2A NEWS/IEtie C!)«rlotte Thursday, February 26, 2004 ILC. campuses roact to HIV rise among blacks Continued from page 1A among youth ages 15 to 24 annually. The infections will cost more than $6 billion in direct medical costs, as reported in the latest issue of the journal Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health published by The Alan Guttmacher Institute. “These numbers on the human and financial costs of STDs in youth should be a wake-up call for the nation,” said Joan Catos, principal investigator of a project at the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication assessing the impact of STDs on young people. ‘We’re not using the tools already available to fight these infections, and we’re letting down our youth because of it.” But North Carolina col leges are taking a more aggressive approach to stop ping HIV. School health offi cials are beefing up educa tion and testing programs. And students are more involved in sharing informa tion with each other through peer counseling and .semi nars. Historically-black colleges are at the forefi”ont of the education effort. An estimat ed 400 students from all 11 N.C. HBCUs and historical ly Native American UNC- Pembroke will meet March 19-21 at N.C. Central University in Durham for a conference on HIV/AIDS. HBCUs have also received $15,000 grants from the N.C. Dept, of Health for on- campus prevention pro grams. Historically-black Livingstone College is using its grant to train up to 24 peer counselors by semes ter’s end, said Pam Henley R.N., director of the school’s health services department. The educational process includes modifying behavior that can lead to acquiring the virus. Experimenting with drugs and alcohol is often a major contributor to lowering defenses, Oates said. As a result, students are counseled to party in moderation and know whom they hang out with. “Drinking and drugs is probably the No. 1 thing that people get HIV and AIDS,” she said. “There’s nothing wrong with having a good time, but you need to know your limit.” Livingstone sponsors “safe sex parties,” alcohol- and drug-free gatherings where the emphasis is on having fun in a safe environment. ‘You’re more likely to get HIV if you engage in risky behavior,” Henley said. “In a college population, it’s more of a concern because of close living quarters and some behaviors that are tra ditional on college campus es,” such as excessive drink ing and sexual experimenta tion, Ferguson said. Oates was surprised by the response of men at the semi nars. Instead of taking a dis missive attitude, they were curious, inquiring about the risks associated with HIV. “When we first did the pro gram with freshmen, there were a lot of questions,” she said. “I was shocked to see more men asking questions than females. The guys weren’t like they were too good to ask questions.” Henley, who has been at Livingstone for 13 years, said she has seen an increase in students’ willing ness to ask questions about sexually-transmitted dis eases. She attributes that openness to administrative support and aggressive pro grams that start fiom the time new students first walk on campus to their senior year. “We hit them aU semester,” Henley said. ‘We hit them in the (residence) halls and all over campus.” On the Net U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention www.cdc.gov Now accepting students for the ; Rare Stones Development Program; Ages 13 and up • Acting I Modeling ] Character Development i ^ Call 704.588.1688 for more Information \ www.dwilsonagency.net d.WILSONAGENCY development | exposure 1 placement t PrimeCare Medical Center ‘Our Emphasis Is On Quality Healthrare' Ask US abMl MW (sditt; Prosecutor to seek N.C. pardon for freed inmate THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WINSTON-SALEM - The district attorney who initial ly opposed a new trial for Darryl Himt now says he will seek a pardon for the man exonerated in the death of a newspaper copy editor. Forsyth County District Attorney Tbm Keith said he will ask Gov. Mike Easley to pardon Hunt, who was exon erated earlier this month after serving 19 years in prison for the 1984 murder. For nearly 20 years, Deborah Sykes’ rape and killing and Hunt’s imprison ment raised tensions among blacks and whites. Sykes was white, and Hunt is black. He planned to seek the pardon during a clemency hearing Thursday for a man convicted of killing a Winston-Salem police officer. While Keith said he is cer tain Hunt is innocent, some people - including Sykes’ family - still believe that Hunt had something to do with the brutal stabbing death of Sykes in downtown Winston-Salem. Keith wasn’t elected until after Hunt had already been twice convicted of murder. His office got into the case in 1994 to oppose a bid for a third trial based upon DNA evidence that showed that Hunt was not Sykes’ rapist. Hunt was convicted of killing Sykes but not of raping her. It wasn’t until last December, when DNA test ing identified Willard Brown and Brown confessed, that Keith said he began to real ize that he and so many oth ers may have been wrong. Hunt’s supporters say Keith should have been able to see the evidence for what it was far earlier. “If he had a passion for jus tice, he would have done it 10 years ago rather than let ting his office and the state Attorney General’s Office continue to argue against fairness for Darryl,” said the Rev. Carlton Eversley, a member of Hunt’s defense com mittee. Keith, in his fourth term as dis trict attor ney, said the Hunt case is about 20 years of accumulat ed errors by police, prosecu tors and even defense attor neys. In his first extended inter view since Hunt’s exonera tion, Keith said the bum bling led to a catastrophe. “I wish I’d taken a different view, but I didn’t know then what I know now,” said Keith, who got a call Dec. 19 Easley fiom the state crime lab that Brown’s DNA matched evi dence in the Sykes’ case. At first, Keith said the evi dence supported the prose cution theory that two or more people were involved in the attack. Keith said that he meant the remark as one of several possibilities, with Hunt’s innocence being another. The DA’s comments set off a round of criticism by Hunt’s attorney and mem bers of the Darryl Hunt Defense Committee, who called for Hunt’s immediate release and an outside inves tigation. Within days, the police department gave the case to the State Bureau of Investigation. Hunt was released Dec. 24 after investigators could find no evidence against him. A pardon from Easley would entitle Hunt to com pensation of about $360,000 for his wrongful conviction. Easley’s office is not saying how quickly a ruling might come after Keith delivers the court order that exonerated Hunt and his motion sup porting a pardon. Keith said he believes that Hunt deserves the money. “It is important that the system make amends for the system,” he said. Internal Medicine Urgent Care Sports Physicals Pre-Employment Health Sreeening X-RAY Services Comprehensive Diabetic Management (Available onsite through our Diabetes Resource Center) ^Recently recognized by the prestigious American Diabetes Association Open Mon., Tue., Wed., Fri. • 9ani-6pm Thurs., 9ani-8pm • SaL, 9ani-2pm www.Primemeilicai.org 1406 Beatties Ford Road, Charlotte, NC 28216 Got a news idea? Call The Post at (704) 376-0496 ■k. A ~ ^1 hriMKaii Patrick E. Evive, MD, FACP Hans M. Kwaku, MD, MPH Kim Neely, PA-C 704-335-0806 We accept most Major Commercial Insurances, Medicare, and Medicaid HMO’s A Unmrsify Child Development ^"^*3 University Executive Park Ch/trioctc. 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