RALEIGH, N.C., THURSDAY-SUNDAY DECEMBER 22,1988 VOL. 48, NO. 6 ’.C.'s Semi-Weekly DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST SINGLE COPY 0(5 IN RALEIGH ■ ELSEWHERE 30* f Wake Arte Council Helps Young Area Musicians { Page 20 VlJ Eddie Robinson Lobbies ■l For Pioneer Athlete Page 21 NAACP Director Says Campaign BIT L1USSTEH A, HlUGfc NNPA Nw> Mifnt * WASHINGTON, D*.-, with President-elect GeorJ Bush to discuss some^ofJh phone interview from his Baltimore headquarters office, “I have met with George Bush once or twice a year for problems confronting something new to NAi Director Benjamij^C Hooks told NNB#fn 1 /.the'meetings ions involving. tjjjprditt. thd ■issues coufrjontfflB the black com munity frtinlr. open and broadly in clusive." Hooks was responding to an NNPA query concerning his recent visit with the president-elect during which Bush reportedly said he plans to Hooks vifflt'.l has u ICUdll.U . .... WV.O.. VOU...V level posts: Louis Sullivan, president of Morehouse College of Medicine; - Atlanta, to the Department of Health and Human Services, and Lt. Gen. Julius W. Becton. Jr., director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to hcud the newly created ^Veterans Affairs Department igpH.owever, convicted murderer Jvillle. Horton's furlough from a Rlnssachuaeip. prison during which strangle*his opponent Michael Dukakis, troubled the civil rights loader (See NAACP; P. 2) m!a woman and became a IssWc Bush used to literally Police Search Continues Woman Raped In Apartment Intruder Climbs Up Building A man who scaled the building to break into a third-floor apartment early one morning last week raped a Wake County woman who had just returned to her apartment complex on Tall Timber Drive near the Crab trua Valley Mall. Upon entering her apartment, she noticed her belongings were out of order, and she was about to leave, but a nun grabbed her, forced her to disrobe, and blindfolded her. He then teak the woman to the bedroom and raped After the act the rapist fled from the apartment and the woman called the Sheriff’s Department around 3 a.m. A Sheriff’s Department spokesman declined to say whether the rapist used a weapon. The at taaker had somehow managed to cHnb an outside wall and broke in (See taum P.3) NEWS BRIE * FOOD FOR NEEDY Sixteen fraternities and a aorority at North Carolina State University have collected 35,072 pounds of food for distribution to needy residents and tornado vic tims in Wake County. The NCSU Inter-Fraternity Council’s 21st annual fall food drive broke the group’s record by more than 6.000 pounds. Students collected canned and packaged food by going door-to-door in Raleigh during the fall semester. The food has been given to Wake County Relief, a church-based organization that will distribute it. HOLIDAY CALLING WASHINGTON, D.C.—Amer \ lean Telephone & Telegraph Co. •ays it expects to handle more than 47 million long-distance calls this Christmas—a holiday lAClAl HARRASSMERT—The Governor's Task force on systems. The Task Force are pictured from left, Josie Kite of Racial, RoHgious and Ethnic Violence and Intimidation held a Greensboro, Edward Knox of Charlotte, James Soars of public forum last Thursday in an effort to learn more about Gates, HC, and Carol Nemitx from RaM|h. (Fheto by TaHb racial harassment? VMWnce and conflict in the school Sabir-Caltowav) “Godfather of Soul,” His Life A Mess, Faces Six Years In Prison ATLANTA, Ga. —For James Brown, the Godfather of Soul, Soul Brother No. 1, the self-proclaimed Pope of Music, it has finally come to this: six years in a South Carolina prison for trying to run over two policemen. Just two years after a comeback run, Brown’s life is a mess. The man praised by presidents for his good works cannot stay out of trouble. The singer of love ballads was charged this year with trying to kill his wife; it’s his third tumultuous marriage. The crusader against drugs ap parently has a PCP habit. “Obviously, there is trouble within the confines of James Brown, the mar.,’’ his attorney, Albert “Buddy” Dallas, said last week. “It’s unbelievable,” said Robert “Flash" Gordon of Augusta, who worked for the singer-businessman's three radio stations in the 1970s, before Brown lost the stations and much of what he owned in tax and other money troubles. “I can't imagine anything like this happening to him,” Gordon said last Friday from Augusta, the day his friend checked into a prison evalua tion center. Brown, 55, has shown little sign of slowing down, either on or off the stage. He still performs around the world. He still makes records. Brown was arrested at least seven times in the past year-and a half, in cluding twice in a bizarre 20 hours in September that culminated in Thurs day's sentence in Aiken, S.C On Sept. 24, Brown led police on a two-state, high-speed chase until they shot out his tires. According to blood tests, he was strung out on PCP, a hallucinogen known as "angel dust.” After posting bond, he was arrested for drunken driving His. trial in Georgia on 10 misde meanors stemming from the chase is scheduled for Jan. 25, 1989. "This is not the real James Brown,” said Dallas, his attorney of four years. Brown's problems, he said, “originated during a time of domestic difficulties” with his wife, Adrienne. “He just can’t get it to smooth out.” “1 programmed three radio sta tions for him,” Gordon recalled. “He didn't allow anything like that. If you even had any alcohol or anything like that, you lost your job. I don't know what has happened to him.” Longtime employee Fred Daviss saw him in September. “He hajl pass ed the point of no return,” Dayiss said. “He had trouble speaking. His wife was hiding the car keys from him. 1 pleaded with her to get him some help.” In the past. Brown made it on his own. Jailed for auto theft at 15, the former shoeshine boy got out and formed a singing group that became I he Famous Flames. In 1956, he ! (See GODFATHER. P. 2) WAIT A MINUTE. I’M THMKM8—Wal not rM«y, this stodont a honing dlsoMod studont Is toMng Santo Glaus what ho wants hy using sign language. Santa’s intent stare is because ha must communicate with Ms ayes and Ms hands. (Photo byTalibSabir-CaNoway) A Merry Christmas Wish For All Readers With Peace And Goodwill From Us Here BY WILBERT M. SANDERS Contributing Writer Christmas is a time for joy, and a time to be happy and a time for shar ing, giving and receiving. We are liv ing and experiencing the abundant life when with unselfish love we seek our own in another’s good and never be content with abundance until we attend to the needs of the less for tunate. All these attributes and qualities are manifestations of celebrating the advent of Jesus Christ, who came that we have and know the abundant, life at this holy Christmas time. Max Robinson, TV Anchorman, Is Dead At Age 49 America's first black news an chorman to reach the network level died Tuesday morning due to complications of AIDS. Howard University Hospital spokesperson Tonya Swanson said Max Robinson, 49, succumb ed to AIDS. Robinson had been ill for more than a year and had been bedridden for more than a month, Roger Wilkins, a family member, said. Robinson’s success began at Washington’s WTOP-TV, where . he won top ratings for a decade. for his on-air performance. As proof of his ability to deliver and report the news, he went on to the national network, joining ABC News. ■ » In 1978. he co-anchored the evening news with Peter Jenn ings in London and Frank (See MAX ROBINSON, P. 2) Can’t we just for a few moments pause and divert our attention from problems and concentrate on this beautiful time of the year? At Chistmas we wonder about the joyous occasion it is supposed to represent. We find it is to commemorate the birth of Jesus Chrsit, the Prince of Peace; the one who came to save the world from sin; the one who taught love and goodwill between men * (See CHRISTMAS WISH, P. 2) Judges' JACOBS DEFENDS HATCHER Tiinothy Jacobs, M, Who is residing with die Onondaga Indians in New York while battling extradition to Robeson County to face 14 counts of kidnapping, told reporters at a news conference Monday that he had heard rumors that co-defendant Eddie Hat cher was on the reservation. But as iar as he knew, Hatcher, 31, had not been to the Onondaga reser vation during the weekend and he said that he did not know Hatcher’s whereabouts. TRAFFICKING IN COCAINE Gordon Ronnell Hines, 31, of 1022 Faison St., Wilson, was charged with trafficking 140 grams of cocaine last week. Authorities arrested him at Raleigb-Durham International Air-, port Thursday. Hines was charged with trafficking cocaine by posses sion and by transportation. He was being held in Wake County Jail under $200,000 bond. The airport drag inter (See JUDGES’ BENCH, P. 2) Prestigious Fraternity Offers Its 1988 Distinguished Service Awards To Four Eta Sigma Chapter of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious black fraternal groups, honored fouf of its distinguished members at its annual (Jo-Dutch Dinner. The affair was held in (he Martin Luther King, Jr. Stu dent Center at St. Augustine's Col lege. The following four brothers were honored: Ted Padgett, Judge Staf ford (J. Bullock. Dr. Clinton R. Down ing ami Dr. George K. Debnam. Padgett, who is station manager for airport operations, Trans World Airlines, Ine. at RDU. received the chapter's Distinguished Service Awurd for Bigger and Better Business. Padgett coordinated all ground ac tivities for Pope John Paul U’s tow when he visited America In' September 1S87. As the current chairperson lor the chapter’s Bigger and Better Business Committee, Padgett has thrust the chapter for ward in exploring business possibilities that are new and un precedented for the group. Judge Bullock, a local judge in tjie Wake County District Court, was honored as the recipient of the Distinguished Service Award for Social Action. In addition to citing Judge Bullock’s exemplary commit ment to community and public ser vice. the group lauded him as an outstanding Judge who is known for his judicial moderation and restraint Dr Downing was awarded the chapter's Distinguished Service Award for Education. One of a very lew blacks with the rank of full pro fessor in the University of North Carolina system, he is currently serv ing ns a: full professor of education at East Carolina University. As chairperson for Eta Sigma Chapter's Education Committee for years prior (o stepping down this year, his con tribution to the organisation, par ticularly in the area of education, was described as "enormous." Education is one of Phi Beta Sigma’s most vital programs. The group’s coveted Matt of the Year Award went to Dr. Debnam. a well-known and popular local physi cian- This was the third time that Dr. Debnam had walked off with the chapter’s most prized award. In addi tion to the award, he received a stan ding ovation from the audience He also received gifts from his pastor and pastor’s wife, Dr. and Mrs. David C. Forbes, Sr., which was presented by Jesse C. Saunders, chairman of the Board of Deacons at Martin Street Baptist Church. The chapter’s vice president, Dr. Marion Phillips, acted as master of (See FRATERNITY, P, J) Mr. DMi Foster, the Chapter*! Mraatar «| PuMtelty, artte InliHanl Jutfpa ***'