Redrawing Districts Blacks Upset Over Secret GOP Pact An agreement to redraw the boundaries of the city’s electoral district* has been called foul play by some African-American leaders and others are downright angry, that the AfHcan-American community had no «*y and the decision was made in secret* Ralph Campbell, Jr., the only African-American member of the Raleigh City Council, in a letter to City Attorney, Thomas A. McCormick, Jr. said that it was indicated that U.S. District Judge James C. tax was interested in the opinion of the minority community in Raleigh concerning a redistricting of the City Council electoral districts for the 1S89 elections. The agreement reached last week proposes to settle a lawsuit brought by Wake Republican Party that contended residents of election districts in northwest and North Raleigh are underrepresented on the City Council. The agreement made without input from the African-American community sets the number of residents in each of the five districts at close to one-fifth of the city’s population of 220.284, making it rrLi.__a.___a respond to the redistricting issue he met with some African-American * ilia 9vvi ci agi cciucui uu i cuiBU iCUUg snoillu not have been done without public hearings and other public input and is not in the best interest of the African-American community or District C. Some are downright angry in the face of this effrontery. necessary to cnange tne borders. Previously Campbell said in order to citizens to discuss the question on June 21. Campbell said “we do not need to redraw the lines at all” and that the city should hold off until it gets accurate figures from the 1990 census. The city also made this argument shortly after the suit was filed. Council members are saying they have no choice but to go along with the agreement or answer to the judge. Where the new boundaries will be is subject to negotiation and the council will vote to approve a plan to redraw the lines July 5. Filing for city elections begins July 7 with elections (See SECRET PACT, P. 9) BUI On Reparations Taking New Impetus National Debate On Exploitation Special to The Carolinian Aa AMlysta Ot«e central principle of international law it that people who have been victims of systematic oppression over a period of time have the right to demand material compensation to redress their grievances. West Germany extended compensation to the state of Israel for the crimes committee against the MS. EOSALYN V. FRAZIER student scores Am Outstanding; Receives Honors Rosalyn V. Frazier is a recipient of the Black American Merit Scholarship from Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem. This is a four year renewable scholarship for full tuition. Miss Frazier is also the recipient of the prestigious Thomas J. Watson Memorial Scholarship from IBM. This scholarship is given in honor of the late Thomas J. Watson was the founder of IBM. Both of these awards are based on academic record, test scores, leadership qualitied, and extra curricular activities. Miss Frazier is also a National Achievement Finalist which is a scholarship program for outstanding Mack students throughout the nation. She has received a $600 Ethnic Minority Scholarship from the National Council of the United Methodist Church. Her scholarship winnings amount to over $72,000. A1980 graduate of Broughton High (SeeROSALYN FRAZIER. P. 2) Jewish people by the regime of Adolph Hitler. Thousands of Japanese Americans were unjustly interned in prison camps by the United States during World War II and have recently won the right to demand compensation. For many years, African Americans have argued that some type of economic compensation should be extended to blacks for the centuries of institutional racism and class exploitation. Seven decades ago, writer Arthur Anderson called for the creation of an all black state termed Moderaa, and demanded that the American government provide reparation totalling six hundred million dollars. In the 1960s, many Black Power advocates agitated for compensation from religious organizations and the government. Today, the call for reparations has acquired new impetus by the actions of Mass. State Sen. Bill Owens. Owens has introduced Senate Bill 1621, calling upon the state “to provide for the payment of reparations for slavery, the slave trade and invidious discrimination against the people of African descent born or residing in the United States of America.” The bill would require Massachusetts to “establish an African reparations commission which shall negotiate with legitimate representation of African descendants born in the United States for payment of reparations.” Owens’ call for reparations has sparked a national debate among blacks. In his view, the call for reparations “is not new. It has been a political issue since the Reconstruction period following the Civil War, when we were promised 40 acres and a mule as a form of compensation for the free labor that helped to build this country.” In short Blacks have been the victims of super-exploitation and compentation is only fair and just. The Detroit City Council concurs with Owens, and recently annroved a (See REPARATIONS. P. 2) vol.48,no.si v*N.C.'a Semi-Weekly Inraleigh^25c TUESDAY, JULM 4,1989 DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST ELSEWHERE 30$ Criminal Conspiracy Charges KINSTON-The Kinston Police and other law enforcement agencies concluded a two-year investigation in drug trafficking and smashed one of the largest rings in the area. After the drug bust, officials said they began with the gathering of intelligence which led to numerous drug purchases, and culminated with an investigative grand jury. “This has been a joint investigation involving the sheriffs departments of Duplin and Lenoir Counties, the Kinston Police Department and the State Bureau of Investigation,” an official statement noted. “This joint effort has effectively identified drug dealers and organizations, which have in years past used county lines as safety zones. With the knowledge gained during the course of this investigation and by utilizing the newly authorized State Investigative Grand Jury, we have been able to effectively attack drug dealers at a level which in the past was seldom reached through conventional investigative methods,” officals said. “By combining the resources of manpower and money, this campaign will terminate with the arrests of 30 individuals fnr a combined total of 228 (See DRUG RING. P. 2) SUPREME COURT RUUNGS-Rev. Jane Jackson stoppod in RaM|h anrouta to Franca and the Middle East and held a press contorenca at RaMgh-Durham International Airport Jackson mat with President Gangs Bash June 30 and docrlod recant Supreme Court retags against civil rights legislation. Sean with Jackson tare Is Bruce Ughtner, RaMgh-Wake Citizens Association chairman. (Photo hy Tata SaMr-Cataway) Legislature Overhauls Laws For Conaoratloae The N. C. General Assembly nas approved a massive 125-page rewrite of state statutes dealing with almost all facets Of corporate law. The bill has received very little attention and even debate about what the measure will do. Some believe it will serve as an NEA President Leaving Legacy As Challenging Voice For Education WASHINGTON (AP) - She held her own against a bombastic education secretary and turned her huge union into a force for school improvement, challenges almost equal to her growing up poor and black in the segregated South. Now the 2-million-member National Education Association (NEA) must choose a successor to mary naiwooa r uireu, uie voice oi the teachers union for six years and some say, the best spokesman it ever had. “The NEA should light a candle to Mary. The organization owes her a great deal,” says Ernest Boyer, president of the Princeton-based Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Ms. Futrell is credited with shifting the NEA’s focus from self-protection to a more professional concern for better education. Under her leadership, union delegates approved a Carnegie plan for a national board to set standards and certify teachers. The union started spending its own money on curriculum innovations and a foundation for education improvement that makes grants for dropout and illiteracy prevention programs, It also cooperated with administrators and principals on a Joint guide to teacher evaluation. NEA is still a union, committed to collective oargaming ana opposed in principle to merit pay plans supported by many outside the teaching field. But its recent activities have gone a long way toward eroding the obstructionist image that made it such an easy target in the early 1960s. Some conservative educators believe Futrell has made only marginal progress. “Her organization under her leadership has moved from the Middle Ages to the mid-18th century,” says Chester Finn, who was an assistant education secretary in the Reagan administration. Futrell, while admitting she would have liked to move faster on some issues such as child care and school restructuring, defends the NEA’s pace. "We would be the first to admit that our efforts are just the beginning,” she said. “What’s important is that we’re taking the (See MARY FUTRELL, P. I) economic development tool to Help convince major corporations to move their charters to North Carolina. Others say its main purpose is to bring the state’s corporate code in line with the changes that have occurred in the world of corporate finance since adoption of the current Business Corporation Act in 1957. The lawmakers say they have simplified, updated and streamlined laws going back 34 years after four years of intensive work by legislators, law professors and corporate lawyers throughout the state. They say the laws deal with how North Carolina-based corporations large and small will do business. Originally' written in 1955 and geared to the smaller companies then in existence, the Business Corporation Act applies to each of the 120,000 companies who have incorporated in North Carolina—varying in size from the smallest Mom-and-Pop.gorcery store to companies the sice Of Duke Power, Food Lion and NCNB. Corporate law spells out In detail the steps a business corporationmust take in being formed ana maintained, including record keeping and other reporting requirements. The laws define and regulate the rights, duties, and responsibUlties of all parties (shareholders, directors and officers) is such a business association. (Soe LEGISLATURE, P. 2) RALPH CAMPBELL. JR. Namibia BY GWEN MCKINNEY NNPA Special Correspondent Windhoek, Namibia—Tears, cheers and ceremonial kissing of the ground marked the homecoming for leaders of the South West Africa People’s Organization (SWAPO), who returned to this once war-torn country to launch an election campaign that will signal the demise of Africa’s last colony. “I didn’t think it would be me who would return home; maybe my daughter but not me,” exclaimed Hague Geingob. “This is truly an emotional moment. The world doesn’t know what it feels like to leave your home and to live in exile.” Geingob, head of SWAPO’s eight member Election Directorate, has lived in exile for 27 years. He and other SWAPO leaders arrived in a chartered jet with 191 other Namibians who are returning home under a United Nations-supervised repatriation. Within the next month over 45,000 Namibians will be returned to participate in independence elections in November. The refugee return is tied to the UN , independence plan which will end South Africa's T*-yt*r eolonial rule. SWAPO has fought since i960 on the diplomatic and military fronts to free the country of South Africa’s occupation. The arrival of the SWAPO leadership marks the movement’s shift from armed struggle to the battle for the ballot. SWAPO, favored to win the elections, is challenged by an assortment of political groupings. The closest opponent, the Democratic Turnhalle Alliance, is backed by South Africa. Geingob and his colleagues were greeted at an airport rally dubbed as a “Heroes Welcome.” It was an event attended by an estimated 10,000 people, engulfed in a chorus of freedom songs and a sea of red, blue and green—SWAPO’s colors. While jubiliation prevailed, there were two separate incidents of violence. A bus carrying rally participants was reportedly shot at and a young man was stabbed by an unknown assailant who fled into the crowd assembled at the airport rally. Those incidents underscore the concern here for potential violence as the election campaign moves into high gear. Theo Ben Gurirab, a member of the Election Directorate and SWAPO foreign secretary, insists that the arrival of the leadership will provide momentum to the mass mobilisation leading up to the election. He lived in exile for S7 years. Said Gurirab, "All the other parties are invited to join the race and we will knock them down one by one, peacefully in the campaign process.” Retiring Pioneers it—mpim Brooks Palmsr and Or. Warron Dornoll Palmar, Saturday, Juno 17, 1MB, at Helan Stough Elamantary School and at the home of Dr. E. B. Palmar, 119 Sunnybrook Road, Ralelfh, raapactlvaly. Juanita, a teacher of S3 years In South Carolina, Chapel Hill, and Raleigh, and Warren, a Toledo, Ohio optometrist of 94years, were “roasted, boasted, and toasted” in a one-and-one-half hour ceremony presided over by Juanita’s personal friend, Mistress of Ceremonies, Wanda J. Garrett, a member of the N. C. State Board of Paroles and former producecjend hostess of “Black Uniimitad”, Channel 11, WTVD, Durham, N.C., and Master of Ceremonies, Edward R. Stewart, executive director, UDI Community -Development Corporation, Durham, N.C., a friend and high school constituent of Warm. Following a "special salute" and "greetings” from Avery Upchurch, the Mayor of the City of Raleigh, and Ralph Campbell) a member of the Raleigh City Council, the ceremonies were opened with a musical prayer solo by Thesis Bailey, a Broughton High School senior. ‘The Past Comes to Lite’ was made real by the appearance of John. Harrell, Juanita's first principal at Gibbs Elementary School, Florence, S.C., her high school alumnus of Allendale High, Allendale, S.C., Bernard Allen, political lobbyist, N. C. Association of Educators, Raleigh, and Attorney Nathan Garrett, CPA Durham, a friend and high school constituent of Warren, Hillside High School, Durham. Robert McAdams, School of Business, N.C. Central University, represented the community and boyhood friendship to Dr. Palmer. In the "Another Town - The Past Continues” aection of the program, Elsie Nunn, retired educator of Estes Hill School, and Woody Edmonds, principal of Culbreth Elementary School, former principal of Frank Potter Graham School, both former co-workers of Mrs. Plamer In Chapel Hill, brought fond memories of Juanita as the first Mack teacher to desegregate the Chapel Hill School System. The honorees were truly roasted by the appearance of two past special guests: Dr. Palmer's life-time Ugh. school and college classmate (Morgan State College, Baltimore, Md.>, Juanita Branch Clemons, who told of Ids great football career at Morgan as "Tank Palmer" and his "Blinders-on-Courtship” (one girl (See PALMERS, P. 2)