o/ o/ 3 / o :-uz t'aye o i -l , x; 5A OPINIONS/ The Charlotte Post Thursday,August 7, 1997 Drugs contribute to our societal decline 'By Robert Harris 'special to the post There is a common thread that runs through many of the worst ills plaguing society. In the examination of contributing factors to crime, violence, child abuse, HrV/AIDS, the health care crisis, and the deficit, one element linked to al of these stands out - substance abuse. Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug abuse, although usually thought of as a “stand alone” on our society today. Alcohol, tobacco, and drug abuse contributors sig nificantly to this nation’s overwhelming health care costs as well as the deficit. Twenty-five to 40 people out of every 100 in general hospital heds are being treated for complications of alcoholism. Annually about 520,000 deaths are due to alcohol, tobacco, or illicit drug abuse. It is estimated that in 1993, the cost for every man, woman, and child in America. ' Alcohol and other drug-related crime cost society $57.3 billion in 199. Annual arrests total nearly 3.2 fflllion for alcohol and other drug statutory crimes. In addition, alcohol is a key factor in p to 68 percent of manslaughters, 62 percent of assaults, 54 percent of murders/attempted murders, 48 percent of robberies, and 44 percent burglaries. Drug and alcohol are contributing factors in violent incidents, including sexual assault. Domestic inci dents of wife battering and child abuse often carry an alcohol or other drug component. And, according to a 1994 U.S. Department of Justice report, more than half of defendants accused of murdering their spouses had been drinking alcohol at the time of the murder. Alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs can impair judgement, increasing the risk of having unsafe sex. Unprotected sex with an partner is the most common way that HIV?AIDS is spread. Additionally, sex under the influence can lead to sex without contraception; at least half of all unplanned pregnancies occur when people drink and/or use drugs before the act of inter course. The continued use of alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs while pregnant can lead lead to birth defects and/or addicted babies, caring the damage of sub stance abuse into the next generation. Preventing the abuse of alcohol, tobacco, and drugs could mean substantially decreasing many of the Nation’s problems. But what can we do to work for prevention? At home and in our communities, there are basic prevention strategies we can follow and teach to others. Raise awareness of the dangers of drugs use and the benefits of constructive behavior. Promote good parenting skills and strengthen the family as the first defense against drug abuse. Provide positive role models for young people. Pave the way for individuals to build social, acade mic, and vocational skills, allowing them the chance to develop into self-sufficient, contributing members of society. Mobilize communities to establish environments conducive to personal growth. Support, policies that promote healthy lifestyles and change community norms for the better. In order to keep the Nation strong and solvent, we as individuals need to be healthy and productive and to help others become healthy and productive. To real ize these goals, alcohol, tobacco, and other drug abuse must be prevented. Prevention works, but it can’t work for everyone until everyone works for preven tion. ROBERT HARRIS is a cluster leader for Charlotte- Mecklenburg Fighting Back, an anti-drug campaign. Exhorbitant salaries soak the state budget By Jon Sanders Special to the post RALEIGH - Salaries of state [officials in North Carolina are, [like Superman, going up, up and jaway What’s worse, the increas- les appear to be linked and there- ifore endemic - a sickness plagu- ling the state’s coffers. t I I Here are three recent examples |of this outbreak: I Example One: When the UNC [Board of Governors prepared to [seek a replacement for retiring [system president C.D. Spangler I Jr., one aspect of the job they con- isidered was salary Spangler in !1996 was receiving an annual 1 salary of $158,660. Saying that [salary was too low to recruit I quahfied applicants, last ■ September the board raised it to [$190,000. ! Furthermore, they hiked the j salary to be offered the new sys- [ tern president to between [$210,700 to $269,400. ; Ironically, the board’s choice, ' Molly Corbett Broad, received an ■ annual salary of $162,888 last i year as vice chancellor of the California State University sys tem - little more than Spangler’s original 1996 salary and far less than his adjusted salary of $190,000. The irony was lost on the board, who awarded Broad an annual salary of $240,000 anyway. So in one year, with no justification, the salary of the president of the UNC system has been raised by 51.3 percent. Example Two: When former governor Bob Scott resigned as president from the State Board of Community Colleges in 1994, he was earning an aimual salary of $113,673. His successor, Lloyd “Vic” Hackley finagled a salary much higher than Scott’s using some financial abracadab- salary negotiations with the board, Hackley sriid his compen sation at Fayetteville State University, where he was chan cellor, was $231,000 annually (A curious legislator assigned research staff members to calcu late Hackley’s compensation package, and they came up with $178,185 - $53,000 less than Hackley’s estimate.) Hackley’s trick was in double- coimting his benefits (such as the rental value of the chancellor’s house and the cost of the house keeping services, both provided by FSU). First he added together the value of the benefits, then he added in the extra salary he would have needed to purchase those services on his own. Presto! Instant salary inflation. The illu sion worked. 'The board raised the president’s salary to $140,000 - 24 percent higher than Scott’s - to prevent Hackley from suffering what would seem an inordinate pay cut, and Hackley was able to say gallant ly that he was taking a cut in compensation of nearly $100,000. When Hacklev left under a cloud two years later, he was receiving an annual salary of $149,226. Instead of returning the president’s salary to a more reasonable level, however, the board granted incoming presi dent Martin Lancaster an annu al salary of $155,000. So in three years, including Hackley’s artifi cial increase, the salary of the president of the State Board of Community Colleges has jumped by 36.4 percent. Example 'Three: The jump did n’t end there. As the salary of the president of the State Board of Community Colleges rose, so did the salaries of the board’s admin istration officials. Some adminis trators saw one-year raises rais es of 35 and 41 percent. 'The exec utive vice president, J. Parker Chesson Jr., received a 13 per cent raise, from $101,709 to $115,000, in the two years follow ing Scott. Chesson’s salary is important becarrse it enabled bim to tell leg islators considering him for the post of chairman of the Employment Security Commision (ESC) that his salary was much higher than the $77,365 aimual salary siven the outgoing ESC head, Ann Q.Duncan (a trick he no doubt learned from Hackley). Chesson’s story prompted legis lators to ehminate the line item specifying the ESC chairman’s annual salary at $77,365 and replace it with a provision a few pages over that allowed the gov ernor to set the salary to “an amount no higher than the high est salary set by the General Assembly for an executive branch official.” IWth the highest salary being the $113,143 (stipulated for the state controller), Chesson’s salary was - naturally - set at $113,000. So in one year, thanks to some budgetary shenanigans, the aimual salary of the ESC chairman was raised by 46 per cent. This last example, at least, prompted some legislative action. Rep. Carolyn Russell (R- Wayne) is trying to bring the ESC chairman’s salary back to normal, although Sen. Aaron Plyler (D-Union) has vowed to fight it in the conference commit tee. Of course legislators are a cagey lot when it comes to salaries; another House Republican, Monroe Buchanan (Mitchell), proposed a four per cent pay raise for legislators, which was of course approved in the House as part of its budget proposal. JON SANDERS is a research- fellow at the Pope Centerfor Higher Education Reform at the John Locke Foundation. Too early to talk about N.C. governor’s race The governor’s race in 2000. ■' 'The presidental election that Same year. - Is it too early to start talking ”tibout who will be running for “those offices? For most people it surely is. ^ But not for us. Not for you and I 'toe - and others like us who feed ’ upon political speculation the ■'-tvay our normal friends devour ‘^hews of sports stars and enter tainment celebrities. '■i*' For us it is never too early to ®-'^ssip about “who might run for 't'tvhat.” So let’s talk about the two '■‘iaces: governor and president. In *^e North Carolina governor’s '7face, the Democratic lineup look- ®‘tfpretty simple. Lt. Gov. Dermis ■^Wicker and Attorney General ’•^Mike Easley are hoth in a good ^'Jlosition to run. Both have orga- ■^fiized and won state-wide races. '^^Both have a network of support, tarij Their interest in ruiming for governor is no news. 'The ques tion for speculation is whether there will be other Democrats to challenge them. Senate leader Marc Basnight is often mentioned in the legisla tive haUs as a possibihty. But Basnight doesn’t encourage this kind of talk. Nor does Erskine Bowles, President Clinton’s chief of staff, when people suggest that he might be interested. What about the Repubhcans? The choices are not obvious. There are, of course, two Republicans with experience running for governor - Robin Hayes and Richard Vinroot. Neither was successful, but both now know their way around the state. 'That experience gives them a head start on the others. Vmroot is preparing to run. Hayes is considering it. But he is also considering the possibihty of running for the U.S. Congress next year against Bill Hefner. If he won that race, it would be hard, it seems to me, to turn around and run for governor in the very next election. If he lost, he would have a hard time con vincing Republicans that he could win the governor’s race. The other folks people talk about are N.C. House Majority Leader Leo Daughtry and Raleigh Mayor Tom Fetzer. Although neither has run a state wide campaign, each has con tacts and support across the state. Will there be others? Sure. I am betting on someone whose first name is “Jim.” Since 1973, every governor of North Carolina has had that name (Jim Holshouser, Jim Hunt, and Jim Martin). So if people call you Jim, con sider throwing your hat in the governor’s race. You will have an asset that the current prospec tive candidates are missing. In the presidental race, like the governor’s race in North Carolina, the Democratic field is pretty well defined: Vice President Al Gore. House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt. And, possibly, former Senator Bill Bradley. Gephardt and Gore have run for president before. If campaign experience is an asset, both of them have it. Gore has the extra benefits - and burdens - of his partnership with President Clinton. Gephardt, like Bob Dole before him, faces the problem of dealing with the demands of con gressional leadership and a pres idential campaign. It is a very tough challenge. Bradley would be the out- sider—and that may be an advantage in 2000. On the Republican side, the newest star, Senator Fred Thompson, got his first tryout last month. How did you think he did in chairing the hearing on campaign finance practices? My opinion: I was disappoint ed. 'Thompson was a pretty good movie actor and I expected a bet ter performance as a chairman in frirnt of the camera. Still, an all- Tennessee presidential race between Thompson and Gore would be a classic. Another 'Ifeimessean, former Hunt governor and 1996 presidential candidate Lamar Alexander mi^t have a better chance in 2000 than he did last time- if he still has the drive to run again. 'Then there is William Weld, the former governor of Massachusetts, whose current battle with our senior senator over an ambassadorship to Mexico mi^t be an effort to get national attention for a presiden tial run. It will be fun to watch, but I am not betting on him. And there are the others. Reruns perhaps for Phil Gramm and Malcolm Forbes. Former Vice President Quayle. Sen. 'Trent Lott, the majorily leader. More likely, perhaps, the Repubhcems will find strength in a solid, practical, hardworking governor whose name is not on any body’s chart yet. Or even more likely yet. North Carolina’s favorite daughter, Ehzabeth Dole. D.G. MARTIN is vice presi dent of public affairs for the University of North Carolina sys tem. He can be reached via e-mail at dgmartin@ga.unc.edu Let’s follow Sojourner’s trail to become involved in the sciences riJ. ^'‘By Stephanie E Myers Pt'ltAinONAL NEWSPAPER PIPUBUSHERS ASSOCIATION 'This year’s fourth of July car- a special thrill for me. After .,j tjie smoke from the fireworks had „rcjeared, my husband and I sat in ji fyont of our personal computer j.giid surfed the NASA Internet sjte where photos were being r,;-fyansmitted from Mars 118 mil- I Ijon miles away 'The pictures p^amed via satellite in “real time” were taken by the Sojourner 'Truth Rover, a toy ^_^ized, land rover transported to T ^ars by the Mars Pathfinder. We were thrilled by the experience was on several levels. First, we realized that we were eye wit nesses to a worldwide historic event. Second, as publishers we were impressed that we were able to get the information and photos at exactly the same time as the rest of the world. And final ly, having served four years as director of the U.S. Department of 'Transportation, Office of Commercial Space 'Transportation, I was gratified that my work, along with many other advocates of the commer cial use of space, had resulted in pushing NASA to allow citizens and businesses direct access to information from space research. 'This means that commercial companies have more opportuni ties than ever to find ways to cre ate products and explore econom ic opportunities through space exploration.Although excited, I did, however, feel a tinge of sad ness because I reahzed that in all probability most African Americans could care less! Most of us are so involved vrith issues of survival, that we don’t have the time or energy to think about making money from space explo ration. But, I would like to sug gest that African Americans pay more attention to the Mars Exploration project and get with it! Let’s follow Sojourner 'Truth...again!If history is full of lessons, maybe there is a mes sage for us in the life of the Sojourner 'Truth, after whom the Mars land rover was named. Bom into slavery in 1797, Sojourner 'Trath was a unique, charismatic woman who was fearless, strong and dynamic. She traveled extensively forging new ground in the fight against slav ery Considered illiterate, she was faced with overwhelming prob lems, but rose above her daily conditions and dealt with the larger issues of her time. 'Ibday she is recorded in U.S. history as one of the most powerful aboli tionists of the 1800s.During slav ery, our ancestors followed Sojourner 'Truth towards free dom. 'Ibday it is important that we follow the spacecraft Sojourner into the 21st century. We must realize that, along with everyone else in the world, we are in a new era. STEPHANIE E. MYERS is former director of the U.S. Office of Commercial Space Transportation, is an author, public speaker and vice president of a publishing company. Letters to The Post ' Well done on Hill ; Thank you so much for the i beautiful article on Sister Trudy ! Hill, Missionary to Ghana (July 1 17). Even though I know 'Trudy 1 very well, I am stiU amazed at 1 what God will do through even ; one person if she vrill make her- j self available to Him. 'Iriidy’s | mission started with a plan to [ provide bicycles to Ghanian pas- [ tors who sometimes walk 10-20) miles per day. For years she has traveled alone Ghana to assess, the most pressing needs of thef people,and then returned to the United States to work tirelessly to provide those needs. I thank God for her and the example she has set for me, as a relatively new missionary. Having just returned from my second mis^ sionaiy trip to Kenya, I praise God for the generosity of the many wonderful individuals and Churches that supported 'Trudy in Ghana and our Mission 'Ifeam in Kenya. As 'Trudy alwayq reminds people, the reward to those who support the mission effort is the same as the reward for the missionary; because the Church is one body, with each member having separate, but critically important roles. 'Thanks again, Charlotte Post) for giving the space to a story that will bless all who read it. And thank you, 'Trudy HiU, for being the tireless warrior for Jesus Christ that you are. Lydia A. Harper-Epps Charlotte On ethnocentrism By Junious R. Stanton NATIONAL NEWSPAPER PUBUSHERS ASSOCIATION Ethnocentrism is the charac teristic of holding one’s own racial or ethnic group to be wor thy, of value; identifying with and being proud to be a member of one’s own racial or national group. It is a natural and healthy support system that provides identity, commonalty, continuity and belonging. It is an extension of the role of the family within the ethnic group. Ethnocentrism has nothing to do with hatred of another group. It simply means that one’s pri mary loyalty is to his or her own family race or ethnic origin.'The dynamics of ethnocentrism pro vides insight to our situation as Africans in America. Unfortunately people of African descent are the one group in America that manifests the oppo site of ethnocentrism; exocen- tism. 'This is the characteristic of denigrating one’s self and hold ing groups outside of one’s own ethnic, racial or national origin as being superior.’This explains why black and brown-skiimed people of Afidcan descent have pictures of depigmented Europeans hanging in their churches and homes. It explains why black folks send their chil dren to “white” schools and pay big money to see motion pictures and videos where relatively few of the performers and actors or black. 'Tragically, even at this late date many black children still prefer to play with dolls that look nothing like themselves. It explains the bizarre pattern of a people with a collective dispos able income of over $400 bilhon a year consciously not patronizing or supporting their own busi nesses, professionals, cultural or charitable causes. 'This explains why black communities have so little economic pulse and vitality and why foreign entrepreneurs do. booming business in our neighborhoods. The one great - thing about human beings is that we each have the capacity and wherewithal to change, to mature and become wiser. Social change begins with the individ ual. We will change our situation only when enough individuals change their self-image, priori ties and values. We will change when individuals and families make it a priority to buy black art and decorate their surroimd- ings with images that reflect our selves. JUNIOUS RICARDO STAN TON is a National Newspaper Publishers Association colum nist.