Coming Home Eagle family members return to nest for annual bonding celebration By Kifimbo HoUoway Staff Reporter Homecoming is a time to reflect on the past and to cherish the present. It's a time when students and alumni alike soar with Eagle pride. For generations. Home coming has been bringing smiles to former students as well as new students at North Carolina Central University. However, Homecoming has not always been a time to look forward to concerts fea turing artists such as, “The Queen of the Pack,” better known as the sexy Patra, Ghost Face Killa or rapper MC Lyte. The old North Carolina Central during the time of our founder. Dr. James Ed ward Shepard, had an enroll ment of only 500 students. Academic activity was the major emphasis of the uni versity. Homecoming only allowed students a mini break from their academic curriculum to witness the crowning of Miss Home coming and Miss NCCU, the parade and the game. Alumnus Rose Mary We got that feeling: Students throw Johnson, who attended NCCU while Shepard was chancellor, recalls her first two years of col lege without Homecoming ac tivities because of World War II. Things have certainly changed since the time when women were not allowed to wear slacks. University archivist Brooklyn up the funk and show their Eagle T. Macmillan, said that Homecoming has evolved into a “student generated” event. It is no longer just a time re served for alumni, it is a cel ebration for everyone to take part in. Roger Bryant, the Associ ate Vice Chancellor for Stu dent Affairs, has watched the pride at an Orientation Rally. evolution of Homecoming since 1976, the year he came to work for the university. “Homecoming was the big event of the year,” Bryant said. During his early years working for the university, he also worked on the Home coming committee. He assisted in the planning of the pep rally, the mock fu neral, the barn fire and the greatly anticipated pre-dawn dance. He remembers a time when both students and alumni worked together in lifting up the name of the university. The mock funeral, a time when students would assist in the burial of the opposing team is no longer a listed activity. Students dressed in black, one taking the role of a minis ter, while the band played something quite lamenting, serenading the opposing team into the grave. Although this event is no longer performed, as is the fire works show, (which at one time signaled the celebration of Homecoming) doesn’t mean our students lack Eagle pride. Hubie Mercado, an NCCU law student definitely feels E.- funk. He is looking forward to reuniting with old friends and bringing his wife to the game. Miss Lou Barnes, program director of the Alphonso El der Student Union, encourages students to be more like Mercado, who is proud of his alma mater By all means, exercise your Eagle pride! Scholars, activists gather to review effects of landmark segregation case By Shelvia Dancy Staff Reporter Civil rights activists, scholars and community leaders gathered on the campus of North Carolina Central University on Friday, Oct. 26, for recognition of the 100th anniversary of Plessy vs Ferguson. The all-day conference, held in the Miller-Morgan Health Science Building, celebrated the landmark court decision that legalized the “separate but equal” ideology. The conference hosted more than 20 speakers and half a dozen semi nars. Speakers included NCCU Chancellor Julius Chambers, and C. D. Spangler, President of the University of North Carolina Sys tem One seminar focused on recent court decisions affecting race- based congressional districts. “We are in trouble,” seminar moderator Ernestine S. Sapp said. “This is really an assault on black progress.” Penda Hair, Director of the N A ACP Legal Defense Fund, agreed. “If districts have to be redrawn, it has to be done in a way to protect the interests of the African-American population,” Hair said. Wade Henderson, Executive Direc tor of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, said the U. S. Supreme Court will continue ruling against race- based congressional voting districts. Henderson urged the audience to participate in the 1996 Presidential Election, pointing out the President of the United States plays an important part in nominating Supreme Court Jus tices. “The 1996 federal election is prob ably the most important election be tween the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the modem day,” Henderson said. Earlier this year, the U. S. Supreme Court declared voter districts with a majority of minority voters unconsti tutional. North Carolina has two pre dominantly black voting districts. The 1st District stretches from the Virginia border almost to South Carolina, and the 12th District, which snakes through Mecklenburg from Gaston and Durham counties. In 1992 the 1st and 12th districts elected RepublicanEva Clayton and Democrat Mel Watt, respectively, to Congress—the first blacks from North Carolina elected to Congress since 1901. Redistricting North Carolina’s predominantly black voting districts could jeopardize the seats Clayton and Watt hold in Congress. The General Assembly will not address the Supreme Court’s deci sion until after the fall elections. Henderson advised participants not to become complacent in the use of voting power. “As we’re beginning to feel good about where we are as a people in the body politic, let us not forget there is still work to be done.” Founder's Day Founder’s Day at NCCU honors the memory of James E. Shepard, who obtained a charter for the National Training School and Chatauqua in 1909 and opened the institution’s doors in 1910. Shepard served as president of the school until his death in 1947, when the institution was North Carolina College at Durham. The first Founder’s Day was held in 1948, one year after Dr. Shepard’s death.