mc rt'i>'y‘^ dl^Cdti VOLUME 73 - NUMBER 25 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA — SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1995 TELEPHONE & FAX (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 30 CENTS Too Few Black Males In Teaching Profession See Page 3 State Voters Likely to Get Decision On Alternative Punishments An AP News Analysis By Dennis Patterson RALEIGH (AP) - If lawmakers have their way, voters will be looking at a fairly long list of constitutional amendments in the next 18 months. The November 1996 ballot will include veto power, for sure. And voters could decide on term limits, merit selection of judges and a vic tims’ rights amendment this fall. Add to the list, almost as a certainty, an amendment on alternative punishments for 6onvicted criminals. That amendment has passed both the House and Senate, with only the date of the election in conflict. Senators want the election held in November 1995, while the House wants it in November 1996. It would give judges more leeway in sentencing. Right now, possible punishments are limited to prison time, fines and removal from office for elected officials. Under the proposed constitutional amendment, judges could sentence criminals to probation, community service, restitution, suspended sentences - with or without conditions - electronic house arrest or work programs. All of those can be ordered as part of a sentence now, but the criminal can refuse to accept them, opting for prison time instead. Opponents of the amendment say it is an idea whose lime has come and gone. But supporters say it is needed, if for no other reason than to take away the right of criminals to refuse a sentence. "1 think if you tell people that a convicted criminal has the right to refuse these alternatives, they’re going to be in favor of doing away with that," said Sen. Charlie Albertson, D-Duplin, who has been pushing the amendment for years. "I just don’t think a criminal ought to have a say- so over what his punishment is." Albertson said the hardest hurdle sup porters might have to overcome is convincing people that alternatives like house arrest and work programs really are punishment. "And restitution is important," Albertson said. "That’s one that criminals ought to be forced to do." Albertson has been so persistent that last year he took out a newspaper ad to try to get the measure moved out of a House committee. "This is the only bill in recent history where the sponsor was so inter ested in its passage that he spent $3,000 of his own money to buy a quarter-page ad to try to get it out of committee," Rep. Larry Justus, R-Henderson, said in arguing for final House approval of the bill Thursday. But opponents remained unimpressed. "If a good bill is made a good bill because you take out an ad in the newspaper... then all of us will be taking out ads in the newspaper and the amount of money you spend will determine if it is a good bill," said Rep. Toby Fitch, D-Wilson, whose committee held the bill before. "That is not how this body works." When Albertson started pushing the amend ment, the state’s prisons were overcrowded and nonviolent inmates were being paroled quickly to make way for violent ones. Stories abounded of convicted criminals who asked for prison time rather than probation, knowing they would only serve a few days in jail, rather than two years under the requirements of probation. Eventually, Albertson said, 3,500 criminals chose prison over proba tion. But a massive prison-building program and a new sentencing format that started last year ended that, many lawmakers say. "It might would have been needed when there was no room in the inn," Fitch said of the amendment. When Albertson began offering the bill, "it was needed, but it’s time to wake up," said Rep. Bob Hensley, D-Wake. "Those particular things have been changed." Structured sentencing, which eliminated parole, im poses penalties like community service and probation. And people sent to prison under the plan will serve an average of 93 percent of their sentence. With enough prison beds, nobody will be taking an "easy-out" from probation. "If my options are two years under probation or eight days in prison, then maybe I might take the prison term," Hensley said. "But going to prison knowing I’m going to serve 93 percent of my sentence? "These are not nice places," he said. "People are not going to want to go there." Morehead School Salutes Volunteers See Page 13 Aviatrix Bessie Coleman First Black Woman Pilot See Insights’ Page 2 Baseball thrives with mem bers of the South Durham Youth Athletic League players. Shown are some members of the Salvation Army team who regularly par ticipate in league play. See story and photos on page 9. (Photo by Trent) Schools Revamping Minority Scholarship Programs CATONSVILLE. Md. (AP) - The U.S. Supreme Court has forced uni versity officials throughout Maryland to sit down with their lawyers to redraw their minority scholarship programs so they’ll pass constitutional muster. Last month, the high court struck down a blacks-only scholarship program at the University of Maryland at College Park. The de cision has forced other colleges into action. The University of Maryland at Baltimore County is changing its prestigious Meyerhoff scholarship program, designed to promote the education of blacks in science and engineering. The Meyerhoff program has been hailed nationally as a model for im proving the pool of future genera tions of black scientists. But state attorneys suggest that it may not pass constitutional muster. So instead of a race-based merit scholarship, the selection criteria for the program may hinge on grades, test scores and the desire to work with inner city students in reading and math, said UMBC President Freeman A. Hrabowski. When the scholarships are offered to the class entering the school in fall 1996, students of all races probably will be eligible, "I suspect that we will decide that the pro gram will no longer be exclusively for African-American students," he said. The University of Maryland’s Banneker scholarship in 1988 was limited to blacks. Daniel J. Pod- beresky, a student of Hispanic de scent, sued the .rll^ ,IoIty in 1990 after he was denii. i ’he scholarship. A federal judge upiiela the pro gram, but in October the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that students who did not qualify be cause they are not black were being discriminated against. The University of Marylahd failed to convince the appellate panel that the scholarship was "nar rowly tailored" to overcome the ef fects of prior discrimination at Col lege Park. The nation’s highest court in May last month declined to review the 4th Circuit decision, so the ruling affects universities in Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia. All of Maryland’s public campuses are submitting their ra cially limited scholarships to the state attorney general’s offices for review. Johns Hopkins University pack ages its scholarships for black stu dents in a program targeting all minorities, and its selection process considers financial need as well. At the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg. Va., the 20 students who receive its "diversity scholarships" represent a variety of minorities as well as people who are handicapped or have overcome backgrounds of adversity. John Lewis Blasts Newt Gingrich On Race and Civil Rights Movement WASHINGTON (AP) - Georgia Rep. says House Speaker Newt Gingrich doesn’t understand the civil rights movement and has in sulted blacks by claiming they lack entrepreneurial traditions. Lewis, an Atlanta Demoprat and longtime civil rights leader, said last Friday that Gingrich’s eom- ments to a group of black journal ists last Thursday are "an affront and insult to the legacy of the civil lights movement." Gingrich wa; guoted as saying that after segrega tion ended, the civil rights move ment went off-track because it was dominated by lawyers, ministers political activists and others "who thought there was some way to get fairness of outcome as opposed to equality of opportunity." Lewis said he said would give Gingrich, a former history professor, an "F’ for his interpretation of the civil rights movement. "African-Americans do not need Newt Gingrich to lecture them on civil rights history, particularly tc those of us who have lived through the horror and degradation of segregation," he said. "I think that’s nonsense," Gingrich said last Friday night at a reception in Smyrna, Ga. "I can’t imagine a more racist comment than to suggest that a white person can’t talk about civil rights,” Lewis said equality of opportunity was the central thrust of the movement after segregation was eliminated and remains the focus of civil rights ef .forts today. Lewis said Gingrich’s ack nowledgement in the interview that America has yet to become a color blind society could be interpreted as an endorsement of affirmative action programs. But, he said, "it appears more certain that Gingrich would rather blame African Americans and other minorities rather than embrace con structive programs, s 'h ’VGr- mative action." Study Says GOP Plans Will Widen Rich-Poor Gap Washington, D.C. (NBNS) - "The poor are being asked to bear a large share of ihe burden of this economic program ... at a time when economic forces are already running against them." Those were the words last week of Urban Institute spokesperson Isabel Sawhill refer ring to the Republican tax and spending cuts currently making their way through Congress. It is the view of Sawhill and an apparent ma jority of economic analysts that the Republican budget plans will have the effect of making the poor poorer and the rich richer. If the plans become law, they will take effect at a time when a host of non government economic factors are already making life increasingly difficult for the poor. According to the Labor Department, for exam ple, the income gap between upper income Americans and lower in come Americans has been widening for the last 15 years in a row. The result has been that households earning $60,(X)0 or more a year have been getting better off over time while those earning $15,(XX) or less have been getting worse off. The Republican plans will make that situation worse because disproportionately the lax cuts will benefit upper income Americans, while cuts in government programs will most adversely affect those with lower incomes. Heart Disease Hits Blacks Differently Than Whites Chicago. Ill. (NBNSt - Heart disease is the number one killer in America. But it appears to affect blacks differently than whites. The biggest problem among whites is clogged arteries which reduce the ability of the heart to pump blood through the body. But according to a Just-released study, the deadliest problem among blacks is the en largement of the heart. This may explain why blacks with heart dis ease have a higher death rale than whites with heart disease. It is not that one ailment is worse than the other. The simple fact is that most heart disease treatments have focused on clogged arteries and. as a result the principle heart disease problem among blacks has gone largely unstudied and untreated. Controlling blood pressure is believed to be the best way to prevent enlargement of the heart. I'lic heart becomes enlarged when it has to overwork and becomes over muscled and thus inefficient. The study was published in last Wed nesday’s issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. AIDS Cases Rise Sharply Among Black Homosexuals Atlanta, Ga. (NBNS) - Officials at the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention are reporting a dramatic rise in the number of AIDS cases among black male homosexuals. During the first half of 1994. there was a 79 percent increase in AIDS cases among black gay males as compared to the same period in 1989. The rate of increase among white male homosexuals was only 14 percent. There was also a dramatic rise among Hispanic gay males of 61 percent. Despite an increased spread of the deadly disease into the general population, ap proximately 90 percent of all Americans afflicted with the deadly HIV virus fall into two groups; homosexual males and intravenous drug users. The CDC also found that in recent years AIDS infection has begun to spread faster in small towns and rural communities. South Africa Abolishes The Death Penalty Johannesburg, South Afri'^'i - While the U.S. i.'- toward establishing a,n ever la''r.y''Jniber of crimes for which i. ’ ,. son can be put to death, SoUlH last week abolished the death penalty after declaring it cruel and u,»t,sual puni.sri.T-cnt. The d. is,on by the South African hijh eouf* Litd he,,- -) ,>..LK'd for some ume