts make it possible for the Army to sentence him to death. He has already been sentenced to eight life terms by the state after he confessed to raping and killing two Fayetteville women. (See POLICE, P. 2) NAACP fltoN «|RI to Ms. family Banks m itMACP. Ligon Middle School Observes Career Day The members of the eighth grade at Ligon Middle School celebrated the coming of spring recently by par ticipating in Career Day. The purpose of Career Day was to introduce the members of the class to a variety of occupations by those who know them bn an intimate and practical basis, who are actively participating in those fields or who train people who Minority Economic Development Center Opens In Eastern N.C. The Eastern N. C. Center (or Minority Economic Development opened here Saturday, as Ted Hooker, project coordinator, and a boat of well-wishers watched Mayor Ralph Elramey cut the ribbon of ficially opening the center at 305 East Nash St. In downtown Wilson. The center has as a goal to assist municipalities, community organiza tions and businesses in economic development planning and im plementation. The organisers and the initial sup porters of the Center were concerned about the lack of day care facilities for moderate and low-income families, a laek of affordable housing, an incoherent development strategy for the economic involvement of minorities, crime and the effect of rapid development outside the urban areas of cities and towns in Eastern North Carolina. The project coordinator stressed the' points of the minority 'community’s need to raise its stan dard of living by attacking the con tinual drawbacks of teenage pregnan cy, drugs and crime, plus the dire need to pull its small, independent contractors together so that as one they would be able to secure a greater percentage of the area’s construction dollar. The Center and its coordinator look forward to developing a close work ing relationship with developers, real estate brokers and representatives of banking and lending institutions as partners in developing and im plementing acceptable strategies for the revitalization of targeted neighborhoods. The programs envisioned will utilize the resources and technical expertise of the National Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation. M. L. Banner, compliance specialist with the Economic Development Administration of the U. S. Department of Commerce in Washington, D.C„ was in attendance (See MINORITY, P. XI ■: . ' „_____ 'fli El Ramey (3rd M* m wti »f. opening ttw Entarn North Carolina Cantor lor Economic Dirilipnmr* it 305 East Noth St. in WHsoo. On ImmI tar tho occasion won (I. - r.) MaMo Fork*. Tod Hooker, wore in tnose areas. Acting as presenters for the activi ty and their areas of expertise were: George Smart, architecture; Capt. Tyree Jones and his sister flight at tendant Michelle Jones, aviation; Ms. Jane Richardson, banking; Ms. Judy Cross, careers in fashion design and modeling; Dallas Foster, Wake Technical College; Dr. Shrikant Kulkarne, chemistry; Dr. Reda Vilner, chiropractic medicine; Wilbert Williams, computer science. Also, Ms. Montina Lee, counseling; Ms. Lois Staton, museum curator; Ms. Darlene Sams, dental science; Dr. David Fowle, elementary educa tion; Bob McCollum, mechanical engineering; attorney Larry Height, law (ABC commission); attorney Susan Iddings, law (General Assembly and private practice); Dr. William D. Lee, medicine; Sgt. Jim Beck, Army; Sgt. James Utley, Air Force; Petty Officer Penny Briley, Navy; Frank Derrickson, real estate; Ms. Sue Woodling, social work; Gerhardt Zimmerman, sym phony music; and Dr. Ethelbert Chukwu, college education. The participants met in the cafeteria at 7:90a.m. for hot buns and coffee. They were welcomed to Ligon (See LIGON. P. 2) iBRAPY - - - - - - p >f fUlUVIia (UVW *»V» til VUt UIXiU S farmlands each year, acknowledged also the decrease of black-owned farms. “I’ve been very conscious of the problem in this area... We’ve lost 200,000 family farms in the last 20 years. It’s a new ballgame in growing food,” he said. Retiublican candidate for in surance commissioner H.L. Redenhour and a representative of current commissioner, Democrat Jim Long, agreed to the need to relieve the difficulties on female heads of households in obtaining in surance. Fourth District congressional can (See RWCA, P. 2) Senator Hand Calls For Stronger Laws On Drug Trafficking Senate Majority Leader Tony Rand has called for tightening drug traf ficking laws and restricting the driving privileges of DWI offenders. “We have to shut down the drug thvgr," declared Rand, D-Cumberland, “and we have to tighten up on drunk drivers.” Rand, 48, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in the May 3 primary, is the principal sponsor of legislation that has given law enforcement officials more authority to fight increasingly sophisticated drug trafficking rings. “We must extend the use of the investigative grand jury in drug traffick ing cases,” said the Fayetteville attorney. “We also must give our law en forcement agenies the authority to use electronic surveillance.” Rand’s bill on electronic surveillance was adopted by the Senate in 1987 but has yet to be approved by the House. The senator rnade his comments in a press conference on law enforce ment. He was on a campaign tour in which he met with the state’s sheriffs’ | association in Monroe. A large number of law enforcement officials have en i dorsed Rand. Michael F. Easley, president of the state’s District Attorneys Associa tion, said, “Many politicians have declared war on drugs, but Tony Rand is the only one to equip law enforcement with the tools to fight the battle.” Cumberland County District Attorney Edward W. Grannis, Jr., added, “If Tony Rand never gets another vote, he has made one of the most significant contributions against drugs of all North Carolinians.” In his law enforcement position paper, Rand called for tighter restric tions on allowing DWI offenders back on the highways. He said that under current laws, many DWI offenders are allowed to return to the road with little or no driving restrictions. Rand urged the legislature to extend efforts in the public schools to educate elementary school-age children about the dangers of drugs. He cited the success of two pilot programs in Mecklenburg and Wake counties that concentrated on elementary students and said, “The legislature should ex amine these programs and expand them to other school systems, especially for those systems that have serious drug problems.” NCSU Black Students Honored At Banquet North Carolina State University’s sixth annual African-American Awards Banquet recognized top graduate and undergraduate black students for academic achievement in a ceremony last week at the Jane S. McKimmon Center. Jacqueline Hughes-Oliver of 5014 Fort Sumter Road, Raleigh, received the Graduate Dean’s African Amt ican Achievement Award, given to the most academically outstanding African-American graduate student. She is a master’s student in statistics in the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences. Seniors Sheryl D. Brown of Kinston, Pamela S. Gilyard of Raleigh and Donnell T. Walton of Charlotte each received a certificate and a cash award as the black students with the highest undergraduate grade-point average based on more than 30 credit hours. Both Brown and Gilyard received academic awards last year for being among the top three black students. Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ' Robert L. Brown of 803 Arrow Drive, Kinston, holds the highest average. She is majoring in biochemistry. Gilyard, of 2800 Sanderford Road, Raleigh, and Walton, of 800 Walnut Street, Charlotte, are both majoring in electrical engineering. Margaret Evans Goodson of 6405 Dixon Drive, Raleigh, received a cash award for holding a 4.0, or straight A, average. She is a freshman majoring in health occupa tions teacher education. Ninety-four certificates were awarded to students who had com pleted a minimum of 30 hours with a grade-point average of 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale. The Graduate Research Award, presented to the African-American graduate student who best ex emplifies research through publica tion and experimental design, was presented to Ralph Fielder of 517-A N. Bloodworth St., Raleigh. He is a master’s student in product design in the School of Design. The Chancellor’s African American Leadership Award was presented to Richard B. Wright, 1S31 Bellwood Drive. Wright is a master’s student in psychology in the College of Educations nd Psychology. An outstanding Mack graduate stu dent from each NCSU’s colleges and the School of Design received an African-American Achievement (See NCSU BLACK, P. 2) Black Family Conference To Look At Health The steering committee of Strengthening the Black Family, Inc., announces its eighth conference, scheduled for April 23, from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the Boyer Building, St. Augustine’s College. Strengthening the Black Family, Inc., t iablished in 1987, is a community-based coordination and dissemination system chartered to support the implementation of black family enhancement programs in Wake County. Beginning in 1M1, an nual conferences have been con ducted through the networking of organizations which comprise the membership of the present-day Strengthening the Black Family, Inc. The 1988 confernce will focus on “Strengthening the Black Family: Mobilizing Its Resources in Pursuit of (See BLACK FAMILY, P. 2) Activist Julian Pierce Assassination Of Leader BY BENJAMIN r. CHAVIS. JK. M|H«lal I* Th» l'«roH»i»n A* Aiialynta An assassination is always painful. It is particularly painful when it takes from us a leader who was beloved by his people and whose potential was so vibrant. Julian Pierce, a Lumbee In dian attorney and activist in Robeson County, was just such a man. He was killed on March 96 of this year. Attorney Pierce had decided to run for a newly-created Superior Court judgeship in the May primary. It was a dangerous decsion. For this is a county in which drug corruption reputedly reaches even into the of fices of the sheriff and other local of ficials. In addition, Pierce’s opponent was Joe Freeman Britt, an established member of the power structure that runs the county. Britt is the current district attorney and holds the world’s record for sending more peo ple to death row—primarily Native American and African-American, than anyone else. In fact, he’s in the “Guiness Book of World Records” for this dubious distinction. Together, the Native American and African-American populations make up 58 percent of Robeson County. Dexter Locklear, finance committee chairman for Pierce’s campaign, noted that the passage of a recent school referendum showed the poten tial of the combined strength of the Native American and African American votes. Through Julian Pierce’s candidacy, that coalition would have been strengthened even more. Who was this man and why did so meone feel be was so dangerous that he was shotgunned to death in his own home? Pierce was born and rais ed in neighboring Hoke County, graduated from college to become a chemist and then returned for his law degree. After receiving his master’s degree in tax law from Georgetown University, he worked with the Securities and Exchange Commis sion in Washington, D.C. Attorney Pierce could have stayed in Washington, earning a comfortable living and working decant hours. In stead, he made the decision to return home and help empower his people. In 1878 he became the first director of Lumbee River Legal Sendees, form ed to provide legal aid to die poor of the area. Attorney Pierce prepared the peti tion for official federal recognition of the Lumbee Nation which would give them control over their community and its economic development. Pierce was also called upon to aaeiet with numerous cases of unsolved murders of native Americans end African Americans, some even in volving the local police. However, Julian Pierce wee net on ly involved in the law ; rather, ha par ticipated in the entire life of his com munity. Hr was instrumental in the Robeson County Health Corpora tion which operated medical dinks in three Robspm County towns. He also served as chairman and chief fund raiser for an ongoing outdoor play (See ASSASSINATION, P. *)