/I 3A NEWS/ The Charlotte Post Thursday, May 15, 1997 Apology just isn’t enough Continued from page 1A In the study, the Public Health Service withheld treat ment from 399 black men between 1932 and 1972 to study how syphilis spread and how it killed. The men, recruited at area churches on the promise of free medical care, were not told they had the disease and for years were denied peni- cilUn, the standard treatment since 1947. Another 201 men who did not have syphilis served as the study’s control group. . White House spokesman Barry Toiv said Tuesday the president has been consider ing a proposal “to provide sup port for such an institution at Tuskegee,” but has yet to say if that includes funding. Eight of the men are still liv ing and their ages range from ANC engaged in domestic terrorism 87 to 109. Their apologies will be issued during a ceremony in the Rose Garden. Four of the survivors plan to attend the ceremony in Washington. “The president should come to Tuskegee to make the apol ogy,” said Fred Gray, attorney for the survivors and their famihes. “It would mean more if it were done in Alabama, in person, where the injury occurred, where the people live.” The Tuskegee study still has ramifications among African Americans. Blacks are less likely to donate organs for transplant, although African Americans are among the groups most in need of match es. A 1995 study done by UNC-Chapel Hill professor Dr. Sandra Quinn showed that up to 70 percent of Continued from page 1A that sometimes brutal actions were warranted. “With the increasingly indis criminate attacks on neigh boring states and the vicious ness of attacks on South ; African civilians by the securi ty forces, it was decided by special operations command to attack military personnel,” the ANC said. Most of the incidents were divulged in previous ANC reports to the commission, which is led by retired arch bishop and Nobel laureate Desmond Tutu. In all, the ANC report detailed 550 armed actions carried out by its armed Spear of the Nation wing, and anoth er 100 incidents that may or may not have been committed •by its operatives. - It tried to put the attacks ■into a political context, saying ■civilians were never targeted ibut that the ANC gradually accepted that such casualties were unavoidable. “We have not attempted to argue that because our strug gle was just, this fact justified ... unacceptable methods of struggle,” Mbeki said. Officials said because of the ANC's loose, secret structure at the time, field operatives often were not in direct com munication with their com manders and were susceptible to committing abuses in the heat of battle. 'These included “necklacings” - when attack ers would put a gasoline- soaked tire around someone's neck, and set it afire. The ANC said the circum stances in which such attacks occurred had to be considered: rampant state repression and TV program seeks Mecklenburg issues By Herbert L. White THE CHARLOTTE POST Charlotte-Mecklenburg’s direction for the futiu-e will be the focus of a live television program Monday. “We, the People,” which airs at 9 p.m. on WTVI (channel 42), is sponsored by the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Urban League and features ordinary citizens in discussions about the county’s most pressing issues. “We, the people of Charlotte- Mecklenburg, must all have a voice in the future of our city,” said Madine Fails, president and CEO of the Urban League. “This program is going to show us some of the ways we can begin to work together toward a future in which we can be the urban model for America.” “Conversation is what this city needs, not confrontation,” said WTVI general manager Hal Bouton. “We are delighted to be working with the Urban League to help all our citizens grow in appreciation for what each of us adds to the commu- African Americans suspect the virus that causes AIDS was created to kill blacks. In Quinn’s study, between 25 and 35 percent of black churchgoers in five U.S. cities believed the human immunod eficiency virus was created to eradicate black people. An equal percentage of respon dents asked were not sure. Distrust of public health and medical research - spurred in part by the Tuskegee study - has hampered efforts to reduce the spread of AIDS in black communities. In response to numerous requests, the 'White House has arranged for a special live telecast of the apology to be shown on Tuskegee’s campus. Herbert L. White of The Charlotte Post contributed to this report. o KINGSPARK apartments Clean, safe, quiet community conveniently locatedon busline. Affordable 2 bedroom sarden and townhouses Refnserator, range, AC and water included in rent. Helpful resident manager and maintenance staff. Call 333-2966 M-F 9:30-6:00 EITH. P.A. ATTORNEY AT LAW ' Auto Accidents • Personal Injury • Wrongful Death • On-the-job Accidents • Occupational Disease • Workers compensation Licensed In North and South Carolina Evening and Weekend Hours By appointment 333-4411 1051 E. Morehead Street government use of hundreds of informers. Mbeki, Modise and Transport Minister Mac Maharaj were among current and former Cabinet ministers who applied for amnesty for apartheid crimes on last Saturday’s deadline. However, Monday's hearings were not directly connected to those applications. The ANC has said it does not believe an application is required from Mandela, who was in orison for most of the period the Truth Commission is covering. The report was the ANC's second voluntary submission to the Truth Commission on crimes and human-rights abuses which occurred before 1994's all-race elections. It included a secret list of “confessed enemy agents” for apartheid. The ANC previous ly had wanted the list to be made public, but changed its mind. “We would not like to con tribute to a culture which punishes people for the rest of their lives,” Maharaj said. “There are people who worked for the enemy who were reha bilitated and have come back to this country and are living normal lives.” The ANC said it executed 22 ANC members for various offenses, including mutinies, rape, murder and betrayal. It named seven activists it had killed for betrayal. There was also a plot to assassinate rival Inkatha Freedom Party leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi, but the ANC refused to approve it, Mbeki said. nity as a whole. If we can con vince people to gather in their living rooms and talk about things that are important to us, then engage others in the community, then we can real ly make Charlotte a model for public discourse in the United States.” In addition to the citizens’ panel, the program will have a studio audience and open tele phone lines. Callers can weigh in with their opinions, ask questions and get information about become more active in their communities. “We don’t just want people to watch this program, we want them to use it,” Fails said. “We want to reach the man who runs the bank and the couple that needs that bank to buy their first home, the children born into luxury and the children born into poverty. We want to hear from those who have inherited the tools of success, as well as those who must earn those tools and then learn to use them.” Subscribe Today! (704) 376-0496 Divorce $150 John J. Locker, Jr. Attorney at Law Call 334-3767 Greetings from Dr. Jerry A. Jones C harlotte you are a wonderful and caring community and we love you. We are still serving you at our new location. 741 Kenilworth Avenue, Suite 100 Our new phone number is (704)332-2272 Give us a call |Whoies^{« Campiiters, frtc ^ . 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