Raleign ***oxvOJL>AY, FEBRUARY 27,1992 VOL. 51, NO. 28 W.C.'s Semi-Weekly] DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST ' Y ^ SINGLE copy ap IN RALEIGH ZmOQ ELSEWHERE 300 Congratulations Sheldon Owens Shaw University Ms. Carolyn Brown St. Augustine's College *CIAA Basketball Players of the Yr. ’ Who Will Succeed Ben Hooks As NAACP Exec. Director? BY CHESTER A. HIGGINS, SR. Special To The CAROLINIAN WASHINGTON, D.C.—Ben jamin Lawson Hooks, for 15 turbu lent years the executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the oldest, largest, most enduring and most respected d vil rights organiza tion in the United States, is quitting after this year, effective April 1993. The scramble is now on for his successor. Speculation is rife among the 400,000-member, 83-year-old organization. Some feel a seasoned person of the stature of Constance Baker Motley, the distinguished New York federal judge, an NAACP stalwart and now in semi-retire ment, should be considered. Others, however, feel the organization needs a younger, more energetic hand as well as a seasoned eye with vision to steer the organization “back on track.” Consider Ernest D. Green, of the famous Little Rock Nine. He is a former assistant U.S. secretary of labor, a longtime NAACP member who has no negatives in terms of board or organizational enemies and now a senior vice president of Shear son Lehman, a national bro kerage firm. Would he make an ideal NAACP executive director? Some observers feel he would, in deed. Others are not so sure. Green, an NAACP board member, told this writer he will probably partiripate as a member of the search committee, “But I won’t be seeking, and I don’t want, the job myself. I have my hands full as a senior vice president of my firm. We are just coming out of a depressed period and I will have to spend all of (See HOOKS RETIRES, P. 2) NEWS BRIEFS DURHAM POLICE CHIEF RESIGNS Trevor Hampton, the Dur ham chief of police who re signed a week ago amid charges of a call girl opera tion in his department, told a local TV station last Monday that Durham District Attor ney Ronald Stephens was to blame for all of his problems and had it in for him. Hampton said that the state attorney general’s office should investigate all of the charges made against his department by Stephens’ of fice. The DA disputed Hamp ton’s claim, but said he wel comed any investigation by the state. Hampton’s four year tenure as Durham police chief was riddled with con troversy, culminating in the indictment of his friend Wiley Davis, Jr. for falsifying Ms educational record to work at the Durham Police Department. At press time, Davis still had not turned himself in. Meanwhile, Hampton, while still officially the chief, has turned the day-to-day op eration over to 21-year vet ! eranLt. Col. H. Kent Fletcher. ! NAACP PROTESTS CONFEDERATE FLAG Saying that honoring the Confederate flag is like "hon oring slavery," the president of the state NAACP is calling on all North Carolinians to write Gov. James Martin to protest his proclamation of March 4 as Confederate Flag. Day. Kelly Alexander, Jr., head of the state NAACP, also mM tK.t during this election year, the candidates cur rently running in the governor**^ rsice should be (See NEWS BRIEFS, P. 2) 4 AFTER THE GROUND WAR-Sgt. Ronald Murray (I.) and Sgt. Jette Jones (r.) pose in the Saudi Desert a year ago during the Persian Gulf War. Jones, then dressed in Arab attire for the picture, came home to Raleigh last week after a nationwide television audience saw him homeless in Boston. Jones says he was |ust one of many homeless veterans that now need their country’s help. Vietnam Veteran Says U. S. Abandons Vets BY CASH MICHAELS Contributing Writer “Praise the Lord!” There isn’t anyone in Raleigh who can convince Marie Jones that God doesn’t answer prayer. The proof was sitting right there in her living room... her son Jesse, a former ser geant in the U.S. Army National Guard who until a few weeks ago was sleeping on the streets of bos ton, Mass. No, 41-year-old Jesse Jones, Jr. wasn’t just any homeless person. He was a Congressional Medal of Honor winner for heroic actions during the Vietnam War. And he answered his country’s call again in 1990 when the United States drew the line in the sand for Iraq’s Saddam Hussein. So why was this highly decorated and certainly proudly dedicated soldier in Uncle Sam’s army left to sleep on the cold streets by his own government? Ms. Jones would like to have that answer, too, but right now she’s just thankful to have her son home. And Jesse’s glad to be back. “It feels great,” Jones told The CAROLINIAN last Thursday, a day after stepping off the Greyhound bus that brought him back home from Boston. To hear his deep, grav elly voice is a clear indication of a military man through and through. “I remember the old song “Nothing Could be Finer than to Be in Caro lina in the Morning, and the night before last when I was sleeping on the bus, all I was thinking about was seeing the green grass of home again.” That vision of Carolina certainly beat the cold, snowy streets of “Beantown,” where the ABC-TV program “Prime Time Live" found Jesse and put his story on nation wide television. Jones’ mother knew that things had not been easy for her son after he came back from the Iraq war (Jones suffers from post-trau matic stress syndrome from the Vietnam War, but battle situations in Iraq worsened it). But she had no idea he was homeless until she saw him on television. That was all it took for her to go to Boston, then arrange through a lo cal Veterans of Foreign Wars post to have Jesse sent back home. Now' that he’s here, Jesse Jones has a story to tell. A story about an 1 18-year-old student at Gamer Con solidated High School who wanted to take care of his mother and make her proud. So five days after gradu ation in 1968, he joined the Marine Corps. Jesse would have his pay checks sent back to his mother to make sure that she was okay. It wasn’t long before he was fighting in the jungles of “Nam,” where, armed with nothing but a .45 and some hand grenades one day, he risked his life, killing 30 of the enemy single-handedly. Jesse was wounded, for which he received the Purple Heart and the congressional Medal of Honor. When he left the service during the ’70s, he studied hard to achieve academic honors and develop skills in welding and auto mechanics. Jesse married, traveled, owned businesses, and stayed close to the military, despite his post-traumatic stress. Over the years, he was in and out of veterans’ hospitals, using his meager veterans’ benefits to sur vive. His marriage no more, Jesse struggled, until, despite his disabil ity, he was Able to fight in the Per sian Gulf. When he was shipped back in April of last year, his condi tion had worsened, his need for medication greater. Jesse was liter ally shipped from VA hospital to VA hospital across the country until finally he ended up in Massachu setts. Jesse couldn’t stay in the shelter in Boston, so he used his survival skills from Vietnam, and slept on the streets with other home less veterans. That’s when ABC-TV found him. Though Jesse still loves his coun try, he is highly critical of how the federal government failed to take care of veterans adequately after Vietnam, and also the Persian Gulf. “They don’t have the GI Bill no more that gave us the G.I. school loan. They also told us before we left Saudi Arabia that they would have a bonus for us... Where’s it at? We haven’t seen it.” Jesse confirms that a lot of the homeless veterans he’s seen have turned to drugs and alcohol. It hurts for him to see once proud and strong people, both men and women, de stroy themselves in the country they riske d their lives for, right or wrong. (See VET BACK HOME, P. 2) Ms. Elizabeth Peebles Of City Named N. C. Mother Of The Year BY ALLIE M. PEEBLES Contributing Writer Ms. Elizabeth Baxter Peebles of 3612 Greenlawn Drive was named North Carolina Mother of the Year in ceremonies held on Thursday, Feb. 13, at the Raleigh Marriott Crabtree Valley at 5 p.m. The occa sion was the 50th anniversary din ner of the North Carolina State Mothers Association. The mistress of ceremonies was the state president, Vickie Goudie. Music was furnished by Nancy Walker, soprano, the 1992 state Music Award winner. Geraldine Cate serves as chairperson of the State Music Committee, and intro duced Ms. Walker. The speaker for the occasion was Joan Burney, the 1991 North Caro lina Mother of the Year. Elizabeth Peebles was nominated by her church, Wilson Temple 1 United Methodist of Oberlin Road. More specifically, it was the United Methodist Women, an auxiliary of the church, that submitted her name. Along with their nomination, the church women stated, “Elizabeth is exemplary by what we have ob served over the years, to be worthy of this recognition.” They added, “Elizabeth has the characteristics, the skills to speakin public, compose essays, act in dra matic events and sing. She is a strict disciplinarian in a loving way when necessary to instill proper behavior in children. Over a period of years, the nominee worked diligently in the Oberlin Church and commu nity.” The church dted her work in the Royalettes, a well-known civic group. Until the last decade, Elizabeth and Nelson “Billy” Peebles and their three children lived on Oberlin Road. During the group’s conference at the Marriott, a special fashion show was held for children. Miriam Tho mas was the celebrity mom and her family members were on hand. She is a co-anchor on WTVD-TV11. Elizabeth is the daughter of the late Rev. and Mrs. Steven Baxter of Maysville. She is the sister of Doreatha Handy of this city. She has inspired her three chil dren to receive a college education. All three have earned master’s de grees. Nelson, Jr. is an accountant, Neltine is a middle school principal in Atlanta, Ga., and Dwight is an administrator with Blue Cvoss/Blue Shield fn Durham. i Elizabeth has retired from the Women’s Correctional Center of Local Historian Records Haley’s Final Interview She knew Alex Haley personally, and had even visited him at the legendary house in Henning, Tenn., where he heard the stories about the African named “Kinte,” and “Chicken George.” So when histo rian Linda Simmons-Henry learned Feb. 10 that this man whom she considered her mentor had died unexpectedly, it was a blow that she felt deeper than most. It had been just five days earlier that Haley had given her what may have been his last interview. And probably Ms. Hemy’s most impor tant. In an exclusive interview with The CAROLINIAN, Ms. Henry talked about Alex Haley, what she learned from him, and what he said in that interview. “He was scheduled to come to North Carolina on Feb. 29 for a speaking engagement in Fayette ville. And I talked with him earlier this month to confirm that. So I was shocked when I heard that he had died shortly after. But when I last interviewed him, he told me about his life, and some of his plans for the future,” she said. One of the reasons why Ms. Henry interviewed Haley is that she was working on an oral history project, and wanted to have input from a recognized historian and genealo gist. Haley became world-renowned for his 12-year search for, pnd re search of, his African origins that became his most honored book, Roots, which went on to be a historic television mini-series. Haley had become impressed with Ms. Henry several years ago when he found out about a prior project she was developing called “The Heritage of Blacks in North Carolina,” which became a pub lished work in 1991. Part of Haley’s family came from AlamanCe County, so he felt close to the state, and wanted to give something back. “He called me one afternoon in my office and indicated that he was real (See LAST INTERVIEW, P. 2) Jury Selection Underway In Rodney King Case SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (AP>-In a courtroom parade, prospective ju rors spoke in sad, hushed tones about a sight all of them had shared: the videotaped image of a black man on the ground being pummeled by white police officers. “It seemed beyond reason,” said one woman. “I can’t see any excuse for what happened,” declared one man. A male prospect wrote on a ques tionnaire that the four officers charged in the beating “seem to be overgrown schoolyard bullies.” They were among eight people dismissed for bias last Wednesday, the first day of jury selection in the trial of four Los Angeles police offi cers charged with assault in the notorious Rodney King beating. All 31 prospective jurors quizzed by the judge had seen the videotape and many said they had viewed it several times. Another 46 people were sum moned for the next session. Defense attorneys appeared de jected as they concluded the first round of questioning. Attorney Mi chael Stone said the responses showed “the magnitude of what we’re dealing with.” Only one man was excused for cause by Superior Court Judge Stanley Weisberg said he was on the side of the four officers. He said his uncle weis a policeman and he tended to favor lawmen. Others, such as prospect Pamela Friedman, expressed strong feel ings agEtinst the officers from the jury box and from the question - (See KING JURY, P. 2) Eva Clayton First To File In First District Race Warren County Commissioner Eva Clayton (D) filed Monday to run for the First District congressional seat, but many observers expect that before the March 2 deadline, several other African-American candidates, and at least two white challengers, will also enter the race. The more black candidates there are spreading out the black vote, the easier it will be for one of the white challengers to win. If that hap pened, it would fly in the face of the original intention of the U.S. Justice Department when it ordered North Carolina to redraw voter district lines to ensure a black majority voting district. Other African-Americans ex pected to enter the Democratic pri mary in the First District race in elude Willie D. Riddick, longtime aide to Rep. Walter B. Jones; Rep. Thomas Hardaway of Enfield, and Rep. Milton “Toby” Fitch of Wilson. The two white candidates are expected to be Williamston Mayor Thomas Brandon, III, who has al ready filed, and state Rep. Walter B. Jones ofFarmville, son of U.S. Rep. Jones, who is retiring. Because under state law a candi date must 'gamer more than 40 percent of thfe primary vote, unless one of the four black candidates in the First District race proves to be extremely popular, it is question able whether any of them can beat one of the white candidates. The theme for the Clayton cam (See CLAYTON FILES, P. 2) MS. ELIZABETH PEEBLES Raleigh, where she stated that it was her opportunity to help others and to listen to women who had made mistakes. Some of them just wanted to have someone who would just listen to them, stated the win ner. * K