The Minority Voice, April 13-19, 1989


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]






JOY
1340 AM

ole

(

What You See Is What You Get, What You Read Is What You Know & Save " Eastern North Carolina Ts Minority Voice Since 1987
ireenville, Washington, and Williamston, North Carolina

Dr. Wiley E. Hines

Hines is Honored as
Distinguished Alumni

Greenville dentist and com-
munity leader, Dr. Wiley E.
Hines is one of the 100 outstan-
ding graduates of historically
black colleges and universities
(HBCUs) being honored as a
distinguished Alumni at the 14th
National Conference on Blacks in
Higher Education, April 19-23, at
the Washington Hilton Hotel. The
conference is sponsored by the
National Association for Equal
Opportunity in Higher Education
(NAFEO).

~All honorees are nominated
by their alumni institutions for
making significant contributions
to the American society. Presen-
tations of the NAFEO citation
shows that the historically black
colleges and universities continue
to produce many high-quality in-
dividuals who enter into the
American mainstream and con-
tribute to outstanding progress. ?
said Dr. Samuel Myers, NAFEO
president.

Knoxville (TN) College
nominated Dr. Hines for this
honor. He is currently a Gentist in
Greenville, and as a native of
Greenville, he also attended
Meharry Medical College in
(Continued on page 10)

April is Black
Mental Health Month

April is Black Mental Health
Month. The Association of Black
Psychologists values education
and advocacy for African
American people because it will
lead to a healthier Black
America. In order to promote a
healthier Black America,
members of the Association and
their supporters throughout the
U.S.A. and abroad observe Black
Mental Health Month during
April. The theme for this April,
1989 is ~People Reaching People:
Pathways to Black Mental
Health. ? T Black Mental Health
Month serves as a rally point for
the Association and other con-
cerned parties and its member-
ship who wish to promote the well
being of Black Americans. Atten-
tion is drawn to various areas of
mental health as deemed impor-
tant by the Association through
various activities i.e., workshops
and symposiums in a number of
cities. The observance of Black
Mental Health Month brings at-
tention to the diverse mental
health issues challenging Black
America to achieve a healthier
tomorrow.

Chapters can expect to hear
very soon from the 1989 Co-Chairs
of the Black mental Health Month
Committee; Dr. Linda James
Myers and Dr. Moriba Kelsey of
the Central Ohio Chapter. The
Association invites every one to
share the Ujima (Unity), and
Ujamaa (Collective Economics)
observed in Black Mental Health
Month. Interested individuals
may participate in the various
activities sponsored by local
chapters of the Association or
through informal discussions
with concerned others. Your par-
ticipation may be just the rela-
tionship needed for a healthier
tomorrow. For local information
contact Dr. Dennis Chestnut,
Dept. of Psychology, East
Carolina University, Greenville,
N.C., 27834. (919) 757-6800.

EDITOR TS NOTE: This is a
continuing series of true accounts
given by the writer.

We sat therewith her leaning on
my chest for about 10 minutes,
and then she said, I know you are
waiting for me to tell you why I
asked you to come here and now
I think it Ts about time for me to
tell you. I hope that you won Tt be
angry with me for what I did, I
just couldn Tt help it.

I was just sitting thinking
whether I should tell you or not,
because it may give you the idea
that I Tm a person who likes to at-
tend to other people Ts affairs.

But I have just got to tell you
this because you are a nice boy
and I like you. I don Tt think you
will be angry. On my day off from
work, I looked for some impor-
tant papers that I was suppose to
fill out to get a government job
and when I looked for the bag that
I put them in, I couldn Tt find it,
and then it came to me that it was
on the back porch where I left it
when I got off work. It was rain-
ing very hard that day and I went
back to the job on my day off to
get the bag, and as I got on the
back porch I could hear you talk-
ing to my boss ladies daughter.

I know how she is because she
got fresh with the grocery boy.
So, Iam warning you to leave her
alone if you are doing anything.
Then I told her that I didn Tt know
how she got that idea, because I
had never said a thing to her, I
am just doing my job and that Ts
all, then she told me how she tip-
ped on the porch and thru the kit-
chen and in the dining room
where shw could hear us good.
After I had denied it again I saw
the.expression change on her face
when she turned and pointed her
finger at me and said, colored
boy, don Tt you lie to me. I know
there Ts something going on bet-
ween you and that devil white

~ oWe Tve Come A Long Way ?

BY: DEACON JAMES VINES

woman and I Tm telling you to stop

if you have to quit your job. I
told her that just as soon as I
finished paying for some things I
had put on layaway, I would quit.
Then I asked her if that was all
she wanted, because it was get-
ting late and I didn Tt want to stay
away from home until it gets too
late, but she still insisted that I
stay, that nothing could happen to
me there, but my mind led me to
go, so I told her good night and
left.

The next day I got up and after
my mother had fixed my
breakfast, I ate and took off for
the drug store, still thinking
about what the cook had told me.
I got to the store about a quarter
till seven and one of the white
boys who worked on the soda
fountain told me the drug store
was Closed until after the funeral,
so, I said who Ts dead, and he said
the owner of the drug store lost
his father and they had goen out
of town and would be gone for a
few days and the drug store
would be closed. So I decided to
go back home and rest for the
next few days. So I left the drug
store and started home with what
I thought was a short cut, but I
should have gone the other way
and I never would have seen Ms.
G, who was on her way to the
drug store. I had just crossed the
street when I heard someone call
for me to wait a minute, as I turn-
ed to look to see who it was. I
looked straight in the face of so-
meone I didn Tt want to see. It was
her, the same person that the
cook had warned me to stay away
from. Before I could say
anything, she had already stop-
ped the cart and opened the door
and asked me to get in the car so
she could take me'to her house so
that I could help her and the cook
cleaned up the yard and around
the house. I was soon to find out

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TINY KNOWS HES GOT HIS TELEVISION SET, AT
ALL THE AN UNFAIR HOME, HAS BEEN OUT
AN6WERS. ADVANTAGE OF ORDER ALL WEEK.

THURSDAY, APRIL 13-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1989

that she knew that the store
would be closed and that she was
on her way to look for me. I kept
wondering why she picked that
day to find me but she knew more
than I thought she knew.

She had gotten all the informa-
tion that she needed on how to
find me by asking the clerk in the
store about me. I got in the car
and she drove away towards her
house. When we got there, the
cook was sweeping off the front
steps and didn Tt see me in the
back of the car. So, she drove in
the yard and stopped and got out
on the passengers side of the car
which was a four door 1939
Plymouth and told me to come on
in with her. So, we got out of the
car and went to the back of the
house and came in through the
back door. I noticed she was
walking very fast so that she
could get in the house before the
cook could see me. After we were
on the back porch I asked her
what she wanted me to do and she
said come on in, I don Tt think we
should let the cook see you going
in the house with me. As we got
past the dining room I knew she
had planned something that I did
not want any part of. So, I follow-
ed her until she came to the front
bedroom, but she kept going un-
til she came to the stairway and
said, we are going upstairs to
more somethings from the attic.
Whe I got to the front of the
stairs, she put her finger to her
lips telling me to walk quietly, so
we tip toed up the stairs and down
the hall and past the door that led
to the attic, but we didn Tt stop
there. We kept going until we
came to one of the bedrooms,
where she stopped and opened
the door and walked in and wav-
ed oor me to come on in and as I
past her, she closed the door and
locked it.

(Continued on page 7)

A JOYFUL MOMENT... Was shared after final competitions were
held at the first annual African American Child Development Talent
Search. Shown here are Talent Program Mistress of Ceremonies, Ms.
Ruby Cannon, Judge; TV Newscaster Mrs. Virginia Foy; Overall
Grand Prize Winner, Cherry Nicole Fields and Dr. Dennis Chestnut,
National ABPsi President and Talent Program Organizer. Back row
is Dr. Theresa Hayes, N.C. Chapter President and Conference Com-
mittee. All participants received a cash prize and a certificate of
participation.

(Voice photo by Jim R

CONGRATULATIONS CHERRY ... Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fields with
their daughter, Grand Prize Winner, Cherry Nicole Fields. Also pic-
tured are Ms. Ruby Cannon and Dr. Chestnut, National ABPsi Presi-

THEY DID IT... The African American Child Development Talent Search was a big success. The event

dent and Program Organizer.
(Voice photo by Jim Rouse)

Hooker named president

was sponsored by the Southern Regional Conference of the Association of Black Psychologists and Joy
1340 AM. Among the finalists were, left to right, Barkeiya Ormond, Dika Harris, Misty and April Joyner,
P. Maurice Cohen, Nicole Dicken, and Ms. Ruby Cannon, mistress of ceremonies. Back row is Dr. Den-
nis Chestnut, National President of The Association of Black Psychologists and Program Organizer;
Treble and Base and Michael Williams, Jr.

NCAPsi Child Talent

Search a Big Success

The North Carolina Chapter of
Black Psychologists, in conjunc-
tion with the Wooten Ts School of
Music and radio station Joy 1340,
has ~labeled T its first annual
Pitt/Greenville African-
American Child Development
Program a great success. The
event, which began March 18th,
was geared toward African-
American children who were Pitt
County residents up to age eigh-
teen and not yet beyond high
school,

ABPsi National President Den-
nis E. Chestnut, Phd., said the
event was designed to involve

community leaders in recogniz-
ing and developing the wealth of
~untapped T ? T talents of Pitt Coun-
ty Ts black youths. He further
stated, according to sources, that
the Month of April has been
designated as ~Black Mental
Health Month ? T nationally by the

prestigious national organization.
Dr, Chestnut is a professor of
psychology for East Carolina
University.

Thirty acts were said to have
been chosen for the preliminary
round with only nine acts actual-

(Voice photo by Jim Rouse)

ly advancing into the final round
of competition. Three acts from
each age category were selected:

13-18 yrs., 8-12 yrs. and ages
below 8.

Ms. Cherry Nicole Fields net-
ted the grand prize in the senior
division as Barkeiya Deshawn
Ormond did in the junior division.
Each contestant received a cash
prize and a certificate of par-
ticipation, Other finalists in-
clude: P. Maurice Cohens, Dika
Harris, Misty and April Joyner,
Treble and Base, Nicole Dickens,
and Michael D, Williams, Jr.

Carla Michelle Hooker, a
sophomore at East Carolina
University, has been elected
president of the Minority Student
Organization on campus.

Ms. Hooker is also active as
chairperson of the East Carolina
University Special Concerts

Committee " Student Union, the
Pirate Crew and the ECU Gospel
Choir. She is a communication
major.

Her parents are Wayne Hooker
of Forestville, Md., and Mary
Hooker of Fort Washington, Md.

Abrams, others ask

Attorney General Robert
Abrams has announced that
seven state attorney generals
have filed an amicus brief in the
U.S. Supreme Court, urging the
Court not to overturn Roe v.
Wade, the 1973 ruling that
legalized abortion.

Mr. Abrams said the amicus
brief in the case of Webster v.
Reproductive Health Services
which originated in Missoun,
was co-authored by his office
and the office of Massachusetts
Attorney General Jim Shannon.
They were joined by the attor-
neys general of California, Col-
orado, Texas, Vermont and
West Virginia.

Mr. Abrams said: ~ ~The
legalization of abortion has
brought out of the shadows
what was once @ furtive and
dangerous procedure, making it
possible for women to exercise
procreative choice openly and
safely. To make abortion illegal
will not. end it, but will simply
bring back the bad old days
when women defied the laws
and risked their lives in order to

HN abortion rights stayed

be able to control their
childbearing, Recriminilization
of abortion would force state
and local governments to divert
scarce resources in an effort to
enforce what would be, in the
end, unenforceable laws. To
turn back the clock now would
be wrong as a matter of law and
as a matter of public policy.

oBy submitting a brief urging
the reversal of Roe v. Wade, the
Bush Administration has sig-
naled the nation that it plans to
continue the attack on women Ts
right to abortion mounted dur-
ing the Reagan Administration.
Last year, we challenged that
policy when it sought out only
to deny poor women access to
constitutional medical proce-
dures, but also attempted to
deny health care providers the
right to inform their patients
about the full range of birth con-
trol options.

~| am gratified that the attor-
neys general of six other states
have joined New York in this
battle. ?







LOVE AND ARGUMENTS

Arguments are unavoidable,
but fight fair. For example, don Tt
pretend the other person has
made an unreasonable statement
or demand. Mindreading, jump-
ing to conclusions, changing the
subject, bringing up many ac-
cusations at a time andusing
logic to hide emotions are also un-
fair practices.

You Tre not fighting fair if you
brag, interrupt, intimidate, in-
sult, ridicule, pout or cimply
refuse to talk.

EASA NNT \Ne

LJ eo ea

GUIDELINES FOR FIGHTING
FAIR INCLUDE:

1. Decide what is important
and stress it. If you Tre careful
with criticism, when something
important comes up, you'll have
a better chance of being heard
and understood.

2. Be clear and specific. Ex-
plain the reason for your deci-
sion. Be specific about your part
in creating a problem.

3. Be realistic and reasonable.

4. Make your wishes and
preferences clear. Don Tt assume

| the other person knows what you
- mean.

5. Recognize that there is more

than one way to view any

situtation.
6. Express feelings openly and

| honestly.

7.. Accept other family
members feelings and try to
understand them.

8. Be courteous, tactful and
considerate and show respect for
family members.

9. Avoid preaching and
lecturing.

10, Don Tt fall for excuses and do
avoid using them yourself.

11. Don Tt whine, yell or nag.

12. Develop a good sense of
humor, but learn when to use
humor and when to be serious.
Avoid destructive teasing.

NOTE: If you are not on the
mailing list, please apply:
Agricultural Extension Service,
1717 W. Fifth Street, Greenville,
N.C. 27834.

All of us know Miss Addie Gore.

SOME SERIOUS BUT
CHALLENGING TRUTHS
EXCERPTS OF THE N&O

MARCH 26, 1989
1, Many students qualify for the
lunch program, a good indicator
of family poverty.
2. Many children receive
federally funded remedial help in

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math and reading.

3. Mnay graduates who enroll
in college as freshmen will need
remedial help.

4. Many drop out and become
pregnant.

5. Parental involvement is
needed.

6. Individualized instruction
should be stressed.

7. Not enough students excel
academically.

8. Parents need to push theur
children to study and they fail to
make education a priority at
home, thus, student motivation is
killed.

9. Travel is an inexperience.

10. Low student motivation and
self-esteem,

1l. Reading among many
students difficult though fine
libraries.

12. Television occupies a great
deal of them.

13. Fourth grade children can Tt
read at first grade level.

14, Few students seek challeng-
ing academic courses in rural
high schools.

15. Continuing inequities bet-
ween the poorest counties and the
urban centers exist.

16. Many children come from
broken homes, illiterate parents.

17. Weapons and drugs seldom
show up in rural schools.

18. Both parents are working,
they are tired and don Tt have
time for kids; thus, leadership is
lacking at home for parents.

19. Many students qualify for

free or reduced-price lunches and ,

lag behind their grade level

academically.

20. Babies pacers babies.

21. Parents can Tt discipline
themselves. How do you expect
them to discipline their children?

22. Homes in rural area are
barren of books, magazines,
newspapers, sometimes even
telephones. They see the world
through television.

23. Many students mimic their
parents by dwelling on
materialistic goals " cars,
stereos, clothes, even it it means
sacrificing school work for long
hours in a Fast Food Restaurant
or grocery store.

24. In the more affluent
districts where most students
come from working class, two-
parent homes, more than half of
these students drive to school in
cars that often are the envy of
their teachers " new Honda Ac-
cords, Buick Regals, and Pontiac
Firebirds fill the student parking
lot.

25. It Ts hard to tell a kid he
needs to get a good education to
have what he wants when he is
driving a $20,000 car.

26. Television, teachers say, is
one of their biggest enemies.
Television robs students of
reading time.

27. Many kids are passed
basically on attendance.

28. Teachers must believe in
themselves and believe in their
kids, making exciting things
happen.

29. Some cannot read the tex-
tbook at all.

30. Experienced teachers sa
they cannot hold the interest tat
their students.

31. Most sit quietly but
disinterested.

32. Rural students are better
behaved than their urban papers

33. Visitation of hanes bs by
teachers for purpose of parental
involvement, teaching them
basic skills two nights a week,
some of whom are working for a
high school diploma, happens in
one country.

34. Access to computers,

35. Parents who never finished
high school are going to school
with their three and four year
olds, becoming role models.

36. Children who attend
preschool are less likely to fail in
school, become involved in
crime, become pregnant as
teens, or end up on welfare.

37. Every child that can learn,
can make progress.

38. Rural schools apprear to
have strong parental
involvement.

39. Regardless of money spent,
illiterate students are still turned
out which is frustrating.

40. There Ts a high correlation
between good teachers and good
student performace.

41. It Ts a worry that parents are
being encouraged to rely too
heavily on schools.

42. It is the parents respon-
sibility to work with your child
and have your child ready for an
education.

THE END

Black doctors treat black patients study says

A Howard University College of
Medicine (HUCM) survey reveals
that its predominantly black alum-
ni provide patient care to a
substantial number of poor blacks
in urban areas.

The survey Ts findings also show
that though most Howard medical
Students depend heavily on loans
to finance their education, per-
sonal satisfaction and service to
others combined to outrank finan-
cial considerations as the motiva-
tion for working as a physician.

The comprehensive survey of 49
classes, in which 83 percent of
respondents were black, was
reported in the February issue of
~ ~Academic Medicine. ? T It adds to
the limited information available

about the practice patterns of
black physicians.
a analysis of the findings revealed
that:

¢ Although 53 percent believe
that there are too many physicians,
63 percent said there are too few
black physicians.

¢ 57 percent of respondents T pa-
tients were black, and respondents
estimated fully one-third were
poor or very poor.

¢ Educational debts significantly
affected physicians T choices of

practice logations, specialty, and
type of practice.

e Physicians were becoming
more concerned &bout malpractice
suits and about medical student
impairment by

and physician

pa

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alcohol and drugs.

The survey report, ~ ~A Second
Survey of Graduates of a Tradi-
tionally Black College of
Medicine, T T was prepared by David
G. Johnson, Ph.D., consultant;
Sterling M. Lloyd, Jr., M.R.P.,
assistant dean for student affairs,
HUCM, and Russell Miller, M.D.,
vice president for health affairs,
Howard University. The medical
school conducted the study to
learn more about the practice
characteristics its alumni, par-
ticularly those of black physicians,

and about ways to improve the.
university Ts medical program. A:
similar but more limited survey :

was conducted in 1978.

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ii iI? 118 119 120 IS IT BEDTIME? . .. According to Heilig Meyers store manager, Ned Godley, if it is bedding time (or
furniture time) he can help make it right on time! Ned, his staff and family were on hand during the
1 123 124 125 Pitt/Greenville Chamber of Commerce sponsored by Expo T89 held April 6, 7, and 8 at the new Green-
ville Warehouse. Ned invites you to stop in at their Greenville Blvd. location to browse through their
126 1 1 huge showroom and open a charge account to furnish your home or apartment today.
(Voice photo by Jim Rouse)
ACROSS drum 34 Small pi 83 Separated i-
1 Sail close to 51 Early auto tee S Plenpoles aan ower quant. 6 Gazed mali 3 Unbiased Gary Burg- ee machine _ "*114 Actress Mer-
the wind manufacturer 36 Singer 87 o " Butter- : Sestd 4 Certain hoff omach ean 77 High and low rill
& Computer 52 Della or Pee McEntire milk Sky ? ne - ? if 15 Trolley shel- freight car- 40 Verb form 54 Caphal f 2 Jessica Lb aakt tiered
programming Wee 37 Overtax 88 Broadway's an rs riers used with apital of ~= " "-102 Jessica 80 Kukla, Fran 118 Ending for
language 53 Souvenir 40 Jack Webb's Connell pester word 16 Fbilipeine othou ? becker ot veteher and " post or host
10 Seevet 6B tbe ack We i, y 119 Frozen termite thou 86 Saul Ts rela- 57 Becker of wrote of it 81 Country on 120 Stammerin
oahd antu tri TV series 90 Sills and 121 Last writes? 17 Await deci- 41 Directed tive tennis 104 Burden the Red Sea sounds $
is x eme 56 She's osweet 42 Weedy rye Sutherland 122 Of the ear pens toward a 89 Turtle Ts 88 Peeled oe 84 Radio Cit
ott as apple grass 91 Yields 123 City in North 18 Aconite goal upper shell 59 Variable 106 oCommon Music Hay
rece cider T 46 Coronet 92 Unruffied Dakota 28 Hawaiian 43 Ruth's 91 US. philan- stars Sense ? wri- director
10 viet sea 57 Gets the bet- 47 Cosmetic 93 Start for 124 Oily, cyclic timber tree mother-in- thropist 62 Vandal ter
7 a or Jong ter of item neck or ketone 30 He wrote law 92 Commuter 64 Ceremonies 107 Not cordial
1 vinged 58 American 48 Fido's doc through 125 Smooth con- oCome Back, 44 Work, in groups 66 Irish sea god 108 Canadian
22 Pickler Ts colonist 50 One type of 95 Asian king- sonant Little Sheba ? physics 94 Lotto's cou- 68 TV's Linda prov. RE AD
or plant on 60 orrelee dom: abbr. 5 Lament 126 Bail 32 Desert gar- 2 pioar ja sin 70 Relies 109 Irish novelist
Amazon Pi ts . 96 More 6 o " You 127 Ruhr valley ments yi gal matte r 38 ae bird 72 Searches 110 Gielgud and ~ 3
cela rational Kind of Glad city 34 Former orton © 97 She was thoroughly Guinness THE M
24 Gas or water employee 97 Musical We Did? ? 128 Animal fat European great power Lucy 73 Aside 112 Coagulate
follower 63 King of Tyre Count 7 Makes a lap? 129 Cabbage kingdom 62 Eliminated § 99 Attack from 74 Street show 113 First she-
25 French sec- "_ 65 Princess of 98 Cubic meters _ 8 It precedes salad 35 Not once potholes the air 75 Simple pherd ] E
urity Monaco " 100 Tapes boat or box DOWN 37 Impassive
26 Punjab prin- 67 Russian river = 102 Valuable fur = 9 Posture or 1 Secular 38 Girl's nick-
cess 69 Made public 103 Pilaster bearing 2 Roman liquid name
27 Saturday 71 Wheel hub 105 Gains as pro- 10 Shipping measure 39 Role for
morning TV 72 Mardi gras, fit container a
fare for one 106 Soft, moist 11 Pub order
29 Musical dir. 76 Dogma part of fruit 12 Judge's D
31 Horned bee- 78 Large glass 107 Auto shelters bench ithout a dverti sin 4 ~.)
tles bottle 111 Actress " 13 Perfume g
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P.O. Box 334
Greenville, NC 27834

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Civic literacy move praised

People For the American Way in
North Carolina has announced its
support for legislation designed to
improve N.C. Ts ~ ~civic literacy. ?

~* ~We are very enthusiastic about
this effort to acquaint students
with the foundations of constitu-

tional thought, T T said Cathy
Rosenthal, executive director of
People For the American Way in
North Carolina.

Currently N.C. law requires
general instruction in United States
government. This bill, introduced

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-on February 2, and referred to the

Senate Education Committee
would provide for study of the
Declaration of Independence, the
United States Constitution, and
othe most important of the

_ Federalist Papers. ? T

~We commend this balanced ap-
proach to improving our civic
literacy, T T said Rosenthal. ~ ~We Tve
learned that one needs to be
cautious not to allow concern over
such a straightforward issue as this
to be used politically. For example,
in the past, extremist groups
pressured the U.S. Department of
Education to fund programs that
focus study solely on the Federalist
papers. Such an analysis would
validate the narrow theory of
~ ~original intent T? as the au-
thoritative interpretation of the
U.S. Constitution.

~Certainly the Federalist Papers
are important historical documents
worthy of study. They were written
specifically to encourage the state
of New York to ratify the ? Con-
stitution. However, they reflect
one point of view about the mean-

ing of the Constitution and ignore
the Bill of Rights, which was also a
major factor in the ratification of
the Constitution. Nowhere in the
Federalist Papers do Jay,
Hamilton, or Madison consider in-
dividual rights and freedoms that
came to be included in the Bill of
Rights. ? T ey

Rosenthal cautioned: ~ ~An ed-
ucational plan that requires con-
centration upon the Federalist
Papers while not specifically men-
tioning the Bill of Rights may be
perceived as suggesting that the
Fedetglist Papers are the primary
source on the meaning and intent
of the Constitution. This theory of
~ ~original intent T T is widely
disputed by scholars and legal pro-
fessionals.

Thorough study of the docu-
ments that have shaped American
history should include a full view
of the philosophies that have
created our American heritage of
diversity and pluralism. ? T

oEach of us should promote
civic literacy among our young
people.

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Bee eA

ISLAM
IN
FOCUS

ABDUL NAMAZ

IN THE NAME OF ALLAH
THE BENEFICENT THE
MERCIFUL

As Salaam Alaikum

Greetings of peace from the
Muslim community of Masjid Al
Nur.

Allah "there is no god but He,
the Ever-living, the Self-
subsisting by Whom all subsist.
Slumber overtakes Him not, nor
sleep. To Him belongs whatever
is in the heavens and whatever is
in the earth. Who is he that can
intercede with Him but by His
permission? He knows what is
before them and what is behind
them. And they encompass
nothing of His knowledge except
what He pleases. His knowledge
extends over the heavens and the
earth, and the preservation of
them both tires Him not. And He
is the Most High, the Great. Holy
Quran 2:255

God Ts religion is universal. It is
meant for anyone who wants to
submit to his will. Most of us
follow one faith or another. Very
few of us however, look beyond
the familiar to determine if what
we follow is in fact God Ts true
guidance. Until something hap-
pens to shake the foundation, we
go on thinking it Ts firm. Such, is
the story of a young Christian,
who later became a Unitarian.
Michael Servetus, lived in Spain
just 400 years ago, a time when
there was unrest in the establish-
ed Church, and in a period when
everyone was questioning the
nature of Christianity. The seven
hundred year Muslim rule of
Spain was coming to an end. In
this period Spain was conquered
by Muslims from North Africa
and became a great nation.
Under Muslim rule, Muslims,
Jews, and Christians lived in

. peace, and made many contribu-

tions to mathematics, science,
social studies, and business. This
peaceful co-existence came to an
end during the time of the
Crusades.

The march of Europe to the Ho-

.~» ly Land to freg it.from the ~in-

fidels T T, resulte@ein the persecu-

_tion of Jews and Muslims in
~ Spain. Young

vetus, became
appalled at what he saw. He
began to study the Bible closer
and was surprised to discover no
mention of the doctrine of Trini-
ty. He also discovered that the Bi-
ble did not always support what
was being taught by the Church.
Servetus stressed what he believ-
ed to be the true nature of Jesus.
He wrote: ~Some are scandalised
at my calling Christ the prophet,
because they happen not
themselves to apply to him the
epithet, they fancy that all who do
so are chargeable with Judaism
and Mohametism, regardless of
the fact that the Scriptures and
ancient writers call him the pro-
phet T T He first took his findings to
the leaders of the new reformed
~protestant T ? T religion, Martin
Luther and John Calvin. But they
were more annoyed with him
than interested in re-discovering
Christ Ts true teachings. Their
revolt against the Church was
political not spiritual. Servetus, a
brilliant scholar, wrote many
books on his belief, and during his
brief life managed to become a
great physician. He was later
betrayed by Calvin who turned
him over to Church authorities
for execution. He died at the ripe
old age of 42. Ironically, much of
what he taught was later adopted
by Calvin Ts followers. (Excerpts
taken from ~Jesus a Prophet of
Islam T T by Muhammad TAta
ur-Rahim)

Michael Servetus Ts story is not
an isolated one. Many Unitarians
were persecuted in his period and
after, because they refused to ac-
cept the doctrine of Trinity. Much
is written about these faithful
followers of Christ. But how could
we, an enslaved people, know of
these writings? When the Con-
stitution freed us, we were il-
literate, hungry, naked, and out
of doors. We wanted to fit in. We
wanted this society to accept us.
So we adapted. We survived,
barely.

~We accepted the religious
teachings of this society without
question. With that acceptance
we became like Esau, selling our

birthright for a bow] of beans. We "

of course understand the position
of our great grandparents, But
now after more than a hundred
years of so-called freedom, it is
time to question, it is time to seek
out God Ts truth, it is time to
regain our birthright, The
Adhan "the Muslim call to
~prayer, beckons us to, ~Come to
Prayer' T, ~Come to Success, ? T

FARA Ms

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Sa con te SS Te See Ge Oe

~ = ww we





Cc A A VW O \/ iz N bo ive

All season Jong, Shaw's women Ts coach
sobby Sanders kept telling people that his

eam would be a force in the CIAA basket:

all race. In the pre-season balloting, the
-ady Bears were picked to finish no higher
han fourth in the Southern Division behind
ohnson C. Smith, St. Augustine's, and Win-
ton-Salem State.

Sanders and his crew are having the last
augh now, after dismantling Johnson C.
imith 83-69 to take the CAA women's tour-
lament title.

"From the beginning I kept telling
wwerybody that we were going to serve
wtice," Sanders says. "Now people will real-
ze that when you play us, you'd bettcr be
eady. Let's just say that notice has been
erved. ? |

The Lady Bears (18-7) survived an early
11-9 run by Smith, then regrouped and con-

CIAA Women's
All-Tournament Team
Oeborah Howell Shaw Universty Guard
Kammy Crown Virginia State T a
pone ~oon C Seth, Fema
v
fe Brevi Johnson'C. ~Smith f
Angela Hami:on Johnson C. Smah Feed
Edith Jetlerson Show University Carter
Avetha Campbell Shaw Universi Guard
Benita Hicks St Augustine's Forward
Rhonda Gunter St Augustine's: Guard
Tournament MyP
» Edith Jeflerson ~

rolled the tcmpo of the game until the final
ight minutes. Edith Jefferson and Deborah
fowcll blazed the path for Shaw as the kcy
xrformers. Jefferson (25 points, 12
cbounds, and five.assists) was voted the
yumament MVP. She was invaluable in the
dw post, battling for loose balls and making
ife miscrable for thc Lady Golden Bulls with
er scoring inside the paint.

Howell, a razzle-dazzlc type of point

guard, look over at critical stages of the gamc
with adroit passes to open teammates and
slick moves to the hoop. Howell ended the
game with 19 points, eight assists, and six
steals.

oHey, I'm very happy with the way we
stuck together and won it all, ? Jefferson says.
"I had a litde fear at.the beginning of the
game when they jumped out to a big lead.
But we all felt that we could come back and
still win. And we have to thank coach
Sanders for giving us that kind of confidence
in ourselves to be able to do what we did. ?

Aretha Campbell brought her full arse-
nal to the court to-assist Jefferson and How-
ell. The sleek gunner fired in 21 points and
had seven rebounds. Her point output includ-
ed four of seven shooting from three-point
range.

In the second half, Shaw threatened to
tum the tide match-up into a route as they
held a commanding 58-41 lead with just over

13 minutes left to play in the contest. And by |

the three minute mark, Smith knotted the

score al 67-all on Angela Hamilton's layup.
From that point on, Howell took center
stage for the Lady Bears. During a.16-2 run,
the flashy ball handlcr scorcd 10 points,
including eight [rec throws. Howell added

| the finishing touches: with 57 seconds

remaining on a move. that made coach
Sanders show the crowd his own version of
the victory shuffle.

Howell brought the ball to the top of the
key, dribbled behind her back, then pulled up
for a fade-away shot that dropped neatly
through the nets. That bucket put Shaw up
79-69 with 44 secords remaining.

"I didn't do that to be a hot dog, ? Howell
explains. "The ume clock was running down
and I took what they gave me."

Howell credits Sanders with instilling a
fierce competitive spirit within her. "I've
been able to play well because I get a lot

shaw proves that predictions were inaccurate

, encouragement from my coach," she points

out. oI fecl that since he has the faith in mc
that | can do well, 1 owe it to him to show

| that | deserve his faith in me. ?

The Shaw-Smith final brought a long
standing drought in conference toumamcnt
play to a halt. The ~89 championship was the
first time that two Southern Division teams
dueled for the title since ~76 when the Lady

Bears downed Winston-Salem Statc.

The Lady Golden Bulls (20-9) refused
to succumb to Shaw's dominance. They start-
cd to reassert themselves with cight minutcs
left, cuuing Shaw's Icad 19 10 points, 62-52.
Onc of the problems that Smith had up to
that point, was the cold shooting of Antonica
Sanford, their dead-eye shooting forward.
For the greater portion of the game, Sanford
had been consistently short on her jumpcr.
When she missed, Shaw grabbed the
rebound and often raced down court for tran-
sition baskets.

Smith coach Hythia Evans-Licber then
ordered her team to attack with a threc-
fourths of the court press. The move was suc-
cessful as JCS stole several passes and forced
Shaw to shoot numerous air balls. In the
meantime, Adrian Williams scored some key
baskets inside and Sanford began to regain
her outside shooting touch.

Kim Brewington led the way for JCS
with 21 points. Sanford ended the game with
20 and Hamilton added 15 points and ninc
rebounds.

Aftcr Hamilton ticd the game, Shaw
steered matters back in their favor. The long

| Tun had taken a lot out of the Lady Golden

Bulls and they didn't have enough steam Icft
to finish what they had started.

oThey were able to get back in the game
becausc we didn't stay with our type of
offense, ? explains Sanders. oAs the coach, it's
my job to keep our people on course. That's
why I'm there on the sidclincs. ?

Betty Boop & Felix The Cat

THERE'S
SOMETHING
WRONG WITH

THIS TV

EVERY TIME I TURN UP
THE BRIGHTNESS
CONTROL...

King Features Symicate, inc. World rights reserved

¢?,?

IT SWITCHES TO THE
PUBLIC TELEVISION
STATION !

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ip
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\UPERMAKKE te

The run that Smith made at Shaw gave
coach Sanders some anxious momenis. But
he felt that his team would weather the storm
and prevail in the end,

"When you have to come back like they
did, it takes a lot of energy, ? Sanders adds.
oTo come back all the way, you have to have
enough people to shuffle in and out of the
game to keep that momentum going. If you
don't, you'll make a strong run, but you'll also
fizzle because you can't maintain that pace.
That's when we were able to come back. ?

The key to Shaw's title victory, the
coach says, was being able to play the kind
of defense that denied Hamilton the ball. oWe
had to put a lot of defensive pressure on them
up front so they couldn't get into their run-
ning game. The ladies did the job because 11
was rare for Smith to get any uncontésted
shots and that was very important. We got the
good, solid, defensive effort and that Ts what
wins championships. ?

-Lawrence Curry ee tw, ~e
DEBORAH HOWELL

Mayor Edward E. Carter, Elected Officials and
Members of The Pitt/Greenville Community

Dennis E. Chestnut, Ph.D.
President & North Carolina Chapter
Conference Committee

April 10, 1989

RE: Southern Regional Conference

On behalf of The Association of Black Psychologists
and The North Carolina Chapter, I would like to take
this opportunity to thank you for your having helped
to make the Southern Regional Conference, held in
Greenville this past weekend, a success. You were
supportive, warm and stimulating. Conference at-
tendees report having thoroughly enjoyed their stay
here.

We salute the parents and participants in the First
Annual Pitt/Greenville Black Child Talent Develop-
ment Program. Best Wishes to all our contestants
and first place winners Barkeiya Ormond and Cherry
Nicole Fields.

We invite you to join us as we continue to celebrate
April, National Black Mental Health Month and"People
Reaching People: Pathways To Black Mental Health."

Again, thank you Pitt/Greenville.

we in Unity, Oe and Progress,

A SA Yi, Cla hpte,/)

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was just for openers. T

a = Sure, after a Grand Opening Celebration we retum

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es to business as usual.

Except for us, it's pretty unusual. Our low, everyday
prices are so low that people keep coming back for more,
and keep us opening up new stores.

de

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Because we have hun- , yy) WINS

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volume, we can discount every

product we sell, and we do. ; "Y\\| gl
You can save money on the LIT NBT SN)

latest fashions for the whole fam- (GI =~ BNW

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goods, cosmetics, toys, phones, | ate . Ji

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oWITH OVER 44
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YEAR, THERE TS
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STORE ? summer sun in comfort.

In addition to our everyday
low discount prices, you'll find
there are exciting sales going on
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Some items in our Grand Even more, you'll like our
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them back again, at the same super 1 ladly e it or refund your
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In addition to the products Because we're the discount ~ southern smile.
featured here, you'llalsofindlotsof store that's based inthe Southeast, - So come in to Roses, and

oother things on sale, ineveryone weoffermoresouthernwarmth " see how the southern store gives
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oWe Tve Come A Long Way ?

Then I asked her if we were go-
ing to clean the yard and she said
yes, but we had something else to
do before we cleaned the yard
and attic. After she had locked
the door she came up to me and
pushed me across the bed and
began to undress me, but I didn Tt
give in to her advances. I struggl-
ed with her until I had almost lost
my breath. When she said, you
may as well give up because
nobody knows you Tre here and I
have been trying to get you in this
position for a long time. Then I
told her that I was afraid so-
meone would catch us there and
I would be in trouble. Nobody will
catch us, because nobody is com-
ing here but you and me, and the
cook will be gone in a little while.
Then I told her that I believed the
cook saw us but she said she
didn Tt. After a few minutes she
got up and took the key out of the
door and laid it on the dresser and
came over to the bed and began
pulling off her clothes, laying
them carefully on a chair. After
she had finished she stood in the
middle of the floor with both
hands over her head turning
round and round as if she was on
a stage in a show. She finally
said, don Tt I look pretty& I
couldn Tt say a word as I sat on the
side of the bed watching a white
woman in her home parade
around the room just like she
came into the world.

She stopped turning and came

over to the bed and pushed me
over on my back and said, I
believe we are going to have
some fun, while she tried to un-
dress me.

I was no match for her since,
she weighed so much more than
my 147 pounds. Plus, she was
about two inches taller than I and
I just didn Tt have no other way
out but to give in fearing she
would scream and bring the
neighbors. After she pulled the
shades down, I notices it was get-
ting dark. I soon discovered that
I had been there for almost a
whole day and I was beginning to
worry about her parents coming
home. I noticed she had dozed off
to sleep and that was my chance
to leave, but when I got up, I must
have awaken her because as I
reached for the key so that I could
gtet out, she raised her head from
the pillow and whispered good
night. I will see you again soon.
So, I went down the stairs and out
the back door and ran all the way
to the colored section of town. I
was almost home when I met one
of my friends on his way to the
Busy Bee Calf where he had
started to get some hot dogs. He
asked me if I would go with him,
and I told him that I would.

When we got almost there, we
could hear the sound of a juke box
playing one of the popular songs
of the day. The closer we got to
the cafe, the louder the music got.
We could hear Billy Eckstein

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(Continued from page 1)

singing a song that went like this.

Hello baby, I had to call you on
the phone . Hello baby, I had to
call you on the phone because I
feel so lonesome and daddy wants
his baby home.

It Ts a down right rotten low
down dirty shame, It Ts a down
right rotten how down dirty
shame.

The way you treated poor me,
I know I Tm not to blame.

Jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly stays on
my mind.

Jelly, jelly, jelly, jelly stays on
my mind.

Jelly roll killed my papa are
ran my mama stone blind.

After the record was over, we
picked up some hot dogs and
started back home when we
noticed a white policeman follow-
ing us. We were walking along
the street sining the song that we
had just heard on the juke box.
On the other side of the street
were two young white girls walk-
ing in the opposite direction. We
came to the corner where we
were to turn around and go to the
westend of town when the police
called to us and told us to wait;
we stopped and waited for him to
catch up to see, when we heard
him say, didn;t I hear you two
niggers medling at those white
girls, and we told him we were
just singing a song. Well, you bet-
ter not sing it any more because
it sounded like you were medling
with those girls.

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4 4 hadi oN
30-9:30

* 1 bl

152-7566
706 South Evans Street

actea ps usa d tagtooga leit fie a ie ae alts.

tr

OPERA DIRECTOR ... Talmadge Fauntleroy, a graduate of East Carolina University who is now direc-
tor of the Studio Lirico opera workshop in Stia, Italy, returned to his alma mater this week to work with
advanced student singers in the ECU School of Music. Here, Fauntleroy, right, coaches Timothy Legeros,
left, and Grace Oh, in developing characters they will portray in a public performance Friday, April
7. Legeros is a sophomore from Morehead City. Oh, a junior, is a resident of Durham. Photo Tony Rumple.

WE GUARANTEE
HOT DELICIOUS FOOD QUICKLY

HOWARD TS

RESTAURANT

BUYER TS MARKET e

2400 MEMORIAL DRIVE

(919) 355-0140
BREAKFAST
1 =e [0 $1.60 Steak&2Eggs.................. $3.60
2Eggs ...................... 1.80 Steak &1Egg...................$3.30
1 Egg, Baconor Sausage ....... 2.50 Pork Chop&2Eggs.............. 3.60
2 Eggs, Bacon or Sausage....... 2.95 Cheese Omelet.................. 2.20
1 Egg, Country Ham............ 2.95 HamOmelet.................... 2.95
2 Eggs, Country Ham........... 3.30 Ham & Cheese Omelet............ 3.20
1Egg,Ham .................. 2.50 Pancakes ...................00. 2.50
2Eggs,Ham ................. 2.85 Cereal&Milk ................... 1.25
Breakfast Served with Grits or Hash Browns & Toast
HOMEMADE BISCUITS _ .65
HAM 1.0... cece cee eee eee $95 Egg&Ham..................... $1.50
BaCon ... 0.6... eee ee 85 Egg&Bacon ................... 1.40
Sausage ........ 5.2... cee eee 85 Egg &Sausage.................. 1.40
oo 80 Egg&Cheese .................. 1.20
Cheese .......... 0.20 cece ee eee 80
SIDE ORDERS
Country Ham ................ $1.95 Steak .................. 00.000. $2.45
Ham .... 0... 0.0 1.40 PorkChop ..................55. 2.20
Bacon ........... 5.0... e eee 140 Sausage ...................008. 1.50
SANDWICHES
Hamburger .................. $1.15 Cheeseburger....... Soe Soe $1.40
oo 95 Ham&Egg................0008. 1.60
Sausage & Egg ............... 1.35 Bacon&Egg ................... 1.40
Ham & Cheese ...... 1.40 Grilled Cheese ........ 1.10
Country Ham ................. 2.35 CountryHam&Egg.............. 2.10
Hot Dog ................ Dees 75 Bar-B-Que........... 0.0.0.0... ee 95
Chick-Filet.................05. 1.30 Double Cheeseburger ............ 1.85
Club Sandwich ................ 2.65 Chicken Tenders 5 pieces ......... 1.50
Philly Cheese Steak ............ 2.65 BLT. 2... eee eee eee. 1.30
Fish Sandwich ................5. 1.75
DINNERS
_ Served with Bread and Two Vegetables
Hamburger Steak ............. $3.95 Pork Chops..................4.. $3.95
Grilled Ham Steak.............. 3.95 1/4 Fried, BBQ, or Broiled Chicken... 3.75
Bar-B-Que ...............045. 3.75 RibEyeSteak................... 6.25
Country Style Steak ............ 3.95 Liver&Onions .................. 3.75
VEGETABLES
French Fries ..............000- $.85 ColeSlaw ...................... $.65
Hash Browns ...............00505 85 Lettuce & Tomatoes ............... 50
Cream Potatoes ................. 85 ButterBeans..................... 85
Collards .......... 0.0.0.0. cee 85 Green Beans.............: Sees .85
Lima Beans................000 0. 85 COM ..... eee eee eee ee .85
Homemade Soup Daily $1.35
ICE CREAM & DESSERT
Vanilla... 6. ee $.50 Cheese Cake ................... $2.25
Chocolate ..................0008 50 Assorted FruitPie ................. 75
Strawberry ..........0 0.0000 000 5. 50 PecanPie .............. 0.00.00, 85
Butter Pecan...............0005. 50 Milk Shakes .................... 1.00
Sundaes $.85

~ap iene cer

We Cater House Parties, Dinner Parties and Receptions.
Call Chef Robert at Howard Ts Restaurant.

WE SPECIALIZE IN PLATE LUNCHES
$2.95 to $3.25, EAT IN or TAKE OUT.
FOR SOME OF THE BEST HOME COOKED
MEALS IN GREENVILLE --GIVE US A TRY

THE ~M T VOICE-THURSDAY, APRIL 13-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1969-7

ax @ @ 5 2 ee RS







Sinan L. JAMISON
aya to her death in August
1987, former New Yorker Shir-
ley Simpson called on her sister
Linda Cromwell, who resides in
Florida, to be legal guardian for
her three-month old daughter.

Shirley had a drug problem
and the state had already taken ~
one of her children..She didn Tt
want the same fate to befall her
new little girl, so in June, right
after the child (who will remain
anonymous) was born in St.
Vincent's Hospital, Staten ls-
land, (June 1, 1987) she started
proceedings that would place
her daughter with her family.

Adhering to the natural in-
clination in the African-Ameri-
can community towards the ex-
tended family, Cromwell happi-
ly agreed to her sister Ts request.
However, nearly two years

later, Cromwell finds herself
still without her niece, and she
is locked in a custody battle
with an affluent white couple
who want the child for them-
selves and as a result the child
has become the focal point of a
legal battle, that according to
those concerned, threatens to go
against state adoption regula-
tions that give priority to blood
relatives.

~At the end of June the hospi-
tal Ts children services worker,
Kathy Girgen told me she
would go before the judge and
try to give me custody before
the baby left the hospital. How-
ever, the judge told her that it
would be necessary that an in-
terstate compact study between
New York and Florida be con-
ducted before the child was re-
leased. She also told me that
there was a possibility they
could arrange a verbal agree-
ment. In July they told me it
was approved and I shouldn't
have any problems getting the
baby, T T Cromwell explained
from Florida.

oEverything seemed to be go-
ing okay, T T explained Leora
Neal, executive director of the
Association of Black Social
Workers Adoption Services on
W. 125th Street, Harlem. ~ oThe
baby stayed at St. Vincent Ts for
two months because of her ad-
diction and'on August 11, 1987
was placed'in the Angel Guar-
dian Home, a _ volunteer
childcare agency in Brooklyn.
They placed the child in one of
their foster care homes with a
white couple. Usually when a
child is placed in foster care,
they leave the city or volunteer
agency and the field office is no
longer involved. But in this case
the field office never got out of
the picture. Which is precedents

setting in itself. ?

Meanwhile, the foster care
parents, Jack Hammil, a yacht
salesman and his wife Laurie
Hammil fell in love with the
child and are now using their
considerable influence and
wealth ta attempt to circum-
vent the law and keep the child,
according to Cromwell.

oIn August I met the Ham-
mil Ts and I saw the child for the
first. time, T T Cromwell said.
oThey told me that they wanted
to keep the baby, and | told
them I couldn't discuss any-
thing with them at that time be-
cause my sister had just
passed. ?

During the following year,
Cromwell kept in touch with all
parties and was constantly reas-
sured the child would be re
leased to her ~ ~soon. ? T

~ ~In December they told me I
would have the baby, but
they've been telling me that for
two years, T T said Cromwell. o ~Be-
cause of them being white with
a lot of money they are pulling
strings. ? T

At the beginning to January,
the Hammil Ts dispatched an
African- American woman nam-
ed Marci Williams from
Newark, NJ, to Florida to try to
convince Cromwell to give up
her fight.

~She came down to Florida in
behalf of the Hammil Ts. In Fact,
when I came home she was sit-
ting in my house and asked if
could we talk in private. She
told me she was a friend of Jack
and Laurie, who sent her to
talk, T Cromwell said. ~ ~She said
~Linda I really need to talk with
you. T She said she dreaded hav-
ing to go back to tell them that
she couldn Tt find any dirt on me,
and then she told me Jack had
told her to start at $5,000 and go
as high as $10,000, and that if I
was on drugs, like my sister
was, I would take it. They even
tried to take me shopping, but I
told her no. ?

The Hammils have attempted
to persuade Cromwell to come
to New York and meet with
them. And at one point, accord-
ing to Cromwell and Neal, the
Child Protective Services were
called to question Cromwell con-
cerning and whereabouts of
Simpson Ts other child who was
taken by a great aunt and
secreted away. -

oThe police and child pro-
tective services were called in
and even though they were told
who took the child, they never
went to their home, ? said Neal.

oThey tried to blame Cromwell for
the missing boy and said since
that incident occurred, they

Sullivan to get
severance pay

By JESSE H. WALKER

Dr. Louis W. Sullivan, secre-
tary of the Department of
Health and Human Services is
going to take the money he
earned -- all $215,000 of it.

Last week he reversed his
decision to forfeit severance pay
earned during his previous post
as president of Morehouse
School of Medicine in Atlanta.

In a statement issued last
Tuesday evening by h Ts office in
Washington, Dr. Sullivan said
he will get $215,000 in
severance benefits that had
been included in his Morehouse
contract. He said that the Office
of Government Ethics had ap-
proved the agreement and that
should end a dispute over how
much, if any, severance pay he
can accept.

After questions were raised
about his nomination, Dr. Sul-
livan said he would forfeit about
$300,000 in accumulated sab-
batical pay. Federal workers are
prohibited from accepting com-
pensation from any source other
than the federal government for
their official duties.

At his confirmation hearing,
however, several members of the
Senate Finance Committee ex-
pressed concern that Dr. Sul-
livan would have to surrender
any benefits he had earned at
the Atlanta school. Campbell
Gardett, an HHS spokesman,
said that those concerns led Dr.
Sullivan to reopen negotiations
about severance pay with the

school Ts board of. trustees after
his confirmation.

Dr, Sullivan previously had

sched to forgo the money be-

cause GS concerns raised in news
le : : . - . i"

DR. LEWIS W. SULLIVAN

to the medical school, which re-
ceives about $5.8 million a year
in federal grants. He made that
decision despite the Office of
Government Ethnic Ts informal
approval of the severance pay
as money earned before he came
to the federal government.

In his statement, Dr, Sullivan
said: | have made this agree-
ment in the full faith that it in
no way present ethical dif-
ficulty, or appearance of dif-
ficulty, with regard to my serv-
ices as HHS secretary. ?

The secretary said the agree-
ment was ~ ~forged by the
Morehouse board (of trustees)
and myself and that it has been
approved by the Office of
Government Ethics. ?

Members of the Senate Fi-

that since the child has yet to be
transferred out of placement, he
didn Tt want the child Ts status
up in the, air, so he decided to
leave the child with the Ham- ,
mils. ?

The day before the next
scheduled hearing (January 27),
the commissioner decided to
keep the child with the foster
parents, and set yet another

hearing for May 1, 1989.
oUnfortunately for Linda, the
longer the child stays in the
foster home the worse her posi-
tion is since their argument is
that the child is bonded to

them, ? T Abbott said.
Spokesperson Susann Trazoff

of the Commissioner Ts office
declined comment, citing the
sensitive nature of the case.

The Hammils could not be
reached for comment.

oThe foster parents knew the
aunt was supposed to get the
child, T T said Neal. ~ oThis issue is
so significant because if parents
are allowed to use bonding as a
way to holding on to a child,
then children may never be
reunited with their families.

LINDA CROMWELL

couldn Tt give her the girl. ?

In 1988 Cromwell contacted
William Crinker, commissioner
of the Human Resources Ad-
ministration, to seek some
redress.

oThe law says natural rela-
tives have first priority, if they
are fit, T T Neal explained. ~ ~It is a
violation of the Child Welfare
Reform Act of 1979, which
gives priority to natural family.
The foster family is alleging
that because of the bonding
that has gone on between them
and the child over the past 17
months that they should have
custody. But it Ts against the
law and fosters parents have no
right to do that. If so, that could
happen to anybody Ts child. ?

Yet despite the law, the judge
decided the foster parents
should retain custody until the
matter is adjudicated.

oInitially. in January, the
agency contacted the Hammil's
and said they would remove the
child. They (Hammils) re-
quested a hearing at the City le-
vel and in several days the hear-
ing examiner, who heard the tes-
timony and prepared a decision
said the child should remain in
the foster family, ? stated Barry
Abbott, attorney for Cromwell.
oConsequently, the next day
the judge initiated an extension
of the placement petition in
Staten Island Family Court.

_ His reasoning is assumed to be

Affirmative action could be in really big trouble

Confusion still reigns after the Supreme Court Ts
decision knocking down Richmond, Virginia's
minority setaside program. Opinions differ about
whether that ruling kills affirmative action or
whether it leaves room for the continued existence
of such programs.

And everyone is waiting for the Court to drop

tT -02.0- ee
| :

shoe " up-
coming ca- TO BE
EQUAL

ses will af-
fect affir-
mative ac-
tion in local
government |
hiring and og
in private ,
employers T promotions.

To take the bright side first, the Richmond deci-
sion need not choke off minority setaside pro-
grams of local governments. Most local programs
are based on goals, not the kind of quotas Rich-
mond wrote into its law.

The judges also struck down the Richmond law
because the city did not prove setasides necessary
to remedy past discrimination. In most places,
such documentation is available and state and
local governments should be compiling statistics
and other evidence of past discrimination to de-
fend their present setaside programs.

A lot will turn on what the Court ultimately
decides is adequate evidence of discrimination and
what appropriate remedies will be acceptable.

Some judges have the peculiar notion that only
specific individuals had been discriminated against
" and who can prove it " should be given
preference in a setaside or an affirmative action
program.

That tells us more about judicial theories than
about reality in our America. Discrimination
against African Americans is easily proven and
richly documented. We were discriminated
against, however, as a group and on the basis of
group affiliation, not as individuals. Group
discrimination leading to group disadvantage re-
quires group remedies.

John E. Jacob

Whether that logic can penetrate the ideologues
on today Ts federal courts is doubtful, and that
means the future of affirmative action could be in
peril.

Some upcoming cases before the Supreme
Court will determine whether its narrower inter-
pretation of the consitutionality of racial
preference programs is tightened into a noose that
murders affirmative action, or whether guidelines
will be refined to the point where such programs
will continue.

One case involves a challenge to a court-ordered
hiring quota for firemen. Another will decide
whether statistical evidence of low minority hiring
and promotion is sufficient to show employer
discrimination in apparently neutral hiring and
promotion practices.

Another big pending case will find the Justices
reviewing the 1976 Runyon decision that allowed
damages in private discrimination cases. And the
lower courts have numerous other cases challeng-
ing affirmative action and minority setaside pro-
grams.

So the next several months will be crucial for the
future of African Americans T efforts to close the
economic gap and achieve opportunities long
denied them.

Affirmative action is an essential mechanism to
overcome discrimination and its effects. The
Supreme Court Ts new majority seems to be acting
as if we are a color-blind society with no need to
make special efforts to overcome past denial of
constitutional rights.

As Justice Thurgood Marshall wrote in his dis-
sent in the Richmond case, the majority is ~ ~con-
stitutionalizing its wishful thinking. ? T It is apply-
ing the same standards and tests to efforts to over-

ocome discrimination Ts effects as it did to state-

imposed segregation.

It may be up to the Congress and the Ad-
ministration to frame a national response to this
runaway Court, with legislation that frames a con-
stitutionally acceptable affirmative action stan-
dard and shelter local government and private af-
firmative action programs from the courts that are
trying, to-roll the clock, back.

Soy ule

Howard University founder Ts library

By GREG HARRIS

oT would feel that I hadn Tt|

been listening to them. I would
feel that I was out of touch with

them. And I would feel that I;
said }
Baraka =@

needed a mental] enema, T
Professor Amiri lI.
(AKA LeRoi Jones) during a
March 17 interview on the CBS
News ~Nightwatch T T program.
The answer was to Steven
Roberts T question about how
Baraka would feel if students

took over his office on the "

SUNY Stony Brook campus.
Professor Baraka appeared with
his son, Ras, who was the leader
of the March 6 takeover of
Howard University's Ad-
ministration Building.

~ Both father and son asserted
that the main issue in the event
~was ~ ~improvement T T in
Howard's Afro-American
studies program. They
downplay the importance of
Republican National Com-
mittee chairman Lee Atwater Ts
election to the Howard Board of
Trustees. If that is true, then
the building takeover was noth-
ing more than a pre- Easter
prank.

Ras Baraka Ts attempt at sar-
casm bordered on the adoles-
cent. He said that all Howard
University does is ~ ~train you so
you have the ability to have a
$30,000 a year salary. T T But
young Baraka Ts most bizarre ac-
cusation was about Howard's
Afro-American studies depart-
ment. He told viewers that the
department is ~ ~in like a little
hut type of building. T T In fact,

the Afro-American studies T

department is located in the
elegant Founders Library
Building. Obviously, Rags
Baraka is not majoring in ar-

chitecture (as. did 247 of

Howard's 1988 graduates).
Of course Baraka might be ex-

the 1987-88 academic year:

AIS

we

ye i

a oHOWARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY

March 30, according to Alan L.
Hermesch, Howard's director of
university relations. The second
semester began Jan. 12.

Howard's history

The establishment of Howard
University was a congressional
action in the wake of the Civil
War. On March 2, 1867, Con-
gress issued a charter speci-
fying the following departments
of the university: Education,
Collegiate, Theological, Medi-
cal, Law and Agriculture. The
university is named for Union
Army Major General Oliver O.
Howard, a Civil War Medal of
Honor recipient. Gen. Howard
was commissioner of the Freed-
man Ts Bureau, and was one of
ten of the school Ts founders. The
school's mission was linked to
the work of the bureau. It was
to help uplift the estimated 4
million freed Black American
slaves, as well as the estimated
25,000 Black Americans not
born into slavery.

- Among Howard's many dis-
tinguished graduates are
Supreme Court Justice Thur-
good Marshall, former Senator

Edward Brook, angie

interest in what Howard offers. and

Evidence of that arose last week

when I discovered that the T

young man had not been an en-
rolled student when he was

ing ~the demonstration. For /

some reason, Professor B
negotiated ? for his son

[Baraka enrolled on Thursday,

noe

science department was or-
ganized and established by Dr.
Ralph Bunche, the first Black
American Nobel Peace
Prize Laureate.

Utility of courses

As a requirement for a
bachelor's degree, each Howard
University undergraduate stu-
dent must complete at least one
course in Afro-American
Studies. After completing that
one course, Afro-American
studies is an elective. Students
are hard-pressed to amass the
required credit hours in their
major subjects; electives be-
come luxuries. Making - deci-
sions about luxuries is an in-
dication of maturity.

At the undergraduate level,
Howard University offers 25
courses in Afro-American
Studies. There are 65 graduate
level course in African Studies
& Research.

College students are prepar-
ing themselves to compete in an
ever evolving world, and their
choices are largely bused upon
their assessment of what will be
useful to them in that world.
During the 1987-88 academic
year, 2,399 Howard University
a eae ee enrolled in

coin oop three

choices (and the

ie

stare of dee.
oPolitical

_ marketing)

Communications Arts (121),
Psychology (95), and Political

Science (79). Forty-eight stu-
dents enrolled in African
Studies.

The Afro-American Studies
and African Studies & Research
departments compete for stu-
dents. At Howard University,

- seventy percent of the bachelor

degrees were earned in business
(finance, management and
or engineering
(electrical, civil and computer
systems). The demonstrated
quality of Howard University
students attracts Fortune 500
corporate employment
recruiters from The Bell
System, Du Pont, Hughes Air-
craft, IBM, Time Inc., and
Xerox -- among others.

Another indicator of
post-1960s student choices are
in the revitalization of the
Reserve Officer Training Corps
(ROTC) program.

Although Howard Univer-
sity Ts ROTC survived the Viet-
nam War era, there was an im-
pact. In 1978, only nine in-
dividuals were commissioned as
officers (5 Air Force and 4 Ar-
my). Six years later, the number

had risen to sixty (40 Army and:

20 Air-Force). During the past
21 years, Howard University
has graduated an average of
thirty men and women each
year through the ROTC pro
grams.

Whether Professor Baraka
and his son like it or not, the
students at Howard University
are concentrating on utility in
making their course selection
decisions, They seek to be pre-
pared, by their credentials, for
the 21st century. They are ful-
filling the mission of Howard

hs lective decison.

=







Faces and Places

" ALL MEATS PREPARED UNDER N.C.D.A. INSPECTIONS "

1/2 Beef cut and wrap

Hind cut and wrap

Front cut and wrap

T-Bone Steak

Sirloin Steak

Rib Steak

Round Steak

Chuck Steak

Rib-Eye Steak

Rib Stew Beef

Boneless Stew Beef

Ground Beef

Beef Ribs for Bar-B-Q .............66) 1.89 Ib.
Turkey Wings... .10 lbs. ...........5.. 5.90
Jamestown All Meat Hotdogs . .10 lbs. .. 11.50
Yorktown Bacon. .(6) 1 Ib. pks.......... 4,99

Call In Orders For FAST SERVICE!
All Meats Guaranteed
All Beef " Western

All Pork " Native

No Limit on Purchases | Sos

CALL IN YOUR ORDER WS
It Will Be con

x ote
Se,

~ MEAT SPECIAL

April Ist Thru April 29th

Ham Hocks Smoked... .10 Ibs. ........ 11.90
Country Sausage Dry.. .l0lbs.......... 19.90
Links, Sausage... .10 Ibs. ............. 14.50
Bulk, Sausage... .10 Ibs. .............. 12.80
Pork Neck Bones ................0005 .59 Ib.
Pork Tailed (Corned) ................ .99 Ib.
Country Side Pepper Coated 1.19 Ib.
Pork Front Feet ...................0. .59 Ib.
Pork Chittling, Raw... .10 lbs. ......... 5.50
Pork Chittling, Cooked ....10 lbs. ..... 10.40
Pork Brisket Ribs... .10lbs............ 5.50
Pork Chop, frozen... .10 lbs. ......... 16.90
Pork Salt Side (Small)

Slab Bacon Slice

Slab Bacon Whole :

Pork Spareribs...Frozen.............
Fresh Pork Shoulder

Lard, 25 Ib. Pail (Smithfield)

Pork Chops Center Cut Frozen. .10 Ibs. . , 19.90
Country Ham Hocks... .10 Ibs. ........ 11.90
Corn Bread Sticks (12 doz.) ............. 8.00
Pork Spare Riblet... .10 lbs. .......... 10.90
Jimmie Hickory Smoke... .10 lbs. .:... 14.60
Jimmie Brown Links... .10lbs......... 14.80
Pork Smoked Shoulder 1.29 Ib.
Pe sss .5 sb Wek athn » didine's .99 Ib.

~2

D STAMPS. ACCEPTED oa

|

THE ~M T VOICE-THURSDAY, APRIL 13-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1999-9

Turkey Neck... .10 lbs. ................ 5.90
Pork Chop, end cut... .l0 Ibs. ,........ 13.90
Pork Brisket Bones .................. .59 Ib.
Pig Front Feet .................0.005 .59 Ib.
Bologna, Stick-All Meat 1.19 Ib.
Smoked Ham Bone.................. .99 Ib.
Fresh Pork Shoulder 1.09 Ib.
Fresh Pork Back Bone ............... 1.49 Ib.
Fresh Pork Hams

Fillet Trout

A PACK

10 Ib. Chuck Steak
10 Ib. Ground beef
10 1b. Chicken Whole
10 1b. Prk. Chps. Mix
40 Ib. for $59.95

C PACK

10 lb. Round Steak

10 lb. Hot Dogs

10 lb, Chick. Leg

10 Ib. Pk. Sp. Ribs
40 Ib. for $47.95

Open
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
8:00 A.M. " 6:00 P.M.

~Pollard Trading oPost

100 Pollard Street
} Behind Fred Webb Ts Grain Mill
~Greenville, North Carolina

PHONE 758-2277
Owner and Operator

__ George Whitley

10 Ib. Sirloin Steak
10 Ib. Grd. Bf. /Pattys
10 lb. Smkd. Sausage
10 Ib. Fryers

40 Ib. for $49.95

D PACK
10 Ib. Chitlins
10 Ib. Pork Spare Ribs
10 Ib. Chicken Wings
10 Ib. Pork Sausage
40 Ib. for $39.95





smog RRP ran OOD

notes SP

&*e33* POR]

ise

PHURSDAY, APRIL 13-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1989-THE ~M T VOICE

PRESENT THESE COUPONS
FOR BIG SAVINGS THRU
MON., APRIL 17, 1989

5H CFA CRLOECRSOH?"?:: COUPONS
9 : nam MUST BE USED
WITH THIS COUPON BEFORE TUESDAY,

APRIL 18, 1989
AT ANY OF OUR
TEN LOCATIONS
IN EASTERN N.C.

9 $45 off

PURCHASE OF ~80.00 OR MORE

USE BEFORE APRIL 18, 1989

=
A,

9)
ry

ON PURCHASE OF
60.00 OR MORE, EVEN
SALE MERCHANDISE

USE BEFORE
APRIL 18, 1989

\ a yum! ¥
me TVW \e

ANY PURCHASE OF $40.00 OR MORE

USE BEFORE APRIL 18, 1989

ANY PURCHASE OF $20.00 OR
MORE, EVEN SALE MERCHANDISE

PLEASE USE BEFORE APRIL 18, 1989

MAKE WHITES YOUR ONE-STOP SHOPPING CENTER. SEE
OUR GREAT LINES OF LADIES T WEAR, MEN TS WEAR, e.
SHOES, LINGERIE, HOUSEWARES, CHILDREN TS WEAR,
HOSIERY, JEWELRY AND MUCH MORE.

~ .
Hines (Continued from page 1)
1967-1971 and received the D.D.S.

degree.

Dr. Hines has_ received
numerous honors, among which
include the Distinguished Service
Award of the Association of North
Carolina Alphamen in 1984.

oThe historically black _
leges enroll less than 20% o
black undergraduates, but Ciler
almost 40 percent of all bac-
calaureate degrees earned by
Blacks, ? Myers said. Based on
recent statistics, two black col-
leges account for 82 percent of all
Blacks earning degrees in den-
tistry; two account for 82 percent
in veterinary medicine. The
historically black colleges con-
tinue even now to press for ex-
panded access at a time when
many states are restricting ad-
missions to all colleges, T T he
added.

The HBCU Alumni will be in-
troduced and feted at a special

conference session and honored

at NAFEO Ts closing Leadership
Awards Banquet, Saturday night,
April 22. NAFEO is an associa-
tion of most of the nation Ts
historically and predominantly
black institutions of higher lear-
ning, including public and
private, two-year and four-year,
undergraduate and graduate
schools.

It was founded in 1969 as a non-
profit, voluntary independent
association representing the
HBCUs which enroll some 250,000
students each year and graduate
more than 40,000 alumni
annually.

Wiley and his wife, Gloria,
have three children and reside in
Greenville.

The TM T Voice is proud to salute
Wiley and all graduates of
HBCUs as well as the others to be
honored.

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Greenville, N.C. 27834
sonne M. Baker, Manager

isae See Us Today fe
@ Auto Loans @ Consumer Loans @ Dealer Financing

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2 pr. s T 5 reg. $47 to $57 ea.

Large Selection Of

(small sizes only)

Stride Rite
Reg. price to $47

Our Price $5.5] 5

(large selection)

Next door to Evans Seafood

- The TM T Voice

Smart Style.

t.

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a oe

¢ Hampton | |

L AN

3439 South Memorial Drive, Greenville, NC 27834
(919) 355-2521

Smart Price. Smart Choice.

And To Enhance Your $4 Lae

@ Continental Breakfast - no charge

@ Local Telephone Calls - no charge

@ *18 Years And Under - no charge

@ In Room Movie Channel - no o$
@ *Third And Fourth Adults - no charge
@ Ice And Spal no charge

Catherine W. Barnhart,

355-2521 or 1-800-HAMPTON

*Some restrictions may apply.

203 W. 9th St.

J9
TAX

General Manager

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Title
The Minority Voice, April 13-19, 1989
Description
The 'M' voice : Eastern North Carolina's minority voice-since 1987. Greenville. N.C. : Minority Voice, inc. James Rouse, Jr. (1942-2017), began publication of The "M" Voice in 1987 with monthly issues published intermittently until 2010. At different times, the paper was also published as The "M"inority Voice and The Minority Voice. It focused on the Black community in Eastern North Carolina.
Date
April 13, 1989 - April 19, 1989
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/66170
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