July 4th Celebration Set For Fairgrounds Page 5 Man Arrested For Stalking Singer Janet Jackson Page 6 f The Carolinian I _ Dept of Cultural Resources, N.C. State Library 109 East Jones Street Raleigh NC 27601 N.C.’s Semi-Weekly DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST SINGLE COPY #}C' IN RALEIGH £D0 ELSEWHERE 300 NAACP To Seek New Leadership At National Meet BY SHEHETTIZI WOODLEY Staff Writer The nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization will be searching for a new leader to guide the group into the 21st century. Dr. Benjamin L. Hooks, execu tive director of the National Asso ciation for the Advancement of Colored People, will officially rep resent the organization for the last time at its annual convention. Hooks will retire in the spring of 1993. As a result, the NAACP has named a search committee to be gin the process of selecting a new executive director. Members selected for the NAACP search committee are from all regions on the country, and they encompass a wide variety of backgrounds and points of view, according to Dr. William F. Gi bson, chairman of the NAACP Na tional Board of Directors. Hooks will attend the NAACPs 1992 annual convention in Nash ville, Tenn. at the Nashville Con vention Center July 12-16. The convention's theme is “Honoring Our Past, Fulfilling Our Present, Preparing for Our Future.” A three-day prelude to the con vention will be held July 9-11. The pre-convention activity, the Health Summit, will examine critical is sues facing the African-American community. The summit will produce policy statements for both the guidance of the NAACPs constituency and for action by policymakers. Dr. Louis L. Sullivan, secretary of the Department of Health and Hainan Services, will be the key note speaker. The convention will include a number of plenary sessions featur ing a series of speakers including Jack Kemp, secretary of the De partment of Housing and Urban Development; William Gray, presi dent of the United Negro College Fund and former whip in the House of Representatives; Marian Wright Edelman, president of the Children’s Defense Fund; and Rev. Jesse Jackson. A special workshop, “The Changing Role of African-Ameri cans in Film—The Making of Mal (See NAACP, P. 2) Watts Activist Didn’t Expect Riots In Los Angeles County LOS ANGELES, Calif. (AP)—Ted Watkins once thought that his efforts to provide training programs, thousands of jobs and affordable homes to people in South Central Los Angeles would help prevent a repeat of the 1965 Watts riots. "Anybody who thinks about rioting is out of their mind in Los Angeles County,” Watkins said in 1980. Now the 68-year-old head of the Watts Labor Commu nity Action Committee surveys the ruins of his world. His headquarters and mini-mall were looted, then torched on April 30 during rioting that far surpassed 1965 in deaths and destruction. "Stereos, videos, stoves, refrigerators, couches, beds, you name it, everything was gone,” he recalled earlier this month while sitting in a barren furniture shop, now his makeshift office. Watkins and his 45-year-old daughter, Tara Watkins, said they were not surprised that the WLCAC was tar geted when so many other black-owned businesses were left standing. “We had the goodies,” said Ms. Watkins, who has worked at the center most of her life. "The looters knew we had VCRs, stereos and first-rate toys. And they knew where to find them.” Neither Watkins nor his daughter seemed to want to blame the looters and arsonists. Instead, Watkins said his $3 million loss has more to do with what he said is a lack of attention paid to Watts, which is mostly black and Hispanic. (See LA. AID SLOW, P. 2) CRIME BEAT Editor’s Note: This column, a fixture of The CAROLINIAN in years past, has returned to our pages in hopes of deterring crime in our community. The information contained herein is taken from public arrest records and does not necessarily mean those mentioned are guilty of crimes. STRUGGLE WITH OFFICER Nineteen-year-old Derrick Cortez Torain of 7130 Vardiman Gardens was charged with two counts of assaulting a law enforcement officer and one count of resisting arrest and obstruction. Police say Torain got into a struggle with Raleigh Police Officer Bradford Marshall at police head quarters on the fourth floor. A door was damaged during the incident. POINTING GUN Thomas Person Ward III, 22, of 817 Peace Terrace, was charged with assault with a deadly weapon. Police say Ward allegedly pointed a gun at 21-year-old Patricia Bell Jones at the same address. CARRYING CONCEALED WEAPON Robert Boss, 18, of 528 Grantland Drive, was charged with carrying a concealed weapon. Police say Boss was arrested at 4000 Poole Road by Officer G.K. Takano with a .32-caliber Jaguar starter pistol. POSSESSION OF COCAINE Thirty-seven-year-old Alton Marvin Chavis of 306 Hill St. was charged with possession of cocaine. Police say Chavis was arrested at the corner of Fisher and Pender streets with a ziplock plastic bag containing two rocks of crack cocaine. AND MORE COCAINE POSSESSION Forty-year-old Larry Donnell Simmons of 1516 Joe Lewis Avenue was charged with possession of cocaine, drug paraphernalia, and carry ing a concealed weapon. Police say Simmons was arrested on the 100 block of Fisher St. with a plastic marijuana pipe, a razor blade, a small baggie with cocaine residue and a small rock object. t Civil Unrest Rises As President & Congress Continue Debate s s BY LARRY A. STILL NNPA New* Service WASHINGTON, D.C.—While the Democratic Congress and Re publican administration continue debate billion-dollar proposals aid all major, deteriorating ur tar / mi LEADERSHIP SUMMIT-Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, center, President of the Rainbow Coalition, welcomes New York City Mayor David N. Dinkins, right, and Maurice Cox, Vice President, Corporate Development and Diversity, Pepsi Cola Company, to the recent “National Leadership Summit, Rebuild America, 1992 and Beyond." Pepsl-Cola was a sponsor of the summit at the Sheraton Washington Hotel in Prof Alleges Discrimination In St. Augustine’s College Suit BY CASH MICHAELS Staff Writer A lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court last Friday alleges that St. Augustine’s College President Prezell R. Robinson and his vice chairman for academic affairs, Dwight Fennel “conspired” to deny a resident white college professor tenure at the school because of his race. That allegation and more is con tained in the 19-page document filed by the attorney for Dr. Allan Cooper, the plaintiff in the suit. Dr. Cooper, an associate professor of history and political science, has taught at the historically black in stitution since 1981. Dr. Cooper is also a member of the City of Raleigh’s Human Resources/Hu man Relations Advisory Commis sion. The CAROLINIAN obtained a copy of the suit last Monday. The defendants, Dr. Robinson and Dr. Fennel were reportedly officially served with the suit that same day. Dr. Cooper alleges that during his 11 years of teaching at St. Augustine’s, he has met every aca demic and administrative require ment for tenure. Tenure is when an academic institution grants professional employment security to a qualifying faculty member. A recognized political scidMe scholar, Dr. Cooper has authored three books and a wide-ranging series of published articles and re views internationally. He has also lectured throughout the United States, Canada and the Caribbean. In 1987, Dr. Cooper was pro moted to chairperson of the Divi sion of Social Sciences and the De partment of History and Political Science. He has also served on sev eral college committees, and is well respected by his fellow faculty members and hie students. So, in 1990, when Dr. Cooper requested to be considered for sal ary increase and tenure, he was pleased to receive a supportive evaluation from his superior, then vice chair for academic affairs, Dr. Thelma Roundtree. Dr. Roundtree gave Dr. Cooper an “excellent” rat ing, the highest possible, and rec ommended both the salary in ban areas following the Los Ange les “riots,” the U.S. Department of Labor provided a meager $2 mil lion emergency grant to relieve “civil unrest” in California as black unemployment continues to rise nationally. jm <■ mmm Washington, D.C. The three-day session brought a multi racial group together to work on what Rev. Jackson called “a program of hope, action and economic justice one month after Los Angeles and a month before the Democratic National Convention.” Mayor Dinkins was one of several big city mayors concerned with problems of the inner cities. crease and tenure. The procedure, as outlined in the faculty handbook, called for that recommendation to be for warded on to Dr. Robinson for his review and approval, and then to the Board of Trustees for the final decision. Having not only met, but exceeded set requirements and standards for tenure, Dr. Cooper told The CAROLINIAN that he was “shocked” when it was not forthcoming. In March of 1991, when he fi nally wrote to Dr. Robinson to in quire why he was not tenured, Dr. Cooper alleges that Dr. Robinson wrote back saying, “...You have demonstrated beyond any reason Radiothon Set By WLLE For July 4th To Assist In Incubator Funding BY CASH MICHAELS Staff Writer In a presidential election year where African-Americans seem ingly have no place politically to go, this holiday weekend, July 2-5, will be an “economic call to arms.” In short, if black people plan to truly make it in this country, com munity leaders say they must get their economic act together. On Saturday, July 4, this serious ef fort to build black businesses con tinues. Prom 9 a.m. to noon, the Busi ness Building Society of Wake County will sponsor its first radio thon to raise funds for the develop ment of a small-business incubator in Southeast Raleigh. The radio thon will be heard on WLLE-AM 570, and it will be hosted by Ms. Margaret Rose Murray, president of BBS; Prank Roberts, host of “Let’s Talk” on WLLE; and this writer. "The purpose of the BBS Radio thon is to raise seed money for Af rican-American commerce in the community," said Ms. Murray. She marveled that despite all of the ac complishments African-Americans can lay claim to here in Raleigh, having their own black business incubator is not one of them. i In announcing distribution of the limited funds to assist west coast communities and workers af fected by 'the recent events, Secre tary of Labor Lynn Martin de clared, “The rebuilding process is a national priority. We are commit able doubt sound scholarship, a spirit of true professionalism... As we approach the end of the aca demic year, your status will be re evaluated as it relates to tenure.” Dr. Cooper has not received ten ure since that letter. In his suit, Dr. Cooper alleges that Dr. Robinson “conspired with defendant Fennel [who had suc ceeded Dr. Roundtree in 1991] to disregard the recommendation for tenure, and in furtherance of that conspiracy, defendant Robinson ultimately refused to recommend to St. Augustine’s College’s Board of Trustees that tenure be con ferred upon [Dr. Cooper], The act (See WHITE PROF., P. 2) “We must have a place where small businesses can go and grow, and get all of the help and support an incubator can provide so that they may grow and become suc cessful," Ms. Murray said. She pointed to similar incubators in Charlotte and other cities, where small businesses for people of color and women share secretarial, jani torial, and warehousing support services in their infancy. Once the businesses grow to a certain level, they’re able to be “hatched” from the incubator, allowing for a new small business to move in. This continuous cycle helps to provide jobs in the community, for the community. “The facility we’re talking about constructing will be multi-level, providing for shops, offices, a mini convention center and a place where young people can go to rec reate. Why should our youth go out to the shopping malls when we will have our own ‘mall’ right here in our community?” asks Ms. Mur ray. The goal is to raise $25,000 on Saturday to add to fluids already raised during the B.B. King con cert four years ago. Guests on the radiothon will (See WLLE RADIOTHON, P. 2) 'X ted to assisting the communities... the healing process must begin immediately—individual by indi vidual, neighborhood by neighbor hood.” She added, “There is a desire in (See CIVIL UNREST, P. 2) Local Deltas Join In Effort To Preserve Estey Hall BY ALLEE M. PEEBLES Contributing Writer The national headquarters of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. has initiated a new project, the preservation, beautification and cherishing of African-American landmarks, monuments and his toric places. In short, it is referred to as Proj ect Cherish. The Raleigh Alumnae Chapter is one of the 12 Delta chapters located in places where significant African-American his tory is visibly represented. Here in Raleigh, such a landmark is Estey Hall, which is located on the cam pus of Shaw University. The Raleigh chapter will carry out various activities to cherish and preserve Estey Hall. On Sunday, June 7, the Raleigh Alumnae Chapter held its cere mony in the Shaw University Learning Center at 4:30 p.m. President Annette Watson gave the greetings on behalf of the chapter. Soror Lucille Webb, co chairman of the committee, gave the background of the sorority’s project and indicated that the local chapter was pleased to work with the Estey Hall project and school officials. Soror Wilmoth Carter, co-chair man of the committee and former (See ESTEY HALL, P. 2) NEWS BRIEFS I HOMELESS PANEL A group studying how to help homeless people has been put on hold while a proposed mission for the' needy is being challenged in court. The Cary Town Council voted recently to suspend the committee’s meetings temporarily. Last month, the council rejected a proposal to turn a down town hotel and restaurant into housing for the home less, and a church group appealed in court. Christian Community in Action had asked Cary for permission to convert the Chatham Street property into a min istry called The Carying Place. BOND PLANS House leaders Friday proposed a $500 million bond referendum for educa tion projects. But they did not say how the state would spend the money or repay the debt. The proposal called for $300 million in bonds for the University of North Carolina system, $100 million for community col leges, and $100 million for public schools. WAKE MEDICAL GETS FACELIFT In a bid to hold its own in an escalating competition for patients, Wake Medical Center wants to spend $40 million to renovate older patient rooms and add an extra floor. The Wake County commissioners and state regulators must en. dorse the plan before con (See NEWS BRIEFS, P. 2) k