RALEIGH, N.C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18,11 VOL. 49, NO. 94 N.C. I ^ 8 X> DEDICATED TOli r \S> 0> x- # c.i ’ ' >*> -C Wfeeftjy ESUS CHRIST SINGLE COPY ftr IN RALEIGH ELSEWHERE 30C I Blue Revue Scholarships Awarded To Teenagers For Academics Page11 N. G. Association of Black Lawyers To Hold Awards Meet Page 17 Rectifying An Error Council * Cooper BY CASH MICHAEL'S After a month of controversy, the Raleigh City Connell voted unanimously Tuesday to reappoint Dr. Alan Cooper to the city’s Human Resources and Human Relations Ad visory Commission. Dr. Cooper, a. professor'at St. AuguetinS’i College art formerly the chairman of the t™, was abrupt^ removed from that body a month ago by-the council for neaions many speculated to he political. . . In an interview with The CARO LINIAN after the vote, Cooper was both happy art oautioni. "1 ap preciate that the coiiqcU has given me an other opportunity to serve die of Raleigh on the Human Resource* and Human Relations Ad visory Commission," Cooper said. “I look forward to oonttautagthe wort wo begin toward resolving the Crab tree controversy, paid other Impor tant human relation Issue*.” The - reference. to uCrabtree’ ’ partitas to chargee of racial Mae leveled agilnat the owner Crabtree Valley Mall lint year by members of Rilelgh’s African-American com munity. Dr. Cooper wa> In the midst of - developing , a process toward resolving that Issue through the com mission when, the City Council sud denly removed Mm lastmonth. Pointing out bow Ms reappointment was a tribute to the community, Dr. Cooper exprssseddsep appreciation for the rapport he garnered from Raleigh’s African-American com munity. Rev. H.B. Pickett, president of the Ralelgh-Apex Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who issued a state ment concerning Cooper’s dismissal criticising, the council's actions as “a mistake In judgment,” said he was glad Cooper had been reappointed. "I was glad to hear that the City Council rectified their error. The community had great Influence and I hope this shows that we can come together to do it again when needed,” Pickett said. Similar approval and comments were echoed by Khalil Ramadan, president of the Concerned Qtlsens for Educational Equity, one of the primary groups Involved with the Crabtree Valley Mall issue. “I am happy that the City Council has responded to the community’sln terests,” Ramadan told The CAROLINIAN In a telephone Inter view from Washington, D.C.,“and I am happy to eea that Dr. Cooper will have an opportunity to make, the Human Relations Commission responsive to the needs of the com munity.” ■ Ramadan agreed with Rev. Pickett that citizens and civic organisations must keep the pressure on the City Council to Improve Its human rela tions record. Cooper Mid he waa moat ap preciative of the organiutional rap port he received from both the NAACP and the CCEB, along with community leaden like Rev. David Boy, and that he looked forward to working with them to conciliate the problem of chargee at raclam at one of the largeat chopping mall* in the atate. Source* aaklng to remain anonymoua raid that it wu becauae of the mall iaaue that Cooper waa removed in the flnt place. Several City Council memben allegedly believed that the chargaa of raclam agalnat the Crabtree manage ment laat year were baaeleaa, and regartnd Coope'a work aa unimpor tant aa a realm. Through the special efforts of Mayor Pro Tem Ralph Campbell, Jr. and District B. Coun cilmember Mary Watson Nooe, several council members came to believe that Crabtree Is atlll a burn ing Issue In Raleigh’s African American community, and Cooper was reappointed without challenge. Even though Cooper la now back on the commission, he Is no longer Its chair. Interim chairperson Ms. Dobra Redden said that she and all of the commission membership welcome Cooper back. Rev. Jim Lewis of the Episcopal Diocese, the Human Relations Com mission. and a member of a group of (See COOPER, P.2) Crack, Cocaine, Marijuana According to police records, Robbie Jecota, 18, of 1517 No. 4 Creet Read, aad Brie Tucker, 17, of an unknown address, were charged recently with possession with intent to sell, deliver and manufacture drugs. Hie arrest was made by Officer S. Jones of the Raleigh Police Depart ment in the 100 block of Oberlin Road in the streets. Allegedly found on the two men were four grams of cocaine in three vials in powder form with four packets of crack, and 10 grams of marijuana in nine individual plastic bags. The drugs were valued at $550. In other news: According to police records, William Donald Yar borough, 51, of 2719 S. Wilmington St., Raleigh, was arrested recently after cutting Barnard Edward Lee, 17, on die left arm and on the right thumb. The incident allegedly happened in the 500 block of South Bloodworth Street. The victim was taken to Wake Medical Center by EMS. The incident was reported by Debra Evans. Officer V.R. Austin answered the call. Taken was a red Swiss army knife and a small linked chain tied in knots, both of which wore believed to have boon used in the fight. NEWi bill for homeless WASHINGTON. D.C.f-An _families weald be hous ed through a pragma developed ■tote and local officials, and ___a Ul.i MU expected to bo signed lata lav la the next week or two. TtH to the drat overhaul ef heudtaf pra ffam to a decade. ■ ROCKY MOUNT FMM CHARGO WITH WAS ROCKY MOUNT—PUIowtex Carp,, one of the Ihrgest manufacturera of duality sleep lag pillows, ntattroaa pad*, and comforter. la the United Stole*, hao been charged by workers With unfair and racist practices, according ta Justice Speaks, puMtohed by the Black Workers for Justice. FUNDING W MARROWS gen. Jesse A. Holme, RtN.C., has eutapent Democrat Harvey B. Gantt by nearly a three le one margin, but the speeding gap has doeed markedly to recent mou ths. financial reports shew. Helms has ratoed SM.S asllltoa; Gantt. 14 million. During the past three months, Gantt.has nearly been able to match Hotels’ sped MART* ATTACKS ; imnnniM Gev. James O. Martin, to an at tack on Democratic lodges, asserted that a program to aid (See NEWS BRIWS,P.i» \ LAST FLIGHT—At Raleigh-Durham International Airport, •mines end a journey that began in Baghdad and no man charters are scheduled to ha* American woman and children and tlwir family members An Kuwait and Iraq. With assistance from the Wake County Department of Social Services, some of the Arab families plan to make Raleigh home and move into apartments. They will receive federal assistance-loans equivalent to Aid for Families and Dependent Children. (Photo by Talib Sabir-Calloway) Firat Black Woman Appellate Judge In N.C. Seeks New Term BY CASH MICHAELS Contributing Writer Last Feb. 12, a young professor at North Carolina Central University School of Law in Durham made history by becoming the first African American female to be appointed to the North Carolina Court of Appeals. Today, Judge Allyson Kay Duncan is hoping that voters will not only take notice of her place in history, but of her strong record of fighting for equal rights. Judge Duncan is running to be elected to the post she was appointed to by Gov. Jim Martin, and so far, while much of the public is unaware of her campaign, thanks in large part to the campaign restrictions placed on judges, she has nonetheless at tracted the endorsement of the North Carolina Association of Educators, the North Carolina Association of Women Attorneys, the North Carolina Women’s Political Caucus, the National Organize ton of Women, all high-powered professional organizations. And yet, despite her unique place in North Carolina’s judicial history, and the stellar recognition, all the 38-year-old Durham native wants to do is “serve.” “I’ve worked hard, but I’ve been very fortunate,” Judge Duncan told The CAROLINIAN, referring to her many accomplishments while being a relatively young woman. It was a play that inspired Judge Duncan to became a lawyer, a play about a Southern black man who was being mistreated by the legal system. A lit tle girl at the time, the play so disturbed her that she demanded of the adults around her watching the play to know why the black man could not get justice. Despite the fact that the play was being held at a black col lege (North Carolina College, now NCCU), had been written by one of the black faculty members and per formed by black students, and despite the fact that her mother (who taught at NCC) and father took her to see the {day, not one adult around her could successfully answer her ques tion. Allyson Duncan decided that day to commit herself to righting those wrongs. Ms. Duncan immediately got on the fast track for excellence. She graduated second in her class from Durham’s Hillside High, first in a class of 400 from Hampton Universi ty. She then went on to Duke Univer sity Law School, graduated, and was admitted to the bar in North Carolina in 1975. In 1977, Judge Duncan served as law clerk to Appellate Judge Julia Cooper Mack in Washington, D.C. Judge Mack, an African-American, was a strong role model for then clerk Duncan. “I believe she was the (See JUDGE DUNCAN, P.2) (Htrto __ pMtiio 6°11 *!£ o. *•«'*"*• BY PR. ALBERT E. JABS .4* An»ly*i* . President Bush ahd. Secretary of State Baker Mnaift Israel to cooperate: . with the tlNreiolutiohcancernh* the UUing of lft Palestinian* inthe OMC1 ty of Jerusalem. Same fee the rejec-. thmof thl* ieeohitien ee beihg Weted to the**** siiheURbySetWem Thia complicate* the Gulf criais with approximately 20 percent of the U.S. military foreea there confc posedof Afrtcan-Amerieane.'. 1 Theiaaitdi-ihhereotitr this Wpaart. ’■ reachbacklntO;hhltoryvTlift cycle, of . \^^«peeiiitaKdWww J^atxwd.MipurK ty, religious fanaticism, nationalism, and cultural chauvinism. Add a dash .of .militarism and journalistic jingoism and one has all the ingre dients of ajtniuiid JDQKJkniliL Middle bast clash. The questions of- history and religion may bathe key to understan ' ding.* the birth of Israel must be understood not in terms of 1M8, but chronologically about 1250 B.C., at the time of the Exodus. This in turn gave .rise to both Islam and Chris (Unity. They art matters involving < See GUi*F CRISIS, P.2) «***"•' “Bad” Government Bush Angers Caucus A major civil rights bill that Presi dent George Bush may veto is the rights movement’s top priority, in Congress this year that would over turn six Supreme Court decisions handed down in 1969. Twenty of the 24 Democratic members of the Congressional Black Caucus continue to express their anger at the Bush administration's failure to address employment,. education, health and security issues. for predominantly African-American communities. They have joined coi leagues and many Republieana in re jecting the president’s budget pro posal. The Senate approved the rights bill earlier this week, falling short of support needed L jp--override a threatened presidential veto on the grounds that its minority hiring features -would lead to the uae of quotas. Bush made it clear that he Intended to veto the measure on the grounds .that it would spur employers to hire by quotas to protect themselves from lawsuits. Sen. Jesse A. Helms (R-N.C.) voted against the bill with Sen. Terry San ford (D-N.C.) voting for it. “It will also foster divisiveness and litigation rather than conciliation and do man to promote legal fees than civil rights,’’ Bush said. Democratic sponsors again scoffed at the notion that the bill would load to quotas. The president has 10 days to act on any bill reaching him, and Congress hopes to adjourn by Oct. 17 at the latest. Provisions of the bill range from a ban on racial harassment in the workplace to punitive damages in ex treme job discrimination cases. The sharpest clashes, however, have edme over complex changes in ground rules governing job discrimination lawsuits. The changes would make it easier for those filing suit to win and harder for employers to defend themselves. Administration officials say the changes would be so hard on employers that they would turn to quota hiring to have a ready-made defense in case they found themselves in court. In rejecting Bush and his budget along with “bad government,” the Blau Caucus will be further disen chanted If the major rights bill is (See BLACK CAUCUS. P S) JOHN W. WINTERS Winters Honored For Commitment, Community Work A real estate developer who climb ed through the rank* from milk truck driver to be founder and president of a major management and develop ment company says that his dream came through various Jobs and John Wesley winters, former air port skycap, poultry fanner, in surance salesman, building contrac tor, Raleigh City Council member, state senator and real estate en trepreneur, chalked up another honor Wednesday as outstanding civil liber tarian by the Wake County Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. Winters, 70, was presened with the annual W.W. Finlator Award at the N.C. Faculty Club for a lifetime of t See JOHN WINTERS. P V