7 7 Happy Valentine's Day! 7 7 Upcoming Events CIAA Tournament Feb. 24-March 1 6ut excuse Issue 63 North Carolina Central University Durham, NC 27701 Monday, Feb. 10, 1997 Crime in Durham strikes a nerve Chancellor Chambers wants to fund security measures By Kifimbo Holloway Staff Reporter While most students made the lazy drive from their home towns on Jan. 6 in preparation for the second semester, Arric Easterling was recovering from gun shot wounds he suffered while walking from his car on Lawson Street to his residence hall. The 19-year-old sophomore was shot in the arm and hip by an unknown teenage assailant he encountered on his way from the Latham dormitory parking lot to Chidley Hall. Easterling's shooting has raised concern among adminis trators for people who come onto the campus from neighbor ing streets and present a poten tial threat for students. "[We want to] ensure safety. Chambers said. " And we plan to do that." Chambers believes that fac ulty, campus security, and stu dents must work hand and hand to promote safety on campus. Shortly after Easterling's (Above) An arial view of the North Carolina Central Univer sity campus and the surrounding community. (Right) Shooting victim Arric Easterling stands at the entrance of NCCU shooting, representatives from the faculty, campus security and the student body met to sur vey the campus in search of po tential crime areas. The Chancellor is also at tempting to fund additional secu r;; rity measures on campus. Improvements in lighting and a shuttle bus are in planning, but nothing is official. Chambers sees a tie between campus security and student pride. VI 5 In a recent visit to some of the resident halls, Chambers was disturbed by the unsanitary living conditions he witnessed. He feels that the way students maintain their dorm rooms re flects the pride they have in the school. "You don't sweep chicken bones out into your hall," Cham bers said. As for students who vandal ize and commit crimes on cam pus, Chambers said that they will shortly meet their doom. " You have one time and you're out," he said. Easterling agrees that student pride is essential for the future of the University. "We can establish the fact that we're NCCU, and this is our little world within Durham and shield the activity that doesn't concern us out," Easterling said. Although his parents wanted him to return to South Carolina and enroll in an in-state school, Easterling returned to NCCU. "There will be your good and bad everywhere," he said. His daughter, Arieyana, turried a yoa«- old shooting. Easterling says she is much too young to understand what happened. He is not bitter towards the university, nor strickened with fear, but said that he is more cautious than he had previously been. "l am a little aprehensive about things," he said. Understanding how lucky he was, Easterling is ready to con tinue working towards his de gree in Computer Information Systems. In life, Easterling said, every thing happens for a reason. Students should be aware of the company they keep, officials say By Nneka Hall Staff Reporter Inquisitive minds venture into the halls of NCCU each semes ter, hoping for a quality educa tion and a safe place to lie their heads. The university setting is warm and close-nit, a comfort that can lead students to forget the community that exists be yond the campus. Statistics show that in the Fayetteville Street area, from Aug. to Dec. of last year, there were 52 counts of drugs/nar cotic arrests, two reported stab- bings, two reported rapes, 7 gunshot wounds, 35 counts of assault, 4 shootings, 47 incidents in which shots were fired, 6 armed robberies and the list goes on. Many of these incidents in A campus police vehicle parked outside of the Chidley Hall substation. volved people who were in their teens to early twenties. "Violence [near campus] is the result of a growing culture of violence in America," said Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Arthur Affleck. He believes that students should be aware of who they interact with from the commu nity, as well as who they choose to bring onto the campus. Youths who live in the local community see the cars stu dents drive and the clothes they wear as a model of what a young person deserves, Affleck said. Affleck thinks that these young people become en tranced with the student culture at NCCU, and that some will do anything to obtain this 'wealth' for themselves. Officer Greg Grayson, of the Durham Police Department, said that this area has always had a problem with campus dis turbances. Grayson, a 1983 NCCU said that the University functions as a home away from honie. "We are a family," he said. "And as such there are some things we must do as a family." He believes that the solution to campus safety is for students to account for their own safety. According to Affleck, the chancellor is working to solve the problems and provide a safer environment for NCCU co-eds. Steps taken include; new doors and working locks for Chidley Hall, the hiring of more campus police and security of ficers, a working card scanning system, the enhancement of lighting on campus, and an es cort (bus transportion) service with a door-to-door policy for those who live on campus and transportation for those who must park off-campus or in a distant parking lot. "A culture of viojence can not be changed by those on cam pus," Affleck said. r —— — — — — —— Ti I I Officer Greg Grayson I will speak on campus I safety precautions I in the lobby I of Baynes Hall on I Wed., Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. I