The Minority Voice, June 1-16, 2006


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






Serving Greenville, Ayden and Pitt County

By: Wiley Henry
Tri - State Defender

When Ronald Baldridge
joined the Gangster Disciples
at age 14, he pretty much
knew the consequences for
his action.

But it would take five bullets,
22 operations, three suicide
attempts, several broken
bones, and the compassion
of a friendly White
policeman for him to fully
get the message.
paraplegic is ona mission "
to save those who may be
following in his
footsteps.

In September 2004, several
days before six students tried
to ojump ? 15-year old Taurus
Williams into a gang called
oG-Unit ? in the bathroom
at Westside Middle School,
Ronald Baldridge was on the
campus trying to encourage
approximately 375 boys
to avoid gangs, respect
authority, finish school, and
choose a career that doesn Tt
lead to the slammer " or
death.

When Baldridge learned
that Taurus had died from his.
injuries, he felt he Td failed the
students at Westside, including
the six he Td talked to who
were charged with reckless
homicide:

Artavius Branch, 13; Jeremy
Henderson, 15; Damien
Farmen,13; Mack Lewis, 15;
Tyrus Strong, 13; and Antonio
~ Taylor, 14.

oMan, it really hurt me
when I heard that this kid was
killed at the school, o says
Baldridge, shaking his head in
disbelief.

Baldridge had attended
Westside as well, and
. only tried to convey to
students " particularly the
impressionable boys " what
he Td learned the hard way.

The deadline is June 21

The 27th Anniversary of the Greenville Industrial C. M Eppes High School Alumni Weekend Annual Reunion on June 30 - July 2, 2006

When he was 14, he joined
the Knight Hawks, a branch
of the Gangster Disciples, and
started stealing and selling
marijuana and cocaine.

oT got tried of my mom
working hard, tired of her
struggling and growing old, ?
says Baldridge, justifying his
membership in the gang and

he need to make fast money.
- oTheard her crying one

Now this / night, praying to the Lord to

help her raise her two sons. I
wanted to do something. So
I saw these guys selling drugs
and really making a nice piece
of change.
o[ just wanted to do what

I could to help my mom. |
had a five-year plan to do
what I could and get out. But
she didn Tt want the money;
she wouldn Tt take any of the
money. ? |
_The fast life was fruitful,

_ but dangerous nonetheless
" even though Baldridge
thought he was invincible.

At least that Ts what he told a

group of students at Sheffield
High School during one of
many speaking engagements.

But he was wrong " almost

dead wrong. At 17, a security
guard shot Baldridge in
the back during a botched
robbery.
oT got a tip that there would
be some money at this place.
My partner was supposed to
take care of the security guard
that was supposed to be shot
twice, we got into a fight, and
_ I got shot in the back.

oI laid on the floor dying. I
was scared, tying to hold on,
fighting and trying to breathe.
My breath got short because -
of my asthma. I asked this
White cop would I live. He
told me yes, Then my heart
stopped " twice; I flat-lined, ?
Baldridge recalls.

a

LET'S CHECK YOUR HISTORY Name these people and win a prize.
GOOD LUCK!!! |

reene St. tGreenville, NC 27834

REDEMPTIO

V O a ( : a Please Take One

Vol XX

Officer Steve Grisham, now
a lieutenant with the Memphis
Police Department, rode in
the JSGEENS ute Baldridge
to the hospital\-- oFrom 1985
- 1987, that guy was always
there. He had arrested me, -
harassed me, and testified
against me at Juvenile Court, ?
says Baldrige, whose hatred
for ocops ? and oWhite folks ?
fueled his wreckless ambition.

Baldridge had become a

paraplegic, but his near-death
experience on July 07, 1985,
didn Tt stop him from gang-
banging in his wheelchair. He
no longer had the use of his
legs, but he was just as mobile

"as anyone with two good ones

He was confined to
the wheelchair, but the
wheelchair didn Tt stop him
from fighting, bearing arms,
and raising a ruckus.

In 1987, he says he shot a

man who tried to rob him in

his home. A judge, he says,
ruled he had a right to protect
himself. But the trouble-prone
young man didn Tt need his
mother Ts words or the law of
the land.

It seemed that Baldridge
was committed to keeping
up hell. He was angry at the
world, but he would have
to pay-a hefty price for his
violent spurts and unlawful
behavior. |

oSoon as I get paralyzed
and in:a wheelchair, I get shot
four more times, And in
1987, even as a paraplegic, I
was thrown out of a car going
about 45 mph. oI also had 22
operations, three suicide
attempts, a broken left hand,
broken ankle, a dislocated
hip, and:a broken night leg.
They got all the bullets out
except one, ? says Baldridge,
pointing to his right leg where
a .38 slug is still lodged.

ty to Promote Growth and Pros
t 752-4101

_www.greenvillenc.org

On May 13, during a
oreconciliation conferenece ?
at Trezevant High School,
several speakers, including
Baldridge, conducted

perity 1,000 MEMBERS STRONG

June Issue

LJ

Groen ifh:-Pal County
Chamber of Commence

workshops, o so that the
teachers, students, and
parents, can have a role in
working together to do what Ts
best for our students, ? said

school Ts principal.

oWe have to convey to
everyone that they Tre part of
the system. The school is one
of the major components of

GIANT KILLER VISIT TS GREENVILLE __

Shaw University Annual Alumni.... On hand was Alumni Pres. Walter Council; (wife )

Mayor Pro Temp, Mildred Council, Keynote Speaker, Attn. Willie Gary and guest.

Attorney Gary was born
with medical complications
that forced his migrant
parents to mortgage and
lose their 200 acres of
farmland, something few
Blacks owned in the 1940s.
Yet, neither the hard life of
extreme poverty, working
in fields, nor living in a
shack with his parents and
10 siblings stopped him
from going after his dreams.
Now, 54-years after that
difficult birthday, he Ts being

cheered on by the masses

for conquering corporate
giants who bully the small
guy. Gary asserts, oSuccess
is about.an attitude. It Ts like
winning: you have to believe
you can do it. If you believe
in yourself, have a positive
attitude and deal with
adversity, things will get
better. ? And despite the early
difficulties he faced, things
did get better for Gary.
Today, he is recognized as

one of the nation Ts best trial

lawyers. He has won over
100 cases valued at more
than a million dollars each,
and he has achieved one of
the largest jury verdicts in
U.S. history-$500 million.
What makes his success so
extraordinary is the fact that
most of his clients are small T
working- men and women,
the rural poor and children.
Yet, most of his opponents
are huge, like hospitals,
chemical companies and
insurance companies.

Honoring Doctor Andrew Best... Pictured in the center is Dr. Andrew Best who was
honored at a gala affair. Dr. Best was also honored to have Humanitarian Award in his name.

History photo by Jim Rouse

(Agenda Page 10)

catia







Minority Voice June, 1- 16,2006 pg2

" OPINION

oe
2

We are devastated that,
once again, the word of a
young black woman has
been casually dismissed in
the media, a woman who
according to the grand jury
indictment was violated

in the most heinous way.
We are devastated that, as
we wait for the indictment
men to stand trial in court,
we must watch her on trial
in the media. In 2006, this
is unacceptable. People

of color have experienced
blame the victim T tactics for
centuries when they accuse
the powerful. These same
tactics are routinely used
against survivors of sexual
assault women of all colors.
Sexual assault must be a civil
rights priority for all people
of goodwill.

Only 40 years ago, Blacks in
America were dying for the
right to be treated equally and
then, as now, in many parts
of this nation the ptess was
used as a tool to distort truth,
and to defame our leaders
and innocent citizens. Yet it
was in this same time that the
courage and determination

of the press to record truth
helped awaken the conscience
of this nation. We call row
upon the media to reject spin
and report truth. Today, as
then, the truth will set us free.

_ AIDS

George Curry
NNPS Analysis

When a strange disease,
later known as AIDS, was
first detected at UCLA 25
years ago, it was difficult
to get African Americans
interested in what was largely
dismissed as oWhite gay
disease. ? Today, however,
AIDS is increasingly
considered largely a oBlack
disease ? that afflicts gays and
straights, males and females.
oToday, more than half of all
people living with HIV/AIDS
and newly-infected with HIV
each year in the United States
are Black, ? Phill Wilson,
executive director or the
Black AIDS Institute, said

The indicted men have hired
the best lawyers and PR
men money can buy. There Ts
~ areason that the defense
doesn Tt mention the racial
slurs that define this case, or
the extraordinary violations

of civil rights and liberties,
or that the survivor Ts life has
been damaged forever. But
there is no excuse for our
media to be silent about these
realities. This case does not
need spin; it needs truth.

When the Coalition of

the Concerned here in

North Carolina opened the
ourheartsworld.com website
dedicated to supporting the
assault survivor and millions
of other survivors of sexual
violence, hardly a drop of ink
was spent on the story. When
the defense team announces
its cherry-picked pieces of
evidence, throngs of reporters,
cameras and pens in hand,

oat & news tonférenceshere
Monday... oAmong women,

Blacks account for two-thirds
of all new infections. And
recent Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
studies estimate nearly half
of all Black gay and bisexual
men in some of American Ts
urban centers are already
infected.

These facts represent an
unprecedented crisis for
Black America. ? Wilson and
Pernessa Seele, founder of the
Balm in Gilead and a major
organizer of Black church
efforts in the US and Africa,
have had a major impact on
helping African American
realize that HIV and AIDS
are ravaging Blacks in the
US, and around the world,
especially in Africa.

The heightened awareness
was evident at the news-
conference called by Wilson.
Among those present to lend
Support were actor Danny
Glover, US Representatives
Charles Rangel, and Donna
M. Christenson, NAACP
President Bruce Gordon,
Reverends Gregory Smith of
Mother AME Zion Church
and Edwin Sanders of
Metropolitan Interdenomina-
tional Church; National Urban
League Senior Vice President
for Programs Donald Bowen;

i} Rachie! Guglielmo of the

Open Soeiety Institute, and
news media representatives
from the National Newspaper
Publishers Association
(NNPA), American Urban
Radio Networks, and Black

Entertainment Television.

All have signed on to Phill
Wilson Ts call to owin ? the
AIDS fight over the next

five years. His organization
issued a new report titled,
oAIDS in Black Face: 25
Years of an Epidemic. ?
Wilson said the report, which
chronicles Black America Ts

scramble to repeat carefully ~
crafted announce-ments as

T if they were objective truths.

The heavy scrutiny of the -
nation has successfully been
diverted from the actions

of the white privileged men

Rev. Dr.
William J.
Barber, II

The NC NAACP
Speaks

to the moral purity of the
survivor. The media calls
her othe stripper ?; She is a
US Navy veteran, a mother -
of two and an accomplished
student at North Carolina
Central University.

We are not called to the
offhand condemnation of
people, but to the righteous
hatred of sin. Where

is the chorus of moral
condemnation against holding
beer parties for 44 mostly
under-aged men, starting at
two on a Monday afternoon?
Where is the chorus of
condemnation about an
apparently common varsity

fades from White to Black

18 37% Black but African

AIDS epidemic, omake it
clear that a quarter century

into America Ts saga with 7

AIDS, the epidemic is more
Black than ever. ? The 25
years of AIDS is not an
anniversary one likes to
celebrate. And it Ts important
to not to get caught up in the
past, Wilson says. oWhile
this reports looks back at the
first 25 years of the AIDS
epidemic, it Ts not a report
about our yesterdays, ? he
said. oIt is a proclamation
about out tomorrows with
recommendations for individ-
uals, communities, and
elected officials on how to
end the AIDS epidemic in
Black America. ?

One can no longer dismiss
AIDS as a oWhite disease. ?
Some of the most notable
AIDS-related deaths of
African-Americans include
tennis great Arthur Ashe,
journalist Max Robinson,
Rev. James Cleveland, dance
choreographer Alvin Ailey and
rapper Eric oEasy E ? Wright.
The oAIDS in Blackface ?
report observes: oThe
epidemic Ts frontline is quickly
shifting from larger, northern
cities to the more dispersed
communities of the South.
Today, seven of the 10 states
with the highest per capita
AIDS rates are the TSouth, and
41% of people living with
HIV are in the Southeast, It is
particularly a Black epidemic.
Eight of the 10 blackest state
epidemics are in the South.

. A chart

in the report breaks it down
on a state-by-state basis. For
example, A frican-Americans
are 26% of the population

in Alabama, but 63% of the
AIDS cases; Blacks are 15%
of the population in Florida yet
account for 49% of the AIDS
cases; in Georgia, Blacks
represent 70% of all AIDS
cases while constituting 29%
of the population; Mississippi

An Open Letter to the N ation:

team practice of hiring female
entertainers? Where is the
chorus of condemnation of
men brandishing a broomstick
at women? Where is the
chorus of condemnation
against racial slandering
overheard by a neighbor,
oThank your grandpa for

my nice cotton shirt? ? Don Tt
let this case be decided by
innuendo, money, guess
work, superstar lawyers,

or community speculation.

,, Take it to the courts. These

allegations are too sad,
sinister, and sadistic to be
trivialized.

Duke was once called Trinity
College. In this case, there are
triune challenges of racism,
sexism, and classicism. In
this crisis is the ugly trinity
of human failure, humanity
deprivation, and human
exploitation. The only way
Out is a triune response. We
must face the evidence; face
whatever truth this reveals;
and face whatever justice
demands.

Rey. William J. Barber,
President, NC NAACP

Original 10 Point Principles
for Duke Lacrosse Team
Case. Issued by the North
Carolina NAACP April 4,
2006 (Anniversary of the
Martyrdom of Dr. King)

~ and ascertain the truth.

+ To'e"e"

We must denounce any code
of silence, which seeks to
inhibit ascertaining the facts.

We must have deep
compassion and concern for
the survivor and challenge
any attempts to demean or
destroy her rather than to seek

We must ensure the D.A. Ts
investigation be completed
thoroughly and promptly and
that serious consequences be
meted out if the allegations
are proven. These allegations
include: sexual violence/gang
rape, racial slandering/hate
crimes, underage alcohol use,
and any prior history of racial
bigotry and intimidation must
be fully investigated. We do
not want a rush to judgment
or a delay of justice. Duke
should be conducting its

own thorough investigation.
Who was at the party? Who
violated Duke Ts Code that
night? How many times

had they violated the law or
Duke Ts Codes before?

We must monitor the

legal process to insure
justice is carried out in this
investigation without special
privilege or treatment to
anyone. Our position as
organizations, interested in
civil rights and community
Justice is that the investigation
of allegations are fair,
meticulous, comprehensive,
aggressive, and thorough.

_ amoral compass, which keeps

Those who are calling for
justice and fairness in the

_ Investigation must not be

wrongly described as a olynch
mob ? no matter how zealous

_ one seeks to defend their

client. "

Those who want to ensure

_ Justice must insist there are

no short cuts to justice. We
demand that the alleged
rpetrators have rights to

protected. We must also
be prayerful for whoever
committed these acts because
whoever did is suffering from
a great sickness of the spirit
and hatred for humanity.

We must face this
investigation when all of the
facts are in.

We must face the truth and the:
Justice that the truth demands.

We must consider in the wake
of all that has and will occur,
how we repent, repair, restore,
and move. forward. We must
not engage in retaliatory
violence. Our faith must insist
that hope can still be rise out
of hurt, what is meant for evil
can yet be turned to good, and _
out of tragedy can still come
triumph. .

We must recognize that in a
moment like this moment we
need the guidance of God and

a o i eat =

us focused on the fact that only
the truth can set us free.

Americans are 73% of the |
AIDS cases; the Tennessee "
Black population is 16%, with
African Americans accounting
for just more than half " 52%

" of those with AIDS cases
there and Virginia, with a

19% Black population, has
a 59% share.

,, Blacks also represent
more than half of all AIDS
cases in Delaware (68%), the
District of Columbia (82%),

Eastern NC Association "
of Black Social Workers }

Receives National Award
April 14, 2006, at its 38th
Annual Conference in
Houston, Tx, the National
Association of Black Social
Workers (NABSW) with its
eadquarters in Washington,
DC awarded its local chapter,
ENCR-ABSW one of its
ighest and most igious
awards for professional
and community services
rendered by the leadership
and members of its various
chapters throughout the
United States, Canada,

Illinois (52%), Louisiana
(66%), Maryland (80%),
Michigan (58%) New Jersey
(55%), North Carolina
(69%), Pennsylvania (53%),
and South Carolina (73%).
Recommendations

include: Rejecting the idea
that HIV and AIDS is
inevitable; " Demanding
that proven weapons such
as needle exchanges and .
arming youth with more than
abstinence only information

Eastern NC Association of Black Social Workers

and the US Virgin Islands.
The award is the Cenie
oJomo ? Williams, Jr, Award.
Accepting the award at -
~ the national conference
were two local members
of ENCR-ABSW; Thomas
MeMillan and Curtis Best of
Grifton and Greenville, NC
respectively, | Eastern NC
Association of Black Social
Workers is also an affiliate of
the NC State Association of *
Black Social Workers with
headquarters in Durham, NC.
For more details and interest
in ENCR-ABSW contact,
Barbara Fenner, MSW and

be expanded; ment Ea

_ access to treatment! " Ending

the stigma asSociated with | |
HIV and AIDS. The report
stated, oIn the final analysis,
this epidemic isn Tt terribly
complicated: When we allow
politics, subjective notions o

of morality and profit-driven T,

health economics toreign

over public health, the most |
vulnerable in our society are * |
left for HIV to prey upon. ?

Annette Faison, Educator
/Co-conveners of the local
chapter at 252.752.9277,
The basic criteria for the
award were: the president 0
the local chaptef must submi
nomination; the recipients
embody the NABSW code
of ethics; the recipients
must have contributed to
the chapter and the African
American community; and
must be currently beaffiliated

with NABSW and exempli
the humanitarian qualities o
Mr. Cenie oJomo ? Williams,
a former president of the
national association,







Minority Voice June, 1 - 16,2006 pg3

_COMMUNITY NEWS

Mrs Beatrice Maye

FIVE FINGERS

When you fold your hands,
the thumb is nearest you. So
begin by praying for those
closet to you " your loved
ones.

The index finger is the
pointer. Pray for those who
teach " Bible teachers &
Preachers, and those who
teach children. (1 Thes. 5:25)

The next finger is the
tallest. It reminds you to pray
for those in authority over you

" national & local leaders,
and your supervisor at work.
(1 Tim. 2:1-2)

The fourth finger is usually
the weakest. Pray for those
who are in trouble or who are
suffering. (James 5:13
- 16)

Then comes your little
finger. It reminds you of
your smallness in relation to
God Ts greatness. Ask him to
supply your needs. (Phil.

:6, 19

uw

Pray for one another .
(James 5:13 - 18)

~ Just talk to God.

He wants to hear what Ts
on yur heart. Written by:
Anne Cetas

Our Biggest Health
Challenges

1. Clean your diet. Get
most of your meal at a take-
out window? Ifyou
want to stay fit and healthly,
revamp _-your eating
habits now. One study
found that 8% of women
ages 20 to 34 had severe
plaque buildup in their
arteries. The plaque is from
french fries, doughnuts,
sugary _ cereals, pastries,
chips, and late-night pizzas.
Degreasing and desugaring
your diet will also protect
you from diabetes.

2. Establish the exercise
habit. In research by
the Heart and Stroke

Foundation of Canada,

it was found that almost

establish the exercise habit.

In research by the Heart
and Stroke Foundation of
Canada, it was found that
almost 40% females b/w _

ages 12 - 19, were sedentary
as were 53% of women in
their twenties. US rates are
assumed to be similar, if
not higher.

3. Protect your bones.
Chronic dieting, eating
disorders, drinking cases

of sodas, smok-ing, alow ~

intake of calcium, too
much salt, and lack of
physical activity all rob
valuable bone from the
obank ?. You don Tt want to
end up in the hospital with a
broken hip.

4. Treat yourself " your
body with respect. Bag the
skinny media bodies and
concentrate on real, fit, and
healthly " looking role
models. If you love your
body, and are connected
to, it rather than isconnected
from it, you'll refuse to
hurt it with nicotine, alcohol,
unprotected sex, and junk
food.

5. Heads Up!! Build a
healthly body compos-
ition now. First, you'll
maintain a hot, calorie "
burning metabolism that

oBlack Rednecks
& White Liberals:
& Other Cultural
& Ethnic Issues ?

By: Thomas Sowell

The rampant violence,
chronic unemployment,

and sexual promiscuity

that pervade America Ts
ghettos can all be traced

to a root cause " slavery,
and its legacy of racism

and segregation. That, says
African American economist
Thomas Sowell, is the
conventional liberal wisdom,
and it is dead wrong. Poor
sputhern blacks acquired
their aversion to work,

b
é
,

Reflections

prone to violence, neglect
of education, and other
anti-social behaviors from
the people with whom they
lived most closely for a
century " poor Southern
whites, or rednecks. That
culture has now become
virtually synonymous with
oblack identity ?. If blacks
are ever to join the social
mainstream, says Sowell,
they will have to stop using
racism as an excuse for their
failures. Instead, they will
have to accept individual
responsibility and give

up their oblack redneck ?

culture.

Sowell further points out
that, despite living in a
racist culture, American
blacks made great strides in
education and other areas
after emancipation. As late
as World War I, northern
blacks were out performing
Southern Whites in armed-
forces tests. Disaster

came in the 1960s with a
vast expansion of welfare
programs, and a rising sense
of victimization in the black
community. These forces
undercut the black redneck
culture by encouraging
single parenthood,
destroying housing values
in black neighborhoods, and
creating counterproductive

attitudes toward education.
One writer comments

about this book, calling it
nonsensical and offensive.
He went on to say that
Sowell Ts stereotyping of
poor blacks and poor whites
is detestable. And his basic
point has a giant hole in

it: If poor whites could
not afford slaves, then no
slaves would be in their
company. So how could
the anti-social behavior of
so-called rednecks rub off
on blacks in the first place?
William Raspberry, a black
commentator and columnist
for The Washington Post
newspaper says in response:
oSowell says that the
redneck culture imported to
this country by immigrants
from Northern Ireland and
the Scottish Highlands
permeated the South,
becoming a developmental
millstone for both blacks
and whites. It Ts true that
Sowell minimizes the effects
of racism, which remains _
a cancer in our society.

But there Ts no longer any
denying his insistence that
blacks must take our destiny
into our own hands, instead
of dwelling on what was
done to us in the past. ?

Respectfully Submitted:
Suejette A. Jones

=e

Studies show that most schools
fall short of providing good
nutritional foods and adequate
physical activity for students.

will sustain you through
allfour hormonal mile-
stones. Second, _ if and
when you break an ankle and
get sick, your muscle mass
in there is longer while you
heal. Third, lifting weights,
and _ eating well give the
curves and glow that turns
heads. Finally, eating well
and moving your body is the
best natural antidepressants a
women can have throughout
her life.

HEALTH FACTS " TRY
THESE TO LOSE
WEIGHT...

Everyone Ts metabolism
naturally slows down with
age.

Smart people use these:

Eat whole grains such as

brown rice, wheat germ, dark
bread, whole grain cereal, -

oatmeal, and brain. Add

chicken, fish, and egg whites.

Eat more low fat yogurt.

Drink more water,
preferably distilled water.

Regular breakfast eaters
are often leaner than
breakfast skippers.

Establish a regular meal

oWinning With Diabetes ? is an all day diabetes self-care

people with diabetes and their families. Speakers from
who have bated diabetes for years wil offer encouragement and instruction on a variety of
Giabetes topics. Diabetes company displays wil alow participants to see and learn about the

. newest and best products for diabetes care on the market There will be an opportunity for eve
foot, blood pressure and cholesterol screenings and to have questions answered by experts in

PNE-NEGIO I RATION fo REQUIRED TO ASSURE SP
Thore is a $25.00 registration fee for this program, which includes lunch. Please call 252:
74-5211 if you are interested in attending or visit www.eahec.ecu.edu if you need

schedule by eating at the
same time each day. -

Switch to green tea.

Do not cut too many
_ calories.

Exercise your muscles
daily " try to push-ups,
squats, and abdominal
crunches.

Please walk briskly at least
twenty minutes three to four
times each week. Speed up

your walking as you gain
momentum and endurance.

Get active after eating instead
of sitting, napping or relaxing,
looking at TV.

Walk through the mall for
an hour daily, if possible.

Ten to fifteen minutes of
laughter each day will help
burn ten to fifteen calories

each time you laugh. Learn
to laugh a little.

Get your thyroid checked
every year. This practice
is particularly advised for

women thirty-five years and
older. Sleep at
least eight hours nightly.

STOP " DO SOMETHING
FOR SELF

5th Annual

Winning With Diabetes

" Conference:

A Community Program For People with Diabetes,
\ Families, Friends and Health Care Providers

Saturday, July 22, 2008
8:15am Registration
8:45am ~ 4:00pm Program

Hilton Greenville, 207 SW Greenville Blvd, Greenville NC

Description

This program is designed to empower people with diabetes to
diabetes care and to motivate them fo be their own diabe
¢

the diabetes field.

Jointly Sponsored by:
Diabetes and Obesity Center

Brody School of Medicine at ECU
Pitt Memorial Hospital Foundation
University Health Systems of Eastem Carolina

and

Easter Area Health Education Center

management program designed for
medicine, nursing, nutrition and others

= IN IMS SPECIAL PROGRAM

Stop overextending
yourself " take care of you
first. We tend to take care of
everyone else first. Pause.
Stop four times a day for five
minutes so you can slash your
stress level. Brag, promote
yourself in a healthly and
non-abrasive manner, your
self-esteem will be enhanced.
You cannot please everybody.
Do not care too much about
what other people say about
you.

Reflect rightly about
your strengths and
accomplishments. Everyone |
has a category oNeeds
Improvement. ?

Read. Research on topics
that attract your attention.

Decide on what you want
to do instead of what others
want you to do.

Do not accept every
invitation. Learn to say oNO ?
sometimes.

Avoid negative thinking,
negative situation and
environments, and negative

people.
Take control of your life.

positive changes in their
team leader.

- additional program information,







Minority Voice June, 1 - 16,2006 pg4

Sheila Ingram International Ministries

Sheila Ingram International
Ministries

ue

WINPOP tering
(Women In Pursuit Of

Understanding Purpose

Who Am I? Why Am I? Where
Am I?

Like everyone, you T ve probably
asked yourself the following
questions at least a dozen times.
Who am I? Why am I? and
Where am I going?

Maybe the knowledge that you
were very much wanted and
_planned for by your parents
still hasn Tt_ answered your
questions as to God Ts special

plan for your life, Perhaps you...

were the result of an unplanned
pregnancy or you grew up
feeling like your parents really
weren't excited about your
birth. You may have even
questioned your right to be
here, or may believe that you
are a mistake. Maybe painful
experiences have convinced
you that you are doomed to a
life of failure, disappointment
and unfulfilled dreams.

I Tm speaking out to all my
WINPOP women. All of you
who are in pursuit of your
purpose those of you who

_ want to turn things around and

keep it moving. I want you
to sit back and exhale, every
breath you take understand
that you are still in charge of
the direction your life is taking.
Time has permitted you to
make quality decisions as well
as decisions you would rather
not remember. Nevertheless it
all is a testimony of your life,
It Ts the story to be told to others
who will listen and understand
and embrace the total you
without passing judgment, |
want you to always remember
that mistakes are what we
do not who we are. Psalm

139: 15-17 the word of God
assures us that God ordained

Our existence, even before our
conception. So in case you

oforgot my sisters God does not

make mistakes.

Many have tried to find their
purpose through many things,
wrong male choices, wrong
friends, drugs, wrong jobs
choices and many other paths
that lead them to everything
but their purpose. First let Ts
talk about purpose. In order to
know the purpose of anything
we must always go back to

the creator of the thing for
original blueprint or purpose.
The creator God knows the

-contentment for all of his

creation lies in fulfilling the
purpose for which they were
created. It is living contrary

to God Ts will for your life

that will ultimately result in
frustration, lack of fulfillment
and most often self-abuse.
Where purpose isn Tt known
abuse is inevitable. Every one
of us is in search of who we
are and why we find ourselves

over and over in the same

situations. If we could just put
our finger on the button within
us and get the answers about

ourselves we would by pass a

lot of drama. Apart from God
you will never get connected
with you. It is God who created
you, that means he wired you
he set your emotions in place.
He knows your strengths and
your weaknesses. So why do
we look everywhere else to be
fulfilled. Think about it? You
will realize that the very thing
we look to be validated by is
also looking to be validated.

Your life message contains
the essence of what you have
lived for believed and strive to
accomplish during the course
of your lifetime. It Ts about your
existence. Our life message is

wv

i

usually the result of a collection
of our life experiences, both
positive and negative. Every
event in our life, whether
pleasant or unpleasant still

. 9 ,
results in shaping us into the

persons we are today. Only
when we surrender situations
even the painful and challenging
situations upon the altar of
God, can he resurrect them
and caused them to result for
our good.

Your past is a rehearsal for
your future. God will use every
situation in your life as tool to
affect his own purpose and plan
for your life.

God has made provision for
your past in your future. God
is sovereign and he knew you
before you knew yourself. He

already knew the temptation

you would face. He knew the
person he had already called
you to become. Just as God
knew that the Apostle Peter, in
his weakenedtate, would deny
ever knowing Christ. He also
knew that once empowered by
the Holy Spirit Peter would
one day influence many to be
converted to righteousness.

Isaiah 46:9-11 Remember the
former things, those of long
ago: I am God, and there is no

University Health Systems of Eastern Carolina is committed

to improving the health of the people of eastern North
Carolina. That's why we're one of five University Health
Systems hospitals going tobacco free on May 31st. We are
doing this to promote healthy lifestyles for our patients,
employees and communities. We know this is the right

thing to do because tobacco use is the number one cause

of preventable deaths in the state of North Carolina.

As healthcare providers, we're committed to providing
Patients and visitors, as well as employees, with a healthy
environment. As part of this change, we're offering smoking
Cessation classes to the community. For information on our
smoking cessation resources, call 847.6501 or visit online

at Www.uhseast.com. The change will do you good.

Pirt County Memoriat Hospitai
University Health Systems of Eastern Carolina.

other, I am God and there is
none life me, I make known
the end from the beginning,
from ancient times, what is still
to come. I say: My purpose
will stand and will do all that
I please. What I have said, that
will I bring to about: What |
have planned; that will I do.

The areas of weakness or
tragedy in your past can one
day be the trumpet that sounds
your life message.

And remember Where
purpose isn Tt known, Abuse
in inevitable.

When nothing changes,
Nothing changes.

FATHER TS DAY
JUNE 19,2006

/

Author Sheila Ingram is a
Pastoral Counselor, Pastor,
Recording Artist and Worship
Leader she lives in Greenville
N.C. and has a heart for women
to move from pain to power.
WINPOP - Women In Pursuit
Of Purpose is her women Ts
ministry under the Sheila Ingram
4nternational Ministries she can
be reached at 252-551-2922
or-email at Sheilaingram5 @
yahoo.com. She-s the wife
of Dr. Ernest Cameron and the
mother of 4. .

Visit Sheilaingram.org and
Tune in to the WINPOP

(Women In Pursuit of Purpose)
radio broadcast Wednesdays
@2:30pm on WOOW Joy
1340 am

WITH ONE

YOU DESERVE Two

(252) 931-9000

Cail or stop by for a free quote

alas d

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winks irmgney Weutte

owe

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ci SE i a i oc er, a, i oe i i Si si did

OE SLE TT OE Oe ele el erlUmeelerlcerlh ere ere eee el ee. .

Minority Yoice June, 1-16, 2006 _ pgs

sat ant

Report: Former Duke Open dam « pm
Star Redick arrested for | Mon Fri

a FARRIOR
& SONS ING.

June 13, 2006 DURHAM,

North Carélina (Ticker) CONSTRUCTION
-.Life after Duke has turned COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL » METAL BUILDINGS
infamous for J.J. Redick. | oo Ce.
Accor ding to a report by PO Box 127 Farmville, North Carolina 27828

(252) 753-2005 Fax (252) 753-2267.

television station WTVD, Mobile (252) 902-5511 © eddie@farriorandsons.com

the former Blue Devil star
was arrested early Tuesday

fhorning for driving while | R ob B a rb our

impaired. Citing a police

feport, WTVD said that the (HW)
Atlantic Coast Conference Ts _

4ll-time leading scorer was HONDA
drrested shortly after 1:00 ce ee
a.m. EDT after Redick Greenville, Ne 27834
committed an illegal U-turn Phone: (252) 355-2500

Fax: (252) 355-5308

to avoid a police checkpoint.
An officer followed Redick
and reported a strong smell
of alcohol on Redick Ts breath
and glassy eyes when he was
pulled over. Redick, who was
teleased on a $1,000 bond,

is scheduled to appear in a

} Durham court on July 17. The
2006 Wooden Award winner,
Redick averaged 26.8 points
and made 139 3-pointers as
the Blue Devils went 32-4 this
past season. He is expected

to be a first-round pick in the

The NAACP recently presented six Scholarships to graduating high school seniors in the
Pitt County area. Pictured above ; top row; left to right: Raymond Williams ( JH Rose),
Christopher Hardy (Farmville Central ), Michael Alexander (DH Conley). Front Row; left
to tight; Danyel Sutton (South Central), Fallow Speaker (Ayden-Grifton High), and Britney
Tyson (North Pitt). Looking on are advisors, Art Wallace and Les Cox. These scholarships
are funded by the NAACP Annual Freedom Fund Banquet. All students will be attending

the college of their choice this fall 2006.

NBA draft on June 28. " .
" Yo 4 O O V \ : . WoW Joy WOGW IDV |
L- oTAY Tite 3 oy AM RA He L340 AM RADID |
. - Washlaginm, ROS TREC Greeowille, WC BPesa
Rar Reacts 's Simtina | - nr

KAT TS KITCHEN
560 S. EVANS STREET GREENVILLE, NC
27834 (252) 758.0065

MONDAY - CLOSED

1900 South Pitt St TUESDAY - 11: 30-5:00P Menu: Fried/Baked Chicken, Hamburger Gravy,
Greenville NC 27834 Turkey Wings, Fried/Smothered Porkchops Baked Spaghetti
4 T
252-321-6991 WEDNESDAY - 11:30 - 5:00 P- Menu: Fried/Baked Chicken, Hamburger Gravy,
Chicken Pastry, & Pigtails " re ee rs
Shop CC Ts for your fresh Se
tee Cad Borcrege THURSDAY - 11:30 - 7:00P
Chips and Candies Menu: Fried/Baked Chicken,

Hamburger Gravy, Chitterlings, BBQ
Ribs, & Pigfeet

FRIDAY - 11:30 - 7:00 P Menu:
Fried/Baked Chicken, Hamburger
Gravy,Chicken Pastry, Chitterlings,

_ Fish(Trout)

SATURDAY - CLOSED ea |
NOW OPEN SUNDAY 12-5PM oH#herine Mills/Owner

BOOKSTORE

Top 20 gospel/praise & worship
Music, Clergy/Choir Robes, Church Supplies,
Books, Bibles, Greeting Cards, Gifts, Wedding & Social
Invitations, Songbooks, Sunday School & Vacation Bible

In June 1999, Lamont graduated from JH Rose High School. He did not stop there. He pur-
sued his dream of continuing his education, this was his true desire . Now he graduated again School Materials and much morell!

on May 12, 2006, with a respiratory therapy degree. He was the only black male graduated Sunday School Commentari es Now Available!
from Pitt Community College to graduate with a degree in Respiratory Therapysince 1986. Open Wednesday through Friday 12-G6pm f
Love your mom, Diane Hines....We, the family, are so proud of you and your accomplish- Saturday 10am-4pm 7.)
ments. !!! Pictured above is Bernatha (grandmother), Uncle Derrick, Diane (mom), College | )
graduate Lamont Tyson, Ms. Williams & Troy(father) from New York.

COORNERSTONE CHRISTIAN BOOKSTORE
1O9OS ALLEN ROAD, GREENVILLE. N¢
co | hadi Pa Mines Pate Yo 14 Ya FAX: 252-752-4405







Minority Voice June, 1 - 16, 2006. pg6

REDEMPTION front pg

the system. We Tre changing
a culture through building
relationships and defining
relationships, ? Willilams said.

Dr. Kenneth T. Whalum
Jr., the often controversial
pastor of New Olivet Baptist
Church, summed up the
conference this way:

oThis is warfare...we
have some children to raise. ?
Baldridge knows firsthand
about gang warfare on the
streets of North Memphis.

He uses his former tattered
life-style and riddled body

as examples to try to steer
wayward youth from a
miserable and potentially
deadly fate. oI tell them that if
they join a gang that there are
three ways out: the grave-

yard, a jail cell, or wheelchair.

This is my jail cell, my
wheelchair, ? says Baldridge,
gripping the wheels of his
lifelong prison cell.

oAs Paul would say, This
is the thorn in my side, a
constant reminder of the
choices I made in my life, ?
says Baldridge, noting that he
grapples with pain on a daily

basis. However, he adds, ?I Tm

blessed. I believe I was left
here to help these kids. ?
Sometimes the kids won Tt
listen, he says. Before and

during his stint in the gang, he

wouldn Tt listen either " not
even to the police officer who
would eventually give him

a calling card to use if he
needed his help for anything.

oWhen I finally called him,
he asked me out to dinner. |
started realizing that a White
man could actually mentor
a Black person. When |
was younger, Black people
would tell me that God and
Jesus love me, but wouldn Tt
get involved in my life. ?
Grisham get involved; he
wouldn Tt give up. Baldridge,
still consumed with anger,

started trusting the officer and

started going to church with
him at Bellevue Baptist. He
was eventually baptized in
1987 with Grishath assisting.

oT still was a part of the gang

even after I was baptized, ?
Baldridge confesses. oI was
still going to clubs in my
wheelchair. But as I learned
more about (Jesus)Christ, and
as Steve continued to talk to
me, I told him I wanted to get
out of the gang and that I was

tired of shooting at people and

was tired to people shooting

at me. So I laid down my flag

(bandana) and was voted out
of the Gangster Disciples. ?
Baldrige finally got his

life together arid avoided

the deathtrap that snared
some of his friends and the
graveyard where they lay.
With Grisham Ts persistence
and Baldridge Ts newfound
religious conversion, a

new way of life began to
unfold for the convert. He
no longegfelt the urgge to
gang-bag@y and no longer felt
invincible, He proclaimed
his discipleship only to
Jesus Christand committed
to saving the many girls and

boys on the fast track to an
eventual death. When the
old Baldrige died, a new
one emerged. What he Td
taken from others, he began
paying back trough PIANO,
a nonprofit organiz-ation he
started oto do for kids what
this White cop did for me. ?

PIANO, Baldrige explains,
is a twofold program where
he visits school, preferable
alternative schools, and do
a rap session with students.
oI Tm open and frank with
them, ? he says. oI show them
the bullet holes and scars.
Secondly, I mentor them and
take them to the hospital to
see gun-shot victims and the
blood. I also take them to the
graveyard to see some of the
people I grew up with. And |
I let them talk to the guys
on the streets who once sold
drugs and are now homeless.
Darryl Baldridge, Baldridge Ts
40-year old brother, assists
him with the program. oI Tll
talk to every gang member
" if they Td listen, ? Baldridge
says. oThese guys are getting
messed up. These kids are
being told to commit crimes
because they won Tt spend
that much time in jail. When
they do go to 201 Poplar
(Downtown jail), some of
them get raped, catch the
virus, and some of them turn

gay. ?

Gangs have flourished in
Memphis since the 1970s.
According to Shelby County
Dist. Atty. Bill Gibbons and
Shelby County Sheriff Mark
Luttress, approximately
15,000 gang members
currently wreak havoc in
Memphis and Shelby County.
They estimate roughly 5,000
are ruthless and hardcore,
5,000 are less violent, and
5,000 are wannabes looking
for male bonding and
camaraderie. oAlot of them
join gangs because of money
and protection, ? Baldridge
says.

oWhether it Ts an established
gang with national affiliation,
or a small neighborhood
gang, the young people
in our community should
understand that if you agree
to join a gang there is a good "
chance you will either end up
in prison, or worse, end up
getting killed at an early age,
o said Gibbons following the
court Ts decision to try the six
defendants who killed Taurus
as juveniles rather than as
adults in Criminal Court.
Gibbons and Luttrell have
each visited middle schools
in Memphis and Shelby
County warning active gang
members and wannabes
about the consequences
of joining a gang and
committing acts of violence.
Nowadays it Ts harder to get
out of a gang, Baldridge says.
oYou can get out by moving
out of the city and don Tt let
anyone know you were part
of a gang, sever your tides
completely, or experience

cont, to back pg 14

a ee es " . Pe ees! ae ae ? ee Yee







| A i

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Our Motto: oMany may out sell us
ee But there is none Who will out serve us ?
Serving Eastern North Carolina for over 100 years

Flanagan Funeral Home, Inc., would like to honor the families
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In Rememberance Mrs.
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pradley, Mrs. Maggie Brown, Mrs. Patricia Brown, Mrs. Martha
Iw Cannon, Mrs, Rosa B. Council Mrs. Helen Dawson, Mrs. Ella
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Parker, Mrs. Mattie Lee Pate, Mrs. Christabelle Parker, Mrs.

Lucy Pugh, Mrs. Bernice G. Parker, Mrs. Mavis Pickett, Mrs.
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Mrs. Letha Smith , Mrs. Rachel Sharpe, Mrs. Martha Sheppard,
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Wilkes, Mrs. Geraldine M.V. Whitehead, Mrs. Delores Wooten,

Rev David Hammond Ward.

Mrs, Zetella Williams, Mrs. Constance Worthington, Mts. Pauline .

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Minority Voice June, 1 - 16,2006 pg8
Interview with Solider Danny isa -
real Gangster Story that has a Good
ending...... Randallstown, MD.......This
new book entitled

Interview with Solider
Danny by Author Don
Antonio is witty dialogue
born out of years of
Correspondent between Don
Antonie and, an Original
Jamaican Trailblazer know
widely and notoriously
as, Solider Danny while the
latter was incarcerated in
New York State Prisons
serving 20 years. Antonio
gets Solider Danny to go
back to the beginning of his
Journey in Kingston, Jamaica
to his migration to Harlem,
NY, to service in the US
Army that includes a tour
in Vietnam. He schools us ©
about the transformation of
the Jamaican Dancehall music
and venues, how it affected
socialization and ultimate
caused eparation. Solider
goes on to explain that all
Jamaican rude boys rallied
under one unity umbrella
in the early days when
Jamaicans were few in New
York, and how money, greed,
and jealously triggered wars
and division into posses as we
» know them today.

\

J

ie pion ah Oe 2. fe . Or en oe OA OO. OO Oe Of

EPPES ALUM

if iw

Solider Danny takes us into
the world of Prisons and gives
vivid dramas, some tragic and
some humorous, about how
West Indians live/survive in
New York Prisons and how
they have earned a very high
level of respect. He speaks
highly of Hyacinth (Maggie),
a strong Black women, who
kept the family together
during his incarceration.
Finally,Solider Danny talks
about his Redem-ption
Transformation, Education
(he earned a Masters Degree),
and transition to society
since This released from
prison in 2004. He explains
further that in era where the
Prison Experience leave one
equipped to live in a world
that no longer exist, he was
blessed to have a very strong
family support and support
from Erudite folks such as
Dr. M. William Howard Jr.,
Dr. Angela Moses, C. Vernon
Mason, and Dr. Cornel West.
He showed that one of the
ways he earned this support
by working with at-risk
Juveniles in New York and
New Jer-sey and sitting on
panels discussing gang issues
and prison re-entry initiatives
at Rutgers University and
New Jersey City University.

For more information on
Interview with Solider Danny,
or contact:

Richard Johnson

ESQ Press 11100 Liberty
Road, Suite G
Randallstown, MD 21133
(410) 496-6683

(410) 496-7357

3 1 3 ry ; ri

Long time Greenville resident,owner of Bridal Boutique baking, up new

business

Sivonna Forbes Carmon, the
only child born to Ms. Sylvia
Forbes of Rocky Mount NC,
was raised and educated in
the Chapel Hill area. Sivonna

is married to Darrell Car-
mon, an employee of East
Carolina University. They

Pictured above =

the one where she brought

have resided in Greenville
for over a decade. Working
at the Courtyard Marriott as
a front resk supervisor, she
had no idea that one day she
would be thw owner of a
bridal store, espacially not

.. Sivonna Forbes Carmon who is mar-

ried to Darrell Carmon, an employee of East Carolina Univer-

a TAr Pvarlo's Nig éa kt

nes ongeagg ly sr ¥

NI CELEBRATIONS

ce
piers,

WTUW Jay
238 Ate BA HE
~ s Wankleg:cm, KE 2788¢

R&B- Tale Radia .

YOY IV
1340 SM RADID
Gi swetiie, NC 2Pead

Hews - Comnlete Gawerane

AT Mo'S

her bridal attire from. The
owner of TNT Formals asked
her if she was interested in
buying the store, and with the
inspiration of her husband,
she took on the business

having no knowledge of the

bridal industry. She has now
been an esteemed business
owner for five consecutive
years. Working in the bridal
arena, assisting customers
with attire, and givng advice
to enhance the sacred cer-
emony, is her strong desire

- and passion. Formerly known

as TNT Formals, the bridal
boutique grew into a place
known as Bridal Illuzions,
which operates under Mrs
Carmon Ts management and
staff of five employees. The

Friday, from 11am to 6pm,
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NAACP SAYS LEGISLATIVE BUDGET PROPOSALS FALL SHORT'AND HO

Contact: Rev. Dr. William "
J. Barber, President,
919/394-8137 Amina J.
Turner, Executive Director,
919/682-4700

Durham "At the
unprecedented People of
Color Justice and Unity
Legislative Day, the
NAACP led more than 77
organizations "over 500
people to bring an agenda to
the General Assembly. Our
primary focus was education
and economics. Under
education, we called for and
_ demanded:

Fully fund the low wealth "
supplemental fund.

Only $42 million ad-
ditional dollars are needed to
ensure that children who live
in counties that don Tt have
a high wealth tax base are
provided qualified teachers,
additional services, as well
as other needed classroom
resources.

Provide additional funding |
for the Disadvantage Student
Supplemental Fund

This Fund requires $200 mil-
lion additional dollars to pro-
vide the programs and services
needed for students at-risk

of academic failure to make
sure that they are successful in
school.

We are deeply concerned

and troubled to hear that on
the Senate side low wealth "
funding and discretionary
funding were omitted. On
the House side, low wealth
funding was put in, but the
disadvantage supplemental
funding taken out. In neither
chamber were additional

i ae i, a ai

OO ER EEE Ee ee

. i ee a ee a ee ae i ae

- 16, 2006

HOL

pS

CHILDREN IN LOW PRIORITY

funds allotted for the 19 and minority children of our toward the least of these. We of our constituents to push and youth members throughout ihe
low-performing high schools _state are not left behind, and can raise teachers T salaries even harder to fight for our premier advocates for civil rights in
threatened with closure this _to ensure that we have one and increase resources for the children. their communities, conducting voter

arolina i i : mobilization and monitoring equal
fall. The NAACP has been North Carolina in truth, not neediest children both at the Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the Gpportunityin the public ant private
working hard everyday in the just in rhetoric. Ina surplus same time. North Carolina nation Ts oldest and largest civil rights sectors, st

organization. Its. ee adult

Legislature to assure that poor _ year, the scales should tilt_

NAACP is calling on all

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talk to a financial aid specialist

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Minority Voice June, 1 - 16, 2006 1

1898 REPORT

by CASH MICHAELS -
The Wilmington Journal.
Originally posted 6/5/2006

Now that the NC General
Assembly has the final report
on what NC NAACP President
Dr. William Barber called oThe
terrorist vigilante attack on
Wilmington Ts citizens ...by a
cabal of rich white men who
did not want to share any
political or economic power
with ordinary white and black
people ? in 1898, what will
lawmakers do to address the
impact of an event over one
hundred years ago that is still
devastating the port city Ts
African-American community?

That is not clear as state
lawmakers are still paging
through the 500-page report
just released Wednesday. The
13-member 1898 Wilmington
Race Riot Commission,
created in 2000 by legislation
sponsored the late State
Senator Luther Jordan [D-New
Hanover], has spent the past
year holding public hearings
across the state, and collecting
and confirming pieces of
information through the Office
of Archives and History in the
N.C. Department of Cultural
Resources to complete the
document.

At those public hearings, the
commission also collected
recommendations about what
the General Assembly should
do to address the social and
economic impact the century-
old white racist insurrection
still has today on Wilmington Ts
Black population.

According to the executive
summary, oThe report follows
a chronological format,
beginning with the Civil War
and Reconstruction and ending
with analysis of the impact of
the riot and the Democratic
Party Ts campaign of 1898 on
African Americans in New
Hanover County. Analysis and
discussion of African American
life in 20th century Wilmington
ends just before the advent of
World War I. ?

oWe believe this factual
historical document will help to
shape North Carolina Ts history
and provide an educational
component beneficial to

all North Carolinians, ?

Rep. Thomas Wright, the
commission chairman, said

in a statement. oIn addition,

I look forward to the next
phase of implementing the
recommendations sent forth to
the General Assembly. ?

Attorney Irving Joyner, vice
chairman of the commission,
says members did not
determine specific monetary
reparations.

oWe don Tt have any dollar
figures; that would be
impossible to come up with, ?

ONFIRMS BLACK HARDSHIP:
REPARATIONS UNCLEAR (RECOMMENDATIONS
OF THE 1898 COMMISSSION AT END OF ARTICLE),

WEEK OF JUNE 1-7, 2006

Carolina in the late 1890s,
conspired to do away with a
coalition oFusionist ? party
of Blacks and Republicans
who ran Wilmington city

"government, and threatened to

keep power.

Blacks in parts of North
Carolina at that time were
doing well not only in business,
but in politics, being elected

to both local offices and

the Legislature. Black men
were able to vote as part of
Reconstruction after the Civil
War.

Wilmington, the state Ts largest
city then, was considered

a shining example of black
power, with numerous
businesses and property
owners, as well as elected
officials in city government.
Blacks outnumbered whites,
and controlled what went on.

oThe overthrow or coup d T tat
took place within the context
of an ongoing statewide
political campaign based

on white supremacy, ? the
commission Ts report says.
oAn armed overthrow of the

legitimately elected municipal

government. ?

Powerful elite white racists,
including Josephus Daniels,
editor of the Raleigh News and
Observer at the time, plotted

to overthrow Wilmington
government, and take the port
city back from Black hands.

Other major white newspapers
across the state, including

the Charlotte Observer and
Wilmington Messenger and
Morning Star, also fanned the
flames of white insurrection
and%tonspiracy against Blacks.

Jack\Betts, columnist for The
Charlotte Observer, wrote
last December, oIn 1900 when
the state disenfranchised most
black voters by imposing a
literacy test and a poll tax, the
Observer said the move was
the result of a struggle of the
white people to rid themselves
of the dangers of rule by
negroes and the lower class of
whites. ?

A fiery editorial published by
the Wilmington Daily Record,
the Black newspaper then,
regarding Blacks and white
women, was used as the
pretense for an angry white
mob to go through the A frican-
American community, killing
people and burning down
properties.

The Black newspaper building
was bumed to the ground, and
the Wilmington City Council
was taken over at gunpoint.

New pictures, discovered
recently that are in the final
report, show owhere black
citizens were killed in the
violence that reigned in

Joyner, a law professor at North Wilmington on Nov. 10, 1898,

Carolina Central University Ts
School of Law, told reporters
during a Wednesday press
conference at the Legislative
Building. But he added that
didn Tt mean lawmakers
shouldn Tt try to come up with
something meaningful.

The report retells how the
Democratic Party of North

during the only documented
coup d Ttat in the United
States, ? a state press release
about the report says. oMost
notable among these images is
a view of the mob in front of
the black-owned newspaper
office... ? that had just been
bummed down.

oUnknown numbers of

Wtuw Joy
T¥20 AM aA HEE:

| Wanhlexion, WO DTaRE

blacks were killed in the
conspiracy designed to end
black political power and

the progressive government
in Wilmington and establish
whit supremacy and a control
by a new government, ? the
release continues. o...Blacks
lost positions in government,
in professional arenas and

as skilled artisans. Black
businesses and workers
suffered economic decline... ?

The report adds, oOrganizers
of the coup instituted a
banishment campaign,
targeting political opponents,
black and white, leading to the
expulsion from the city of over
twenty targeted individuals
and a mass exodus of over
2,100 others. Consequently,
the Republican power base in
Wilmington was destroyed. ?

And untold numbers of
Wilmington Blacks were killed.

oOne result of the Wilmington
diaspora (the departure of
African Americans from.

the Port City, voluntary or:
otherwise) was a decline

in economic opportunity

for Black citizens, ? the
commission Ts report notes.
oAnalysis of statistical data
indicates that Wilmington Ts
Black businesses and workers
suffered losses after 1898 in
terms of job status, income, and
access to capital. ?

oAfter 1898, Black-owned
businesses suffered economic
decline as some businesses
closed or moved from the city Ts
business district to traditionally
black neighborhoods. ?

Ever since then, Black
economic and political power,
along with the population in
Wilmington and New Hanover
County, has steadily eroded.

oWe are still under the shadow
of this disfranchisement back at
the turn of the century, ? Jeffrey
Crow, deputy secretary of the
N.C. Office of Archives and
History, told The Charlotte
Observer last December.

oThis is clearly an indictment
of North Carolina government
" the Democratic and
Republican parties, ? Prof.
Joyner said. oIt impacted
negatively the African-
American community in
Wilmington, but eventually
throughout the state. From
1898 to 1990, there was a
political drought of A frican-
Americans in [North
Carolina]. ?

He added that 1898 also lit the
fuse for repressive Jim Crow
racial segregation laws to
spring up all across the South.

Some of the recommendations
made for the Legislature to
consider included making
sure the story of the 1898
massacre is included in North
Carolina history text books,
and taught in the state Ts public
school systems. Another

recommendation was to include

New Hanover County in the
current forty counties covered
by the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
The Black population there is
over 20 percent, but only one
African-American serves on

the county school board, and no

WOoOOW s0¥
1340 AM RADID
Cis cemville, NC Bese

almost the beginning. A white

__ hired to oversee the project.

. Massacre; companies and

_ 1898; and help uncover hidden

%

Blacks currently serve on the
county commission board. _

The commission and the final
report had strong critics from

researcher, LeRae Umfleet, was

Given the sensitivity and

pain the event still had on the
descendants of those who were
either killed or chased out of
Wilmington over a century ago,
many Blacks did not want to

talk with her, or give her any of °
their families T personal diaries,
fearing that they would be
misused. .

The commission was criticized
for not hiring a Black
researcher, even to work with
Umfleet, so that the community
could have more confidence in
the process.

Some say now, the whole truth
of 1898 will never be revealed..

Dr. William Barber,

NC NAACP president,
recommended that the
commission should remain
for another year to further
refine the report and continue
to receive information from
families all over the country
with roots in Wilmington: He
also suggested that a nonprofit
organization be created to
help locate those families and
continue further investigation;
Black newspapers be given
paid supplements that tell

the full history of the 1898

corporations involved in the
1898 massacre like the News
and Observer sponsor 25 four- _
year scholarships for Black * ~~
students to attend college

and major in journalism and
then be paid to intern with the
Black press; create a special
memorial on state Capital
grounds commemorating

the unique contributions by
African-Americans to the

state; address the economic
impact of the riots on Black
Wilmington; make a film

about events surrounding

information about the white
racist conspiracy that made
1898 happen.

oWe need to use this terrible
atrocity as an educational tool
for our people, as a springboard
for truth and reconciliation, and
as a benchmark for determining
appropriate material and moral
redress for the great wrongs
inflicted on our people, ? said
Rev. Barber.

ooo e eee eee OOOOH eeeeeeeeeeece

4,

HAPPY FATHER TS D
JUNE, BURNIS, RAY, and LINWOOD BARNES, Remember
their Father, JAMES (2nd from right) on this Father,s Day. A

Good Tree Bringeth Forth Good Fruit. FATHER WE MISS YOu!!!


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Sava: a





ial

Giant Killer T Willie Gary Ts visit Hosted by

By Corey G. Johnson

The Daily Reflector

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

More than 50 years ago, a
poverty-stricken Willie Gary
was picking and shucking

corn underneath the sweltering
heat of an oppressive Florida
sun.In that America, if you
were black and poor, the farm
field: more often:than not was
your alpha and omega. But
apparently, Gary didn Tt get that
memo. Using the three oGs ? of
Guts, Grit and God, the man
known to friends and foes as
oThe Giant Killer ? transformed
himself from a dishwashing,
bean picking, migrant worker
to a ultimillion dollar advocate
for the downtrodden. On his
Monday trip to:Greenville,
Gary saw those same cornfields
of yesterday as he flew over

_ them in his own custom
designed Boeing 737. oIf you

keep God in your plans, there Ts
nothing you can Tt do, ? Gary
passionately remarked. oMan
can. do some things ... but God

SOME IS GOOD,SOME IS BAD, AND SOME IS OUTTA THIS WORLD

co

ArTY

can do it all. ? More than
500 people crowded the
Cornerstone Family Life
Center to celebrate Gary Ts
oexample, The event was
spearheaded by the Pitt
County Chapter of Shaw
University Alumni atid
Gary Ts Shaw University
Classmate and friend,
Greenville Mayor Pro-.
Fem Mildred Council.
The dinner was intended
to be a fundraiser for the
_ United Negro College Fund,
organizers said.Although
a final tally had not been
completed, at least $10,000
had been raised from the
_ ticket Sales alone, alumni .
spokesman Ethelene Hardy-
Stover said. Butthe night -
had far more going on
than dollar bills. Mayor
. Don Parrott honored TGary
~ by giving him a gold key
to the city of Greenville.
Parrott said the gesture
was meant to affirm the
attorney Ts good-natured

FATH

a i oe

aS DAY

philanthropy and work. oGary
has just done so much to help

raise funds for people to get

higher education, ? Parrott
said. oWe need more like

. him T ? Local governmental
and legal dignitaries, Shaw

University President Clarence
G. Newsome and scores of

Shaw graduates trumpeted

Gary Ts story to remind the
younger people present of the
power of historically black

- institutions. Shaw University

accepted Gary and other

_ nontraditional students, when

other schools turned their
backs. oAnd the best part is
still to come, ? Newsome said.
oShaw is in the business of
making a way for those who

- have no way. ? Linda Byrd, a

retired middle school teacher
and Shaw graduate who drove
from Fayetteville to see Gary,
said the event was a spirit
raiser. oSeeing Willie Gary
lets you know that no matter
who you are, if you work ard
you can make it, ? Byrd, 54,

says E TJack, mornings when a caller gives his or here opinion on the Morning Show at
WOOW Radio Station. E TJack wishes happy Father Ts Day and remember school is out so
look out for the kids on vacation. . |

oAbove All Bail Bonding Annual Scholarship Banquet... ? Pictured above are some of
Eastern NC Ts finest from Superior Court Judge. Toby. Fitch to Councilwoman Rose Glover.
Mr. Walt gives this annual scholarship banquet to help those deserving students that want to
go to college, go and conquer that dream, Best wishes to Above All Bail Bonding Company
for all their hard work to the community.

(photo by: Jim Rouse)

said. She added: oThe main
thing that children need to
know is that he put God first. ?
Born in 1947 to a migrant
farming family in Eastman,
Ga., Gary co-founded the
Stuart, Fla.-based law firm

of Gary, Williams, Parenti,
Finney, Lewis, McManus,
Watson & Sperando. The

_ firm made national news in

1985 when he won a $40
million settlement from

eB

nm

Minority Voice June, 1- 16,2006 pgi3

Florida Power & Light over
the electrocution of seven
rural sie in Palm Beach
County. In 1995, he won

a $500 million verdict for
damages " one of the largest
jury verdicts in U.S. history
" in a breach-of-contract
case that pitted a small-
business owner against a
Canadian-based funeral home
conglomerate. Five years
later, Gary won a $240 million

Shaw University of Greenville

verdict against the Walt Disney
Co. for defrauding two small
business wners. A key part of
Gary Ts message to the youth,
he said, was not allowing
racism and other obstacles to
bog him down. oYou Tre going
to always have those who are
going to dig ditches for you, ?
he said. oBut you Tve got to rise
above it. ? Corey G. Johnson
can be reached at cjohnson@
coxnc.com or 329-9565.

GIANT NUMBER OF COMMUNITY

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cont. from pg 6 Minority Voice June, 1- 16,2006 pgl4

iGmeetssioee GREENVILLE TV & APPLIANCE SALUTE THE GHIS/
oiciecescme ©: EPPES ALUMNI 27th ANNIVERSARY

When David Boxdale, Larry j saber " ea " ie
Hover and oShorty Mack ? ay | : a 4
founded the Gangster Discip- .
les in Chicago in 1967,
Baldridge opened his eyes

for the first time to the world.
Fourteen years later, he would

TeRAND I aw eee
Yala Yais | . ' a 'Y INTEREST
FOR

become a full-fledge member.
oThe literature of Gangster cox ; | tal NS \ Wa
Disciples encourages 5 i] A | \ ON a |
social, political, spiritual, * LS EEE "EEEE " =
economic, and growth and S a " =& CO.
develop-ment, ? Baldridge. mit :& } ne em
explains. oYou must defend KE - A : . ~~» . a _
yourself and respect your joe. wah ance ell elon | a |
parents, because if youcan Tt | ~ |
cat eect leadership fe need to reduce our imventory. |
can Tt respect leadership. & z | | 7 - |
It Ts the same hiloso h . = cstimusamataaee : s . 26: " _ " bi wi Oe ee inane inal _ . ; a ssncniennnitincnente = _ . , MUPme ne _ " rn .
as the Black Panthers ny . *TS2SAPKKQ ff ao ? . eWwCVHE260PWW He T : m . WARES 2600 WW | 1 MAYTAG +MFISSOBAES |.
Baldridge says the lure of DM pOO Mir SidcRefrigesor |\g) King Size Front (7) White Washer
66 i 677 oe _ 29° oO o 5
believe he Vie ee : 4Cu FL Capacity , - ° on Elect ric French Door Bottom
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oo , . & © Cubed of Crested for acd Water "_: 3. cu ft. ° - ING elias "2
Gangster Disciples, and the meee harm Syste *HydroMotion' Ts |} ae Mount Refrigerator
Crips believe more in what ; , : te a BS Clase Shr leery wash action ; : : * 26 W ash Cycles 5 . Clee at lee & .
they Tre doing than pastors a peel ° i ydroMation ?"? aechive A971 a :
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velieve a what they hen ee © 26 wash cycles W PURCHASE : Freezer ; 1
hewas meaning, nage Rete oLoad Dryer White Dryer ie he
Baldridge says the Gangster Mocust Refrigerator | oad Bryer | Drawer
over their neighborhoods + 1T6Cu. Pt Cagmtiay - Co ae
pay See mow Fa iA pe la 1° 27" Front-Load Gas [© 27"F rontl gad Electric cota
. ? is is Clear Honudey oar ed Cnepers : ® 70 Cu. FL. Ca ). : « 6.0 Cu. 1. ap. AUR a
their lawn, wash cars, and, chew eatin We te Cecles Areracycies
if necessary, unify to fight. +a wih meet in dich = Te Deluxe Dryer Rack spews sein * Interior Drum Light
oIt seems like yesterday o "* "_ renee DCVHS156
ohe says. But he talks f- AAG AA BAR L. All 3 \ ocaeeetnerdienh |
nevertheless, hoping to . {° cams 0 ttm 3 fou
redirect the misdir-ected and Stainless Steel Kitchen for only Cordless Speed Iron nase
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Although Baldridge Ts life ee
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wanton criminal acts and Canister "
reckless gang violence, he : Weekes the
now breathes.a sigh of relief "169 Value Free
knowing he survived the
dangerous streets despite
having to live inside a bad! nae eee -in-
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He Ts also amazed at what Frigidaire Stainless Steel _ Frigidaire Stainless Steel _ Frigidaire Stainless Steel

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They are framed reminders SG |

of his work with children and
law enforcement. There Ts a
picture of Baldridge and Steve
Grisham, his police friend, and
a congratulatory letter from
Memphis Police chief Larry
Godwin. There are certificates

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auxiliary probation officer for
» the last nine years. AVE HIGH DEFINITION
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There are several newspaper
articles written about his
transformation and subsequent
redemption. And, in 2005,

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Grand Rapids, Mich., in 1999,
The interview, he says, was
broadcast all over the world
on approximately 475 stations.
He says he Ts been threatened oo
for trying to deter wayward " Why Choose Your Local BRANDSOURCE Store
youth from gangs but the :

rewards, he adds, outweigh COMMUNTEY-BASED + VALUE * BUYING POWER
any threats. oI Tm always
watching my back....and I Tm
not afraid to die. You just can Tt
sit back and not do anything. o

*DLDICATION « NAME REANDS o J EACH OF MIND


Title
The Minority Voice, June 1-16, 2006
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
June 01, 2006 - June 16, 2006
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/66491
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