RALEIGH, N.C„ THURSDAY,/ DECEMBER 20/I? VOL. 49, NO. ! DEDICATED TO THE SPIRl/ T M Ml • MERRY CHRISTMAS Local Leaders Charge Disproportionate Number Of Blacks To Gulf Tnm CAROLINIAN Staff RcparU The last active-duty task for ex-Air .Force Sgt. Mike Bowen was to bring home body bags of Marines killed in the Beirut bombing in October 1983. Today he is mobilizing anti-war ac tions in Philadelphia. Linda Stouts, with the Piedmont Peace Project in rural North Carolina, was astounded to learn that two-thirds of some 80 people at a re cant meeting had a loved one in the desert in Saudi Arabia. One man, a recent recruit of the organization, revealed that two brothers, two brothers-in-law and sisters have been shipped to the Gulf. Pat Bryant, formerly of Raleigh, recently led caravans through 37 communities in the Gulf Coast and Black Belt South, forming human barricades at gas pumps, with the battle cry, “No blood for oil! ” Also in the Louisiana area with Bryant is Mayso Tomlinson from Raleigh. Earlier this week, area ministers and supporters met in front of the Legislative Building in downtown Raleigh where the Rev. Leon White, who is a leader of the United Church of Christ Commission for Racial Justice, announced a national mobilisation and prayed for peace. He called oa blacks across the nation to gather once a week to pray for a peaceful end to the crisis. White’s “National African Americans Pray for Justice and Peace Movement” Joins a growing tide of opposition to the Persian Gulf war is building, fueled by the disproportionate deployment of black people on the front lines and the ever increasing hardships at home. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., ex ecutive director of the UCC’s Com mission for Racial Justice, said the time has come for the call that all U.S. armed forces be withdrawn from the Persian Gulf region to prevent a devastating war. “At first, the troops were initially sent to defend Saudi Arabia and to en force United Nations sanctions against Iraq. U.S. foreign policy must be more even-handed and consistent and less contradictory. The United States refusal to enforce previous United Nations resolutions concern ing the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and other Palestinian ter ritories only aervea to fuelfurtber conflict,” Chvia said. “Therefore we Join with the Na tional Council of Churches in the USA and demand , that all U.S. troops return to the United States except tboee designated by the United Na tions to be in the UN peacekeeping force,” Chavis said. (See PERSIAN GULF, P. 2) Gardens Scene Of Santa Visit . is coming to Raleigh with I gifts to give to children who ise might not receive many to» this year. Ike JoUy elf has agreed to make fids special visttlo Southeast Raleigh a day earlier and to disperse gifts at the Martin Luther King Memorial Gardens. Claus said he would receive kids on Dec. a from 4-6 p.m., prior to departing for the long trek to other chUdren around the globe. The special visit was arranged af ter he learned that the King Commit tee was planning an “OM-Fashfamed Christmas Caroling Program” at the gardens. In addition to Santa, the Martin Luther King All-Children’s Chsir will sing along with the King Committee’s Caroling Choir compos ed of committee members and their Dr. Paul Vandergrift, organizer and director of the committee’s choir, “The King Gardens has one of Wake County’s attractions. Continuing to this positive image as a viable community showpiece is im P<WhUe the activities are taking place, the committee will serve hot apple cider and Christmas cookies and be warmed by two old-fashioned outdoor bonfires. The Christmas pro gram’s coordinator, Ms. Bettye Hargrove, said, “Christmas is such a special time of the year. We want to share this spirit with the total com munity. The caroling, fellowship and Santa’s presence will make this the type of neighborhood gathering that we’ve been missing. We encourage (See SANTA CLAUS, P. 2) NEWS BRIEFS PUBLIC HEARING ON The City of Raleigh is inviting the public to make comments and of the $20 on Nov. C. The .hearing will ha heM an Jan. 2 at Tpji. in the conncil chamber of the W. Hargett St. Written* 'aloe may ha city's Department. They A VITAL LINK West Africa Promotions, a vital link to Accra, Freetown, Lagos, Abidjan and Lome, in association with Global impact Media, plan a to Africa for . GIM is a in the area with Saks In New York, Housten, Paris, Ghana and the Ivory Coast. West Africa Promotion is located at 21M Klagstree Court in or 2214244. COMEDY PARTY of the Harlem Charlie Good the Christmas Com % (See NEWS BRIEFS, P.2) NEW MOVEMENT-Arta mMstan and suppartart an taan standing naar Christmas Tran USA In tha tabby at tha N.C. State Legislative Bedding prior to Rav. Leon White’s announcement of a national malllizaMen pretesting American troops In the Persian Gulf known as the “National African-Americans Pray fir Jvstica and Peaca Movamant.” In photo: the Rev. J. H. Janas, Rev. David Fay, Ms. Nancy Tice, Rev. Rebecca Jahnaan and Rav. Herman Laa. Not pictured: Rav. Lonnie Yeung. (Photo by James GHas) First Black Patrol Captain To JV.C. Highway Patrol BY DANIEL A. YOUNG, SR. Contributing Writer On Thursday, Lt. Richard Holden of the North Carolina Highway Patrol in Wake County, becomes the first black to be promoted to the rank of captain in die history of the State Troopers. Troop C Commander, Captain Spainhour, who has been with the Highway Patrol 24 years, says of Holden, “He’s very professional, and he gets along well with people. I think he’ll serve North Carolina well.’’ Holden, a Wake County resident, born and raised in Wendell by strong willed, supportive parents who knew the value of strict discipline. He went to James E. Sheppard High School. After high school, while pursuing studies to be a teacher in industrial technology at North Carolina A*T in Greensboro, he met Capt. Charlie Johnson who was instrumental in changing his goals from being a teacher to being a member of the Highway Patrol. "He was such a nice fellow; I just really found my interest in law enforcement just talking to him,” Holden said. “He talked very positively to me about the opportunities in the Highway Patrol. After talking to him, CAPT. RICHARD HOLDEN l decided to go with the Highway Patrol. I felt they were the utopia, the top of law enforcement. After making my talk with him I Just knew this was what I wanted to do. “I put in my application when there was only one other black on the force, Charlie Johnson from Winston Salem. I put in my application, it was accepted and in September 1969, I started patrol school, which lasted until December 1969 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and thereafter I was assigned to my first duty station in Fayetteville.” At 43, Holden has been married for 21 years on Dec. 27 and has two youngsters. He threw in the date of Dec. 27 for good measure. While the family recognizes the potential for danger, Holden says, “My wife has been very supportive of me. She said if this is the career I want to follow, she would encourage and support my efforts. She’s been the person behind the scenes that has really given me a lot of support in many instances. She is a school teacher and kind of keeps me straight on a lot of things.” Holden reflected on handling con cerns in our neighborhoods by saying, “I think most of it is community con tact, and being a part of the com munity that you live in will be a factor that will have a positive image with small kids and teenagers.” Holden, who is 6’2” and weighs 215 pounds, says that physical re quirements have changed over the years. “Years ago there were a lot more restrictions concerning physical build than there are now. There is no longer any height requirement in law enforcement, and your weight has to be in proportion to vour height. (See STATE TROOPER. P. 2) N.Y. Courtroom Erupts As Teens Are Convicted In “Jogger” Case NEW YORK, N.Y. (AF)-Cour troom spectators screamed threats at the judge, prosecutor and jurors when two more defendants were con victed ih the attack on a jogger who was gang-raped and beaten nearly to death in Central Park. Kevin Richardson, 16, last Tuesday became the first of five people con victed in the April 1969 attack to be found guilty of attempted murder. He also was convicted of rape, sodomy, robbery, assault and riot. Kharey Wise, 18, was cleared of the more serious charges but found guilty of assault, sexual abuse and riot. One juror said nhysical evidence, like that against Richardson, was lacking in Wise’s case. The verdicts came after 12 days of deliberations in the case, which rested chiefly on videotaped statements the defendants made to police. The defense had argued that the teenagers were intimidated and told what to say ny ponce. Family members and other sup porters erupted when tne verdicts against Richardson were read, jump ing to their feet, yelling threats and waving fists. Some yelled, “white justice," or “white racist” and accused the judge and prosecutor of railroading Wise and Richardson, who are black. The victim is white. Richardson’s mother, Grace Cuf fey, fainted in the pandemonium, and the court was cleared so emergency workers could administer oxygen. As Wise was led from the cour troom in handcuffs, he turned to Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Lederer and said, "You, bitch, you’re going to pay for this." Lederer, who won convictions against three other defendants in an earlier trial stemming’from the at tack, was escorted from the court by police. The case symbolized rising fears of random violence in New York City and brought the term “wilding” into the city’s mainstream vocabulary. Wilding is a street term for in discriminate rampages of violence and robberies. Critics in the black community said the case received wide attention only because the victim, an investment banker, was white and affluent. Wise and Richardson face sentenc ing on Jan. 9. Richardson, charged as a mionr, could get a maximum of five to 10 years in prison. Wise, who was charged as an adult because he was 16 when the attack took place, could be sentenced to eight and two-thirds to SB years in prison. Defense attorneys said they would appeal. Juror Victoria Bryers said tticanrason was convicieu ot roe (See JOGGER, P.S) A Christmas Stogy Best Theme Told BY DOROTHY 8HAW-THOMP8ON C«trlMk| Writer Once upon a time in a faraway but very dose kingdom lived a Father who was both mother and father to his 144,000 children. Of course any father with so many children had to own a very, very large home kingdom and be very, very wise and extremely rich and, of course, most creative. Of his many, many wonder ful qualities, the most loving one is Ms spirit of permissiveness. He had learned that the more choices he per mitted Ms children to have, the more able Ms children were to nuke the best choices. The leas he whipped and controlled Ms children the more they yearned to be like Mm. The children were good children because they had been created through a wonderful and wise father but as all children do they liked to play, imagine and pretend to be somebody else. Some were more creative than others buit all in some way had the same qualities of the father, of course in different propor tions. Within this family were the two older children who were twins. These children were the leaders of the others. One day one of the twins said to his group of children, “Father has tricked us. He's told us we can do whatever we’d like but he really doesn’t let us. Think about it, every time we go out of the kingdom too far, he whispers and there we are called back before we know it. Now what kind of freedom is that?” The other twin listening said, “But dear twin, that isn’t freedom, that’s love—haven’t you learned anything?” “Love, love, love, I’m sick of tht word,” said Ms twin. “I don’t want love, I want freedom and I know Father—he will give it to me and I’m going to ask him now.” Of course, since they were both correct, the father said to them, “Certainly, twin, you may have freedom but I can’t give that to you without love—you’ll learn that what I have to and I can turn nothing off because you demand it, nor can I refuse to give you what you want because since you came tram me all I have to yours." And so the twin and all who even tually followed im went off to play, create and imagine—all, that to, but the other twin. That twin stayed with the tether and his elder aequain tsnwfw called the M Archangels. Sure enough, the further the children went out to play, the more freedom they had and the less they heard the whisperings of their father’s love. Before they knew it, their creations were getting out of hand. They had created wars and sickness and confusions among the many ten things they had also created—so much so that sometimes they couldn’t tell which was which. Money was fun and so was war and sometimes sickness created much for them to laugh at, discover and change. Soon there came a time when the Archangels went to the tether and said, “Sir, don’t you think the children’s games have gotten out of hand? Aren’t you afraid you wUl lose them altogether? Can’t you Just stop this madness and call them all beck?” Hie tether simply replied, “I hear you, Archangels, hut a promise is a promise. There to only one way I can stop than and that to to destroy them How can I destroy my own creation? The mother in me Just won’t let me do Umt she’s too wise.” Hie twin that had stayed with the father and the Archangels and a few of his followers who had stayed closer to the kingdom, listened intently. He had from time to time gone out to play with Ms brothers and sisters but had never stayed too long. Just long enough to remind them'of the Father and his love. As he listened he created (See BEST THEME, P. 2) IN DEATHS U.S. District Judge W. Earl Britt ordered a mandatory life sentence without parole to a 20-year-old Raleigh woman who helped sell heroin to three persons who died us ing the drug, and also left four others sickened. Sonia Camille Taylor had pleaded guilty in September to conspiracy and aiding and abetting heroin distribution. In such cases, federal laws require a life term, because Ms. Taylor had a criminal record for dkug dealing and because she was con victea of distributing drugs that caus ed deaths and serious injuries. Mi. Taylor’s attorney, Ed Walker, argued that the sentencing law was unconstitutional, and Oat due pro cess should require that the deaths or injuries be “reasonably foreseeable” from her actions before she is sub jected to life in prison. Her attorney later stated that he would talk to Ms. Taylor about ap pealing the sentence on that basis, in hopes that Ms. Taylor might return to the court in the future and seek a reduction of the sentence as an in vestigation is etui ongoing. In other news: Raleigh Police and CrimeStoppers of Raleigh are looking for the subject or subjects Who assaulted a city resi dent in the vicinity of Ms home Nov. 11. Tom GiU, 50, of S10-A Lord Anson Drive, left Ms residence at approx imately ll p.m. Sunday, Nov. ll, to buy cigarettes. When he returned ap proximately 45 minutes later, he had been beaten severely, causing serious head injuries. Gill collapsed on the floor of his home. Family members did not recognise the seriousness of his in juries until the next morning, when he was rushed to the nsuro-surgical unit of Wake Medical Center and ad mitted in critical condition. GiU is presently undergoing therapy for the km of movement on the left side of Ms body, believed to be the result of head Injuries he received in the Gill is described as a dark-skinned Mack male, 5lVk" tall, weighing ieo pounds, with Made hair, which is graying at the hairUne. The victim is (See CONVICTED, P. 2)

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