SPORTS NAACP Tourney, car up for grabs at Winston Lake PAGE C1 editorials RELIGION Being clipped by, and "clipping," The Clipper; also, about C. Everett Koop PAGE A4 Age no obstacle to answering the call of God PAGE B1 W^ri^iton-Salem Chronicle The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly \tol.XIV, Nc CUP THE CUPPER WInslon-Salem, N.C. Thursday, May 19,1988 50 cents 34 Pages This Week NAACP head calls for investigation of police By ANGELA WRIGHT Chronicle Managing Editor I I HOI • TO CliPftAi The head of the local NAACP Monday asked the Board of Aldermen to establish a Citizen's Review Board to investigate alle gations of police brutality and to begin hold ing public hearings to discuss police/com munity relations. \\hlter Marshall, president of the local chapter of the Nation^ Association for the Advancement of Colored People, expressed to the board his "concern with the increased level of police brutality and the ease in which city policemen commit lawle^^acts against people of color and the poor.’' He asked the board to direct assistant city manager Alexander R. Beaty to review the internal regulations of the police depart ment and "to detomine why so many police men are using questionable tactics in their investigations and arrests of minority and poor citizens." Marshall also asked the board to direct city manager Bill Stuart to have human rela tions director Emery Rann organize the pub lic hearings. In a telephone interview Tuesday, Mar shall said that there were many citizens who had experienced police brutality, but would not file a formal complaint "Holding public hearings could give city officials a better idea of what's really going on around the community," he said. Please see page A12 Dorothy Height to speak at Hyatt Larry Little, and his wife, Glenda, man the picket line outside of the Clipper Family Seafood Restaurant during Wednes- Winston-Salem Section of National day's Ixiycott of the establishment (photo by Mike Cunningham). Council of Negro Women Inc. will host the Littles organize boycott of The Clipper By ANGELA WRIGHT Chronidei Managing Editor Fonner alderman Larry Little is lead ing a boycott of The Clipper Restaurant. He says’he wants to "teach them a lesson about resijecting black people, which they have clearly shown they don't tlo." About ten Afro-Americans, including the Rev. Carlton A. G. Eversley, picketed the restaurant on Deacon Boulevard and University Parkway for several hours Wednesday, turning away most of the Afro-American customers and a few of the white customers. Little, his wife and one of the pick- eters say the owner of the restaurant, John Pantazis, hurled racial slurs at them as they picketed his business. \feronica Bitting, a picketer, said, "When he drove into the parking lot he said 'How much is this clown ( Little) paying you?' Then he said 'All y'all nig gers are on welfare.'" Little's wife, Glenda, said, "He drove up to where I was and said 'Why don’t y'all niggers get a job. All niggers are on welfare. What y’all trying to do, pay with food stamps or something?’" Little, a recent graduate of the Wake Forest University School of Law, orga nized the boycott after an incident at the restaurant which he says indicates the owners "disrespect black people overall." Mrs. Little is six months pregnant. She says she had a craving for fish Satur day before last, so she and her husband went to The Clij^r restaurant, a family- owned business. They say they had patronized the business at least twice a month since the establishment first opened eight years ago. It was just about closing time. They went there intending to write a Please see page A2 Spring 1988 Leadership Institute May 19 to 22 at the Hyatt Hotel. The event will bring national and state leaders to the city for the program. Dr. Dorothy I. Height, national president, is the featured guest for the institute. Dr. Manderline Scales, coordinator of the local institute, said that the conferences are held to encourage netwc^king for a com mon cause. "We were chosen as a result of the national conference which was held in Wash ington in November of 1987," said Dr. Scales. "The decision was made that people throughout the United States needed to have the experience we were getting there. We'll be giving a lot of valuable information in terms of health concerns, education, training for family members and other issues. NCNW President Dr. Dorothy Height, right, and Dr. Manderline Scales, local coordinator, will lead sessions at this weekend’s conference. Through our meetings with our 32 affiliate organizations, we will show people how to become involved in concentrated efforts to Please see page A3 Black children face lengthy wait for adoption THE NATION’S NEWS Compiled From AP Wire Court rejects racial bias claim WASHINGTON - The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a ruling that protects state prison officials from a racial-bias lawsuit designed to help more than 1,400 blacks seeking jobs in the state prison system. Lawyers for blacks who applied unsuccessfully U) become prison guards said the appeals court ruling jeopardizes the hopes of more than 1,400 people to win discrimination claims against the state. Tutu wants harsher sanctions WASHINGTON ~ Only new and harsher econom ic pressure on South Africa will prompt the regime to end its policy of official racism, Anglican Arch bishop Desmond Tutu told members of Congress. Tiitu repeated his message that the longstanding U.S. policy of diplomatic pressure has failed. He urged lawmakers to support a new bill that would sever virtually all economic ties between the two countries. Poor face voting barriers WASHINGTON - Discriminatory voter registra- lion procedures are disenfranchising the poor, minor ity and disabled citizens throughout the country, directors of a private study said. Among the practices are arbitrary registration hours, inconvenient registration locations, "mysteri- ous purging of voters without notice, denial of regis tration before an election," said Sen. Alan Cranston,, who is the author of legislation to correct such prac- )mo to unite Jackson, Jews Tile - New York Gov. Mano Cuomo will a meeting between Jesse Jackson and New Jewish leaders. During the campaign leading 'Jew York's April 19 primary, Jackson refused a with Jewish leaders and the campaign f^- diarp attacks on Jackson from New York City ' Edward Koch, who at one point said Jews have to be "crazy" to vote for Jackson. This is the first in a series of arti cles on the adoption of Afro-Ameri can children By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer There are 25 Afro-American chil dren in Forsyth County waiting to find a permanent home, a permanent family. Some, now school age, have been wait ing since they were infants. Forsyth County, like counties across the country, is struggling to find families to adopt homeless Afro-American children. Area adoption personnel say the crisis is likely to get worse before it gets better. The North Carolina Adoption Resource Exchange reports that there were 71 Afro-American children regis tered on the exchange as of December 1987. That figure is nearly double the number of white children available for adoption. Additionally, the majority of older children listed on the exchange were Afro-American. Twenty-two of the 27 children between the ages of 8 and Brothers Telly and Tyrone have spent the better portion of their young lives In foster homes and in agency care waiting to be placed with an adoptive Afro-American family (photo courtesy of F-C Department of Social Services). 10 waiting to be adopted were Afro- American. Several factors are contributing to the abundance of Afro-American chil dren waiting for adoptive parents. Most significant among them is a new'trend in the Afro-American community. Afro-American families traditionally have opted to keep their children and either raise them themselves or have them raised by members of their extended family. Now, more Afro- American teen-agers are giving their babies up for adopdon while the num ber of Afro-American families willing to become adoptive parents remains rel atively small. The result of that situation is that Afro-American children are spending a disproportionate amount of time in foster care because there simply are not homes available for them. "More black young women are choosing to place their children for adoption," said Sandy M. Cook, director of the inter-agency program at The Children’s Home Society. "This means there's not only school-age children but also infants available to couples who wish to increase their family through adoption.” Forsyth County social workers said they, too, face the task of locating suit able Afro-American families who are Please see page A13 Moore sets lunch experiment Schools to meet state mandate By CRAIG GREENLEE Chronide Staff Writer The Moore Alternative Elementary School has experimented with an idea that school administrators hope will help them provide more instructional time for teachers. The experiment involves having all the school's students eat lunch at one lime instead of the usual staggered manner where different classes eat at different limes. This idea could be part of the solution in the state's public schools' efforts to adhere U) the North Carolina Basic Education Program. BEP is a plan designed to outline cur riculum, programs, general standards, class room materials and staffing requirements for the state’s public schools. The plan is to be fully implemented by 1993. An area of concern among school offi cials and teachers is how schools will make the adjustment in complying with the state wide mandate. Presently, all schools must have a minimum of 5 1/2 hours of instruc tional time per day. According to Susan Car- son, community relations coordinator for Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools, area schools are averaging six hours daily. The state average, she says, is around 6 1/4 - 6 1/2 hours. BEP impacts on teaching time because there are ad^tional courses they will have Please see page A10 Geneva Brown says teachers will have a difficult time fitting addition al curriculum into students' schedules (photo by Craig Greenlee), Hi I h\