STU CAROLINIANl Ill MS. CATHRYN (iAKINEK Student-Stewardess Accomplishes Goals * Dean Louis Westerfield of the North Carolina Central University School of Law has been quoted as say ing full-time work and full-time law school attendance don’t mix well. Cathryn Garner agrees with the dean. She says, “It isn't a good idea for most students ” Ms. Garner, however, worked full time as a flight attendant for Pied mont Airlines during her three years as a law student. She received her juris doctor degree from NCCU in May, and was notified this month that she had passed the North Carolina Bar Examination. Motivation was important, she says, and so was time management. “I am very good at managing my time.” She had to be good at managing her time. She was living and attending law school in Durham, while flying out of Washington and then Baltimore on a weekend schedule with Pied mont. It was the weekend schedule that made her accomplishment possi ble, but she had no difficulty getting those assignments. “We bid for our schedules on the basis of seniority, but nobody else wants to work weekends.” Typically, she attended classes from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Thursday, with her Friday classes ending around 1 p.m. The absence of afternoon classes on Fri day made it possible for her to fly to Washington or Baltimore to begin her weekend of work. During the week, she said, she started classes at 9, remaining at the law school unti' 4 D.m., in class or stu (See STUDENT, P.M) _ On The Hill UNMET DUKAKIS PROMISES TO JESSE RACKING CAMPAIGN DRIVE? WASHINGTON, D.C.—Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis was on Capitol Hill last week challenging a reluctant GOP presidential candidate George Bush to debate campaign issues. Pine. But some critical observers feel that the Massachusetts governor might better spend his time first shor ing up his disjointed campaign team that seems uncertain about what issues he should tackle, how and where. And finally, what he intends to do about coming to grips with alleged , promises he made to Jesse Jackson on that Monday morning at the start of the Democratic Convention. This latter issue is sundering the ef fective operation of his campaign machinery, insiders say, and if Dukakis doesn’t grab control and set the operation quickly back on course, his chances of winning the presidency in the November elections might be dim, indeed. Bush is maintaining a troubling lead in the polls. Jesse Jackson himself signaled the serious disarray when he appeared on the David Brinkley show and told acting host Sam Donaldson that none of the promises elicited at his conven tion meeting with Dukakis had been kept, including the important one of placing a senior official of Jackson’s choosing in a policy-making position on the Democratic National Commit tee. With the November elections only weeks away, the most effective Democratic campaigner, Jackson, is not even being utilized! NNPA has learned confidentially that the Dukakis inner (white) circle doesn’t want Jesse to campaign for the ticket, except in limited areas. They have restricted him from campaign ing in Detroit, for example, capital of the state he won in a primary land slide. Lindy Boggs, in Louisiana, is fighting to return to Congress, and needs Jackson’s support, but the Dukakis inner (white) circle doesn’t want him in that state for fear of alienating the conservative white Democrats that have avidly sup ported Ronald Reagan for the past 7 Vi years! These are a few examples. There are more. Some reports have reached NNPA that “Jesse has agreed to abide by these restrictions and everything, come a few weeks from now, is going to be okay." But some sources have told NNPA that Jesse Jackson “con (See ON THE HILL. P.14) Uejiant CouncUmen Justices Reject Desegregation Plan WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP)-Two members of the U.S. Supreme Court did not agree that the four defiant city councilmen in the Yonkers, N.Y. desegregation case should have had their fines stayed, but they were out voted by their colleagues on the bench. Justices Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan, in a 13-page dissent written by Marshall, rejected the argument that the coun cilmen—Henry Spallone, Nicholas Longo, Edward Fagan and Peter Chema—were protected by “legislative immunity" when they voted against a court-ordered desegregation plan. Marshall and Brennan agreed with the rest of the court that finea should be reinstated - against the city. “The councilmembenT primary argument is that a federal court lacks authority to order an individual local legislator, as opposed to the body in which he serves, to enact specific legislation,” Marshall wrote in the dissent, issued last Thursday night. "In the councilmembers’ view, a Federal court, by entering such an irder, runs roughshod over what they ice as the local legislator’s right to be ibsolutely free from such restraints. While this issue arguably is of lubstantial interest, this case is not a proper vehicle for addressing it.” Marshall and Brennan said this was not a situation where the federal court was trying to force local legislators to vote in favor of a par ticular bill in order to'remedy a con ititutlonal violation. Rather, they Mid, "This case is about a district court’s ability to enforce its consent NCSU Library Launches Series For New Authors Award-winning young writer Kaye B. Gibbons of Raleigh has been nam ed the first resident author under the recently created North Carolina State University Friends of the Librai ' Author of the Year Program. The program, thought to be unique among academic libraries, was an nounced by NCSU Director of Libraries Susan K. Nutter as part of the NCSU Libraries’ celebration of their centennial year in 1980. The Author of the Year Program is intended to assist a series of promis ing new authors, especially those associated with NCSU, in fostering their literary careers. Gibbons, 27, is a native of Nash County. She attended NCSU and the University of North Carolina at Chapel pi. While at NCSU, Gibbons worked at the NCSU Libraries’ Technical Information Center. She received international acclaim with her first novel, “Ellen Foster,” published in 1987 by-Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. In May the novel was awarded both the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fic tion by the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters and a PEN/Hemingway First Novel Cita tion. Earlier In the year, "Ellen Foster" reached No. S on the bestseller list in France. Recently, Paramount Pic tures purchased the motion picture option for “Ellen Foster.” During their tenure as authors of the year, Gibbons and her successors will be able to use the Friends of the Library study carrel at D.H. Hill Library as well as other library resources. The resident author also will be included in the libraries’ social functions. In other events to celebrate the libraries’ centennial year, NCSU Friends of the Library will sponsor its first program of evening talks by North Carolina authors, including Gibbons. Also, the Friends of the Library will hold its first book sale. The NCSU Libraries plan to install an automated circulation system developed with the libraries of UNC Chapel Hill and Duke University. Later in the centennial year, NCSU will dedicate both an ll-story addition to D.H. Hill Library and a new Natural Resources Library. fue G*eat E»hft|rt00 BY TR1TIA MCLAUGHLIN Special 1* 11m CAROLINIAN Many of the artifacts from the “Rameses the Great: the Pharaoh and His Time” exhibition will arrive in Charlotte not as strangers to the ci ty but as kindred spirits. Charlotte and Rameses’ Egypt, 3,300 years and 4,200 miles apart, both grew to enjoy a high standard of living because of an element in their geological makeup—gold. Legislators Set Hearing For Citisens Legislators studying the state’s rest homes would like to hear from citizens interested la pa tient care and the quality of life for residents of nursing and rest homes. The Legislative Committee on Nursing Homes, Rest Homes and Ombudsman will hold a public hearing In Raleigh on Wednes day, Sept. 14, from it a.m. to 3 p.m. In Room 1218 of the State Legislative Building on Jones Street. Any person wishing to address the committee Is asked to contact John Young at 733-2578 or David Moser at 1-5484551. Audience members may address the com mittee. All comments will be held to five minutes or less. Written (See HEARINGS, P.M) STLL MARCMM-Mtmbar* at thi Ku Klux Klan marchad Hnj|fi Hw itraati of RaMfli Saturday and hold a roly In . ^^p^^ ^p^p^p^p pjppupj ppp^p capital. (PMiltyTattUMrMwrart It is most appropriate that Ramoses the Great—the pharaoh who oversaw the greatest volume of gold ever extracted from Egyptian lands—should visit another gold capital on his North American tour. Gold has long been a source of wealth and power. The use of gold in Jewelry dates back 5,000 years, long before the pharaohs reigned. Organized, systematic panning of gold came under royal jurisdiction during Egypt’s Old Kingdom period, more than 4,000 years ago. Gold and royalty became synonymous. If an Egyptian found gold in the Nile or elsewhere, 10 per cent of it by law belonged to the pharaoh. The amount of gold in the pharaoh’s treasury determined the ruler’s military strength, national security, religious fervor and social standing. Ramoses II’s aggressive pursuit of gold and precious stones produced a nation whose wealth surpassed all others of that period. Rameses stress ed gold production. He more fully ex ploited Nubian and Upper Egyptian gold deposits by implementing shaft mining. Systematic panning and shaft mining produced hundreds of pounds of gold annually. But resources at home were not enough for Rameses II. He and his armies went beyond Egypt’s traditional (See RAMESES, P. 14) Poverty Level Climbing For Blacks In U. S. WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP)-In craaaing poverty among blacks, but not w hi tea, ahows that the nation's economic recovery is not being even ly shared, the head of a private anti poverty group said last week. But an official of a conservative group challenged Census Bureau figures on the extent of black poverty. “It seems that this is a very uneven economic recovery. The gains are not being evenly shared... the gap bet ween rich families end poor families is now wider in this country than at any point in the past 40 years,’’ Robert Greensteln said on NBC's “Today" show. Greensteln, head of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, com mented in the wake of a new Census Bureau report showing that nearly one-third of all black Americans live in poverty. Poverty among blacks climbed two percentage points to 33.1 percent last year, according to the Census Bureau’s annual study of income and poverty released last Wednesday. That means that there were an estimated o n million poor blacks in 1907, which was 700,000 more than a year earlier. decrees. Even if this case had warranted the court’s decision on the legislative im munity question, they wrote, Yonkers presents a peculiarity: “The city stresses its ‘extraordinary’ system of governance, in which the council ex ercises both legislative and executive powers.” So, the two justices said, it may be that the City Council was exercising its executive prerogatives, rather than legislative, when it did not com ply with the consent decree. Marshall and Brennan were out voted by their seven judicial col leagues. No written opinion was issued, however, leaving Yonkers leaders to speculate over why the ci ty’s fines were not stayed and the councilmembers’ were. Yonkers Mayor Nicholas Wasicsko said the Supreme Court’s action denied “political martyrdom” to the four defiant councilmen. Had their penalties not been stayed, the four would have had to report to jail on Sunday. CORPORATE GIFT-Executive director of the Gerner Road YMCA, Norman E. Day, It teen In photo with IBM executives Ernest Jenkins and LeRoy Thomas, a fow of the 1088 Back-A-Child committee members who display good coroorate qualities. NAACP Moves To Block Segregated Classrooms The U.S. Department of Justice, once the civil rights movement’s staunch ally, is currently planning to eliminate 200 school desegregation orders in six Southern and Western states, according to an article in Black Enterprise. The NAACP and the Legal Defense Fund have moved to block the effort, extending that the ‘'closing out” of these orders could lead again to segregated classrooms. Under the Reagan administration, the department that once served as the plaintiff in more than 500 school desegregation cases has reversed its position, and has not supported such mandatory school desegregation remedies as rezoning, pairing, clustering, grade reorganization and busing. Legal Defense Fund attorney Nor man L. Chachkin helped prepare the case against lifting permanent in junctions against school districts. Ac cording to Chachkin, the Justice Department has argued that once a school system “implements an ac ceptable plan in good faith, all effects of the previous constitutional viola tion have been eliminated and the system becomes integrated.” But civil rights organizations believe lifting the injunctions will have a devastating effect on the abili (SeeNAACP.P. 14) REMEMBER VIETNAM- VlUnim veterans held a ceremony to remember the nlailng In action and prieoneri of war at the Vietnam Memorial at the Capital lubding. The ceremony wao accompanied by a tub Marina Honor Buard, and It hold the drat Saturday of each month to cab attention to the MlAi and POWa tram the State el North Carobna. (Photo by Tabb SaMr-Calloway) tiuniii'r-nrTniHinn t. — 1 ■■ '' . ■ ^ Lit Our Exptrtt Kaap Your Car InTapShapot BRAKE REPAIR DRUMS & ROTORS TURNED TUNE UPS BATTERIES TIRES COMPUTER BALANCED OFFICIAL Licensed Inspection Station! 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