RALEIGH, N.C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 1,1991 VOL. 50, NO. 72 s c>emi”Vveetu y single copy ap ^ IN RALEIGH DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST ELSEWHERE 300 Shaw Friends of the Library Join National Organization. SeePage 13 i •tTLty r, j**#*"?? NCAE Prexy Blasts Teacher Salary Freese; Plane Ed. Hearings “Salaries are crucial to recrultlag and retaining quality teachers In ear state who can provide excellence In education to our children. NCAE will be working very hard to make sure the salary freeze Is ewded In Item end does not drag on for six years as the last one did." With these words, Rose Marie Lowry opened her first press con ference as president of the North Carolina Association of Educators. She acknowledged that the General Assembly had a difficult Job balancing the state badget. but she said that ‘‘As professional educators we cannot be satisfied with the deep cuts In education." Ibe conference came at the start of NCAE’s annual Summer Leadership Training Academy, which has registered 400 association leader* from ail parts of the state, at the Downtown Holiday Inn in Raleigh. Lowry also asserted that teachers want and need the option to retire without penalty after completing 28 years in the public educa tion system. "NCAE is goin^ to help them secure that option,” she said forcefully. Lowry saved the major portion of her remarks for school restruc turing, In a time when parents want more from their public schools ' and children'Med more to be competitive In the economy of the world, Lowry minced no words. "The classroom teacher and other school level professionals are the best people to say what changes are needed. We are going to make sure that the voices of classroom teachers are heard throughout this state,” she said. To publicise the opinions of classroom teachers and the results of NCAE reports on restructuring, Lowry announced that she will bold a series of public education hearings around the state starting In the faU. , "I want to gather testimony from citizens about the quality of 1 education In their schools and Ideas for new school reforms. I want to hear what the public has to say about the current method of financ ing public schools. And I want people la all parts of North Carolina to hear what clasaroom teachers want for the children in their Lewsry released the findings of three new reports on school restructuring by the Instruction/Professional Development Com m iiulan ml NfAF. Lowry laid, "Oa the basis of It* findings, NCAE will push strongly for heterogeneous groupings es a positive way to teal with all types Certifies tisa: “NCAE wants to go on record opposing any sieves to water down certification of professional educators,” declared WACHOVIA NAMES NEW ASSISTANT V.P. Suianne H. CMtleberry has beca elected assistant vice presi dent far Wachovia Bank. This an neaacement was made by Thomas A. Bennett, vice chair man, following a meeting of the Wachovia Board of Directors. Ms. Castleberry Jeiaed Wachovia in IMS ia Charlotte as supervisor of the lockbox ser vices area. She was elected operations officer in IMS. She transferred to Winston-Salem as manager hi the corporate opera tions support unit in IMS. Ms. Casttebwry assumed her present position in Raleigh as the cor porate and retail account ser vices maaagsr of the Central Region Operations Center In January. Thomas B. Perron* of Raleigh, immediate dai! nrMldont of the ^""Wmewvw |>ne* pro wesHVls* vi vmv North Raleigh Lions Club, has been presented the prestigious Melvin Jones Fellowship Award. A fellowship pin and plaque were presented to him at the club’s Installation of officers on July is. A Melvin Jones Fellowship is the highesst honor a Lien can achieve. In the United States, It is often given to Liens Judged hy their peers to be unusually generous with their “ Ume and talent. The Liens Club J. D. Lewis Files For City Council At-Large Seat J.D. Lewis, a longtime resident ol the Raleigh community, filet Wednesday as a candidate for one oi the city’s two at-large council seats,. Lewis said he is not running against any candidate, but rather for one of the seats. On Tuesday, Frank L. Turner said that he would not seek re-election tc his council seat, an at-large seat 1m won by a two-vote margin in 19N. Turner, a retired assistant personnel director for the state, said he decided against a second term because he needed to spend more time with his rental business. Lewis is currently corporate affairs director for Capitol Broadcasting Co., a former television editorialist and host of some of the station’s issue oriented public affairs programming. “I have been asked to run for many years,” Lewis said, “But my Jobs prevented me. So I elected not to do it—not to wear two hats. Although I have always had an affection for the town and the community and If I can help in any way make it a better place I will be happy.” Lewis also hosted a popular teen dance show on television for 22 years, "Teenage Frolics,” and is an ac complished speaker on various issues from education to development. The filing deadline is Aug. 9. If Charles C. Meeker, a farmer two term council member, decides to run, he will likely Join a crowded field for the two at-laige seats. Wake School Board member Henry C. Knight, in an announcement Wednesday, said he plans to run Knight earlier this month had an J.D. LEWIS nounced that he would not seek another term on the Wake Board of Education. "1 also aald that I was not ready to stand on the sidelines politically and .rauld be Interested in seeking an at-large seat on the Raleigh City Council, If the opportuni ty presented itself,’' Knight said. “The recent announcement by Mr. Turner has afforded me that oppor tunity. Raleigh is an exciting city. She has grown from a sleepy, Southern capital to one of the beet places in the world to work, play, study, and raise a family,” Knight said. Anne S. Franklin, the council’s other at-large member, said recently that she planned to seek re-election to a third term. NAACP Braces For Battle After Nixing Thomas Pick WASHINGTON, D.C.-The Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People on Wednes day ended almost two weeks of suspense by announcing its opposi tion to the nomination of federal Judge Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court. The group urged the Senate to block Thomas’ confirmation in what is shaping up to be a loud and heated battle. While other liberal, minority and women’s groups had immediately ex pressed dismay after President George Bush announced his choice of Thomas to succeed retiring Justice Thurgood Marshall, the NAACP’s reaction had been guarded, saying that it needed to study the record and gather opinions from board members and constituents. In opposing the nomination, the NAACP becomes the largest and strongest black interest group to hold that position. The National Urban League just last week announced that it would not oppose the nomination. Dr. William Gibson, chairman of the NAACP National Btoard of Direc tors, said Thomas’ nomination was t not in the best interest of African- \ Americans, and cited Thomas as be- t ing anti-affirmative action an incon- E sistent on civil rights. “That makes V Thomas a threat when the court is I already radically conservative,” Gib- ii son said. o The NAACP is the nation’s oldest a and largest civil rights organization 1 and is widely seen as the group best positioned to lead any serious C organized opposition to Thomas. p One of the most vocal opponents of confirmation for Thomas has been le Congressional Black Caucus, foich reiterated earlier this week hat Thomas "must not be ominated. Make sure that’s clear, fe’re in no mood to compromise.” epublicans on Capitol Hill are try ig to paint the CBC leadership as out 1 touch with the black masses, who, ccording to polls, support the honuu nomination by 56 percent. At a news conference last week, the BC presented a “bill of articulars.” They know Judge (See NAACP, P. 2) Crack Cocaine Use In Violent Crimes... Death Penalty Advocated Young Blacks Involved In Drags Target? The Senate’s new crime bill is drawing opposition from federal judges and lawyers who contend it would impose billions of dollars in hidden costs on the criminal-justice system, seriously compound inequities in the sentencing of defendants with more black juveniles doing*'hardtime.” The measure, approved recently by a vote of 71 to 26, also could have a devastating impact on the federal prison system. In addition to imnoping the death, penalty for 51 cranes, the bill includes a new layer of mandatory minimum sentences for drug and gun offenses, provisions that could generate tens of thninmnds of new federal inmates at a time when federal prisons are operating at nearly 150 percent of capacity. Democrats and Republicans are battling this session to see who can be the “toughest” on crime and the parties’ proposals for a new Violent Crime Control Act is just that. The act expands the list of charges to which the death penalty can be applied and both target those involved in the drug trade for severe penalties. The Bush administration has not taken a position on the admendments, but President Bush has said th$ crime bill is one of his top priorities, and administration officials praised the Senate version for including (See TOUGH PENALTY, P. 2) wm*** WRITING PROJECT-Margaret Douglass, left, dance/drama teacher tor Waks County Schools; Gareth Cordory, standing, protossor of EngHsh at tho University of Canterbury, Now Zealand; and Clementina Holloway, right, teachar of bohavtoraly-handicappod students at Gold Sand Middle School, LauMmrg, give feedback eo her writing to Jesse McClain, language arts teacher at Cantngtea Jr. Mgh School, Durham. Al an partldpatlag la the Capital Ana Writing Prelect at NCSU. wilder may rind Challenge rrom Jackson In Preaidmitial Race BV FRANKLIN TATE NNPA Newt Service (Part I) In an exclusive inerview for the NNPA, the nation’s only black gover nor, L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia, spoke by telephone like the unan nounced candidate for president that he is. 4 Fresh from a 10-day European trade mission that took him to Lon ion, Brussels, Warsaw, Hamburg snd even Taiwan, however, Gov. Wilder was born into humble beginni ngs. One of eight children, “My father was an insurance salesman, snd my mother raised a family... in Htween, she did domestic work,” he laid. Divorced for 13 years, Wilder has three children. His only son, L. Douglas Wilder, Jr., is an attorney vith his father’s former law firm in Richmond. The nation’s only black governor lince Reconstruction is a product of listorically black colleges, “I [raduated from Virginia Union Jniversity,” he said, "and received ny law degree from Howard Univer ity Law School.” Before winning the governor’s seat, « served in the Virginia Senate and ron his first statewide election by ecoming lieutenant governor. Wilder is very proud of the fact that is state’s population is only about 19 ercent black, and the black voting opulation Is about 19 percent, but he cceived 41 percent of the white vote i the gubernatorial race in 1989. With such resounding proof of abili 1 to attract white votes, the governor >rmed a committee to explore his rospects for the presidency three lonths ago. He made his second trip > Iowa, the first caucus state, in ear r May and campaigned as though he ere an announced candidate. When asked if his bachelor status (See CHALLENGE, P. 2> GOV. L. DOUGLAS WILDER innovative Child Project To Local Community Ctre. The 1991 Summer Playground ac tivities designed (or children in several of the community recreation centers are innovative in many ways. One such program is called Music On Parks. “It was quite unusual and unique the way that this program got started,” say; Carol P. Langley, who coordinates educational programs for the Raleigh Parks and Recreation Department. In October 1990, Willie Jordan, a well-known music educator, began her work with Raleigh Parks and Recreation as music consultant to the reading program, Radical RAP (Reading At Parks) and the summer’s Math Magic Program. “When the new Math Magic Pro gram was established." says Ms. Langley, “the age groups to benefit from this program Include children ages M2. This left another large group •«' children, ages W, without any structured activity, who would also be present during the same time slots as Math Magic.” The sites include Roberts, Camp bell, Method, Walnut Terrace, Biltmore Hills, Halifax, Chavis and Southgate. The immediate opportuni ty was Initiated for Ms. Jordan to organize and write lesson plans for MOP. The basic objective was to teach music as an art of communication that includes structured listening, singing, and music history. During the first week of this program, July 1-5, the children were taught about (SeeCHILD PROJECT. P. 2)