j i VOL. 47, NO. 24 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1989 DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST IN RALEIGH ELSEWHERE 300 '( I Top Ladies Of Distinction Charters New Chapter Page 13 NBA Affair Showcases Stars During Classic Page 19 NEWS BRIEFS ECONOMIC PROGRAM The Southeast Raleigh Com munity Economic Development Corp. will meet Feb. 23 at Saint Auguatlne’i College and dlicuaa a variety of topic* directed to the need* of the community. Plan* will alio be dimmed on finding a permanent location and adopting bylaw* to function a* a nonprofit organliatlon. The event will be held In the boardroom library at 6 p.m. ARTS IN THE COURT A program of dance, drama, music and visual arts as a tribute to Black History Month, “Journey to Jubilee,” written by Gerard Edwards, choreographed by Bob Jones and sponsored by the Raleigh Parks and Recrea tion Department, will be held at the Halifax Community Center Feb. 28 at 5:30 p.m. SHAW UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT Predominantly African American colleges and univer sities have profited from recent anti-bias agreement settlements between the U.S. Equal Employ ment Opportunity Commission and the leading automobile manufacturers, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. Shaw University receives 150.000 and North Carolina A&T State University receives $200,000. RECEIVES GRANT Gov. James G. Martin an nounced this week a grant of $31,126 to Goodwill Industries of East Central North Carolina, Inc. In Raleigh. Gov. Martin said, "These funds will provide an im portant service and will help en sure that those with developmen tal disabilities have the oppor tunity to live the most fulfilling lives possible.” TAP DANCE DAY Rep. John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich.), chairman of the House Government Operations Committee, introduced House Joint Resolution 131 designating May 25 as "National Tap Dance Day.” May 25 marks the birthday of legendary tapdancer Bill “Bo Jangles” Robinson, whose danc ing was the highlight of many Broadway musicals and motion pictures beginning in the 1930s. KOREAN TRADE MISSION A Korean fact-finding mission made a visit to North Carolina this week to promote economic cooperation in trade and Invest ment between Korea and North Carolina. Commerce Secretary James T. Broyhill and Myong Hyun Sohn, minister for economic affairs of the Korean Embassy In Washington, D.C., headed the delegation, consisting of Korea’s first secretary, government officials and business executives. The faet findlng mission also visited South Carolina and Mississippi. AGENCY ADMISSIONS The United Way of Wake Coun ty announces that It Is now taking applications for new agency ad missions to United Way. In order (See NEWS BRIEFS, P. 3) I n in I .M| II . ■ Self Protection Women Buy Guns For Defense The street* of Raleigh are somewhat peaceful and the nights are seldom shattered by the heart stopping sounds of automatic gunfire which takes place in the nation’s capital, East Oakland and Detroit. The rising gun violence In America cries for new rules and laws and many law-abiding citizens, especially women, are fed up to the point of Arm ing themselves to fight back against crime. Others want to disarm 14-year-old punks who carry AK-47s and Uzis. President George Bush said, “I’d like to find seme way to do something" about easy access to semiautomatic weapons. But the president added, "I want to be the president that protects the rights of people to have arms.” Patrick Purdy did more than slaughter five students and wound 30 others when he fired his rapid-fire assault rifle into a crowd of Stockton, Calif, elementary school children before killing himself with a pistol. His insane bloodbath sparked off another national horror wave with its accompanying frenzy of gun-buying. “If children playing in a schoolyard during recess are no longer safe, who ift?" a great many people seemed to be asking themselves. It is the kind of question that follows each new media report of crime victim deaths—inno cent people who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. And the answer more and more are coming to, including a growing number of women, is that no one is safe in today’s crime-riddled society. It is not surprising that sociologists say Americans are losing confidence in the traditional forces of crime prevention. While gun buying was once predominantly for hunting and sport, recent surveys show self protection to be the main reason nearly so percent of gun purchases are now made. And more and more first-time gun buyers are women. Between 1963 and 1986, according to a Gallup survey, the number of women purchasing firearms increased 53 percent. In California alone, nearly 300,000 peo ple armed themselves with handguns in 1965, and one-third of these are estimated to have been women. Since then, hundreds of thousands of addi tional women have bought handguns while many more (numbering in the millions by survey) are seriously Chavis Heights Area Man Held In Fatal Stabbing Dispute Leads To Murder A Raleigh man has been charged with murder after allegedly stabbing a man in Southeast Raleigh druing the weekend. James A. Allen Leonard, 30, of Apt. 4, 526 E. Bragg St., was stabbed several times in the chest and shoulder during an argument in a downtown apartment complex near Chavis Heights over rent money, ac cording to police-reports. Roy McLean, 25, of Apt. 2, 526 E. Bragg St., was charged with murder and assault. McLean was arrested Feb. 21 and is being held in Wake County Jail. Martina D. Johnson, 28, who lived in the same apartment as Leonard, told police she had been kicked in the face during the argument. According to police, Ms. Johnson and the victim were arguing with McLean and his girlfriend over some rent money when the stabbing occurred. In other events: Police are looking for a black male suspect they believe has been involved with at least two armed robberies and one attempted robbery. The suspect is described as black in his early 20s, 5’5” tall and weighing 130 to 150 pounds. He has short hair and a mustache. Police say a man fitting this description robbed an Exxon at Six Forks Road and later robbed a Fast Fare at 2909 Brentwood Road on Feb. 10 at approximately 3:15 a.m. and 3:25 a.m., respectively. Anyone having information about this robbery should call 834-4357. ' farmer vice chtk of the party and on« el (Ive Mack MileMr MocMvMOwtdo lit Mw nation, mm **Ww; The image that some people have of prison inmates sitting around all day watching television at the expense of taxpayers is very durable. It is also false. Nearly nine out.of every to inmate^ incarcerated by the North Carolina Departmept of Correction; -have regular job or educational assignments, according to Harry Ballard, chief of prognkm services for the Division of Prisons. “We believe that programs designed to rehabilitate convicted offenders should also teach the offender a work ethic,” Ballard said. The question of what inmates do with their time in prison has come up on several occasions during the publie^ebate,oy$r attempts tolmain tpin a'lfcorrecthipal syMemthat iscon ^titntkmally defensible. Some' opi nions have been'expressed which sug gest that prison life is a life of leisure. A look at the facts, however, does not bear out that opinion. "Many people are surprised when they discover the extent to which in mate labor is used in North Carolina,” Ballard said. “They are equally surprised as to the variety of job assignments within our prison system.” On Feb. 13, a day when there were 17,735 inmates housed in the prison system, 15,429 (or 87 percent) of the inmates had assigned duties. Those duties range from internal prison operation chores (such as housekeep ing, cooking, and maintenance), to work assignments with other state government agencies. Others were involved in either academic and/or programs or were excluded from ac tivities by reason of either health, NAACP Holds Emergency Summit To Address Supreme Court Decision uisi-ipuue, ui cusiouy-ievei re quirements. The remaining 2,306 inmates who did not have assigned duties on Feb. 13 were either new to the prison system or did not have job oppor GREENVILLE, S.C.-Dr. William F. Gibson, chairman of the National Board of Directors of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the oldest and largest civil rights organization In America, recently chaired an emergency sum mit to discuss the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision on Richmond vs. Croaofi. The emergency summit was held at the 80th annual meeting of the civil rights organisation in the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City. The : ^ ■ 1 ' a ■■■ .... - . .y. emergency aummit waa the product of another emergency meeting that Dr. Gibeon and Dr. Benjamin L. Hooka, national NAACP executive director, convened in Atlanta, Ga., earlier thia month. The aeaaion in cluded a team of lawyera comprised of membera of the NAACP legal ataff and NAACP Legal Committee of the National Board, and dlatlnguiahed legal academiciana and lawyera in private practice acraaa the United Statea. The emergency aummit in New York City was to explain to the membership of the national NAACP board, NAACP Special Contribution Fund, Inc., and the national and regional staff, the legal ramifications of the decision. It was also to define what to look for in similar local plans to see if those ramlftcations met the. U.S. Constitution guidelines as outlin ed in Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s majority opinion. In addUon, it was to instruct the NAACP branch and (See NAACP, P. 2) kMlliklvw MiVU VUOIUUJ ICVOl. Inmates working within the prisons as part of the Correctional Enterprise program or working with other state agencies earn from 40 cents to tl pet day. Correctional Enterprise pro vides a number of low-cost services to state and local government utilizing inmate labor, including printing, food production, paint, highway sips, laundry services, and office furniture construction. Profits from Correc tional Enterprise operation are returned for use by state govern (See PRISONERS, P. 2) Preserving History dies For “Roots” Special Ta The CAROLINIAN^ Since the phenomenal success of Alex Haley's “Roots," many black families have been inspired to go in OpheUa McAlpin Ir b wills, deeds, hats, mgs and histories in family tree. Her. f when she waeable r, for ttte first tima, iants of the brothers the Alpine clan here in Raleigh at the Marriott Hotel. Me. Irving’s family search began with the death of her father, Jerry McAlpin, who had been the family’s great storyte Among those stories was how the McAlpin name was ten. It gamps #t one polpt there wpre Jo many McAlpineain one small town In Alabama -that her grand father chafefcM 10s spelling to McAlpin, just so the mail could be illustrious family lino beftin i William MoAlnino *»>»«»—w of Seims University in thinking about it. Laws affecting ownership of hand guns vary widely from state to state. In North Carolina it is not difficult to obtain a permit. A spokesperson in the Sheriff’s office said, “A witness is required to vouch for the character of the person who is purchasing the weapon and to verify residence of the individual.” To obtain a permit one must be 21 years of age or older with no criminal record, including misdemeanors and felonies. A good driving record is also required. Up to five guns can be pur (See WOMEN ARMED, P 1, Jesse Jackson To Join NCNW For Symposium Rev. Jesse Jackson has confirmed his participation in the National Council of Negro Women’s “Cradle of Civilization” symposium to be held in Cairo, Egypt from July 3-10. “African-Americans are now reawakening to our role in global development,” Jackson said in a re cent interview with Sisters magazine. “We are key members in the global village.” Egypt, chosen to initiate a series of NCNW international symposia, was endorsed by Jackson because at tendees will be able to “immerse themselves in our history and culture” and continue to meet the “challenge to overcome the barriers created by language, and distance, and history.” < "Africans, African-Americans, and African Brazilians were equally separate, one from the other. So we’re almost equally ignorant of each other’s basic kinship," Jackson said. “The one thing we know is that the blood that unites us is stronger than the waters that divide us.” Jackson spoke of the “500-year massive onslaught" of the Middle Passage. “We’re only just now emerging from it with a new sense of ourselves and our relationship to the world,” Jackson said. “So we go full circle, really, from slave ship to ^see JESSE JACKSON, P. 2) Judges' Bench JCKY PANEL CHOSEN A panel of prospective jurors was selected this week in the trial of the third high-ranking Marine to face a court-martial in connection with the death of a lance corporal abandoned in the Mojave Desert. A panel of 12 officers, two colonels, two lieutenant colonels, five majors, and three captains was selected to be considered for the court-martial of 1st Lt. Allen Lawson. Lawson, 25, is the third Marine to face a court-martial In connection with the death of Lance Cpl. Jason Rother, 19, of Minneapolis. Rother disappeared Aug. 30 after being assigned as a road guide for a night movement of troops at Twentynlne Palms, Calif, His remains were discovered Dec. 4. An Investigation showed he probably died of exposure to intense heat the day after he disap peared. Lawson is charged with willfullv disobeying an order, dereliction o duty and conduct unbecoming an of ficer. (See JUDGES’ BENCH, P. 2) Fashion Fair cosmetics director and part owner with her husband John Johnson of Johnson Publishing Co., publishers of Ebony and Jet magazines; and her sister, Dr. Helen (See BLACK FAMILY, t. MCALF1N, JR. RIVERS' MCALFW.gR. MS. ELLIS |