/editorials, columns, letters ‘Notebook cleaning time’ provides some tidbits KAi^iLri-i - rime to clean little items out of the notebook, again. • Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mike Easley, the state's attorney general, spoke to reporters at the top of a hotel stairwell after appearing before the American Association of Retired Persons last week. Reporters asked Easley if he'd answer a few questions, a reasonable request considering that Easley has been mostly unavailable to the press this campaign and that his public schedule has been very limited. fundraising is taking entirely too much time for everybody in every race, especially for us." Easley said. "We don't have the national money. Their campaign is being funded out of Washing ton." Easley was refering to national Republican money that is flowing to his opponent, Richard V inroot. who is also spending a lot of time raising money. Easley continued: "Campaign ing is the chance for people to get to you.” Sure was. but only for a few Today in North Carolina PAUL O'CONNOR minutes. Easley kept trying to move away from the reporters, as his staff conjured up. in emer gency tones of voice, the need for the candidate to stay on sched ule. Asked why he was in such a rush, Easley said, he didn't know but that he had to go. Guess he was off for more fundraising, now that he'd given the press all of five minutes for questions. At the same time, Vinroot was holding a press conference across town. • Vinroot’s communications consultant. Jack Hawke, wants the world to know that Vinroot was not the first gubernatorial candidate to run negative ads this year. He says Easley was ' first — which is probably correct given a small Easley ad buy this summer. Hawke was responding to a column about Vinroot’s rising negatives in the Mason-Dixon poll. • TV viewers in the east have probably seen Rep. Art Pope’s ads in which the somewhat cerebral, some would say nerdy, Raleigh Republican rows a canoe. He looks as Comfortable as Mike Dukakis looked in his tank. He recently ran into Jack Nichols, his Democratic oppo nent, and caught a little ribbing for the canoe ad - implications that he's not much of an outdoorsman. “That's not true.” Pope said, “I’ve been canoeing since I was six.” But from the “You can't win for losing” department, it turns out that Nichols is an avid canoeist who often takes three-or four-day. trips, and who has traveled the Boundary Waters Canoe Area in upper Minnesota, Pope said. See O'CONNOR On Page 5-A The appeal of offensive news still enduring GBSONBURG. OHIO — Folks who insist they read only The Wall Street Journal and National Geographic, with maybe an issue or two of the Smithsonian It's just small talk SCBUf thrown in for idle chat, scare me. 1 suspect they’re not being truthful. Or maybe it’s just that they have never had to stand in a supermarket checkout line when the person two carts ahead of them has bought a bunch of stuff with the bar-codes missing from the bottom. This is a prime-time, trash reading moment. Tell me you've never, sneaked a glance at the sleaze tabloids racked up there. And that you’ve never wanted to know more about a headline boasting an in-depth interview with a Martian claiming George W. is h is long lost uncle who was banished to Earth as a punishment for syntax abuse. I have. And I laugh to myself Ha' Who’d buy that stuff? And then I answer myself. Millions, apparently, because folks don’t keep printing papers that, won’t sell. t Non-journalism has been around forever. It probably began with the first guy in the cave who set about chiseling stuff on the walls like, ‘'Ptero dactyl admits love tryst with Madonna.” Around the turn of the 20th century, a couple of now legendary New York newspaper owners. Joseph Pulitzer (World) and William Randolph Hearst (Journal) were slugging it out on the newsstands. Pulitzer, who is credited with being a master syn'thesist rather than an innovator, took a lesson from the Chicago Times when it ran a story on four murderers who found God just before being hanged. "Jerked to Jesus,” was the Times headline. In a Sunday supplement. Pulitzer's World ran a story about a French scientist and explorer who claimed to have'discovered a race of savages with well-developed tails. There was even a drawing of a “human man-monkey with a tail " clinging to a tree. “To be certain that I was not the plaything of an illusion,” the explorer is quoted as saying, "I felt his tail.” Meanwhile, back at the Journal. Hearst was hold ing his owrn in the inflammatory news department. “Babies Killed by Score” the headline of one evening edition proclaimed. “Twenty bodies have been re See SCHUETT On Page 5-A Choice improves achievement BY SHERRI JOYNER RALEIGH. NC - In August, two studies were released measuring the effect of private school scholarships for low-income students. The results are astounding and demonstrate that cho.ice programs can narrow if not close the racial perfor mance gap suprisingly quickly. , A Harvard study showed that after two years in private schools, students receiving scholarships in New York City, Dayton. Ohio, and the District of Columbia scored 6 percentile points higher than those stu dents who applied for scholar ships but did not receive them and therefore remained in the public school system. The other study, by Jay P. Greene at the Manhat tan Institute for Policy Research, examined evidence from the Children’s Scholarship Fund (CSF) in Charlotte - a private scholarship program that serves mostly minority students. After only one year in private schools, students receiving a CSF scholarship improved their standardized math test scores by between 5.9 and 6.2 percentile points, and improved their standardized reading test scores by between 5.4 and 7.7 percentile points. Not only did test scores soar in Charlotte, but so did parental satisfaction. Choice parents were nearly twice as likely to be “very- satisfied” with virtually all aspects of the schools - including safety, discipline, facilities, and moral values - as public school parents were. The improvement in test scores caused by the Charlotte CSF program were larger than those observed in the Tennessee STAR study of class-size reductions, and the CSF program is less expensive. When the Tennessee STAR study was released showing the class size reductions boosted test scores, politicians and teachers' unions exalted the results and encouraged educational policies that would reduce class sizes. Now that a new study shows that allowing parents to choose the school that is right for their children produces an even larger academic gain, will these same groups clamor to gfVe scholarships to poor children to attend private schools? Probably not. The Manhattan Institute study also showed that private schools in Charlotte were not creaming the best students from the public schools and dumping the worst. Opponents argue that private schools will refuse students because of stringent academic standards. According to the Charlotte study, only two students failed to attend the school of their choice because of an admissions test, and there was no evidence that any students were expelled for similar reasons. Opponents also argue that the money spent on ’ scholarships would be better spent improving public schools. This is not the case. Looking at previous studies that identify the cost and success of education reforms, it is easy to see that scholar ships for private schools are the most cost-effective solution. See BEAT On Page 5-A I Carolina BEAT Voting for the bonds; my own special reasons “When are you going to weigh in on the bond issue in your column?” Some people who know (hat I worked for University of North Caro One on One D.G. MARTIN lina (System) and for several of its campuses have been asking me that question. It is their way of telling me that 1 should share my opinion about the upcoming vote on the higher education bonds with my readers. While I was on the university payroll, 1 was reluctant to use my column to push the higher education agenda - thinking my editors and readers might see a conflict of interest. And even though I have left the university it is hard to break the old feeling of restrictions. But now, as an ordinary taxpayer. I have a right * to share my opinions about how my tax money is to be spent. No, I have a duty to speak out. So here is what I think. The higher education bond referendum is a critical opportunity for us to improve our state - not just for those, who will be students in the universities and community colleges, but for all of us. The public information effort by the universities and community colleges has laid out the case for the investment in great detail. And the broad bipartisan coalition of the state’s political and business leaders in support of the bonds gives assurance that the vote is not a Republican Democrat or liberal-conservative issue. State Treasurer Harlan Boyles, whose protective ness over the state’s credit rating is legendary, supports the investment and assures us that the bonds can be repaid without increasing our taxes. (And the viewers of UNCTV's great programs such as North Carolina Bookwatch - know that without funds from the bonds to meet the Federal requirement to convert to digital transmitting, North Carolina’s state wide public television network may lose its broadcast licenses.) This broad-based support boosts my commit ment, but my vote in favor of the bonds will also be a matter of personal urgency based on things I have seen during my 12 years of working in the university environment. For example, last year wh ile I was work i ng at UNC Pembroke, I got a chance to watch its science faculty in action. Although that institution focuses on in struction of undergraduate students, the faculty’s See MARTIN On Page 11 A THE CHOWAN HERALD (USPS 106-380) Telephone: (252) 482-4418 PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY By Cox North Carolina Publications, Inc. Entered as a second-class matter August 30, 1934 at the Post Office of Edenton, North Carolina, under Act of March 3,1870. E.N. Manning - Publisher Emeritus David W. Crawley - Publisher Rebecca Bunch.Editor Derrick Armstead.Sports Editor / Staff Writer Mia Noble.Advertising Rep. Susan Bunch...Office Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 Year 6 Months Edenton / Tyner.,.$21.95.$11.95 Anywhere Else in NC...$26.95.....$13.95 Outside NC.$28.95...$15.95 Zone „j^...$32.95.$17.95 Subscription Breakdowns Available Upon Request 10% Discount Available To Senior Citizens POSTMASTER: SEND ADDRESS CHANGES TO: The Chowan Herald • P.O. Box 207 • Edenton, NC 27932 Which type of tax cut is most beneficial? BY DR. MIKE WALDEN NC Cooperative Extension Service Fall is in the air, the election is around the corner, and presiden tial candidates are touting their favorite tax-cut plans. While every .candidate proudly states that his or her tax-cut plan is the very best, tax-cut plans can be so complicated that two analysts NOTICETOOUR READERS If you have something you would like to get off your chest, take the time to write the The Chowan Herald. All letters must include your current address, telephone num ber and signature of the writer. Deadline for the letters is 12 noon Friday prior to each week’s publication. You DECIDE can interpret the same plan quite differently. How can the average person judge tax-cut programs? There are many ways, but one of the most important questions is whether the tax cut is targeted or across the board. A targeted tax cut is one that is only available to taxpayers who meet certain conditions. For example, tjie home mortgage interest tax deduction is a tax cut targeted to homeowners with mortgages, because they're the only ones who qualify. Renters and homeowners who have paid off their mortgages don’t get this tax cut. The current federal income tax code is chock full of targeted tax cuts. Households with child-care expenses, excessive medical expenditures and college and retirement savings are among those eligible for tax reductions. These targeted tax cuts differ from across-the-board cuts, which give all taxpayers a specified percentage tax cut regardless of how they spend or save. In the purest form of across-the-board cuts, all taxpay ers receive the same percentage reduction. In a variation qf the across-the-board cut, the percent age reduction can vary by the taxpayer’s income. There are some clear pluses and minuses to each approach. Targeted tax cuts certainly helpl specific types of taxpayers, so if you’re in one of these groups, you may like the cuts. For example, if a targeted tax cut is provided for elderly households with prescription drug costs and you are one of these households, then you may support this approach. However, if you don't have significant prescription drug costs, this targeted cut may be irrelevant. There’s one big caveat to targeted tax cuts. Often they only apply to households with in comes below a certain level. This means the designer of the target tax cut must decide which households, based on income, deserve the tax reduction and which don’t. Obviously, there’s no easy ,way to do this, and any t income limit will raise questions * of fairness. Many people are calling for simplification of the tax code, but targeted tax cuts do just the opposite: They complicate the tax code. Targeted tax cuts add more deductions and credits to the tax code and taxpayers must make an effort to find out if they qualify. And taxpayers also have to do See DECIDE On Page r,.A