When I go to Houston I always meet other veterans from Conroe and while we're waiting for hours and hours we talk about what we've heard about the Conroe clinic and when it's going to happen. There are a lot of veterans and we have a hard time with driving. If there was a clinic here in town you can get a neighbor to take you.

It's everywhere. It's the drug influence.

I believe his work in Black Psychology will influence future generations. His contribution to building the Department of African American Studies will remain and inspire as long as the department exists.

I guess if the higher-ups know (what the plan for the city is), the people on the bottom don't know.

Normally, I call the police station just about every Friday, Saturday and Sunday night to get people out of our parking lot.

They don't have control yet.

The killing has got to stop. We lose a lot of young people on the street.

I most remember the Black faculty lunches he would host while working as the faculty assistant for affirmative action. It was the only place on campus you could regularly meet colleagues from across the various departments and hear about issues that affected our community.

One of Jones' defining characteristics was his knowledge of the political levers on campus and his ability to manipulate them to cause real actions to be taken.