<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701190300
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870419
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, April 19, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
REPRINTED STATE EDITION April 20, 1987
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
KIDS AND BULLETS
A SHOT, A BLOODSTAIN, AND LIFE GOES ON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>
CORRECTION RAN May 1, 1987;

getting it straight

  An April 19 sports section photo of Chester Jackson, the slain
Murray-Wright High School football player, was incorrectly
credited. It was taken by photograhper Russell Waldo.
</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The blood is still there, on the asphalt, in sad little stains. When the
sun is hot, the stains seem to take color, to wet, and the kids from the
neighborhood ride their bikes past and say, "That's  where he got it, man.
Right here. Damn! Chester!" And then they ride on, past the rusted green trash
dumpster to the basketball courts. No guards at this burial ground. This is a
public high school.  When a student gets shot in the middle of lunch, in the
middle of the parking lot, for nothing, and now he's dead, there is a ripple
of pause and then everything goes on. 
Kids and bullets.

  On the day after the murder, Robert Jackson, a ninth-grader who weighs
maybe a hundred pounds, was sitting in a hot dog joint on West Warren Avenue
across from the school, Murray- Wright High School.  A newspaper was folded
on the table in front of him.  The headline read "STUDENT SHOT DEAD, 2
INJURED." He stared at it.
  "Did you know Chester?" someone asked.
  "Yup," he said softly. "I knew  him."
  "Was he a friend of yours?"
  "Yup."
  "Did you see what happened?"
  "I was in the cafeteria."
  "Do you know who shot him?"
  "He was a tall kid." 
  "A tall kid?"
  "Yeah. Light-skinned. But I don't know him."
  "But he had the gun?"
  "Yup."
  "What kind of gun?"
  "A .357."
  "Where'd he get a gun like that?"
  "From the street maybe."
  "He bought it?"
  "Probably so."
  "What's a gun like that cost on the street?"
  "Maybe a hundred dollars."
  "Was this kid in your grade?"
  "Yup."
  He fidgeted in his chair.
  "How old are you?"
  "Fourteen."
Kids and bullets.
  The day before, Chester Jackson Jr., 17, a star running back for
Murray-Wright, had been shot in the head by this tall ninth-grader. And  now
Jackson is dead, and another student, Damon Mathews, 18, a senior on the
basketball team, is in the hospital with a bullet wound in the face. And the
suspect,  who reportedly tried to look tough  as the police drove him away, is
in a youth home awaiting a hearing. 
  It is the second shooting in a Detroit public school in less than three
months. No one is sure why this trigger was pulled. What kind of reason do you
think? The "assailant" was 14 years old. There is one story about a food
fight. There is one story about a chase. There is one in which the last words
Chester Jackson said  to the kid before being snuffed out were, "Why are you
shooting at me?"
  There are stories.
  Robert got up to buy some cookies. He slid his money under the bulletproof
glass over the counter.  Then he sat back down.
  "What do you remember?" he was asked.
  "We were sitting in the lunchroom, and we heard the gunshot and everybody
started running. I went outside and I saw Chester lying  on the ground where
the kid shot him."
  "Was he still alive?"
  "Yup."
  "How do you know?"
  "I saw his hands moved, and his eyes were open. The janitor was saying,
'Don't move. Don't move.'  
  "The janitor?"
  "Uh-huh."
  "Then what?"
  "They told us to go back into school."
  "And?"
  "And we went back into school."
  "And . . .? "
  "And the janitor put a coat  over Chester's head."
  The kid spoke softly, but without horror. He is 14. He has seen guns
before. He has even fired one. Children, you might feel, should never be
exposed to such things. But this  is the inner city, the veins of Detroit, a
place that most of us forgot about in between headlines. Today politicians are
making statements and parents are screaming for changes.  But it's the kids,
the Murray-Wright students, who must endure security guards and police
officers and ID checks, and none of it was enough on Thursday. A few days
earlier, Robert said, a man walked into the school, into  a classroom, beat up
a female teacher -- "she was his girlfriend" -- then walked out. Untouched. 
  "They told everyone it was a student who did it," he said. But he and his
friends claim otherwise.  Until Thursday, however, even Robert had never seen
someone killed. Now he has. In cold blood. He is a member of the richest
potential resource of our city: He is a student in our public schools. This
is his education.
  "Our security ain't s---," he said.
  A friend came into the food store, Armondo Neal, broad- shouldered with
short hair and a little goatee. Armondo was wearing a sweatshirt  and a blue
cap. He said he was 16. And a friend of Chester's.
  "Gimme some," he said to Robert, grabbing a piece of his cookie.
  "Not so much, man!" Robert protested.
  The two walked outside  and leaned against a fence, watching the cars.
School was out. Easter break. The shooting had taken place just a few hours
before vacation.
  Robert looked sad. He grabbed the links of the fence and pulled himself
back and forth. Armondo started talking about Chester, about the Public School
League final a few years ago, and the football game in which Chester ran for
109 yards. "Chester was dominating,"  Armondo said.
  "Where did the kid get the gun that killed him?" he was asked.
  "He can get a gun anywhere around here."
  "Anywhere?"
  "You just find somebody on the street. You see the  guy, you say, 'Hey
man, I need a piece.' Easy as that. He says, 'How much money you got?' You
say, 'I got 50 dollars.' He says, '50 dollars will buy you a .38.' You say,
awright, that'll do. He says,  'I'll be right back.' He comes back with a bag,
you give him the 50, he gives you the gun. Just like that."
  "Even a 14-year-old?"
  "Don't matter how old you are if you've got the money."
  A car passed and the driver waved. Armondo waved back. Robert was still
quiet, hanging on the fence.
  "What would you do to that kid if he were  here now?" they were asked.
  "I'd tie him to  a pole and break his ribs and his arms and his legs,"
Armondo said quickly, his voice rising. "I wouldn't kill him, but I'd make him
wish like he was dead."
  "Wouldn't that be just as bad as what  he did to Chester?"
  "Yeah, but there'd be a point. I'd be thinking, 'I'm doing this for
Chester.' I wouldn't mind going to jail for beating that boy. They'd ask me
why I did it? I'd say, 'Because  he killed Chester.' They'd say, 'Who were you
to Chester?' I'd say, 'He was my friend.' 
  "You know, when I heard the news, I cried, man! A guy crying for another
guy? But we were in the same grade  together. I owed the blood five dollars
man, to this day! I felt for him! I didn't want it to be him. Out of all
people, it's like, damn! Chester! Why Chester? Why Chester? Why Chester?"
  Armondo  paused. He cocked his head, as if listening to his words float
away.
  "What would you do to the kid?" the question was repeated to Robert, who
was staring at his shoes.
  "I'd beat him down,"  he said softly.
  In the street "blood" is a word for friend, brother, a fellow black. At
about 3 p.m., Robert and Armondo crossed Warren Avenue to look at the blood of
their blood, near the trash  dumpster in the Murray-Wright  parking lot. Every
now and then a car would pull up, and people would get out and whisper and
point, and then they'd shake their heads and get back in the car and drive
away.
  Robert and Armondo, who have already seen too much for their years, stared
without words at the blood stains. Then they wandered over to a nearby
concrete wall and lifted themselves up. Another  friend, a small kid with a
big head whom they called "Peanut," came by and sat with them.
  "Chester, man," said Armondo. "He was gonna be a pro football player. Born
to play football! You'd see  him run into a pile of guys, it seemed like they
got him and all of a sudden you'd see the blood with his head up, going down
the field, sprinting."
  "He was the best," said Peanut.
  "He was  the best Murray-Wright ever had!" said Armondo, gesturing with
his hands. "He'd come out fired up for every game. He'd be banging on his
helmet. He'd say 'Ain't nobody stopping me, I'm Herschel Walker!'  
  "He's Herschel Walker!" laughed Peanut.
  "Damn!" said Armondo. "He was gonna go to a big college somewhere, like,
um, he might've gone to, what's that, UCLA?"
  "Yeah!" said Peanut.
  "UCLA," said Robert.
  "And I can say I knew Chester a long time."
  "He's my boy."
  "He was in the fifth grade with me," said Armondo. "We went on a school
trip to Boblo Island and I ran  out of money and he give me five dollars. And
he ain't never pressed me for it."
  "No."
  "Nuh-uh. He'd see me at Murray-Wright and he'd say, 'You got my five
dollars, Mondo?' and I'd say, "Aw,  Chester, man, you caught me broke again.'
And he'd say, 'Ain't no thing. You want a hamburger?' And I'd say, 'Yeah.' And
he'd buy me a hamburger.
  "Damn! I wanted to see him go to college so I could  brag about him. You
know, like we'd be somewhere, when we're grown up, watching the football game
and I'd say, 'Yo man. I know Chester Jackson.' And they'd say, 'Bull, you
don't know Chester Jackson.'  And I'd pull out a picture and say, 'Man, you
wanna see a picture of me and him?' "
  "Yeah!" laughed Peanut.
  "Put your money where your mouth is," said Robert.
  "HE'S A PRO FROM THE GHET-TO!"  yelled Armondo.
  "And he'd never dog you, man," said Peanut. "He didn't care if you were
small or a freshman, he'd treat you the same way. We were wrestling with him
the other day, me and Robert,  right, Robert?"
  "That's right."
  "He didn't hurt us, though."
  "Blood was straight," said Armondo. "He never used drugs, he never drank.
He just had football and his girlfriends. That was his thing. He earned
everything he got. He wouldn't start a fight. If somebody called him a name
he'd say, 'I ain't got time for you.'
  "And he never failed a grade either. I don't think he ever failed. He was
smart. I failed a couple times, and when I got here to Murray-Wright you know
what he said? He said, 'Damn, Mondo! It's about time you got here.' "
  They stopped and caught their breath,  the three of them, sitting on a
concrete wall,  paying homage. In certain religions, it is a custom to
remember the dead in a wake. This was the schoolyard wake. Chester Jackson, a
good kid who should still be here today, but is not.
  "He made you want to come to school," said Armondo. "Even if it was just
to play with him. You'd say, 'Today I'm gonna chase around Chester.' It made
you want to  come."
  Can there be a sweeter tribute? 
  As the afternoon wore on, more and more kids from the neighborhood came
by. They brought basketballs. They rode bicycles. They were 14 and 15 and 16
years old, from the row houses off Vermont Street and Putnam Street and Rosa
Parks Boulevard. They wore Adidas sneakers without shoelaces, and caps turned
backward. Most of them stopped at the blood  stains for a moment, still
dribbling the balls, then continued on. 
  Mourners.
  "Are you scared now?" the kids were asked.
  "I ain't scared," said Armondo. "That kid is in jail today. I'll  bet he's
saying, 'Damn! I shouldna done no s--- like that. It was wrong.' "
  "The security in our school is so bad," said Peanut. "They don't ever
check for guns."
  "In some ways I'm scared,  and some ways, I ain't," said Robert.
  "Which ways?"
  "The way I'm scared is, if I mess with the wrong person now, he might pop
me."
  "Pop you?"
  "Shoot me."
  "You worry about that  now?"
  "Uh-huh."
  "In what way aren't you scared?"
  "Well, if I do get away from the guy, I just live down the street, so I
have protection."
  "You mean because you live a few blocks  away, you think someone  couldn't
catch you if he  had a gun?"
  He looked off for a moment. "Not if I had speed like Chester."
  "Chester had the utmost speed!" said Armondo.
  "The utmost  speed!" Robert echoed.
  No one corrected them. What's the point? Chester is gone. Athlete or no
athlete. Star or no star. We can forget sometimes that our football heroes are
human, too, in high  school they are just kids, and kids should never know
from bullets, but this has happened, it is  horrible, tragic, and it is not
new.
  Today and tomorrow they will be arguing about random gun searches  at the
Detroit high schools. Parents will demand hand- held metal detectors, the type
they use at airports. Tighter security. Constant checking. More police. More
guards. Gun sweeps. Locked doors. High  school. Why Chester? Why Chester? Why
Chester? Here is what we have become. Kids and bullets.
  "Will you go to the cemetery for a funeral?" the kids were asked.
  "That's one place I won't go,"  said Robert Jackson, shaking his head. "I
won't go to no graveyard."
  "Why not?"
  "I don't like 'em. All the tombstones and stuff." 
  He pushed himself off the concrete wall and unzipped  his jacket. He
walked within inches of the blood stains of Chester Jackson, the blood of
their blood, which glistened now in the heat. And he continued on. He was
going to play basketball.
  "Graveyards  give me the creeps," he said.
CUTLINE
Friends thought Chester Jackson would make it to the pros.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;SHOOTING;CHESTER JACKSON;SCHOOL;JUVENILE;DEATH;DETROIT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
