7A >o NEWS/Si&e Cfiatlotte $otit Thursday, November 16, 2006 Harding parents, students demand stability Continued from page 1A produced 17 National Achievement Scholars - African American students who score in the top one-half percent of seniors in North Carolina - more than the rest of CMS combined. Harding is also in transi tion with new leadership and Climate change hits Africa By Stephen Leahy GLOBAL INFORMATION SERVICE faculty. In addition to a teacher shortage, popular longtime principal Curtis Carroll left in August for Duval County (Fla.) Schools and was succeeded by Alicisa Johnson, who is now out on maternity leave. Denise AtMnson, an assistant princi pal at Providence High School, wiU take over as interim principal. “We’ve got aU this going on at one time,” Price-Patterson says. “It looks like it’s setting us up to fail, but we won’t.” • CarroU, Harding’s princi pal from 1999-2006, is com ing back to CMS. Superintendent Peter Gorman named Carroll area superintendent Tuesday, where he’ll oversee underper forming schools. Carroll, who built his reputation for chal lenging Harding students in their academic pursuits, will report directly to Gorman. Carroll started his CMS career in 1993 as an assistant principal at Randolph Middle School. He was an assistant principal at West Mecklenburg High, then moved up to principal at McCMntock Middle. • Donald Fennoy was appointed principal at Phillip 0. Berry Academy of Technology. He previously was assistant principal at Oljonpia High School in Orlando, Fla. Hell start work Dec. 4. • Stan Frazier was named principal at E.E. Waddell High School. He previously was principal at Merry Oaks Elementary. BROOKLIN, Canada, Nov. 6, 2006 — Climate change will devastate Africa imless the continent gets substan tial help from the world com munity, according to a new report released at the open ing of a major U.N. Climate Change Conference in Nairobi, Kenya, on Monday. “Africa is the least responsi ble for climate change but will be hit the hardest,” said Nick NuttaU, spokesperson for the United Nations Environment-Program. New scientific data shows that Africa is more vulnera ble to the impacts than previ ously thought, Nuttall told IPS from Nairobi. Seventy million people and 30 percent of Africa’s coastal infrastructure face the risk of coastal flooding by 2080 linked to rising sea levels, the report found. More than one- third of the habitats that sup port African wildlife could be lost. Crop yields will fall due to warmer temperatures and more intense droughts. By 2025, some 480 million people in Africa could be liv ing in water-scarce or water- stressed areas. "If Afric-a’s weather gets any more fickle, then they are in very deep trouble,” said Steve Sawyer of Greenpeace International. Sawyer is one of 6,000 people in Nairobi attending the United Nations Climate Change Conference. East Africa is losing the snow from its mountains like Mt. Kenya and Mt. . Kilimanjaro, which means rivers and streams fed by these mountains are running dry. Farmers will have to relocate and they need help right now, Sawyer told IPS. "Chmate change is imder- way and the international community must respond by offering weU-targeted assis tance to those countries in the finnt-line risked destruc tion,” said Achim Steiner, executive director of UNEP. Africa is also the least pre pared continent and wiU need substantial help from devel oped nations to cope with impacts of climate change, said Nuttall. “This is the first major cli mate change conference in Africa. There is strong inter est in how to help ‘climate- proof African infrastructiu-e,” he said. Africa is developing eco nomically, building roads, railways and port facilities, but those have to be con structed in such a way that, they will not disappear in 30 or 40 years because of the impabts of climate change, he said. Those impacts could also devastate the world economy, the British government reported last week. The world’s economy could shrink by 20 percent in the worst- case scenario, but Sir Nicholas Stem, a former chief economist of the World Bank, found that major economic impacts are a certainty imder all circumstances. And his report also found that devel oping regions will be hit hard est. Scientists estimate that Ali'Sta«l CHsir P2S7m new now $3997 was ^59®^ get holiday ready with ONLY AT LOWE’S! 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