Thursday, May 17, 1990 ? VOL. XVI, No. 39 80 cants 36 Pagaa This waak "The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly" Drug war heating up; black communities under siege Shore killed. Brown killed. Nowlln charged. Try to set a positive example for your children to follow and tell them to give the Lord some of their time. ... Guide them and pray for them, then if tragedy comes you can deal with it. " - Chlories Shore ( ? Two dead; mothers griovo as druijwar escalates By RUDY ANDERSON Chfonfcte Managing Editor Last Sunday should have been a happy occasion for women with children. But for two women in this city, Mother's Day 1990 will For ever be frozen in their memory as a time of tragedy, as the time when their sons were mur dered. "It's been a hard couple of days for me, M said Chlories P. Shore in an interview Tuesday. Ptea$e see page A11 SambQ. Sold At Bookstore - ______ ?Book furthers racial stereotypes By ROBIN BARKSOALE Chronicle Staff Writer A discussion of a childhood experi ence with a painful story is causing feel ings of uneasiness in the community and raisins the issue of censorship vs. good taste. Last week, D. Smith, president and GEO of the Winston Salem Urban League, shared a recollection of one of her first experiences with racism. She talked of the pain that she felt while listening to the tale of a dark-skinned lad, dressed in bright ly-colored clothes who managed to out wit several tigers and take hundreds of pan cakes home to his family. The story was the tale of "Little Black Sambo," a book around which controversy and charges of racism have swirled for years. But, here in 1990, Ms. Smith and other community members are feeling some consternation over the fact that the book is still available at public libraries. Ms. Smith said that she thought the book had been removed from shelves across the country in the 1960s and that it was no longer available. She said she was outraged when alocal resident brought lier a copy of the book which had been pur chased at a local store. She was even more -"ninr ^?nxinriiiii, LBS courtty of Reity A Britton Co. 9 1908 (Hlus. by John ft NeW) frustrated, she said, when a league staff member discov ered that the book was cata loged at the public library. "I went into the educa tional system extremely trust ing," said Ms. Smith. "But in kindergarten, the teacher called us into a circle and began to read to us from this book. That's how I saw myself in the educational system: patent leather black, shiny with braids and look ptea$e see page A9 " That's how I saw myself in the educa tional system: patent leather black , shiny with braids and look ing like Buckwheat. I remember him ('Little Black Sambo ) being so smart he could outwit tigers but / knew he didn't turn them into butter Those images horri fied me." - Delores Smith Renewed caltloncorfew draws fire By TONYA V. SMITH Chronicle Staff Writer Murders, shootings and fights among youth in the city's public housing areas is proof enough that something needs to be done to alleviate drug trafficking* however, neither the aldermen nor residents have an answer as to what should be done. On Sunday, 19-year-old Thomas Derrick Shore of Pfafftown was shot in the head dur ing a shootout in Happy Hill Gardens. Also killed was Brian Christopher Brown, 18, of 930 Cleveland Ave. Because of their deaths, numerous other violent incidents and a fear for their safety, in April leaders from the public housing communities suggested that the aldermen consider establishing a curfew in the four neighborhoods to keep teenagers off the streets at night. The aldermen's Public Safety Committee scheduled a follow-up dis cussion of the issue for Monday and asked that police Chief George L. Sweat and the public safety attorney present their case. But three and a half hours into the meeting when the item came up on the agenda, residents used the opportunity to express their feelings on the issue. Walter Marshall, president of the local branch of the NAACP, called such a selective curfew unconstitutional and said such a. move on the part of the city could be interpreted as a racial incident Alderman Vivian H. Burke, chair of the committee, conceded that at the present time the board can't legally install a curfew. Khalida Lovell, chair of Concerned Mothers of Forsyth County, proposed that her group be allowed to "reteach parents the val ues of parenthood/ saying that change in the neighborhoods must first begin in the home. Others agreed, but those people living in the public housing areas said a curfew might not be the answer but that something needs to be done to restore peace in their neighborhoods. "We're not just asking for a curfew but Please see page A11 they will Photo by LB. Speas Jr. From left, Amy Hageman, Donna Radar, D. Smith, David Abernathy, Lee Faye Mack, Felicia Klrby and East ward Alderman Virginia Newell discuss how to combat neighborhood drug problems. Community gets outside help on ideas insight against drugs By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer Marie Christopher never liked interacting with the police. They were there and she J respected their authority and that, she said, was the extent of her involvement But her attitude changed after she was exposed to the effects of living among drug dealers. Ms. Christopher and her family, who live in government-subsidized Section 8 housing, were burned out of the apartment they had occupied for several years. The accident left them home less. When they were able to relocate, they were moved to another location. Her experiences in that situation, she said, set her on a mission to rid drug dealers from her neighborhood and helped her form an alliance with the Citizens Committee for New York, an anti-drug organi Please see page A 1 0 Tracking racist, audit concludes By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer High schools in tne Win ston -Sal em/Forsyth County school system have received a poor rating from an audit of the local curriculum and the report's findings on the track ing system, which it classi fied as "segregationist" and ultimately "racist" are expected to have the most direct effect on African American students. The audit describes the local tiered tracking system "perhaps the most glaring deficiency of the entire school pro gram in WSFC" and concludes that the practice has "lowered pupil learning expecta tions and resegregated the high schools." Tracking in the local system is used to group students into leveled groups based on ability. But the report found that the Win ston -Salem/Forsyth County system has employed track ing in a subjective manner Bailey Com* that is having a discriminato ry effect on black students. "The subjective nature of tracking criteria and their Please see page A10