wm JAN - 9 2004 Jt:. MLK HOLIDAY Mecklenburg has a longest of signature ^ rights activlst’?-^'^^^: January 19 Volume 29 No. 16 www.thecharlottepost.com W^t Cliarlotti $1.00 Duke Library 00 Beat ford Rd Charlotte -tc 28216- 5.80, The Voice of the Black Community WKK OF JANUARY 2004 CAROLINA PANTHERMONIUM PHOTO/WADE NASH Cai'olina Panthers receiver Steve Smith is mobbed by fans at Ericsson Stadium after the Panthers beat the Dallas Cowboys 29-10 in a first-round NFL playoff game last week. The Panthers, who are in the playoffs for just the second time in the franchise’s nine- year history, will play at the St. Louis Rams Saturday at 4:15 p.m. Details in Sports, Page 1C. Seat-belt safety campaign targets high-risk groups Burgess By Herbert L. White herb.whue@thecharlottepost.com Charlott e-Mecklenburg Police Officer Don Eubanks sees first-hand what happens to people in wrecks. And he’s finding Afifican Americans are more likely to be maimed and killed when they don’t buckle up. Eubanks, a member of the CMPs Highway Interdiction and Traffic Safety unit, is working on a campaign with Mecklenburg Safe Communities to encourage black and Hispanic motorists to wear seat belts. The pro gram comes on the heels of a fatal wreck in Iredell County last week that killed seven teen-agers - all of them black. ’’Since the accident where the kids in Statesville were killed, it came to me that more needs to be done to get the word out in the Afncan American com- WSOCTV news connection PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Darrell Stephens reads a poster to be used as part of the seat belt awareness campaign. munity,” Eubanks said. Statistics bear out the lack of seat belt use among black dri vers and passengers. The per centage of overall seat belt use in North Carolina drivers is 84 percent, but among African American drivers in Mecklenburg, it’s 73 percent. Fifty-nine percent of black front passengers buckle up. Afncan Americans have the RITUAL PREVALENT ACROSS CONTINENT More Africans openly challenge female mutilation By Susan Kreimers WOMEN'S E-NEWS On a day she will never for-, get, Soraya Mire expected to receive a "gift” in her native Somalia. She was only 13 years old and anxiously await ed her mother’s promise. The present turned out to be her worst nightmare. What she saw upon entering the doc tor’s house was a surgery room. Shock'froze every bone in her body, yet she couldn’t flee. "How can you run away when the person who loves you the most - and is supposed to he protecting you - is right there allowing this to happen?” says Mire, who is now 40 and. lives in Los Angeles, where she’s working on her second feature film about female geni tal mutilation. "So, at the moment, you say, TVIaybe what she’s doing is right.’ But then you know that deep down in you, something awful is going to happen.” The pain under local anes thetic was so horrendous that she wanted to die. Infibulation, the extreme form of female •genital mutilation, involved removing the entire external genitalia and stitching togeth er the vulva, leaving only a small hole. Also serving Cabarrus, Chester, Mecklenburg, Rowan and York counties Clock’s Ockoigoii housing subsidy City Council weighs HOPE VI support By Herbert L. White herb, white @ ihechartoltepo.'U.com Charlotte City Council doesn’t have much time to debate whether it should sup port a federal application to revi talize the Piedmont Courts and Belmont communities. The Communities Within A City committee will meet Friday to dis cuss the city’s options in applying for $20 million in HOPE VI fund ing finm the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The committee will forward its recommendation to the council for a final vote Monday. Among the council’s options are voting for an immediate commit ment of $15.5 million to build infrastructure or a housing bond referendum on November’s ballot. HUD’s demand that applicants declare monetary support up front is a major council concern. "The city manager has suggest ed we make a contingency based on approval of housing bonds,” council member Susan Burgess said. “I believe the sentiment among council is to go forward anyway and depend on the good people of Charlotte to approve Please see CITY COUNCIL/6A Application time for new students in school district By Herbert L, White herb, white @ thecharlottepost.com Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools started its stu dent assignment process this week. The 2004-2005 school application process began Monday with students who must select a choice for next year taking applications home. Students who will be starting 6th grade and entering 9th grade as well as those impacted by the home school boundary changes voted on the school board must make a selection for the 2004-2005 academic year. Personalized applications as well as a student assignment application guide will be sent home with these students this week. Families new to the district with students start ing kindergarten or coming to CMS for the first time must complete a new student enrollment form. The forms can be picked up at any school or the Family Application Center at 124 Skyland Ave. or on the Internet at www.cms.kl2.nc.us. Once families complete the new student enroll ment form, a personalized application will be mailed to their home. Families have until Wednesday to complete the new student form in order to receive a personalized application by the Jan. 30 deadline. Families now enrolled in CMS who do not have to select a school for next year but want to consid er other options must complete a request for appli cation form. This request form can be filled out at any school or the Family Application Center. Once Please see APPLICATIONS/3A highest rate of motor vehicle occupant injury among ethnic groups, with people age 20-24 at the highest risk. Blacks make up 26 percent of Mecklenburg’s population. “I’ve been looking at a lot of numbers, and a lot of fatali ties,” Eubanks said. “Quite a few of them have involved blacks who were not buckling up.” The reasons vary. Vanity and apathy top the list, Eubanks says. Other drivers see buck ling up as an individual deci sion that shouldn’t be legislat ed despite laws that provide fines for drivers and passen gers who don’t strap in. “The number one answer is they don’t want to wrinkle their clothes,” Eubanks said. “Some women even say it’s uncomfortable if you have large breasts. Kids say they like playing with the police and grabbing their seat belt when the police come by.” Charlotte-Mecklenburg Please see SEAT BELT/6A Graham In Somalia and Sudan, 98 percent of women in Mire’s generation were mutilated, most by age 5 because their mothers and grandmothers believed the younger the bet ter, thinking the torture would be easier to forget. Mire’s fami ly waited so long because her father, who had seen the suf fering inflicted upon his three older daughters, wanted to Please see MORE/6A Inside Editorials 4A Weather 8A Life IB Religion 8B Sports 1C Real Estate 5C Business 8C A&E ID Classified 4D To subscribe, call (704) 376-0496 or FAX (704) 342-2160. © 2003 The Charlotte Post Publishing Co. Please Recycle o 'OI