The Minority Voice, May 28-June 3, 1994


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]






2-THE *

oVOICE - WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994

oMiss Jabberwock ? Scholarhip
Pageant held in Greenville

On April 9, 1994 the Greenville
Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority sponsored its Bi-
Annual Miss Jabberwock Scholar-
ship Pageant, at the J.H. Rose

High School Performing Arts Center.

Miss Joy Diadra Williams,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs John I.
Williams of Greenville was
crowned oMiss Jabberwock ? and

Behind Fred Webb's Gra
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Public Notice

Miss Brooke Deronica Bond,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Styron
Bond of Williamston was crowned
oLittle Miss Jabberwock ?.

The first runner up for oMiss "

Jabberwock ? was Miss Atondra

Falette Carree, the daughter of ©
Dr. and Mrs. Tim Monroe of "

Greenville and Mr. Bernard Ca-
reer of Cary. Second runner up
was Miss Adeea Raykael Rogers,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.
Ray Rogers of Greenville.

Other participants were: Miss
Wanda Faye Barrett, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Barrett, Miss
Aisha Concharia Barrow, daugh-
ter of Mrs. Barbara Barrow and
Mr. Joe Barrow, Miss Alysia
Danielle Blount, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Blount, Miss
LaTara Carney, daughter of Ms.
Annette Carney, Miss Monique Tia
Cole, daughter of Mrs. Queen
Esther Dawson and Mr. James
Cole, Miss Rachel Copeland,
daughter of Ms. Lillian Sutton,
Miss Tiffin Deyshona Daniels,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Daniels, Miss Christy Cherise
Dickens, daughter of Rev. and Mrs.
Charles Dickens, Miss Norva
Aushe Gaskins, daughter of Ms.
R. Michelle Gaskins, Miss
Adrienne Nakia Doctor, daughter
of Ms. Cynthia Doctor, Miss Crys-
tal Gorham, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Gorham, Miss
LaTressa Hardy, daughter of Ms.
Martha Hardy, Miss Aleta Linette
Harper, daughter of Mrs. Velma
Harper, Miss Sadie Hunter,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Mathew Hunter, Miss Kemberly
Donice Lee, daughter of Mrs,
Bernice Lee Coward and Mr. Kemp
Lee, Miss LuChara Sayles, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayles,
Miss Jerusha Olievetta Bonnie
Blue Shea Streeter, daughter of

The Greenville Urban Area's Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) willsoonbe
Preparing a Local Transportation Improvement Program (LTIP) for Greenville,
Winterville and a portion of Pitt County. The LTIP will focus on highway, bridge, public
transit, bicycle, pedestrian, and railroad safety projects. The MPO has developed
a proposed Public Involvement Policy to assist the MPO in establishing transportation

priorities.

The proposed Public Involvement Policy willbe on file in the office of the MPO's Lead
Planning Agency for forty-five (45) days beginning Monday, May 16, 1994, Toobtain
a copy or review the proposed policy, please contact John Roberson, Engineering
Division, City of Greenville, 306 South Greene Street, PO Box 7207, Greenville, NC

27835, (919) 830-4476,

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Beauty Queens...Miss Ji oy Diadra Williams, oMiss Jabberwock ?and Miss Brooke Deronica

Bond oLittle Miss Jabberwock ? were recently crowned in Greenville

Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Phillips and
Miss Sakeya Wilkins, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Wilkins.

First runner up for oLittle Miss
Jabberwock ? was Miss Leonce
Marie Wilkins, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Wilkins and second
runner up was Miss Tiara Che-
nille Parker, daughter of Rev. and
Mrs. Charles Parker.

Other participants included:
Miss Chameka Campbell White,
daughter of Annette Campbell-
White, Miss Odetta Locks, daugh-
ter of Rev. and Mrs. Sidney Locks
and Misses Fatima Maryam Sahid-
El and Laila Shar Shaid-E] daugh-
ters of Amina Josey Shaid-E].

The Graves-Forbes Scholarship
winner was Miss Aletha Linette
Harper and Miss Congeniality was
Miss Alysia Danielle Blount.

Junior Marshals for the evening
included: Keith Best, Gregory
Blow, Steven Boyd, Kendra
Bryant, Matheis Cater, Douglas
Cogdell, Quentin Corey, Todd
Daniels, James L. Ebron, III,
Branson Edwards, Karlus
Faulcon, Robert oTrey ? Harvey,
III, Derrick Hopkins, Omar Jack-
son, Eric Jones, David Koonce,
Freddie Locks, Charles Lodge, Jr.,
Chris Morris, Corey Don Vann,
Tyrone Walston and Thaddeus
Wilkins.

Soror Brenda H. Teel served as
Mistress of Ceremony and enter-
tainment was provided by the par-
ticipants, Mr. Johnny Wooten and
the Greenville Theater Arts Cen-
ter. Proceeds from the fund rais-
ing activities will provide scholar-
ships and savings bonds for the
participants towards their college
education. Soror Patti Sanders-
Smith served as overall chairper-
son for the Jabberwock Pageant
and Soror Mavis G. Williams is
chapter president. The Greenville
Alumnae Chapter would like to
thank the Greenville and sur-
rounding area for their continued
support to the Jabberwock Pag-
eant.

The Pastor journeys to Johannesburg

chairs, blind, deaf and lame waited
to vote so they could create a new
life. What a sight it was to behold
as people stood in lines 2 and 3
miles long to vote on the two suc-
ceeding days of the general elec-
tion. I shall never forget one older
lady saying to me, oI Tm 82 years

Continued From Page 1

old and I Tve been waiting all my
life to vote, so what is eight or nine
hours. I'll, wait as long as I need
to. ? In the township of Soweto, the
predominantly black township of
two million people just outside of
Johannesburg, we visited such
historic sites as Communal Town

201 W. 9th St.

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Hall where Mr. Mandela and oth-
ers used to have the early meet-
ings of the African National Con-
gress (ANC), Freedom Rock where
the ANC Freedom Charter was
written and Orlando West where
Mr. Mandela, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu and other leaders
of the Freedom Movement live.
We also visited the so-called squat-
ter-camps where thousands of the
poorest of the poor live in make-
shift shacks. One man and his wife
articulated so well the resiliency
and tenacity of the black people of
this land by telling us so power-
fully and profoundly that they were
voting for a better life for their
children a job, a house health care
and compulsory education for all
the children of South Africa.

On Tuesday night, April 26, in
Johannesburg City Plaza, I
watched a minute before 12 mid-
night the old flag of the Republic of
South Africa being lowered to rise
no more and at 1 minute after
midnight the flag of the new South
Africa raised officially to fly for-
ever. This was oone moment in
time ? - God Ts time.

Today, there is a new South Af-
rican where Mr. Mandela is soon
to beinaugurated as the first demo-

cratically elected President. We -

must not forget, however, that as
he entitled his autobiography, My
Life is the Struggle, the struggle
goes on " for South Africans, Afri-
cans in the Motherland and in the
diaspora everywhere. Amandia!

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6-THE oM"-VOICE - WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994

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ini

THE oM T-VOICE- WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994-3

From the Desk of Beatrice May

The law of echoes

Want your associates at work to
be cheery, unselfish, free form
catty, caustic comments and ugly
glares? The place to begin is with
that person who glares back at you
from the bathroom mirror every
morning.

The law is remarkably consis-
tent. Children echo their parents;
pupils in a classroom are usually
echoes of teachers; a congregation
of worshipers is more than not a
reflection of the pastors. If the
once communicating is negative,
severe, blunt, and demanding "
guess what? Theecho reflects those
same characteristics, almost with-
out exception.

The law of echoes. If you want
others to judge and condemn you,
you start it. If you want them to be
understanding, broadminded, al-
lowing you room to be you, then
begin by being that way yourself.
Like begets like. Smiles breed
smiles. A positive attitude is as
contagious as Hong Kong flu. Un-
fortunately, so are frowns, sighs,
and harsh words. Whatever you
deposit in the echo bank, you draw
in return. Sometimes with inter-
est.

The law of echoes applies to
marriage. You want a wife who is
gracious, forgiving, tolerant, and
supportive? Start with her hus-
band. It will roll from your soul to
hers, my friend. As our Savior puts
it, oTreat her exactly as you would
like her to treat you ?, that Ts quite
a promise. But it rests on quite an
assignment.

God is in charge of my day, not I.
One of His preferred methods of
training us is through adjustment
to irritation.

Read: Daniel 6:1-28; Job 23:8-
12.

Excerpts from Charles
Swindoll Ts Growing Strong in the
seasons of life Ts recipe

Life recipe

1 cup of Good Thoughts

1 cup of Kind Deeds

1 cup of Consideration for Oth-
ers

3 cups of Forgiveness

2 cups of Well-Beaten Faults

Mix these thoroughly and add
Tears of Joy and Sorrow and Sym-
pathy for Others. Flavor with Little
Gifts of Love. Fold in 4 cups of
Prayer and Faith to lighten other

Something
To Consider

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) is a biologically-
based disorder that affects from
an estimated 3-8% of school-aged
children. Ofthechildren diagnosed
with ADHD 80% of them are boys.

ADHD is characterized by three
major signs. They include a short
attention span, impulsivity, and
hyperactivity. Children with this
disorder have difficulty paying
close attention in activities that
require sustained attention (Con-
centration). Children also tend to
be easily distracted and often have
difficulty waiting their turn in ac-
tivities or games. He or she has
difficulty sitting still and tends to
be overactive (have a lot of energy)
in various settings like at home,
church, grocery store, etc.

Children who exhibit these char-
acteristics for longer than six
months may be at-risk for having
this disorder. However, a diagno-
sis should only be made after rul-
ing out other factors related to a
child Ts medical. emotional or envi-
ronment hat can show similar
symptoms. Therefore physicians,
psychologist, andeducators (teach-
ers, counselors) must conduct
multidisciplinary evaluations of
the child including medical stud-
ies, psychological and educational
testing, and speech and language
assessment, neurologial evalua-
tion, and behavioral rating scales
completed by the child Ts teachers
and parents.

If your child demonstrates any
of these symptoms, seek out help
from trained professionals. Chil-
dren with this disorder who are
left untreated are at-risk for con-
siderable academicand behavioral
difficulties at school and home.

. 2 teil

ae

ingredients and raise the texture
to great height of Christian Living
other ingredients and raise the
texture to great height of Chris-
tian Living. After pouring all this
into your Daily Life, bake well
with the Heat of Wisdom and Hu-
man Kindness. Serve with a
SMILE.

Harry Truman said: oI studied
the lives of great men and women,
famous men and women, and I
found that the men and women
who got tot the top were those who
did the jobs they had in hand with
everything they had of energy and
enthusiasm and hard work.

oExperience is a school where a
man learns what a big fool he has
been.

Josh Billings

Questions...

What do men want in women?

What do women want in men?

Why do men look at football
games and do not want to be dis-
turbed?

Why do women look at oSoaps
and do no want to be disturbed?

Why does a man want a Cadillac?

Why does a woman want a fur
coat?

Does aman who has a BS degree
or no degree at all feel inferior to a
woman with a PHD degree?

What about a mechanicor a bank
teller Ts inferiority complex to a
school teacher or principal or does
a nurse feel inferior to a president
of a bank?

Doesn Tt a man want a wife to be
his Mom or want a wife who has
his mother Ts qualities or at-
tributes?

Does the average man hold a
woman back? Career wise? Is he
her best supporter?

Does she stay home with the
kids while he goes to his func-
tions? Or does she get a baby sitter
and go with him to his functions,
games, or even shopping?

Spritual Leadership
Leadership is influence.
Standard qualities or character-

istics usually found among natu-
ral-born leaders: Enthusiasm, op-
timism persistence, ambition, com-
petitiveness, knowledge, insight,
independence friendliness,
adventureness, security, decisive-
ness, integrity, flexibility, sense of
humor, discipline, creativity, prac-
ticality, aggressiveness, poise in-
quisitiveness

A fire for cold hearts
How would you rate the tem-
perature of your heart?

hot, excited about God
... burning zeal

..very Warm

..warm

...8emi-warm

.. lukewarm

..cold

dey

oYou aren Tt born smart, you get
smart by studying ?.

Branching out
While you are in church this
Sunday, make sure you do the four
basics: take in some teaching; talk
to at least three other people; par-
ticipate in communion and pray.

Community

Outreach/Service

Topics Community Outreach
must address:

Who are we trying to reach?

What are their outstanding
needs?

What can we do to help?

Who is able & willing to serve?

Where will the financial support
come from?

What other groups are working
at the problem?

How do we carry out the task?

What Is Easylmage?

Want A Better
To Keep Your Checks

You must consider

these steps

Determine the need

Define the goal

Outline, step by step, clear pro-
cedures :

Delegate assignments

Evaluate & revise procédures to
deal with experience

How can the youth of our church
contribute to some of the following
needs?

Youth Gangs

VOTE FOR JIM ROUSE

Drug Addicts

_ School Dropouts

a

Abused & Neglected Youth
Mentally i
Juvenile Delinquents
Suggestions for some projects
Visitations to Jails, Hospitals,

Nursing Homes, Group Homes, etc.
Volunteer work in a Homeless

Shelter or House of Ruth, etc.
Community Canvassing
Welcome Programs for newcom-

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NOVEMBER 8

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When the stars of the 27th An-
nual Hampton (Va.) Jazz Festival
were announced at a recent press
conference, George Wein, Presi-
dent of New Yourk Ts Festival Pro-
ductions, Inc., and long-time pro-
ducer of the now-fabled East Coast
aficionado Ts tradition, said the
show Ts mix of stars and styles of
music is a prime example of what
has made the _ event,
oEVERYBODY'S FESTIVAL ?

The weekend-long music festi-
val is set for June 24,25,26 at the
Hampton Coliseum, and will star:

"on Friday night "R&B leg-
ends Gladys Knight, The Four
Tops, and B.B. King plus saxo-
phonist Gerald Albright, with vo-
cal stylist Lalah Hathaway, for a
touch of jazz;

"on Saturday night "all jazz-
down and earthy pianist Ramsey
Lewis, neoclassical jazz guitarist
Earl Klugh, The Count Basie Or-
chestra with crooner Joe Williams,
plus George Duke Ts current Jazz
Explosion, featuring vocalists, Will
Downingand Rachelle Farrell, and
saxophonist George Howard;

"on Sunday afternoon "the
original New Age fusionists Earth,
Wide, and Fire, and fire-cracker
hot show-stopper Patti LaBelle,
plus Tidewater Ts own cool favorite
Connie Parker, for a stylish show
opener.

oThis is a wonderful meeting of
the great legends and soon-to-be
legends of the several classic forms
and ages of Black music-or soul
music "African American music
whatever you want to call the rich
musical heritage that has grown
out of the Black experience in
America, ? Wein said. oWe have
music for those who were swing-
ing back in the T40s and T50s "for
their kids, who were grooving in
the T60s and T70s "and for the new
and old fans who have survived
the 80s and T90s. ?

~ As if destined to prove the lon-
gevity of the music and the festi-
val, Gladys Knight along with her
brothers and cousins, The Pips,
has had hits in four of those de-
cades, and played the Hampton
Festival five different times in the
70s and T80s. From early hits like
now-standard favorites like MID-
NIGHT TRAIN TO GEORGIA,
THE BEST THING THAT EVER
HAPPENED TO ME, and THE
WAY WE WERE/TRY TO RE-
MEMBER, she and her siblings
provided soundtracks for the last
40 years of our lives.

But now, in the T90s, oI Tm actu-
ally performing alone and the
group is... suspended, ? she says.

In 1991, she came to Hampton
with her own 20-piece orchestra,
instead of her Pips, and graciously
filled in, on very short notice, for
an ailing Aretha Franklin, who
couldn Tt keep her appointment
with HFH fans.

On the strength of her GOOD
WOMAN album, the SISTERS IN
The NAME OF LOVE television
special, with HJF alumna Patti
LaBelle (Sunday Ts headliner) and
Dionne Warwick; and chart-top-
ping hits like MEN, MR. LOVE,
and IF YOU ONLY KNEW, which
she wrote, and the anthem-like
SUPERWOMAN "plus a sensa-
tionally stylish solo act-she won
the hearts and thunderous acco-

_ lades of her Hampton audience.

She says she Ts like her girlfriend,
Patti LaBelle "anxious to come
back and do it all again.

She'll share the opening night
bill with The Four Tops, the clas-
sic doo-wop group who mellowed
into everybody's favorite memory
o of the "70s, and B.B. King, the
classic blues-meister who has
played the Hampton Festival more
times than any other star. This is
his 11th appearance since 1971!
To keep the evening cool, jazz saxo-
phonist Gerald Albright is bring-
ing Lalah Hathaway along to add
her special talents to his third "
her first "HJF performance.

Saturday is the first alljazznight
in several HJF years "and an
aficionado Ts summer night's
dream. Klugh and George Duke
and company represent the
branchings of musical roots estab-
lished by the Count Basie Orcestra
and Joe Williams, in the years
before the first Hampton Festival.

Lewis and the great Count Basie
and his Orchestra were among the
then-legendary acts to open the
first Hampton Jazz Festival, back
in 1968.

Duke is doing his whe
ite thing again this year "bring-
ing alonga few utoabianhad
dies, for whom he has written and/
or produced albums that move
steadily up the jazz charts and
create careers. As always, he prom-
ises this batch of colleagdes and

} won't disappoint his
yal fans.
| Kasra to hes Sina.oe The Quoee

i " if
Pegs oe ee ea

to party, sharing Sunday Ts bill with

~born-again classic R&B fusionist

Earth, Wind, and Fire, who are
celebrating their long awaited re-
union and a successful new al-
bum.
Festival producers also an-
nounced a repeat of a new addition
to the traditional weekend con-

. certs "free pre-concert showcase

performances by local artists, on
the Coliseum Plaza. The U.S. Con-
tinental Army Jazz Band from
nearby Ft. Monroe will lead the
parade of Tidewater swingers.
Performances are set for 5:45 on
Saturday evening and 12:45 on
Sunday afternoon.

Wein says he and his co-produc-
ers have again, put together a
musical extravaganza designed
especially for their loyal Hampton
Jazz Festival Fans, oa very special
group of seasoned, musically
knowledgeable fans, who know
what's good and what they like. ?

Speaking for their respective
Festival co-sponsors, Hampton
University President William R.
Harvey, and Hampton City Mayor
James Eason added their personal
invitations to East Coast jazz fans.
oCome join America Ts longest run-
ning celebration of the music of
the African disapora! ?

The festival was originally
staged "long before both of them
took office "to mark the 100th
anniversary of Hampton Institute,
now Hampton University, one of
America Ts oldest, predominately
Black colleges. Wein was called in
by then-college President Jerome
oBrud ? Holland and then "city
Mayor Anne Kilgore, to help plan
the special, once-in-a-lifetime
event.

The event became a tradition. It
has survived several subsequent
office mayors and college presi-
dents, while Wein and former

Hampton students John Scott, Bill
Cope, and a cadre of supporters
known as John Scott Associates,
continue to produce and promote
the shows.

oFans T, families, friends, and
party people journey from Wash-
ington, D.C. and Washington, N.C.;
Boston, Mass., and South Boston,
VA; Wilmington, N.C. and
Wilmington, D.E.; and from New
York, New Bern, and New Haven
to take part in our musical cel-
ebration, ? the officials agree. oThis
year Ts gathering is very special,

~with a list of stars that includes

the royalty and legends ofjazz and
soul music. We are proud to con-
tinue the traditions entrusted to
us by our respective predecessors
and three generations of music
lovers. ?

Wein added, oWe wish to give a
special thanks to the distinguished
group of corporate sponsors con-
tributing to this year Ts event. ?

Those corporate sponsors in-
clude first time participants
Casey Ts BMW and Colonial
Williamsburg, Inc., cooperating to
sponsor the official Festival Infor-
mation Brochure, and AT&T Long
Distance, USAir, Crestar Bank,
Burger King, and Mid-Atlantic
Coca-Cola, all cooperating to spon-
sor the annual music festival.

The show Ts producers say they
want to announce additional cor-
porate participants in the coming
weeks. Reluctantly, they an-
nounced oa small increase in ticket
prices, ? the first in more than two
years. All seats are priced at $32
per night (plus a fifty cents oBox
Office Charge ?).

Tickets go on sale April 20, at
the Hampton Coliseum and all
Ticket Master locations. For more
information, call the Coliseum at
(804) 838-4203.

teaches fourth grade at Weldon

New Superintendent begins work

HALIFAX - Willie J. Gilchrist
began work as the new superin-
tendent of the Halifax County
Schools May 3, after a swearing-in
ceremony at the regular meeting
of the Board of Education May 2.

Gilchrist comes to the school "

system Ts top post from the.

Northampton County Schools
where he has worked since 1976 as
a teach and administrator. Most
recently, he has been associate
superintendent, after 15 years as
principal of Gumberry High School
and Northampton-West High
School since it opened in 1982.

He also served as an assistant
principal at Gumberry and at Jack-
son Eastside Elementary School,
and taught math and physical edu-
cation. He worked in the Roches-
ter, N.Y. public schools from 1973
to 1976 as a health educator, spe-
cial education teacher and counse-
lor.

The new superintendent is a
1973 grauduate of Elizabeth City
State University with a bachelor Ts
degree in health and physical edu-
cation and a minor in biology. He
earned a master Ts in education
administration from Brockport
State University in New York in
1976, and the educational special-
ist in educational administration
from Virginia Polytechnic Insti-
tute and State University in 1985.

Gilchrist is the son of Willie and
Vera Gilchrist of Rochester, N.Y.,
and the late Essie Gilchrist. His
wife, Jacqueline Johnson Gilchrist,
is the daughter of Andrew and
Sarah Johnson of Occoneechee
Neck in Northampton County, and

THE oM T-VOICE- WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994-5

Willie J. Gilchrist... superintendent of the Halifax County

Schools

Elementary School.

Their daughter, Wyvondalynn,
will graduate from Elizabeth City
State University this spring. Their
son, Steven, is a junior at

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Northamption-West, and Willie II
is a sixth-grader at Garysburg E]-
ementary. The family will relocate
to Halifax County in the near fu-
ture.

a ee es ee ee, ee







Raleigh-Gov. Jim Hunt and the
Consul General of Israel, Arye
ikel, signed a memorandum of
funderstanding between North
Carolina and Israel today, as part
of a new effort to strengthen busi-
ness ties and boost trade and tech-
nology exchanges.

The agreement will help the
North Carolina International
Commission, which Hunt estab-
lished in October, foster economic
development, boost university-in-
dustry alliances and to improve

between North Carolina and Is-
rael. The commission is co-chaired
by Jane Patterson, Hunt Ts Policy,
Budget and Technology Advisor,
and Bill Cassell of Greensboro,
President of Cassell Properties.
oTo stay ahead of the curve in
today Ts global economy, North
Carolina must create an interna-
tional strategy for economic
growth, ? Hunt said. oThat means
we have to work smarter to gain
advantages in the global market-
place. Bringing together business,
academia and government under
this commission and with this
agreement will help us do just
that. ?

The International commission,
considered as a model for other

arts, culture and education efforts-

[Hunt signs economic develo
agreement agreement with I

states, has designated Israel as its
first otarget ? country. The Com-
mission will work directly with
the Israeli government and busi-
ness community to provide ser-
vices to give North Carolina com-
panies greater access to Israeli
markets. There are no state ex-
penditures involved.

In the last three years, North
Carolina Ts annual exports to Is-
rael have averaged $65 million.
The Commission Ts goal is to boost
that market, and to increase em-
ployment and economic opportu-
nities in both regions.

After the signing and a brief
ceremony today, three task forces
created by the International Com-
mission met to discuss specific way
to reach to goals of the agreement.
The three task forces, which in-
clude many of Norht Carolina Ts
leading public and private sector
leaders, are:

*Economic Development Task
Force, co-chaired by Tom Sloan,
CEO of Southern Optical Co. in
Greensboro and Dick Quinlan,
head of the N.C. Commerce Dept Ts
International Trade Division.

*University-Industry Alliance
Task Force, co-chaired by Don
DeRosa, provost of UNC-Greens-
boro, and Frank Hart, Interim

fa

rey

73
2 eat

CROSSWORD

SERGREE 20

i 4m

CLUES ACROSS
- 1. Prohibition
5. Portents
7. Hamlet
8. Melodies
10. Requirement
11. Reprimand
13. Items for discussion
14. Blitzed
17. Alone
19. Prison (British)
21. Corn
22. Affect strongly
23. Pardon
24. Attempted

CLUES DOWN
2. Trust
3. Meander
4. Carry too far
5. Conventional
6. Boredom
7. Wanton damage
9. Timetables
12. Close by
15. Courage
16. Contraption
18. General dislike
20. Musical
composition

| ONE LARGE | ONE reat
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TOPPING |! ONE TOPPING:

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a

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ee
srael

president of MCNC;

Henry Levinson, head of religious
studies at UNC-Greensboro.

Operation
Sunshine
1994
Summer

Program

June 13 through
August 5, 1994
10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Monday Through Friday
Field Trips, Arts and
Crafts,
Indoor/Outdoor
Activities and Lots of
Fun!

No Transportation
Available
Applications
accepted June 3 -
Limited Space
Contact:
Barbara D. W. Ormond

758-5315

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dealer. Because right now the Benjamin Moore finishes shown here
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A Stroke Of Brilliance:

Sometimes you

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than just a hand

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Some of the things that make life easiér can seem a lite out of reach at times. Like
sending a child off to college. Consolidating bills. Or buying new car.

lads wh Wich works with each cosoaner n'a ddd bras.

With fixed or variable rate loans. Automatic payments from your Wachovi checking
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ns Graduates
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y Voice

Carolina's

OICE

EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA'S MINORITY VOICE - SINCE 1987

WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994

Jesse Jackson to lead bus

tour into Eastern NC

Reverend Jackson will be the
Guest Minister for the 11:00 a.m.
Worship Service at the
Corner Stone Baptist Church
in Greenville, N.C.

On Sunday, June 5, 1994, The
Reverend Jesse Jackson will lead
a Southern Voting Rights Bus Tour
into Eastern North Carolina. The
tour will include stopsin Greenville
and Rocky Mount. Reverend Jack-
son will be joined by Congress-
woman Eva M. at each stop. Rev-
erend Jackson will be the Guest
Minister for the 11:00 a.m. Wor-
ship Service atthe Corner Stone
Baptist Church in Greenville, N.C.

Following the service in
Greenville, the tour will travel to
Rocky Mount for a 3:30 p.m. Vot-
ing Rights Mass Rally at the

Ebenezer Baptist Church where
Reverend Jackson will be the fea-
tured speaker, along with others,
Interested citizens are urged to
attend these events.

The purpose of the tour is to
fully educate citizens on the po-
tential impact of various Court
challenges of redistrictingin south-
ern states. It will also encourage
citizens to become actively involved
in efforts to protect the threat these
challenges present to the 1965
Voting Rights Act and the elec-
toral gains of minorities.

Florida Bill Passes Requiring Black
History Taught In Public Schools

By James Martinez
Associated Press Writer

Saying oknowledge is the anti-
dote to the poison of
prejudice, TFlorida Gov. Lawton
Chiles signed. into law Swe Be a
measure inig T public Béhools
td teach black history.

oThis is a powerful weapon to
help extinguish the embers of ig-
norance, ? said Chiles, who two
weeks earlier signed a similar bill
making Holocaust education man-
datory in state schools.

The black history law would re-

quire the teaching of slavery, the

passage to America, abolition and
the contributions of black to soci-
ety.

oYou can Tt understand the his-
tory of America without under-
standing the history of African-
Americans, ? said state Sen. Jim
Hargrett, D-Tampa, who co-spon-
sored the bill with Rep. Rudy Bra-
dley, D-St. Petersburg and joined
Childs in the ceremony at the
Jefferson High School library. oIf
you don Tt have the history of Afri-
can-Americans, it Ts his story T in-
stead of ~history. ?

Hargrett added that education
would notonly help fight predudice

oVery few people on the face of

-the earth have made some of the

accomplishments under some of
the most difficult circumstances
that African-Americans have
made, ? he said. oOnly when you

have hope and 4.sense of where,

you came from can you ~have : a
direction of where You're going. ?

How black history will be taught
will be left up to the state educa-
tion department and local school
boards. And Hargrett noted that
black leaders across the state will
be watching closely to make sure it
is done right.

The bill made its way through
the Legislature over concerns that
another state mandate wouldn Tt
be consistent with the philsophy of
returning control of the schools to
the local level. "

But proponents said such argu-
ments fall flat, sirice state law al-
ready requires the teaching of such
things as flag education, principles
of agriculture and kindness to ani-
mals,

"The history of African-Ameri-
cans must not be minimized or
trivialized, ? Chiles said. oThe les-
sons of history should not be lim-
ited to one month or oné day on the
school-year calendar. ?

eo espn eyroery er

EASTERN STAR ... The ladies of Eastern Star Organization held their annual meeting in Plymouth, NC last Saturday.
Shown posing for our camera, the Eastern Star is one of the oldest black groups in America.

Congress should investigate Waco Massacre

April 19 marked the one-year
anniversary of the FBI's murder-
ous assault on the Branch

Davidian religious community ~

americans "supposedly because

: they had some unregistered guns.

It has never been explained (in
fact. very few have even asked)

Du » Waco; Texas, 4 hae F Why ne gen mpi resmade ine w
~With governinient loudspeakers the ~search. jarratit opeace ily.
blaring oThisis notan assault, ? an lawenforcement agents had

M-60 tank tore off the wall of the:

Branch Davidians T home and
pumped CS gas, a particularly
powerful tear gas banned by an
international treaty last year, into
the building. We all know the re-
sults. Seventy-five people "white,
black and latino, over half of them

~women and children-were incin-

erated by agents of the U.S. gov-
ernment that day.

The chain of events a Waco be-
gan when the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms(ATF) spent
months planning and rehearsing
a violent assault on this reclusive
community of devoutly religious

done just that a few years earlier.,
and David Koresh, the Davidian
leader, had been found not guilty.)

Instead, as Richard Shweder, a
professor of human development
at the University of Chicago,
pointed out in the New York Times
recently, the ATF launched oa
major military operation, worthy
of a police state, carried out against
the domestic residence of an un-
popular and readily stigmatized
religious community. ?

The excuse for this violation of
the U.S. Constitution and the most
basic rights supposedly granted
every American? It Ts a simple four-

versary 0

letter word ""cult. ?

The democracy and human
rights lobbying firm of Ross &
Green, with which I have worked

ly for years, marked the anni-
ofaee ofthe massacre by bring-_
ing E. G. (Gerry) Morris and
Michael Bernard, two of the attor-
neys of the surviving Branch
Davidians, to Washington, D.C. to
lobby for a Congressional investi-
gation of the Waco massacre. They
insist that those in Congress re-
sponsible for overseeing federal
law enforcementlook into the clear
abuse of government power in
Waeo. One such abuse is the clear
influence of the organized anti-
cult movement on law enforcement
agencies. In particular, the cult
Awareness Network has played a
major role in propagating an at-
mosphere of intolerance, fear and
violence against new, smaller, non-

The Pastor journeys to Johannesburg

Amandia! Amandia! Power to
the people! It was for this cause
that I journeyed to South Africa as
an International Election Observer
during the week of April 23-30,
1994, I was a member of the Reli-

gious Action Network delegation

a led by Dr, Wyatt Tee Walker. We

represented the largest delegation

_ of ministers from around the world
: Shoocar esis get aroma vin

th Africa, The Independent
Cimunission sbanyed us
ears of

- the world ? this historic first

| democratic election in this coun-

Tom arriving in 1 the City of te
ma ay

Johannesburgon Johannesburg on
Saturday, April 23, we were all
amazed at this world class, first
world city built on the gold mines.
Never before had I seen such a
land, where there sat side-by-side
the first, second, and third worlds,
Indeed, oit was a tale of three
worlds. ?

We had come, however, to wit-
ness the death of three hundred
and fifty years of minority-white
rule and majority-black oppres-
sion under the regime of apart-
heid, The old South Africa had
heard the death knell and was
about to die forever, The cry was

On Tuesday, April 26, the first of
the three days of election, when
the aged and handicapped per-
sons voted, some of the most hope-
ful scenes for the human family
were sighted in living color. Old
women with aprons stood in long
lines four and five hours to cast
their ballot and thereby give birth
in their oldage to anew nation and
a new people. Elderly black men,
bent over from bearing the bur-
dens of hard labor for many years
voted - determinedly their destiny
" even for generations yet un-
born, Persons on canes, in wheel-

__ Continued on Page 2

mainstream religions. ?

Both before, during and after
the 51-day siege and subsequent
massacre at Waco, CAN and AFF
spokespersons had easy access to

the aa By theirown count they o~

gave hundreds of interviews to the
radio and print media during this
period in which they warned the
American people about the sup-
posed evil characteristics of ocults ?
and advocated the use of lethal
force against them.

Even more insidiously, a CAN
associate appears to have had the
ear of the ATF and the FBI
throughout this period. A report
researched and written for the.
Justice Department by Dr. Nancy
Ammerman of Enory University,
documents the active role played
by Rick Ross, a CAN-associated
odeprogrammer ? with a criminal
record stretching back to 1975, in
influencing law enforcement in
regard to the Davidians.

According to Dr. Ammerman Ts
report, Ross oclearly had the most
extensive access to both agencies
of any person on the ocult expert T
lest, and he was apparently lis-
tenedtomore attentively. The ATF
interviewed the persons he di-
rected them to and evidently used
information from those interviews
in planning their February 28
raid...The FBI interview report
includes the note that Ross ~has a
personal hatred for all religious
cults T and would willingly aid law
enforcement in an attempt to ~de-
stroy a cult, T The FBI report does
not include and mention of the
numerous legal challenges to the
tactics employed by Mr. Ross in
extricating members from the
groups he hates. ?

The FBI apparently dismissed
the advice of their own behavioral
experts and listened to an infor-
mant "Ross "who advanced the
scien discredited notions
of obrainwashing ? and omind con-





7"



4-THE oM ?-VOICE - WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994

CLASS ACT... The Annual Gospel Award Festival featured
gospel giant Bobby Jones. Jonesis shown with Tammy Edwards
of the Edward Singers as they pose for our camera at the
Banquet held at the Days Inn in New Bern NC.

Photo By Jim Rouse

Dear Editor:

On Tuesday, May 31, there will
be a second primary for Demo-
crats across the state, as runoff
election for a seat on the North
Carolina Court of Appeals. Incum-
bent Judge Elizabeth (Betsy)
McCrodden of Raleigh, faces John
Tyson of Fayetteville. Another
judge recently said to me that
Batsy Ts upcoming election was the
perfect example of why state court
Judges should not ne elected state-
wide. Havingspend the last couple

of months. trying to get the word
out about what an exceptional per-
son Betsy is, and why she needs to
stay on the Court, I felt the judge

_ was right. Governor Hunt recog-

nized her strengths and integrity
when he appointed her-last year.
Since then she has served to the
accolades of her colleagues on the
Court of Appeals. She has won the
endorsement in this second pri-
mary of the NC Academy of Trial
Lawyers and the AFL-CIO, and
has been endorsed by major news-

Letter to the editor

papers across the state. It seems a
shame to leave such an important
seat, which has been so obviously
well-filled, up to the whim of the
citizens across the state, and yet
that is the system we have - elect-
ing our state-court judges state-
wide.

Then again, what if anoth gov-
ernor for whom I had less respect
than I do for Governor Hunt had
appointed a judge to state judicial
office - had appointed a judge for
whom I and others had little re-

Obituaries

JONES

Mitchell Ts Funeral Home an-
nounces the death and funeral ser-
vice for Miss Juanita M. Jones,
age 22 of 605 Gooden Place,
Greenville, NC who died Friday,
May 20, at Pitt Memorial Hospital
In Greenville, NC.

Funeral services were held
Wednesday at 1:00 p.m. at Mt.
Calvary Free Will Baptist Church
in Greenville with Bishop James
Smith officiating. Burial followed
in the First Born Holy Church
Cemetary in Grimesland, NC.

She is survived by one daughter,
Brittany Jones of Greenville, 2
sons; darrian Jones and Brian
Jones of Greenville, her mother,
Marietta Grantham of Greenville,
her step-father, Bobby Grantham
of Greenville, 4 sisters; Gala Har-
ris, Dika Harris and Diana Harris
all of Greenville, and LaTonya
Harris of Washington, NC, one

brother, Jerome Jones of
Greenville, her maternal grand-
mother, Rose Smith of Newark,
NJ, her maternal grandfather and
grandmother; BishopJames Smith
and Vera Smith of Grimesland,
her paternal grandmother, Bar-
bara Keys of Blounts Creek, NC,
12 uncles, 17 aunts, a number of
niences, nephews and other rela- -
tives.

SMITH

Mitchell Ts Funeral Home an-
nounces the death and funeral ser-
vice for Miss Cristie Nicole Smith,
age 22 of Route 2, Grimesland, NC
who died Friday, May 20 at Pitt
Memorial Hospital in Greenville,
NC.

Funeral services were held
Wednesday at 1:00 p.m. at Mt.
Calvary Free Will Baptist Church
in Greenville with Bishop James
Smith officiating. Burial followed

in the First Born Holy Church
Cemetary in Grimesland, NC.
She is survived by one foster
son, Hunter Hardison of
Winterville, NC, her parents, Mr.
Johnnie Lee Smith and Mrs.
Delores Jones Smith of
Grimesland, 3 brothers; Gregory

awaiting election day and my
chance to make a change at the
ballot box. Our system may need
improving, but in the meantime
it Ts time to get back to work get-
ting the word out about the exce]-
lentjudge we haveon the NC Court

of Appeals, Judge Betsy
McCrodden.

Mary Alsentzer

Greenville

Smith and Karon Smith, both of
Greenville and Reginald Smith of
Washington, NC, 1 sister, Jeanine
M. Smith of Scotch Plains, N.J., 7
uncles, 11 aunts, a number of
nieces, nephews, other relatives
and friends.

Please
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8-THE oM ?-VOICE - WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 1994

Eowanos/Mike Stecle |

Basketball Day Camp

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1 oFor applications call 756-3738 (After 5pm, Call 355-3127) j

Jerome Ramey
Attorney at Law

Personal Injury/Auto
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¢ Bankruptcy

* Social Security Disablity

a Blue

¢ Worker's Compensation
¢ Wills/Probate Matters

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ANSWERS FOR CROSSWORD ON PAGE 7

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Title
The Minority Voice, May 28-June 3, 1994
Description
The 'M' voice : Eastern North Carolina's minority voice-since 1987. Greenville. N.C. : Minority Voice, inc. James Rouse, Jr. (1942-2017), began publication of The "M" Voice in 1987 with monthly issues published intermittently until 2010. At different times, the paper was also published as The "M"inority Voice and The Minority Voice. It focused on the Black community in Eastern North Carolina.
Date
May 28, 1994 - June 03, 1994
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/66206
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