4B LIFE/XIit Cliatlotte $ot Thursday October 13, 2005 Katrina victims in the North prepare for their first cold winter Continued from page 3B gear. “I’m looking at the leaves,” he said. “It’s amazing to me. In New Orieans, you get two colors: green and dirty brown.” In New England, “I see pretty yellows, a little burgundy color, li^t green.” He also plans to give skiing a shot. Jackson, who plans to find work as an HIV counselor, said fall in New York has been preferable to the siz zling heat in Louisiana. "It’s likp we have air conditioning outside,” she said. A few chairs away fiom her in a New York assistance cen ter sat Bernard Pearce, a New Orleans musician. “It’s not 200 mph winds and a 30- foot storm surge,” Pearce said. ‘I’ll take a little cold and snow over a hurricane any day” Andrew Chambers found shelter with relatives in New York after fleeing Biloxi, Miss. Originally fi^m Jamaica, Chambere has never seen snow and he won ders how cold weather com pares to standing in fiont of an open refiigerator. Snow is “something I’m looking forward to seeing,” he said. “It’s making my imagi nation run wild.” Winston-Salem State University losing its ‘suitcase college’ atmosphere IHE ASSOCIATED PRESS WINSTON-SALEM-The clock-tower bell tolled eight times. On a recent Thursday night, strains of the marching band drifted through the open windows of the dimly lit dorm living room. Students plopped into over- stufied chairs. When the seats ran out, others leaned against the walls. The master of ceremonies— a Winston-Salem State University sophomore named Ashley Bowman — walked to one end of the room and raised her voice. ‘T ask at this time that all cell phones be turned off or on vibrate,” she said, opening the student open-mike night at Moore Residence Hall. “First up is Melessia Kellar. She’s a fi^shman biology mtyor from Connecticut, and she is going to do a mono logue called ‘Dark Secret.”’ The days of Wmston-Salem State’s reputation as a “suit case” school—where students came for the week and left for the weekend—seem to be waning. As enrollment at WSSU has increased—more than 98 percent in the last five years — so has the number of stu dents living on campus. Designated a “focused- growth” campus by the University of North Carolina system, WSSU is one of seven public universities in the state expected to accommo date a wave of high-school graduates. This year’s fi^hman class is the laigest in school histo ry Although school officials are uncertain whether WSSU will continue to grow at the current rate, they expect to enroll about 8,000 students by 2015. At the recent open-mike ni^t, a handful of students signed up to read poetry and sing about love, their child hoods, relationships, sex, love and more love. About 30 spec tators drifted in and out of the living room of the all-girls dorm, sharing seats on couch es and even on tables as they drank lemonade and ate cookies. The singing and the read ing went on well into the evening. ‘Tf you know it, hdp me out, because I’m nervous,” said Mychaell Johnson, an 18- year-old fi'eshman biology rn^or, before she began to sing in fix)nt of the living- room crowd. A few beats later, she was joined by a chorus of female voices and a staccato of snap ping fingers. “Let’s take a long walk around the park, after dark,” they sang. During a five-minute break, the blaring band passed by Several students began danc ing. Mason Parker, a 19-year- old junior who lives on cam pus, stood outside. He said that the change in campus atmosphere — or that there’s now an atmos phere at all — is noticeable. The change seems genuine, something that’s not just orchestrated for glossy col lege-brochure photo shoots. ‘Tt creates a kind of school spirit because the fi:eshmen become a lot more involved,” Parker said. ‘When I was a fi'eshman, everyone went home on the weekends, and if you didn’t go home on the weekends, you were just bored.” Residence advisers are oiganizing game and card nights, ice-cream socials, video-game tournaments, and a haunted house. For the more practical-minded, there are dorm workshops such as “How to Tie a Tie” and “How to Get a Tlitor.” The student healih center will have more part-time staffers this yesir, including a pharmacist. The student fit ness center is open longer on the week^ids, and, on some Saturday nights, there are late-night parties in the gym. “In the past, we probably wouldn’t have dreamed about putting a comedy show on Saturday because nobody would have come,” said Theo Howard, an assistant vice chancellor who oversees cam pus activities. University officials hope that more campus activities for greater numbers of stu dents mean that fewer of them will drink alcohol. But Howard said that cam pus life is also tied to student retention. “On the weekend, people are actually here,” said Ashley Barbre, a residence adviser and a junior. ‘It’s very interesting to see a bunch of women singing to ‘Beauty and the Beast,”’ she added. Ckarleston 1 louse on'Tlie Plaza A i_.>w Country Restaurant Where Everyday is a Holiday Lunch 11:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Dinner. 5:00 p.m. • 11:00 p.m. 3128 The Plaza Charlotte, NC 28205 704-333-4441 Lots of good food and beverages We’ll feed’ you til we fill’ you up, fuh true! Parking available on premises and shuttle services off premises. Black Holocaust Museum struggling financially 77/A’ ASSOCIATED PRESS MILWAUKEE - The nationally acclaimed America’s Black Holocaust Museum is struggling finan cially, due to its inability to find an executive director and lagging attendance, officials say The nearly 20-year-old museum has gone fium hav ing a working capital budget of $1,1 million a few years ago to not having enou^ money to make full mortgage pay ments on its building. ‘We’re digging out of the hole,” said Marissa Weaver, the museum’s former execu tive director, who recently came back to the board to help stabilize the facility ‘We’re putting tcgether a whole new board.” One of her key functions had been grant-writing. Since her departure, the museum has been led by a string of interim directors working on month-to-month contracts. ‘We are now working to re establish relationships with donors,” Weaver said. One of the first of its kind in the country, the museum explores the struggles of blacks in America fixtm slav ery to the present time. It was founded in 1988 by James Cameron, who, in 1930, survived a lynch mob in his hometown of Marion, Ind. Over the years, the muse um has hosted a number of high-profile exhibits, includ ing the “A Slave Ship Speaks: the Wreck of the Henrietta Marie,” which brought in 75,000 visitors in 1999. “It was wonderful and things were really booming,” said Marty Stein, a philan thropist who recently joined the board. But in the past two weeks the museum has seen just 305 visitors. Stein attributes the muse um’s current state to lack of leadership fiom its board, “There were people who didn’t really take their responsibility seriously and consequently let the museum drift,” Stein said “Now we are out raising money” Board member Reuben Harpole said the museum needs to raise about $300,000 a year for its operating bud get. The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, which has had nearly 300,000 visitors since open ing in Cincinnati a year ago. looked to Mlwaukee’s muse um and others like it for tips and advice before opening, said Paul Bemish, chief com munications officer for the Ohio facility “The significance of that museum is that it brings to the forefiont issues and histo ry related to Afiican- Americans, who are an inte gral part of this society,” Bemish said. “This country has the most div^se popula tion in the world”' Funding for black miise- ums throughout the coimtry has always been a challenge, said Lawrence J. Pijeaux Jr, executive director for the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and president and chief executive officer of the Association of Afidcan American Museums. Often, he said, the difficulty comes with the subject mat ter. “Tbey focus on the pli^t of Afiican-Americans in this country and tlie stories we tell are painful,” Pyeaux said. “A discussion on civil rights and slavery may be imcom- fortable. It makes it difficult for us to receive financial sup port fiom the m^ority com munity” Board member and Wsconsin Secretary of Revenue ^fichael Morgan said their fund raising drive is heading in a positive direc tion. ‘Tt hasn’t resulted in pulling us out of the crisis, but we have good people who eire part of the museum now,” he said. Milwaukee Mayor Tbm Barrett said he’s confident the museum can work throug^i its financial problems. The muse um received $75,000 as part of W0«0 O GOD RKOAtX-AST\m Nh f WORK 'V’ VjoeRj NC saus"'”'’’ WAD % ■AM 1340 WADESBORO, NC -Kith '2it. ‘Toity i’/iny Pixm pitm pkllif 'havi-;, pum Ckithf fjiicofo, /Hmic, c’n fV and mck md in atui jit Hand! 1501 N. 1-85 Service Road • Charlotte, NC 28216 704.-393-1540 Welcome to the Family. Community news you can use every day. Subscribe today The Lowe's YMCA Joins the Greater Charlotte Family this Fall a,U»MYne Village rmandal assistance is avaUdfh. Offer good at any YMCA of Greater Charlotte location. 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