II Paoe A4-The Chronicle, Thursday, June 12,1906 m Winston-Salem Chronicle Founded 1974 ItNIST M. MTT, Publisher NDUtlSI IOIMONYI ALLIH JOHNSON I : ? Co-Founder,. Executive Editor | ILAINIL PITT MICH AIL WTT Office Manager Circulation Manager !? EDITORIALS . I f y Unfair and outdated NORTH CAROLINA'S second primaries are as ? fmprant awtfritlfrtftl f"* Created ill 1915, they require run-offs when a candidate fails to receive a majority (more than 50 percent) of the vote. They also spell political doom for black candidates, who have shown an ability to win a plurality of the vote in first' primaries, but who lose in the nin-off? in se w io see him favorably (47 ircen \ Hart is 67-14 and Cl no is 64-20. Ironically, Cuomo's success presents a rare opportunity for the Republicans - if they play their "race card." Cuomo was forced to select a running-mate lieutenant governor in his coming gubernatorial bid against a relative unknown, Republican Andrew O'Rourke. It took on unusual importance because, if Cuomo is elected t^presk)fent, the lieutenant governor Would automatically succeed him. New York*s black politicians wanted Cuomo's running mate to be black, for obvious and opportunistic reasons. Cuomo instead picked a white man from the nonurban region of the state, a man who emphasizes "agriculture and economic development.*' Most / nt movement g, FROM THE ORASSROC By DR. MANNING MARAB mass boycott against his company made "us consider the potential negative impact our continued involvement in South Africa could have on other Bell and Howell businesses." The divestment boycott threat it A. *- - * puis uic wnoic company in jeopardy," he says. H *jjp| iHn$NarniR/j0HNS0NB)cem A number of cities and states have already divested. Philadelphia's $57 million in assets have been cleaned of South ? Africa-related stocks. The values of others* assets divested from apartheid firms include those of Massachusetts, $110 million; Connecticut, S79 million; Kansas, $26 million; Washington, D.C., $35 million, and Nebraska, $28 million. Many investment managers insist that partial or total <> ) (pr ty racism of the others considered were also from the "upstate" (that's how you say "white" in New York) region. The Republican Party, if it were not just as racist, would nominate Roy Innis, a black neocnns?rvfltiv? ril/il riahic lao/^or /* ? ?* v ?ITU il^llVO 1VUUV1 I IU run for lieutenant governor on O'Rourke's ticket. He's perfect ideologically as a Republican and, in this race, couldn't possibly hurt the party's already scant chances. He may even add a vote or two. The Republicans could legitimately seize the civil rights issue by nominating a black when a liberal Democrat, put in office by the black-voter margin, refused to do so. Though Cuomo will be re-elected governor no matter what the Republicans do, they could hurt the, perhaps, Democratic frontrunner later with this issue when he cam paigns for president. However, Republicans won't play this "race card" because they are too racist, just like the New York Democrats who use blacks to become governor, but refuse to repay them when the time comes. iSH ^ (fir' ' .#>f-? ' %*, WW:, *1 V So much for the two-party system. Tony Brown is a syndicated columnist and television host, whose series, "Tony Brown's Journal," airs Saturdays at 1:30 p.m. on channels 4 and 26. others steam >TS ILE ? ; divestiture simply courts fiduciary disaster. But the actual fiscal record of states which have begun to divest isn't bad at all. In Connertirnt a 1089 1 on; noriJa IKt ..w.NVH?| H A XU1> IH TT piu UIU1J divested the state's pension funds, which currently total $3.9 billion. This fund has earned an average of 12.7 percent per year WHBfMB&MlMUItim. . X IV f V II IV fF W* over the past five years. And in Michigan, according to Business Week, "consultants think divestment of the state's $12 billion pension fund would bring extra transaction costs of only $23 million over five years, since over that time many stocks would be routinely traded." In short, apartheid divestment can be done without extreme financial risk. Since late 1985, 64 American universities and colleges had sold Please see page A5 / CHILDWATCH A health crisis among teens By MARIAN W.'EDELMAN Syndicated Columnist ' WASHINGTON - Wc adults ; 1 tend to assume that teens do not have serious health problems. '" But Dr. Robert Johnson of New JC1KJ a uiuvcisuy ui mcuikilic and Dentistry, who has had hundreds of teen-agers in and out of ' ' his office, calls that belief a r" myth. i tor fttCtfr WrV Di. JUkilWm. * Between five and 10 million ' ; children under 21 suffer one or more health problems, ranging ' from poor vision or hearing to ', chronic illnesses to mental or emotional problems. Lowincome teens are at highest risk " because even such crippling con- ' ditions as poor eyesight are more " :' likely to be untreated or even undetected during childhood. "The youngsters don't have ' the money to afford the glasses," says Johnson. Today, our teens are increasingly threatened by a whole new*:' group of health.trends that doc- '' lors caii tnc "new morbidity." These illnesses do not come from * % germs but from societal ills: I alcohol or drug abuse, teen pregnancy, violent behavior^ ? suicide and mental-health pro- ; blems. Some are now among the ; leading causes of death and : disability among our youth. I For example, at one inner-city I cL'nic during 1983, the majority of young patients were admitted for 4'new-morbidity" problems. ; Fifty-one percent were hospitalized for abortions, deliveries or sexually transmitted diseases, and another 24 percent for trafeina related to accidents and injuries. The estimated 5 million teen- 1 age girls and 7 million teen-age ' boys who are sexually active to day have an especially high risk ~* of developing various health problems. Those teen-age women who become pregnant and have babies will be more likely to have ' { low-birth weight babies. Both young men and women ages IS to 1Q flr# in thi? htoh??*_*4eV m>Aun - ? w w >u? uyivwi i wn %/up for sexually transmitted diseases. Teens often don't know when they have a serious health problem, says Johnson. "Youngsters will come in for a cold and they will actually have a sexually transmitted disease," he says. Or they need counseling on avoiding teen pregnancy. He tells * the story of a bright young man of 16 who tried to share the responsibility of birth control with his girlfriend by taking the birth control pill himself every other month. What can be done to help more of our teens get the health care they need? My prescription has three parts: Make it affordable,, make it accessible and make it appropriate to their needs. First, only half of America's', ; poor children are now covered by : Medicaid. We should make sure*; that all children have adequate;, health coverage, including teens. ? - ? ?- I Second, we should explore ways of taking the services where teens are. One idea that has often improved teens' health is comr * prehensive etinics in ornear> schools or in housing projects ; where many disadvantaged teen*' may live. Finally, all of our doctor* tiav* got to learn what Johnson*. already knows: how to talk to.^ teens, teach them preventive" health care and look out for their total, long-term health needs. We parents can help doctors dp ' their jobs better by encouraging * our children to get regular ami* complete health care. *' Marian Wright Edeiman it a National Newapaper: Publishers Association coJ? umnist who Is preaidant oftha Children's Defenae Fund,; a national voice for youth. / 5?