The Carolinian RALEIGH, N.C., ITHURSDAY^SUNDAY NOVEMBER 17,1988 VOL. 47, NO. 100 N.C.’s Semi-Weekly "^25* DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST ELSEWHERE 300 J The Issues: A Look At Conservatism In America Page 13 NCCU Eagles Make Plans For NCAA Playoffs Page 22 ENHANCING EDUCATION-Lols Fisher, district manager far Saatlwm Ban In IMalgh, presents a check lor a $60,000 grant te Shaw’s new president, Dr. Talbert 0. Shaw. The grant from the BoMevth Foundation of Atlanta wM show three professors to complete requirements for a doctoral degree. New Grasit Sends Three Shaw Professors Back To School As Students Three Shaw University professors will be going back to school^under the terms of a new grant announced to day. The $60,000 grant from the BellSouth Foundation of Atlanta, Ga. will allow three professors to com plete the requirements for a doctoral degree in the areas of science, business or technology. Ronald Swain, the university’s director of development and plann ing, said the grant was important for Shaw, which is scheduled for re accreditation in 1992. “even though we are primarily a liberal arts institution, we want to en sure that we have a high-caliber faculty in the areas of science and technology,” he said. “We see the university as being in a building NEWS BRIEFS N. TELECOM WILL LAY OFF 200 Northern Telecom, Inc., in Nashville, Tenn., said it is laying off about 200 mid-level managers in the Triangle in a cost-cutting move at its division based in Research Triangle Park. The employees being laid off typically have about four years service with the company and can expect about two months’ severance pay. The company will continue Insurance benefits for about 90 days. bnnio i iwiMo rnnnuc The 44th annual Christmas Parade, sponsored by the Raleigh Merchants Bureau, Inc., will be held Saturday, The parade will begin at 10 a.m. at the in teraectdlon of Hillsborough and St. Mary’s streets. It will proceed te the State Capitol, then turn south on Salisbury Street to Lenoir Street, where it will dis band. The parade will include 22 marching bands and 43 floats. POETRY READING Gwendolyn Books, thb first AMcan-Amerlcan author to win a Pulitzer Prize, wUI give a reading of her poetry Wednes day. Nov. 30. at 1:15 p.m. at North Carolina State University's SUwart Theatre. The reading Is free and open to the public. Qnastion-and-answer period and recaption will follow the reading. Brooks, who won the Pulitzer in ISM for "Annie Allen," will be heaered the following night at NCSU's annual University* Community Brotherhood Dinner. Par more information contact lya-Ilu Moses at 737-2038. YEAR-ROUND SCHOOL Would you like to have your child involved in educational ac tivities throughout the year? If so, you may be Interested in Year-Round School, a new pro (See NEWS BRIEFS, P. 2) mode in terms of the number of facul ty members holding doctoral degrees in their fields, attracting highly qualified new faculty members and attracting more students.” Swain said the most immediate beneficiaries of the grant will be the professors, but that the students will benefit in the long term. “This will enhance the quality of (See NEW GRANT, P. 2) Enrollment, Test Scores Up For Blacks CHAPEL HILL (AP>—Black enrollment In the University of North Carolina system and stan dardised test scores for Incoming freshmen have increased this year, the UNC Board of Gover nors was told recently. Black enrollment grew 3.2 per cent this academic year, said Raymond Dawson, senior vice president for academic affairs. Overall enrollment of full-time equivalent students in the system is up 3.1 percent over 1987-88,. with much of the increase coming from in-state students, he said. Only two campuses, East (See ENROLLMENT, P..2) African Americans Need To Revise Grass Roots Movement For Progress In the wake of Vice President George Bush’s victory in the presidential election, millions of African-Americans and other racial and ethnic citizens of the United States are pondering the future. Will the Bush administration be similar to the Reagan administration? Will the ranks of the poor and homeless con tinue to increase? Will the incidents of overt violence continue to in crease? Will a Bush administration continue to have “constructive engagement” with the racist apar [ theid regime of South Africa? And m. W fl ' W will the future for African-Americans Church of Christ, says the answers to be any brighter during the next four these questions have to be pursued by years? African-American leadership for Those who are victimized because of racism and economic exploitation must organize and mobilize around a national agenda that calls for social change. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., ex- thrightiy. ecutive director for the Commission “The last eight years have been for Racial Justice of the United devastating economically as well as iyu L,easn jluw Wake Girl Killed By Dogs ino Charges Pending In The Attack A Raleigh tot was attacked and kill ed by a dog Monday as she played on ly 40 to 50 feet from her house. Antoinette Renee Robinson, 3, went outside to play behind her mother’s home on Holly Springs Road off Stephenson Road and never returned. The dog, a cross-breed German shepherd, was shot at the scene. There apparently were two dogs in the area, but when Wake Animal Con trol and police officials arrived there was only one at the scene. Wake County officer S.M. Pickett said, “The youngster was bitten all over her body, with the biggest areas being around her neck and shoulders. “The dog looked like any normal dog” when the officers arrived, Pickett said, but became elusive and started running back toward a wood ed area at the time he was shot. “We have sent the child’s body and the dog to the state medical examiner's office in Chapel Hill for comparisons bet ween the bites on the child and the dog.” The animal’s body was first taken from the scene to the Rollins Animal Disease Lab for an autopsy. Dr. John Atwell of the lab said, “The animal was brought in by Wake County Sheriffs at 2 p.m. Monday. The dog’s weight was 82 pounds, and he was killed by a shotgun. At that time specimens were taken of blood that was found on the animal’s collar.” The law in Wake County states that a pet four months or older must wear a collar or harness, a current rabies tag should be attached, but doesn't have to be displayed. (See NO CHARGES, P. 2) If. S. Auto industry Losing To Japanese, Impacting On Blacks BY CHESTER A. HIGGINS, SR. NNPA News Editor WASHINGTON, D.C.-Two thing! struck me recently about th< Japanese and our “problem” witl them: the amount of goods we pur chase from them monthly, and a re cent report from the University o Michigan detailing how hard our auti industry has been hit since 1879. The financial pages of several U.S newspapers glumly report that eacl month Japan ships the United Statei about $5 billion more In goods—auto mobiles, TVs, precision machinery etc., than the United States sells ti Japan. That’s called trade im balance, and translated further, 1 pegs America as a debtor nation. Some Republicans say this is fin* and makes our country great becaus* ultimately this turns into foreign in vestment which provides capital am creates Jobs for the Amerlcai economy. Some Democrats however, squirm because they knov the Japanese take excess dollars am buy American real estate, banks am manufacturing plants for very selfisl Japanese reasons, not American. For whoever owns the factories L certain to determine the quality o American Jobs and what wage scale these Jobs will command. Indeed they will determine, as the Japane* are already doing, where the far lories are located and who gets wha Job. The plants have been located ii areas largely inaccessible to black and the high-paying Jobe such a engineers, computer experts, plan management, quality control direc tor andadministrators as well as auto franchises have gone for the most part to those other than blacks. 1 Meanwhile, blacks are some of the most consistent buyers of Japanese ; products—of their autos, radios and TVs, VCRs, calculators, cameras, ’ etc. It is estimated that between 10 and 15 percent—some estimates go as high as 20 percent—of Japan’s im 1 ports are purchased by blacks. They 1 are rewarded for this loyal support by Japanese racist attacks that question their intelligence, honesty, discipline 1 and work habits. Listen to what Donald R. Deskins, ' Jr., a black professor at the Universi ty of Michigan, says: "Since 1079, the number of workers employed in the 1 American automotive manufacturing | industry (in the Big Three—Ford, 1 Chrysler and General Motors) has 1 steadily declined by 18 percent from 1 one million employees in 1978 to ! 818,000 in 1984. It is important to understand that the American 1 automobile industry has been and 1 continues to be a major provider of employment for black workers. As 1 jobs in U.S. companies decline, the newer Japanese plants, both 1 manufacturers and suppliers, are not ’ hiring blacks to a similar extent. ’ These newer Japanese plants locate ' in areas with few blacks, even fewer 1 than IS the case with new American t 1 plants. Many of the jobs provided hy * American automotive manufacturing | firms are being lost to Japanese com 1 petitiveness." FNHTRM SICKLE CELL—(Left to right) DivM Bom, Vico President of PepsiCo Food Systems, Dr. Charles Whitten, President of the National Association of Sickle CoS Disease and Barry Johnson, Director of Affirmative Action for Ptzza HuL Inc. Charity programs and partnerships are raising money In an effort to bring about a cure lor sickle cel. Social Security Eyes Rules Changes To Limit Appeals In a move that could leave millions wondering where their next month’s income will come from, the Social Security Administration is drafting new rules which would curtail the rights of elderly and disabled people to appeal the government's decisions cutting off Social Security, Medicare and welfare benefits. In an effort to close the flood gates to disadvantaged and disabled Americans, the Social Security Ad ministration's Office of Hearings and Appeals lost more than 50 percent ol the cases that were appealed. The new rules are designed to increase the government’s chances of winning those appeals. The new rules would affect millions of Americans who seek or are already receiving disability benefits, health insurance through Medicare ot welfare benefits front the Supplemen tal Security Income program for the aged, blind and disabled. The draft states that the govern ment will attempt to alter the form ol its regulations and operating policies and to emphasize the importance of issuing rationalized decisions based on well-defined, properly established records. Last year, the agency received 5.5 million claims and more than 300,000 appeals from its rulings. A review of the draft by officials at the SSA was recently completed and a final deci sion is not expected until sometime early next year. The appeals process currently is in formal, but the new rules would be geared toward constructing a formal process. The administration is at tempting to clear up a backlog of cases and overloads. The agency received 250,000 requests for hearing by administrative law judges, 57,000 requests for further reviews, 11,000 new civil actions in federal district courts, which had a backlog of 44,000 Social Security cases. The draft rules represent the first attempt in the 40-year history of the Social Security Administration to amend the appeals process. 4H«f «*$! />. . V WB politically for the African-American community. Much of the progress of the struggle for racial justice and equality has eroded during the past decade. There are more people who are living in poverty today than in 1986,” Chavis said. Chavis is traveling across the coun try with a . delegation of eight Angolans, most of them children with (See GRASSROOTS. P. 8) Judges' Bench STILL SEIZED An old-fashioned type, all-copper whiskey still was seized by Franklin County lawmen in the Seven Paths community of the county. The 8 a.m. raid led authorities to the still that was ready to run, but not fired up. The still was confiscated, along with two propane tanks, a burner and a variety of other items. DEATH SENTENCE Jeffrey Karl Meyer, a former Fort Bragg soldier, was sentenced to death by a New Hanover County Superior Court jury Tuesday for his part in the slaying of an elderly Cumberland County couple two years ago. Meyer pleaded guilty to the first degree murder charges and received separate death sentences for the kill ing of Janie (62) and Paul (68) Kutz. The jurors deliberated for about six hours before returning the verdicts at 4:45 p.m. Meyer, 22, was one of two soldiers charged in the deaths. Co-defendant Mark Edward Thompson, of Pen sacola, Fla., has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity and awaits trial. Meyer was discharged from the Ar my earlier this year. He had pleaded guilty to the charges earlier this year. Investigators said the two men were wearing black “ninja” clothing and carrying blow-guns and other martial arts weapons at the time of the crime. After pleading guilty to the murders, Meyers escaped from the Cumberland County Jail last summer but was recaptured. VANDALS STRIKE Two dozen mail boxes were van dalized in the Brookhaven and Stonehenge subdivisions in Nor thwest Raleigh early Sunday morn ing, according to Raleigh police. The damage took place around 2 a.m. Sunday . The first report of damage was received shortly after 7 a.m. from a resident. One resident told police that she didn’t notice any damage to her mailbox when she ar -.1 DONALU T. MOSS Moss Tapped As Kittrell Job Corps Director Management and Training Cor poration recently announced the selection of Donald T. Moes as center director for the Kittrell Job Corps Center in Kittrell. Moss, who has been the deputy director for a lit tle more than a year, replaced retir ing cento: director James List. Moss is a graduate of Southern University in Baton Rouge, La. After attending Howard University Law School in Washington, D.C., Moss began a distinguished career in both the public and private sector. (See MOSS. P.2)