York curator of African American studies brings history to life/7B B tKlje CI)arlotte Bosit ■ VOLUME 21 NO. 26 MARCH 14, 1996 75 CENTS White UNC students challenge race-based scholarships By Dennis Patterson THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RALEIGH - Past racial dis crimination at the University of North Carolina does not justify race-based scholarships now, according to a federal lawsuit filed by eight Republican students. Kmart boycott planned By John Minter THE CHARLOTTE POST Worjcers at a Kmart distrib ution center in Greensboro are calling for a national boycott of the troubled retailer start ing during the Easter shop ping season. Easter is April 7. The group came to Charlotte last weekend to meet with local ministers. Rev. Warden Henderson, president of the Christian Ministers Fellowship Association, said the interde nominational group will con sider the workers’ request for support at its April 13 meet ing. Two workers met with the ministers at Henderson’s Weeping Willow AME Zion Church Saturday. Workers at the Greensboro center say they are paid as much as $6 less per hour than those at 10 others around the country, according to Ben Hensler, a spokesman for the union representing the work ers. The pay practices are racially discriminatory, Hensler said. The Greensboro union is predominantly black. "All we are asking for is to be treated the same as other Kmart employees who do the same jobs we do,” said worker Deborah Compton-Holt. “We can’t let a company like Kmart, that makes millions of dollars from our community, turn back the clock on dis crimination.” Hensler said the Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees is seeking support from around the coun try for a nationwide Kmart boycott. UNITE has taken on several major North Carolina employees in long hard battles and won, including J.P. Stevens and Cannon Mills. Kmart workers in Greensboro voted to join the union in 1993, but UNITE and Kmart have yet to sign a col lective bargaining agreement. The National Labor Relations Board has cited the company for failure to bargain with the union. Kmart says it has negotiated in good faith with the workers and pays a wage based on the cost of living in the Greensboro area and on seniority. The Kmart distribu tion center opened in See UNION page 3A Jack Daly and seven other UNC students are challenging minority presence grants that have been used since the early 1980s to attract white stu dents to predominantly black campuses and black students to predominantly white cam puses. The grants initially were part of a court settlement over desegregation. But when the consent order ended, the state kept the grants, earmarking $1.6 million for the program this year. “There has been an uncon scionable history of racial dis crimination in the UNC System," said Daly, a UNC law student and GOP candi date for state auditor. “That does not justify race discrimi nation in 1996." Daly said at a news confer ence Monday that the grants discriminate against both whites and blacks. See RACE page 2A SERVING MANKIND Elizabeth Randolph has given Charlotte more than 50 years of untiring, dedicated service. Libby Randolph inspires with five decades of service By Tammie Tblbert THE CHARLOTTE POST A fter five decades as an educator and civic leader, Elizabeth Randolph still likes being involved. "Education never ceases to be important,” said Randolph, a retired Charlotte- Mecklenburg administrator and recipient this week of the Whitney M. Young Jr., Award ISXORY-MQN from the Charlotte- bridge nuild Mecklenburg Urban League. Randolph's nephew, Baltimore mayor Kurt Schmoke presented the award, given annually to an individual who has furthered equal opportunity for African Americans and serves as a e?'be^een the ge races. Randolph has been helping people all her life. In 1936, the Shaw University graduate began her teaching career working in the public schools See RANDOLPH page 2A Professor James Roland Law JCSU remembers professor James Law with campus service By Wir.fred B. Cross THE CHARLOTTE POST Johnson C. Smith University will suspend classes from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. today in memory of psychology professor James Roland Law. Mr. Law died Sunday of an apparent heart attack while jog ging. His funeral is noon today in the Jane N. Smith Memorial Church on Smith’s campus. His body will lie in state from 11 a.m. until the service. Smith President Dorothy Cowser Yancy issued a statement Tuesday asking the campus to take a moment of silence at noon to honor Mr. Law's memory. "We are saddened by the loss of our teacher, mentor and friend and extend heartfelt condolences to his family," Yancy wrote. "We ask that the JCSU family take time out...in celebration of the life of Dr. James Roland Law." Yancy is a former student of Law's, as is Maxine Moore, direc tor for the Center for Integrated Study. She said Mr. Law's death was "a shock to all of us. "It shocked the total college community because he was doing so well in his pursuit and training in track and was very active in the community," Moore said. "1 can truthfully say we are deeply grieved by his loss.” Moore called Mr. Law a "tough professor," but a true gentle men. "He always joked he was a 17th century gentleman caught in the wrong century," Moore said. "He was a demanding instructor, very accomplished. He worked very hard to see his students pos sessed the knowledge needed to succeed.” Law's association with Smith began in 1949. He eventually served as vice president for academic affairs before stepping down in 1988 to become the James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of Psychology. Mr. Law, who was awarded the title professor emeritus by JCSU this academic year, was on a five-year leave of absence from the university. During that time he became an avid runner, earning the title "the fastest senior in the world." His passion for track led him to push Mecklenburg County commissioners to sup port a bond referendum to build a $2.3 million Olympic-size track on campus-owned land. "To know he will not be around to see this project come to (com pletion) is really a shocker," said Steve Joyner, Smith men's bas ketball coach and athletic director. "He was very instrumental in this coming about.” See LAW page 6A Sixty years on the cutting edge PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON A.D. Neal loves his job, cutting hair and giving out advice and opinions on any and aii subjects in his Oaklawn Road shop. By John Minter THE CHARLOTTE POST Head on out Beatties Ford Road a ways, beyond Johnson C. Smith University and the water treatment plant, and a quick glance to the right gives you a peek at Neal’s Barbershop. The shop and its delightful owner Albert D. Neal have been a fixture near the comer of Beatties Ford Road and Oaklawn for more than half a decade. And, while at age 73, Neal’s planning to cut back on the number of days he works in the small shop, he’s not about to stop cutting hair. After all, this is a man who spends one of his days off - Tuesday - cutting the hair of the sick and shut-in at their homes or at hospitals and nursing homes. For free. “I wouldn’t trade barbering for a Ph.D,” Neal says. “I love it. You have to love it to (start cutting) hair for 15 cents and still be here.” He spends much of his other day off, Sunday, at church. That’s Friendship Missionary Baptist, further out Beatties Ford, beyond the 1-85 bridge and McDonald’s Cafeteria. Neal, a member of Friendship’s Adult Choir, is leader of the bass section. Neal began cutting hair when he was 13 years old, learning the trade from Frank Williams, out of New York. He never went to barber school and when the state inspector caught him cutting hair in a shop, he gave Neal a chance to take the test. “I made the highest score,” Neal said. “1 skipped the apprentice See SHOP page 3A Inside Editorials 4A-5A Community News 3A Lifestyles 9A Religion 11A Arts/Entertainment 1B What's Up 5B Regional News 7B Sports 8B Classified 13B To subscribe, call (704) 376- 0496 or FAX (704) 342-2160. © 1996 The Charlotte Post Publishing Company. E-mail: charpost@clt.mindspring.com