TUESDAY Cosbys Scholarship Bill and Camille Cosby establish the Cosbys Scholarship Program In The District Of Columbia. P«g«S Raiders in Japan Gene Upshaw, Executive Director of the NFL Players Association Makes Historic Tnp To Japan. Page 8 Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable, born in the Dominican Republic in the late 1700s, settled in what became present-day Chicago and prospered in farming, comerce and the fur trade. In 1987, the U.S. Post Office honored him with a commemorative stamp. RALEIGH, N.C., VOL.60.NO 73 TUESDAY, AUGUST 6,1991 N.C.'s Semi-Weekly DEDICATED TO THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST SINGLE COPY IN RALEIGH ELSEWHERE 300 Medigap Policies - What To Buy BY CURTIS VENABLE 8»ectal T» The CAROLINIAN Twenty million Americans ov< age 65 have a private Medigap polic; Deciding to buy may be easy. Tb problem cornea when you compai the dozens of policies availabli Equally difficult is knowing whic gaps in your existing coverage Medigap policy fills in a reasonabi cost-efficient way. An American Association c Retired Persons’ survey in 1969 foun the average cost of Medigap ii surance was $706 per year. Knowin how much mooey to spend on whic options requires some knowledge < the law and some smart thinking as; r j.,“l Medicare coverage has two parts, Part A for certain hospital coverage r and the low-cost Part B for outpatient .. services. These may have gape, e however. To cover the gaps in their e coverage, some older adults use !. Medicaid, employer paid health in !i surance policies, and health a maintenance organizations. But y millons of othrs t4urn to the private maze called the Medigap industry, f In 1990, aware of the confusion and i complaints about this industry, Con - gress mandated various changes for ; Medigap policies, which are phasing ) in through November 1991. All f Medigap policies are now required by t law to cover: (1) all or none of the Medicare Part A in-patient hospital deductibl amounts; (2) all the Medicare Part A no covered by Medicare from day 611 90 and day 91 to 150 in any benefi period; (3) upon exhaustion of all Medicar hospital in-patient coverage, a polic; must cover an additional 365 life-tim days at a 90 percent minimum for al eligible expenses; (4) 20 percent of Medicare - approv ed charges under Part B after i calendar year deductible of $100 fo such expenses; The deductible can not exceed Medicare’s limit of $100 and (5) reasonable cost of first thre< pints of blood under either Part A oi i PartB. Within these general guidelines, t you must then decide on the coverage > you need. A typical Medigap plan, t beyond the minimum requirements explained above may include these i separate options; r Payment of Medicare Part B s deductible of $100 1 Coverage of physician charges beyond what Medicare determines to ■ be customary and reasonable; i Coverage for prescription drugs; Coverage for non-certified skilled ■ care facilities; and Coverage for private duty nursing. From such possible options, you (See MEDIGAP, P.2) Dr. Ramadan Makes School Board Bid For District 3 Editor’s Note: The following is a continuation of a series of interviews with elected officials and political candidates addressing accountability and pertinent issues concerning the African-American community. Dr. Khalif Ramadan has elected to run in District 3 as a Wake School Baord candidate. BY MARVA CRAIG Contributing Writer CAROLINIAN—In 1987 you ran for the District 4 Wake County School Board seat. How would you describe that experience? RAMADAN—The experience was very rewarding. However, in 1987 some people approached me at the end of the filing deadline and asked me to run. Consequently I was spen ding a lot of time on research and preparation. Those on my campaign team had their own issues and con cerns and much of the campaign in 1987 was formulating my platform. Thanks to God, I am much more prepared for the 1991 election. I have been active in educational issues since 1987, and this time I chose to run for the Districct 3 seat, and am sur (See KHALIF RAMADAN, P.2) First Black Man To Earn Nursing Ph.D. Speaks Out ox uaviu niLu/unsun HwM T» TV CAROLINIAN CHAPEL HILL—When the weman suffered her third miscarriage, nurses and other hospital staff members directed all their attention and sym pathies toward her. When the woman’s doctor ask ed her hnshnad in passing if there was anything he could do for Mm, the husband Just said, “No... thank yon." But the husband, who was equally upset, wanted to say, I “Yes, can you Just put your arm around me for a few momenta?” Dr. Randolph F.R. Rasch, an assistant professor of nursing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, repeated the story in an interview. He says the man’s response is typical. “Like most men, instead of saying what he really felt, the husband Just kept silent,” Rasch said. “That was what people ex pected him to do ever since he was a little boy who fell down and skinned his knee.” Rasch—the first black man to earn a Ph.D. in nursing in this country—wants to change men’s attitudes about how they should behave when they feel physical or Or, if that’s not possible, he hopes at least to sensitise health care providers to the pervasive masculine conditioning that prevents men from expressing their haelth cencerns. He believes improved commuaica , tion would increase the effec tlveness of the care that men impressive Economical Impact Convention Center Meets Challenge The Raleigh Convention and Visitor*’ Bureau continue* to make an impreaaive impact on the economy in the area and anticipates a con siderable growth in the next few years. MB A mIIU, bureau in 1991-92 including an enlarg ed focus and the potential for more compkitive facilities. Hie coming transition period will be extremely important as we restructure the organization, adjust our mission and move froward to effectively market the entire greater area.” Convention President David L. Heinl added that the sales depart ment initiated its ijrst tammanzation tour program, trained new staff and had a productive and successful year including new programs targeting (See CONVENTION, P. 2) in convention business by the bureau in the fiscal year ending June 30, as reported at the bureau’s fourth an nual meeting recently. S. Leigh Wilson, chairman of the bureau, said, “Raleigh’s emergence as a convention and visitor destina tion continued with major new con struction downtown and the addition A three new professional sports earns, along with potential (dins for weded public facilities in the future. “Raleigh’s skyline dramatically hanged during the past year with the ompletion of two 20-story office uildings and the 11-story Wake bounty Public Center. The City larket area continued to grow, the tate Farmers Market opened and m now North Carolina Museum of iistory neared completion,’’ he said. In anticipating future growth, Vilson said, “this was a year of bangs, with the promise of even lore dramatic changes for the f DR. RANDOLPH RASCH receive. Toward his goal, Rasch has begun a study of how men ex perience illness and health in the United States. UNC is supporting the research with a Junior Facul ty Development Award. “When I worked in the prison system in Tennessee as a nurse practitioner, most of the people I saw were men, and I became in terested in their problems," he said. “At first I behaved in the stereotypical way. Just taking histories and doing physicals and so forth. But the more I asked them how they were doing and the more they sensed that I really wanted to know, the more they (See NURSE, P. 2) School For Homeless Meeting Needs Of Children A unique, one-room school house will openits doors this Jail to meet the . needs of Wake County’s homeless children. The school is one of six of its kind in the nation. A Growing Place, located at the Salvation Army Com munity Center on Wake Forest Road, will be under the administrative arms of parent school Millbrook Elementary. An open house will be held at the center on Tuesday, Aug. 20, from 4-6 p.m. “A Growing Place is designed to provide a stable educational environ ment without interruption for children who experience homelessness or may be shifted from one type of transitional housing to another,” said Dr. Ron Anderson, director of guidance and social work with the Wake County Public School System. “These students experience a wide variety of problems ranging from school attendance to academic difficulties related to their disruption. The intent is to keep students from falling behind academically when they experience transition.” A teacher, teacher assistant, a, part-time sociaj workqt, and many community volunteers will help the 12 to 15 elementary students who will be enrolled a the school at any given time. Students will benefit from cross-age teaching and individualized (See HOMELESS, P.2) JOINT RESEARCH-Shaw University and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have launched a Joint research apprenticeship program for minority high .school students. Students selected from Wake schools this year, pictured in their lab are: Devin N. Cofield, Tiffany R. Greene, Crystal L. Faison, Cameron R. Morris, Asha K. Pai, hiwanda R. PetKway, Tara E. Robinson, Kristan M. horter, Stanley B. Richards and Caprtda N. Townes (Auni I. Kiiatri, not pictured). bhaw University, EPA Launching Joint Research Apprenticeships vironmental Protection Agency have launched a joint research appren ticeship program for minority high school students during this summer. The specially selected students, all promising young scientists from Wake’s Gifted and Talented science chosen by Wake County school per sonnel. The program consists of science and mathematics “appren ticeship” with emphasis on en vironmental problems. Ninth-grade students selected receive four years of training with Shaw faculty and EPA scientists which continues throughout the academic year. Their last two summers will be spent at an EPA facility in the United States. Each year, a new class of ninth Ms. Elizabeth J. Hudson, EPA’s senior official for research and development in the Research Triangle Park, said of the program, “Minority students are under represented in science and related fields. To correct this situation, we need to start early—at the hiph school level—by exposing these students to exciting research programs, hoping (See APPRENTICESHIP, P. 2) Inside Africa Fros Ana cons Bush Lifting The Sanctions BY DANIEL MAROLEN An Analysis President George Bush’s lifting of sanctions against South Africa has both pros and cons. To the Africans inside and outside the country, as well as all anti-apartheidists around the world, it was a thunderbolt from the blue. But, to the ruling racist Afrikaners who dominate and monopolize the country’s political life, the lifting of sanctions was man na from above. Thus, the act was a disillusionment to the opponents of apartheid, and a boon to the racist regime who now feel jubilant and triumphant. All over the land, Afrikaners lit up bonfires in celebra tion of President Bush’s lifting of the economic sanctions. President Bush’s action was a turning point to uie ruling mimanei clique, aiiu a crushing blow to all opponents of apartheid who saw Nelson Mandela’s release from prison in February 1990 as the beginning of the end of apar theid and the advent of the democratization of South Africa, where the African population enjoy no citizenship rights and participa tion in government, and yearn for the early demise of apartheid. But, why hurry to lift sanctions, and not to end apartheid? Instead of simply nibbling at apartheid, why not abolish it in toto? Why not hurry to enfranchise the African population, and abolish the mad balkanization of the country into concentration camps called Bantustans? Or why not distribute the land equitably and end all forms of racial differentiation? However one looks at the act of lif ting the sanctions, one cannot escape the fact that the act has turned the global struggle against the wicked (See INSIDE AFRICA, P. 2)