2A NEWS/The Charlotte Post October 24,1996 Alexander saga drags on Continued from page 1A those charges and then they will make a final decision along with Mfume. Alston said the delay is proper. “If you are going to charge a person or allege certain things about a person, that person should have an opportunity to prove his innocence," Alston said. “We do live in a democra tic society. You are innocent until proven guilty." Alexander has said in earlier interviews that the complaints against him are the political motivations of those who wanted to oust him, including Alston, a Guilford County commissioner, and longtime nemesis Valerie Woodard of Charlotte, now second vice president of the state NAACP conference. He denies any wrongdoing, save improper use of several pre-signed checks after a new treasurer took over last spnng. The delay in board action on Alexander will likely cast a shadow on the upcoming state chapter annual conference in Winston Salem next week. • Alexander and the local NAACP chapter, of which his brother Alfred is president, are hosting a civil rights con ference Friday in conjunction with the local chapter’s annu al Kelly M. Alexander Sr. Freedom Fund Dinner. Ads polarizing voters, some say Continued from page 1A “This is the ad that set up the hands-crumbling-the-letter ad (in 1990). You had the first part, which came about this time, that Gantt profited from affir mative action, and then they closed it a couple of days before the actual election with, ‘here’s the reverse of that, a white man suffering,’” Paletz said. That ad showed a pair of white hands crumpling a sheet of paper while an announcer said a sought-after job went to someone else because of an affir mative action quota. The ad links Gantt to support for racial quotas, which the Democrat denies. Rep. Mel Watt, who has taken some negative hits in his 12th District re-election campaign, said “negative campaigning is probably out of control.” “There’s no code of conduct.” Watt .said. “I’eople go away at the end of the campaign feeling very negative toward the process. That’s why some people are so negative toward politi cians now. It is becoming a mud throwing contest,” But, Watt said, negative cam paigning can be effective because many people believe what the see on television or read in the paper. “That’s why politial campaigns have come up with the notion that you must respond immedi ately (to negative attacks),” Watt said. He said the answer to nega tive campaigning is for voters to “quit being so gullible in believ ing all this crap. It is almost disingenious the way Helms has used it.” A campaign spokeswoman for Helms said the ad was not about race. “This ad has nothing to do with race. Take a look at what some of the major newspapers Drug program gets grant Continued from page 1A Johnson Foundation grant will allow Charlotte to contin ue the pursuit of innovative solutions to substance abuse and related problems," Spickard said. The Stop the Killing Crusade founded by Rev. James Barnett will be hon ored Monday as one of the most effective anti-drug efforts sponsored by Fighting Back. The crusade is the only similar organization among the 14 Fighting Back chapters across the country. Other activities Monday include a bus tour of some west Charlotte neighborhoods, a 5:30 p.m. candlelight vigil and a cilywide cookout. led by Barnett. The public is invited to the cookout. Plighting Back director Hattie Anthony praised Barnett’s efforts. “The crusade has picketed suspected drug houses, stared down drug dealers in practically every troubled neighborhood in Charlotte and jotted down the license numbers of suspected buyers," Anthony said. Said Barnett, “In Charlotte, we do more than raise aware ness of the dangers of alcohol and illegal drugs, we confront the problem head-on.” in North Carolina had to say about Mr. Gantt's shady busi ness deals,” Julie Wilkie said Tuesday. The Helms campaign provided reporters with scores of articles to support claims made in the ad. The new Helms ad said: “In 1986, Harvey Gantt used his minority status to purchase interest in a TV station under false pretense. ... Weeks later, he and his partners sold the sta tion to a white-owned corpora tion, making millions.” The ad also said Gantt, who is an architect, used his minority status “to get preferential treat ment on public school con tracts.” The ad does not specify the contracts Gantt may have landed. The Helms campaign backed up its claim with a copy of a 1994 article in The Charlotte Observer in which school board members said they wanted to ^iv(‘ Gantt’s firm more time to negotiate a contract because it would help meet minority con tracting goals. Paletz called the Helms cam paign ads clever because they do not directly attack a group, such as gays, but identify Gantt as supporting gays. The new ad takes a similar approach. “He’s not attacking blacks, he’s attacking something that is of benefit to Afncan Americans which is unpopular in the state and then he identifies Gantt with that. There’s an important distinction here, which makes him less vulnerable to accusa tions of race-baiting or gay bait ing, even though that is what he is doing,” he said. The Helms ad also complains that Gantt ads wrongly say the 24-year Republican incumbent repeatedly voted to cut Medicare. Helms has voted for Republican budget-balancing legislation that would have curbed Medicare spending increases. “I think Jesse Helms is des perately trying to change the subject. He would rather rerun false attacks than defend his record on Medicare and Social Security,” said Gantt spokes woman Dalit Toledano. “The fact is that Harvey Gantt is a successful, award-winning architect and businessman who does not use his minority status to get business.” The television license was raised against Gantt when he ran for re-election as Charlotte’s mayor in 1987 and by Helms in 1990. Gantt lost both contests. Gantt applied with other investors in 1984 to the Federal Communication Commission for a license to build a new televi sion station in Belmont, about 10 miles west of Charlotte. Gantt’s investment was about $50,000. His return was $450,000. plus 10 percent inter est, over 10 years. The ads won’t affect Carolyn Moore’s voting for Gantt. “I don’t think there is any room for negative campaigning, be it TV or be it written or ver bal,” she said. Bonds up for voter approval Money for roads, infrastructure Continued from page 1A communities on the westside. City officials say the bonds will be used for street improve ments, storm drainage, curb and gutters, sidewalks, land scaping and fighting. The idea is to use the bonds, along with other city programs, to stop the deterioration of the affected neighborhoods and pro mote development. Other neighborhoods in the bond package: Beatties Ford/Trinity Park - $2.3 mil lion; Choyce Avenue - $1.2 mil lion; City View - $1.1 million; Cummings Avenue/Lincoln Heights - $1.3 million; Druid Hills - $5.2 million; Grier Heights - $2.5 million; Hidden Valley - $4.4 million; Lakewood - $1.1 million; Moores Chapel - $1.7 million; Oakhurst - $1.5 million; Orchard Park — $200,000; Plaza-Midwood - $2.2 million; Sterling^Sterfing Forest - $500,000; Wilmore - $1 mil lion; Wilora Lake - $1.1 million; Wingate - $1.2 million. Much of the money will be used for basics like curb and gutter and sidewalks in the selected neighborhoods. Druid Hills, Lakewood, Reid Park, Sterling/Sterling Forest, Villa Heights and Wingate had received some improvement fiinds earlier. Bond supporters compare the ini'ra.structure plans to city funding of similar projects in four neighborhoods - Belmont, where $3,725,000 was spent on curb and gutters, sidewalks and storm drains; Genesis Park, where $615,000 was spent on similar projects; Lockwood, $650,000; and Seversville, $2.6 million. The claim each of those neigh borhoods has improved as places to five as a result of those expenditures. 'The new bonds wUl not cause an increase in property taxes, according to city officials. MOYHE'S AFRICAN HAIR BRAIDING Professional African Hair Designer and Stylist from New York Is Now In Your Town BOX BRAIDS • CORN ROWS GODDESS BRAIDS SENEGALESE TWIST • FLAT TWIST • INVISIBLE BRAIDS • MICRO BRAIDS SPAGHETTI BRAIDS CORKSCREW • WEAVE INTERLOCK • BOFRUTO, SILKY DREAD and more. 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