J.CS.U. Homecoming 1988 Festivities Kick-off lifestyles/ Page 6B VALENCE: Returning To JCSU Entertainment/ Page 12A Oral Cancer: The Warning Signs Health & Physical Fitness Supplement/ Page 1C /ns/rfe The Alliance Dr. W. J. Simmons I First Black Appointed Dean at Gaston College Alliance/ Page ID Charlotte ^osft Vol. 14, No. 20 Thursday, October 27,1988 THE AWARD-WINNING " VOICE OF THE BLACK COMMUNITY" 50 Cents Board: No To Guns In Schools By HERB WHITE Post Staff Writer The Increase of gun seizures In Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools reflects the problems of society, school board Vice Chairman George Battle believes. Students bring guns for a va riety of reasons, said Battle, the designated "gun czar" appointed by Chairman Ashley Hogewood to prepare a prellmlnaiy report on the problem. "Some of them are scared," he said. "And some of them are Just mean." The board met Tuesday to dis cuss ways to stem the flow of guns onto campus, a growing problem this year. Everyone agreed something should be done, but the conver sation was heated at times, with members of the audience Inter rupting the board to state their cases. At least 14 weapons have been confiscated this year, a pace that will eclipse last year's 22 seizures. The most widely publi cized Incident was a shooting at a West Charlotte-Garlnger foot ball game In which three people were hurt The board took no formal ac tion, but asked administrators to prepare a plan at the next meeting. Battle's report suggested the board establish a policy of: • Random, unannounced locker searches. • Establishing a hot line so students may tip authorities to possible gun possession. • Having a board member present at the court sentencing of students on trial for gun pos session. • Maintaining court-ordered counseling for firearm offenders. Schools Supt. Peter Relic said the schools' gun problem has brought the community together to work for its elimination. "All right-thinking people de plore guns In the schools and we're angiy." he said. "...It's a plea for this community to come to gether." Relic agreed that guns is a so cietal problem, compounded by the ease in acquiring weapons. "Any young person can go out on tlie streets and buy a gun," he said, adding that parents often condone their use by children. Students, administrators and staff have been "alert In the schools." Relic said, and the sys tem's suspension and expulsion of offenders will remain con stant. "I'm satisfied and I hope the board is satisfied that we can continue to employ a strong dis cipline policy," he said. Members of the audience gave their suggestions, even while the board discussed strategy. Carlton Lewis, a minister with the Rod of God Ministries, said students who cany guns are ac tually looking for attention they don't get in school. 'The home life and the church es Is where we should base this," he said. 'We need to go directly to the young people." Lewis, who late stopped the board's deliberations with an emotional outburst, blamed the use of guns in school as part of the drug culture and compound ed by a school system that doesn't recognize blacks as readily as whites. 'The young black men want to be recognized as somebody, but they are on the low end of the to tem pole, the product of their environment," he said. See GUN On Page 2A -V: A NEW FACELIFT FOR PIEDHONT COURTS welcomed many of Charlotte'a dignitariea at a re-dedication ceremony held Photo/CALVIN FERGUSON Wednesday. Clarence Westbrooks, President of Piedmont Courts Regent's Aaaoclstlon. qiealu during the gathering. Neighborhoods Get Improvement Money The Foundation For The Caro- linas announced recently that $48,500 has been awarded to 15 neighborhoods through Its 1988-89 Neighborhood Grants Program for low Income areas. Its fifth year of operation, the Neighborhood Grants Program has provided approximately $250,000 to fund a variety of neighborhood Improvement programs and to develop le.ader- ship skills at the grassroots lev el. Neighborhood grants for 1988- 89 are: - $7,500 to Brookhill, South- side and Wilmore neighbor hoods, located In the S. Tryon Street area, for joint youth and beautification programs and to plan for community centers In the area. - $7,500 to the Huntersville Community Development Asso ciation in the Pottstown neigh borhood for a food service pro gram In which neighborhood residents will be trained In food service jobs so they may offer a senior nutrition program and other food services for their neighborhood at a new kitchen in a recently renovated commu nity center. - $4,880 to the First Ward FuU Court Press j; rogram which pro vides athletio, educational and community service opportuni ties to youth In Earle Village, Piedmont Courts, Belmont and nearby neighborhoods. - $4,000 to the Kingston Com munity Organization near Shel by, N.C. for a youth program called Partners With Kingston Youth. - $4,000 to Seversville Commu nity Organization In the Tucka- seegee Avenue area for a beauti fication program Involving neighborhood youth. -$3,800 to Reid Park Commu nity Organization off West Boulevard to expand a youth motivational project and study the feasibility of a community development corporation for neighborhood economic devel opment and housing. - $3,500 to Hampton Park Community Organization off Highway 29 In the University City area for beautification and small-scale rehabilitation of homes. - $3,000 to Sterling Communi ty Organization off South Boule vard for a neighborhood beauti fication project. - $2,000 to Washington Heights Improvement Commit tee for a beautification program Involving neighborhood youth In the neighborhood off Beatties Ford Road In west Charlotte. - $1,500 Optimist Park Com munity Organization located off! N. Brevard Street for beautifica- • tion projects and a community newsletter. - $1,000 to Crestdale Commu nity Organization In Matthews for on going community educa tion programs at the Crestdale Community Center, which was established through earlier grants from the Neighborhood Grants Program. - $1,000 to Nevin Community Organization to publish a news letter for their community which Is located off Statesville Avenue. - $800 to Christ the King Cen ter in the Optimist Park neigh borhood for a newsletter to ac quaint neighborhood residents and supporters In other parts of See NEIGHBORHOOD On 2A Clark To Run For Reelection Special To The Poet Mary Clarke recently an nounced her candidacy for reelectlon as president of the Charlotte- Mecklenbuig County Branch NAACP. Clarke was Clarke elected presi dent of the Charlotte- Mecklenburg branch for the term 1987-1988 after serving as senior vice president (1985-86) and as vice president for two previous terms. During her more than 30 years of Involvement In the NAACP, Clarke has served on various lo cal. state, and regional NAACP committees Including political action, labor and Industry, cre dentials, resolutions, nominat ing, health programs, women's auxlliaiy, membership, conven tion planning and more. Clarke's top priorities If elect ed to a new term are focus on school drop-out prevention, youth and family participation In the NAACP. alcohol and drug abuse prevention, weapon con trol in schools, senior citizen assistance programs, single member districts, and monitor ing of the school board and city/ county commissions. Also, Clarke says she plans to Increase Involvement of NAACP members in outlying areas of the county In NAACP activities and programs. Clarke maintains that she rec ognizes the Importance of politi cal action, and she plans to In crease the local NAACP branch activities In the areas of voter participation, education and registration. GAO Hits EEOC, Urges A Congressional Probe By Chester A. Higgins, Sr. NNPA News Editor Washington, DC - The United States General Accounting Of fice, In a scathing 85-page re port. has charged the Equ^ Em- ployment Opportunity Commission with faulty "Investigative techniques" that have resulted In up to "82 per cent of Its cases being closed by District Offices without being fully Investigated." GAO also charged that despite this short- cutting of Investigative proce dures the "size of the backlog nearly doubled between 1983- 87, leaving more than 118,000 charges awaiting Investigation by either EEOC or the state agencies." In summary, GAO declared that "given EEOC's large work load, large backlog of charges and long-standing history of in vestigative problems, (GAO) be lieves that It Is time for a con gressional review of the strategy being used to enforce employ ment dlscrimlnatoiy laws" In the United States. GAO recommended that Rep. Augustus Hawkins (D-CA), chairman of the House Com mittee on Education and Labor Committee "and other appropri ate congressional committees jointly establish a panel of ex perts to consider the strategy being used to enforce job bias laws. EEOC Commission Chairman Clarence Thomas, In a letter to Lawrence H, Thompson, GAO assistant Comptroller General, Human Resources division, hot ly denied the charges, declaring that the "draft report trivializes civil rights enforcement to a lev el commensurate with widget making." The embattled EEOC chair man In an interview with NNPA this summer predicted that GAO would skewer him with a nega tive report. He complained the report also "fails to note EEOC's many program Improvements and unprecedented success In clvU rights enforcement. It does not accurately reflect EEOC's current Investigative perfor mance." He said, "the limited, overly mechanistic study Ig nores the complexities Inherent In civil rights enforcement," add ed that "GAO'S recommenda tions present no original sug gestions for Improvement and disregard initiatives Implement ed by EEOC." Thomas said "between 1982 and 1988, EEOC surpassed the agency's previous enforcement record... and obtained more tan gible benefits, both monetary and non-monetary, for victims of unlawful discrimination than were obtained by any previous Commission. A total of $8.6 mil lion In monetary benefits was secured by EEOC between Octo ber 1, 1987 and June 30, 1988, alone." He also claimed "our pending charge Inventory has been significantly reduced," but did not offer figures In support of the allegation. GAO recommended that EEOC clarify and enforce Investigatory policies and standards. Includ ing obtaining and verifying all relevant evidence, direct EEOC's district offices to monitor Inves- See GAO On Page 2A County Offers Grant NAACP May Challenge N.C. Broadcast Stations STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) — The state NAACP says It may challenge the renewal of broad cast licenses for as many as 29 North Caro lina radio sta tions for fail ure to hire women and minorities. In extreme cases, the FCC could decline to renew a sta tion's license, forcing It off Schatzman the air and rendering It worthless to Its owners. In a market the size of Charlotte, an FM station sells for $7 million to $10 million. Even If a challenge falls. It can be costly for a station. "In 1974, we challenged WBAL- TV In Baltimore," said Dennis Schatzman, executive director of the N.C. Conference of the Na tional Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People. "It ended up costing them $250,000 — and that was In 1974 dol lars." The potential challenges were announced Thursday by David Honlg, general counsel to the Maryland Conference of the NAACP and to the National Black Media Coalition, an or ganization of owners of black- owned radio and TV stations. Honlg spoke on license chal lenges before the 45th annual convention of the N.C. Confer ence of the NAACP. The conven tion continues In Statesville to day and Saturday. The NAACP took no specific ac tlon on Honig's report. Allen Dick, general manager and vice president of WKRR, one of the stations mentioned by the NAACP, said his station has made a speclflc effort to recruit women and minorities. Of the station's 15 full-time employees, six are women, Dick said. The station has had less suc cess hiring blacks, Dick saild. "I have solicited and Inter viewed but we have no black em ployees," Dick said. "It's not from the lack of trying." Dick said as the 3-year-old sta tion grows and expands, the op portunity for minority employ ment will Increase. "We'll give an Interview to any one — black, white or Indian," Dick said. "If anyone Is Interest ed, send us a resume." Other stations mentioned In clude WZZU In Burlington. WCHL In Chapel Hill, WLOE and WWMY In Eden, and WBIG in Re- Idsvllle. Michael Whalen, general man ager and part owner of WLOE and WWMY, said since he and his partners bought WLOE 15 months ago, they've have a hard time finding qualified employ ees In gener^. He attributes part of the problem to the station's size and the challenge of attract ing people who want to work In larger metropolitan areas. But he said his station does make a special effort to recruit minorities and women. Of the station's 11 full- and part-time employees, four are minorities or women, he said. "I understandably become a bit annoyed when people say, 'Do It because It's the law,"' Whalen said. "I do It because I want the best people. I'd hire an all- minority staff or an all-woman staff If they were the best peo ple." As a condition of their Ucens- See NAACP On Page 2A The Mecklenburg County Commissioners voted recently to give the westslde business In cubator project a hand In rais ing money. The commissioners, behind a proposal by District 2 Incum bent Bob Walton, voted 4-2 to release $25,000 In a challenge grant to the project. Barbara Lockwood, Carla Du- Puy, deny Blackmon, Rod Au- trey and Walton voted In favor of the proposal while Peter Keber and George Higgins voted against it. Walton Is the only black and Democrat on the board. "We want to show our concern for economic growth on the westslde," Walton said. The funds will be released when the Beatties Ford-West' Trade Street Merchants Associ ation closes In on its goal of $150,000 for the Incubator. The organization has raised over See INCUBATOR On Page 2A Inside This Week Editorials Pg. 6A Obituaries Pg. 3B Entertainment Pg. 9A Sports Pg. 9B Lifestyles Pg. 1B Classifieds Pg. 16B Church News Pg. 3B The Alliance Sec. 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