By Edith M Lederer UNITED NATIONS - Earlier this month, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan faced criticism from some U.S. law- makers because of alleged corruption in the oil-for-food program for Iraq. Although the church o The United States expressed con- fidence in Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Thursday and said he should remain at the helm of the United Nations, an abrupt turn- around from its refusal to back him Waging his own per perates for additional businesses, Prigen (on the left) says, “that the Subway shop is not about making money. It’s about mis- sions,” Mast of the people employed by the subway franchise are not mem- bers of True Bethel Baptist Church and added that employ people right from the community it serves. the church seeks to day, they have BUFFALO, N.Y. - If you've driven down the east side of the city of Buffalo recently, you've probably noticed the new Sub- way Sandwich shop that stands at 701 E, Ferry Street. The store, which opened in September, is a tribute to a community striving for spiritual, economical and physical transformation. At True Bethel Baptist Church, the Rev. Darius Pridgen is happy to serve the Word. He's also pretty quick to serve a SUBWAY sub. On any given day, the franchise serves people ranging from workers dropping Y for a quick lunch or elderly people wanting a clean, safe place to eat and con- verse or yourtg people needing somewhere to get a quick bite and hang out with friends or do homework. But the unique- ness of this store goes way beyond sou p and sandwiches. The shop is owned and operated by True Bethel Baptist Church. In fact, the entrance for the Church's gen- eral offices is located inside the sandwich shop. GREENVILLE, N.C, - During Thanksgiving week, the Eastern NC Episcopal District of The AME Afri- can Methodist Episcopal Zion Church held it’s 141st Annual Con- ference at St. Augustine's AME Zion Church located in Kinston where Rev, Julian Pridgen is the pastor. As the new AME Zion presiding Prelate, Bishop Richard K, Thompson replaced Bishop George E. Battle, Jr. The theme was “Becoming A Healthy Church” and. their motto was “Build a Bridge - Get Over It. Mixing ministry and business, al- though nota new idea, is a growing phe- nomenon. Rey. Darius G. Pridgen, who has pastored True Bethel Baptist church for the past ten years, says the sandwich shop is really just an extension of the church and provides opportunities for “marketing” the gospel of Jesus Christ. “Each church has a specific calling and purpose. Churches must examine what they are doing to get new members (people who are not a part of another con- gregation). | use my business sense that says | need to market and I need to use what I learned as an entrepreneur”. ex- plains Pridgen. “The entrepreneurial model provides us with the opportunity to become more self-sufficient and also to be able to employ our own people.” Pridgen believes that the gospel must be ‘packaged’ in a way that makes it at- tractive to people. He says, “You have to, first of all, offer a product, that is not nec- essarily what people want because the gospel message isn't about what people J During the conference, Bishop Thompson convened over the 3rd Episcopal District that makes up the NC Conference of the AME: Zion Church. This area includes the eastern counties of Pitt, Beaufort, Craven, Onslow, Lenoir and Edgecomb Counties. This Thanks- giving Week Conference lasting Six days, has been a long standing tra- dition among African Americans in the Eastern North Carolina area and concluded with new appointments with the Bishop appointing Pastors c . i ‘a : last week after a U.S. senator called for hisresignation. ° The unequivocal support from U.S. Ambassador John Danforth, who said he was speaking on behalf of the Bush administration, aligned the United States with the 190 other members of the United Nations who rallied to sup- port the beleaguered Annan. “We are not suggesting or pushing for the resignation of the secretary-gen- eral,” Danforth said. “We have worked well with him in the past and look for- ward to working with him for some time in the future.” | Sen. Norm Coleman's call last week for Annan’ resignation amid allegations of corruption in the U.N. oil-for-food Program in Iraq made headlines and led to an outpouring of support from na- tions around the world. The leaders of U.S. ally Britain, as well as France, Russia, Germany and other countries phoned the secretary- general to back him, and Annan gota rare standing ovation Wednesday from the U.N. General Assembly which in- cludes all 191 U.N. member states. President Bush twice refused to want but about what they need, But you have to package it ina way so that they will come and getit. I’ve listened to pas- tors complain bout attendance but never examine what they were offering. Jesus never forced anything down anybody's throat; he offered it’. When Pridgen first accepted the Position as pastor of the church they had gone through several church splits and were averaging about twenty-five people in attendance on any given Sunday. To- ; ave more thor people in combined attendance of their ‘three Sunday morning services, making them one of the fastest growing churches in the Buffalo area. Pridgen says that his success has been partly because he is “fool- ish”. “I don't care how many books you read or how many church models you study; no model is right for every church Pridgen says he has learned to do whatever the Lord tells him to do, with- out fear or hesitation. “I begin every day by lying on my face before God. I read a text from the Scriptures, I write in my journal and then I’m flat on my face be- fore the Lord saying ‘God whatever you want to do today, I'm ready for a miracle, You show me and I'll go’. Then I get up and I go to work.” The church started a work-skills pro- gram for young people two years ago but it fizzled without jobs for its araduates That's when the church, which is housed inside a former supermarket and attracts about 2,000 people each week, opened its own businesses: a small bookstore, silkscreen company and cleaning company that contracts with an adjacent charter school. For Subway officials, the church lo- cation — its first — posed no problems. “If there's room and it fits within the zoning board requirements, we're happy,” said Les Winogard, a spokesman for the Milford, Conn.-based chain. Of Subway’s 22,000 locations, 3,500 shops are in “nontraditional” places, like convenience stores, schools, sports arenas, hospitals and military bases. The city provided about $10,000 Theme “Becoming A Healthy Church” +" —~T to one years terms. Among those pastors of the NC Conference were a few notable transfers and appointments. Rey, Ronald P. McDougal from the Trin- ity AME Zion Church in New Bern was transferred to the New Jersey Conference and Rey. Charles Dillahart received a new assignment to St.Paul AME Zion Church in Pollacksville, N.C. Spiritedly, the conference was well received by long term delegates and conference attendees who ex! tharr three thousand. Se support the secretary-general last week, stressing that he wanted a “full and fair and open accounting of the oil-for-food program” so U.S. taxpay- ers “feel comfortable about suppott- ing the United Nations.” Some U.N. officials and diplo- mats saw this as a veiled threat that the United States might again stop paying its U.N. dues. “We have worked well with him in the past and look forward to workin with him for some time in the future.” -U.S. Ambassador John Danforth Danforth also called for a thorough inves- tigation. But he said Tuesday he had “great confidence” in the secretary-general. On Wednesday, U.S. deputy am- bassador Patrick Kennedy joined in the ovation at the end of Annan's presenta- tion to the General Assembly of a report that called for the most sweeping reforms of the United Nations since its found- ing in 1945, Annan said Tuesday he would stay on as U.N. chief and focus on reform during his final two years. Danforth said U.S. support for a thorough oil-for-food investigation in small business grants, Common Coun- cil member Antoine Thompson said. ile the church itself is tax-exempt, the portion dedicated to the restaurant is not, though it qualifies for exemptions under the state’s Empire Zone economic devel- opment program, he said. Since opening in September, the franchise has placed consistently among the top performers of Subway’s 80 stores in the region, at one point sending an embarrassed Pridgen beggit g, at other Subways for brea aie le rush. "It's turned into a bigger operation than we ever imagined," he said, Darius Pridgen describes himself as a husband, a dad, a pastor, and an entre- preneur. But he says being a pastor was something he never wanted to do, but does out of obedience to the calling of God on his life. He further notes that he much prefers to be an assistant. Janice Goodell, the church adminis- trator, has known Pridgen since they were children. She says he is the type of leader that genuinely cares about people. Loving people is what Darius Pridgen and True Bethel Church is all about. In fact, they continue to seek new and innovative ways to introduce people _ to the gospel of Jesus Christ. Pridgen notes how at one point he noticed that some of the young men did not want to come and sit in church for two hours so he em- ployed methods like making them secu- rity guards or having them run the video cameras. “I found that this gave them buy- in and makes them a part of something,” he explained. Pridgen says he tries to cre- ate opportunities that involve young people and by them being involved they receive the mentoring that is so lacking in the community. Pridgen says he refuses to have staff members who do not love people. “When I find I have that (someone who doesn't love people), I make changes quickly and honestly without lying to people or talk- ing down to them”. He explains that if people can't find love in the church then they will go into the streets and find it ugh acraby: |Serving Eastern North Carolina's Minority Communities Since 1988 | Complimentary Is Please Take ( ACGEN AACE “Vol. 17 Issue 15 - Dee, 17-31, had been misinterpreted as a lack of confidence in Annan and a desire for his resignation. He said he was asked to clarify that the United States sup- ported the secretary-general and did not want him to step down. . In his news conference Thursday, which was delayed for five hours, .Danforth said the oil-for-food probe was essentially “a criminal investiga- tion” and that the investigators must determine whether anyone is guilty of bribery, payoffs and corruption. “We are expressing confidence in the secretary-general and in his con- tinuing in office. We are also saying that the investigation is critically im- portant, that there is a cloud over the United Nations,” Danforth said. “The only way to dispel the cloud is let the sunlight in. And that means a thorough investigation, an objective investigation,” he said. Danforth was asked about recent revelations about Annan’s son, Kojo, who worked in Africa for a Swiss-based company that had an oil-for-food con- tract. He said Kojo Annan was an adult and implied he has to answer for himself. . “There is no question as to the per- sonal integrity of the secretary-general,” Danforth said. ___ Annan appointed former U.S. Fed- eral Reserve chairman Paul Volcker to lead an independent inquiry of the oil-for-feod program and turned over all U.N. docu- ments. Coleman, who is leading one.of five U.S. congressional investi tions, has accused Annan of not helping his inquiry. The secretary-general said it’s up to Volcker, who controls the U.N. material, and Volcker said he will only release docu- ments with his reports. The first is due in January and « final report is expected in mid-2005. . Danforth said the worst thing the United Nations could now do is not co- operate with the probe. In his remarks last week, Coleman, a Minnesota Republican, said Annan pte- sided over the “greatest fraud and theft” in the history of the United Nations. Two weeks ago, the Senate Permanent Subcom- mittee on Investigations which he chairs said it had uncovered evidence that Saddam Hussein's government raised more than $21.3 billion in illegal revenue by subverting U.N. sanctions and the oil-for- food program. sonal war on poverty with Subway Franchaise and much more ¥ phenomena to there. Church members say Pridgen is a transparent leader who is not afraid to admit his mistakes or tell you that he doesn't have the answer. It is these and other qualities that make them feel com- fortable with him. He has a way of mak- ing them feel like they can talk to him about anything. For Darius Pridgen and True Bethel Baptist Church, the “business of minis- uy.. is something that will continue well Rl four businesses: the Subway franchise, a bookstore, a T-shirt company and a clean- ing company. They plan to launch a fifth (an engravin company) soon. The Subway franchise idea was in- troduced to Pridgen by a local entrepre- neur, Joe Parker. Parker, who at one time owned his own franchise in Tonawanda, mentioned the idea a few years back and asked Pridgen to come on board, The church set aside money for franchise de- velopment and when the time was right community self sufficiency they proceeded. . “That Subway shop ‘is not about making money. Ir’s about missions,” says Pridgen. He emphasizes that every bill at True Bethel is paid off and that the church is funded through the tithes and offering of its members. He further explains that the mission of the frarichise ig to train young people in customer service ahd work ethics, he ae Most of the people employed by a 2 Tan ae ey pies“ aaah ty e “8 to employ people right ftom the cotritnu- nity it sertes And he some of the em- ployees and patrons alike, it is the closest they have come to attending a church service in years, It is not unusual on any given after- noon to find Pastor Pridgen joking around with people in the store or pitching in to make sandwiches for patrons. He tries to never give the impression that he is too “big” to do the little thirigs. And that’s what people love about him. . wa and Les Cox. In the back row are Willi Reginald Barrett, 2nd Vice President. NEWLY ELECTED OFFICERS FO R THE LOCAL NAACP: Pictured from left to right is Evelyn Littles, Executive Committee-At-Large, Calvin Henderson, President Pitt County NAACP Judge Wanda Bryant, NC Court of A peals, Howard Conner, Treasurer, Bernard Haselig, Asst. Treasurers, Howard é am H. Worthington, Ist Vice President, onner 2 te pressed satisfaction with the devel- opments achieved during this an- nual coming-together. Adjectives such as “fair’ and “reasonable” were among those used in recalling the sessions that were officiated over by Bishop Thompson. Other notables who attended the conference were Mrs. Georgia M. Thompson, Missionary Super- visor, Presiding Elders Jeremiah Asbury, Clyde L. Murphy and Wil- liam L, Wainwright. Other local pastors in attendance included Rey, sets agenda for AME Zion aN ¥ David Moore, Rev, Willie Johnson, Rey. Margaret Blackmon and Rev. Acolia Simon-Thomas. D.D. Garrett, Sr. of Greenville served as conference trustee and del egate. Garrett has also served on na. tional AME Zion boards and com mittees, Other events and coriferencs that are currently schedule for the upcoming year are the South Africa Annual Conference which will take place December 9 through 12. 2004 at the Spottswood A.M.E. . Beaty Cm be erence an 4 Zion Church. The Christian Edu- cation Summit wil take place on January 26 and 27. 2005 followed by the Eastern North Carolina Convocation & Ordination on January 27 and 29, 2005 at the Hilton Riverside in Wilmington, NC, and the Virgin Island Annual Conference will Be held on March 16-20. 2005 at the Medford A.M.E. Zion Church, Se, Croix, US Virgin Islands. The Host Pastor will be the Rev. Charles Bertram, ON A@TIIANARYD ITT Ly ROW ANOND ynNtTAnyes the of drue A big hoax is about to be pulled on the American people in the name of So- cial Security reform if President Bush and the Republican Congress get their way and send Social Security money to Wall Street. If this happens all Ameri- cans will lose big but African Americans val likely receive the shortest end of the Rationale for Social Security ivatization is Pulp Fiction Social Security “reform,” codeword for privatization, seeks to divert all or a portion of the funds currently support- ing the Social Security program into 401K-type accounts that individuals can invest in the stock market. While is j may seem innocuous on its face, the reality is that privatization is a du. plicitous attempt to renege on our country’s promise to provide reliable _ Social Security trust funds will be able — So Senda the system. In reality, ity's “crisis” is thus: in the year 2052 the to pay 80 cents on every $1 in benefits promi t privatizers don’t want Americans to know is that this 20 cent gap per dollar of promised benefits is eable and can be closed without radically altering the system. In fact, the tax cuts President Bush gave away to the wealthiest one percent of Ameri- cans could have covered the amount of that can be sclicd cl by png aes r ; xi 2 > a ft hi : cs Re a “ee ‘ : 4 f f : 4 we, tr ; F ¢ .* one thing is for certain: proponents d 0) Not promote privatization because their plans are affordable, effective, or effi- cient. Indeed, privatization plans like those put forth by President Bush’s So- cial Security commission, are pro- hibitively expensive. Not only do they blow a big hole in the Social Security Trust Fund (thereby cutting benefits) by removing trillions of dollars in dedi- cated revenue, they also require massive transfers of money from the general the long-term Social Security shortfall budget in order to sustain the transition and there would have still been Money and administrative costs of individual left over for other accounts over the important priori- short, medium, ties. and long term. So, if Social rsd Fe rate fe ram #4 Since Presi Security’ fiscal im- more then dent Bush has al- balance is -]| -- from more than 24% to ready ruled out the able why is it that 65%--- if there was no social possibility of rais- Supporters of securuty ing taxes in order privatization are so to finance these intent on changj enormous costs, it the system? Coul it be that they seek is guaranteed that they will have to be cover in their attempts to justify the mas- sive transfer of taxpayer dollars to the mo rson Wall Street amore that will further benefit the rich at the expense of working and middle class families? Could it Be that they seek to dismantle an efficient federal entitlement program that they have historically re- sented because all - including the wealthy - must contribute? Could it be, that, (like corporations who move from defined benefit pension plans to defined contribution plans), they seek to make individuals more responsible for shoul- suppo ing retirees, di k- dering the financial burden of their own ers, nd . doped wor retirement? Or, could it be all of the Supporters of individual account above? Proposals seek to perpetuate the fiction _-Plans to Privatize Blow a Hole in i facing afiscal crisis Social Security and the Federal Budget ty is Susie Clemons GREENVILLE - With warm thoughts of Thanksgiving past still lingering, romises of a memorable Christmas all bu erased the remaining calendar days of November 2004. Then came ber 1, the evening noted author JL King rode into town on his sleigh, bearing his shocking message about Black men who live a life of lies and deception on the “Down Low”. reid Hendrix Theatre center left he stood- easy on the eyes, well dressed and sted, his approach. For those of us in the audience having already read his book, “Black Men on the Down Low”, or viewed Mr. King on Oprah a few months back, our insiders on this phenomenon of men who lead bi-sexual li who endanger the lives of women wi sexually transmitted diseases especially the virus that causes Aids- HIV, was already much talked about. That Mr. JL King landed in Greenville to tell us about it in person- well, what a treat from Santa. Imagine our shock when Mr. King with us that on his ride into town he was well versed in what he could or could not present to our quaint but less than idyllic bedroom community about the subject matter of black men loving other men. . lack men under Herb Boyd " Whar to Tyrone Willingham, Tavis Smiley, Kofi Annan, Charles Ogletree and Kweisi Mfume have in common? Other than being promi- nent Black men in leadership capaci- ties, they are cither looking for or may soon be looking for new assignments. Willingham, after three years struggling to build a dilapidated foot- ball program at Notre Dame, and with a winning record this season, was re- cently fired by the school’s athletic director. Smiley, atone exaspera- tion at the National Public Radio’ fail- ure to reach out more aggressively to African-American listeners, has told the network that he will not be re- newing his contract with them. Annan, the UN's secretary gen- eral, is under fire to step down from this prestigious position. His detrac- tors cite that his son, Kojo, accepted reimbursements for health sosuranice coverage from a Swiss company that is under investigation for alleged fraud and abuses of the oil-for-food program, it served as a monitor of im- ports to Iraq. Mfume, the president Santa bo DUH? I ask who would be threatened by this message intended to save and not destroy lives? Better yet who in our communi feared that dosed eyes would be opened? No doubt our southern ptimness was further: diminished when Mer: King that several aréa houses refused to allow PiCASO, Pitt County Aids Service Organization, the Opportunity to speak to con tions onthisd matter of infectious disease control- given that 72% of all new HIV cases national have occurred in Black women and 72 % to Black teenage girls. Moreover, what we have missed in our judgmental states of bliss is that seniors- persons over 50- are happily engaging in their pursuits. And as result, a good many have fallen victim to the accursed HIV/AIDS. Talk about a SHOCK! No doubt theirs is a comfort zone that has inevitably lead to death and will surely lead to more less folks change their way of thinking. Henceforth, I urge the utmost caution when talks of Noah and the Flood are in the air— remember he had to save himself and his family when others said that he was lying. No time for fatalistic talks of “pic in the sky” there's a war waging in our community of €normous proportions with the intent to wipe us out. Those of us who are not dead or dying from this disease: He that hath ears let ‘em hear! My sources share that area or local centers of worship with younger congregants are more receptive to this message of TRUTH intended to save lives- not cast anyone into the furnace of fire and brimstone. HELLO"! Aids, the virus that causes HIV, is neither dressed in a mini-skirt nor wearing red lipstick, or a pair of denims worn too low beneath the belt line, but rests in olyester lined caskets made by the company Opportunity and Ignorance. That anyone would want a community to remain in ignorance about such things as preposterous as it is downright evil! and CEO of the NAACP. the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organiza- tion, said he will be resigning from his post on Jan. 1, 2005. e's resignation comes in the wake of an investigation by the IRS of the NAACP’s tax-exempt status. Ata press conference, Mfume said that his departure was not related to the IRS investigation. Julian Bond, the organization's chairman, believes the investigation was prompted by re: marks he made that were critical of the Bush administration, after the presi- dent refused to address the group's annual convention last summer. Then there are two cases from out of the South where two less promi- nent Black men are entangled in cir- cumstances that are reminiscent of the struggles of the civil rights era. In Bir- min »Ala., Roderick Jackson, the coach of a girls high-school basketball team, claims he lost his coaching job and his termination was in violation of Title IX. Jackson had complained that the school gave preferential treat- ment to the boys team. He charges that his firing was the Birmingham School of worship Paid for by further shrinking Social Se- curity benefits and/or by piling more debt on top of our already steep federal budget debits - Creating a hole so deep it will take our economy almost 60 to recover according to the 2004 Eco- nomic Report of the President. ican Americans are Harmed by Privatization Plans Privatization’s likely impact on Af- rican American families provides a prime example of why these plans also fail the effectiveness test. Because of historical patterns of discrimination in the U.S. education system and labor market, Af. rican Americans are more likely to earn a modest living during the course of their working lives, more likely to have expe- rienced spells of unemployment or un- That some chose to languish in baseless notions about how things ought to be done or said is beyond me, especially when it comes to saving the lives of the fellow man for whom th claim undying love before GOD. La ble at best when collective made quite obvious by merely viewing the,status of some of our communities, and by the duplicitous heart had by some in professing the need to flee from the wrath of sin on the one hand while allowing our future to be put asunder on the other. Clearly I amr as hood winked by such actions, as I am the state of quieted fear imposed upon Americans by the current Bush-Chaney leadershi posse- descendants of Ma Barker and the train robbers Jesse James and Frank. Lest my memory fails me, did not Our ancestors wage a tremendous war Has Culture Supplanted Race in Over the years, much has been writ- ten about the American racial question and its impact on life in the United States. Conspicuously absent from the debate has been a recognition of how racism may now be but a convenient roxy for cultural marginalization. en racial minorities experience dis- crimination today, the cause is most likely rooted in differences of culture rather than differences in inherited physical char-acteristics. Perhaps the time has fi- nally come to attribute American inter- tensions to “culturism’ as o roracism. The difference is far mor than semantic and it could suggest that America has unknowingly turned the comer in regard to relations between ra- cial groups. It is well settled that race has his- torically been the predominant factor negatively impacting the lives of racial minorities. However, upon close exami- nation of the current condition of let's say, blacks, it becomes increasingly clear that we are most likely to be discrimi- nated against if and when we function Board’s retaliation for his complaint. Jackson brought a lawsuit against the board, and now the case is before the Supreme Court. Attorney Chokwe Lumumba is also fighting for his life and license in a Supreme Court, this one in the state of Mississippi. The militant lawyer, long affiliated with the Republic of New Afrika, has a date in court on Dec. 7 to determine a case in which he is charged with contempt. “When Chokwe observed a white judge in Mississippi railroading his client, as typically ha pens in the criminal jus- tice system, he lodged a vigorous legal objection. He could have turned his head. Most lawyers would have heard nothing, seen nothing and said noth- ing,” attorney Alton Maddox wrote in a weekly column. Lumumba’s resistance and adher- ence to the Code of Professional Re- sponsibility, rather than to white su- premacy, ticked off the judge, accord- ing to Maddox. ._ "Chokwe was summarily hauled off to the penitentiary. He was also fined. The trial judge had already de- " tirement income for 40 ught to deremployment, and more likely to re- tire with less income from private pen- sions, assets or personal savings. To add insult to injury, African Americans’ dis- proportionate lack of access to quality, affordable healthcare - also rooted in education, employment and income in- uities - contributes to our higher rates of disability and early death. A comprehensive community in- surance plan, Social Security provides an equalizing effect in this perfect storm through the provision of a steady Bere check for retirees, for those who become disabled, and for the dependent children and spouse of a worker who has died iri the prime of his or her life. On the whole, Social Security Ad- ministration statistics show that African Americans benefit significantly from these benefits. The only source of re- rcent of Afri- can American seniors, SSA estimates the for freedom? To think that we've had nearly forty years of freedom firmly in our hands- who's to blame for steering the ship into the waters of bondage now? Clearly slavery for us was as cruel a punishment as it gets. Yet moving forward means not ing but using the same energy it~ took to bring our aricestors out of the ** valley to bring about a new day for ourselves, our children and their en. Is the same energy and spirit had during the presidential election past, is the same energy needed now to overcome this veil of ignorance and death that seeks to kill off as many black women as is possible, leaving behind untold numbers of our tldren without mothers, Tis’ the season to be jolly and | should be out caroling, baking a pumpkin streusel pie, shopping or something. But December 2004 has outside of what is considered the cul- tural mainstream. If this is indeed true, the implications would be profoundly positive. Race is an immutable charac- teristic that one cannot change; culture, however, is very changeable through fa- miliarity and conditioning. When whites discriminate against blacks today, it is likely that they do so use of negative perceptions of dif- fering attitudes, behaviors and commu- nication styles, whether real or imagined. It is rare today for whites to discriminate against blacks due solely to the hysical traits associated with being black For example, there exists a sizable and growing class of affluent and suc- cesstul blacks who have sufficiently adopted the practices and mores of main- stream society. Their adoptions of cor- porate language, etiquette, and values ave equipped them to persevere in ericas competitive environment de- spite their racial differences. In contrast, the most underachieving strata of blacks tend to function farthest from the cul- tural mainstream core. Does it follow that fire, fired, or fired up cided that the punishment fit the crime, As O.]. Simpson discovered, the claim of double jeopardy does not ap- ply to a descendant of enslaved Afri- cans. has taken the unprecedented step of seeking to suspend him from the prac- tice of law for at least two years even though a judicial panel recommended only a reprimand. This recommenda- tion has been appealed to the Missis- sippi Supreme Court,” “What's happening to these Black men should not come as a surprise, since in practically all the cases you are talking about power, authority and economics,” said Kermit Eady, who said he speaks with personal experi- ence on this issue. “Once a Black man is in a position of power with a sizable budget at his command, you can bet your bottom dollar that he will be in the crosshairs of destruction, What's happening to them is the same thing that happened to me.” Eady, the founder and former ex- ecutive director/CEO of the Black United Fund of New York was tar- geted by the state's attorney general, The Mississippi Bar Association. poverty rate for elderly blacks would more double - from 24 percent to 65 percent - without Soci Security. vor benefits. Given the various ways in which Social Security benefits black families, Benefits for black seniors are boosted howwould privatization proposals stack further by. — up? The annual cost [/— ; short ‘an- of living ad- African Americans, however, should be swer: they justments |! highly alarmed about privatization’s don't. By and a Pro- implications for the economic stability || diverting Biessive ben- of their families and community. trillions of efit structure dollars in that replaces - _ fevenue a larger percentage of pre-retirement earn- away from Social Security, privatization ings for lower-income earners. In addi- tion, Social Security's disability and sur- vivor benefits are also extremely impor- tant for black families, Although onl 12 percent of the U.S. population, AL rican Americans are almost 18 percent of those receiving disability benefits. In addition, black children represent 23 percent of all children receiving survi- lans require drastic up-front cuts to Social Security thereby reducing the guaranteed amount received by African American seniors on modest, fixed-in- comes. Since they are all factored into the same OASDI (Old Age, Survivor and Disability Insurance) formula, the diver. sion will also reduce and destabilize the Continues on | Page 7 been a month of heart wrenching and €ye opening events for us all. Begi ing with Mt ings visit to ECU, to the 17 year old capital area teen Dwight McClean who was recently sentenced to life for the crime of murder, whose story inspired WRAL 5 to dub his generation of Black youth as the “Lost Generation” December 15, to the Daily rs spin on poverty and young : mothers ~ Decem of the mother land, where top USS. officials are now accused of knowing that the drug Neviraprine could cause death, not the prevention of HIV transmission from the mother to the fetus to more than 27 million, not Italians, or Greeks, or Japanese, or Europeans, but to M As we prepare for yet another Christmas and promises of brand new year. Let each and every one of us think first about how to make the world a better place for his fellow man and for the generations to follow. Let us toss aside foolish notions that keep our collective thoughts and actions in the Am a possible solution to the discrimination that blacks and others experience is main- stream acculturization? Sadly, vehement and defiant resis- tance to mainstream acculturization remain the rule in many black commu- nities. Years of continual exclusion from Amer-ican mainstream life has given rise to a vibrant black sub-culture that, among other things, prides itself in re- jecting vestiges of the cultural main- stream. That this rejection stifles upward mobility is seldom considered in some black communities. Therein dwells the new American dilemma. To expect these blacks to abandon their familiar culture in favor of a historically hostile main- stream would be truly ambitious. This difficulty nglyackrowiete this should ber 5, to increasingly acknowledged as a criti- cal cultural goal to be pursued. Some critics might consider this main- stream acculturization to be a form of de- nial of ethnic heritage. This need not be the case. Obtaining the ability to func- tin inadifferent cultural milicadoes ns necessarily displace one’s original cultural erican Social he has always charged, and subse- quently removed from his Osition, “Nobody's is perfect, but Black men ought to know that they cannot do what white men do. A minor infrac-, tion by us is seen as a major violation by the powers that be,” continued Eady, currently in the process of de- veloping his Empowerment Institute. And finally, there is the academic problem of Professor Charles O etree of Harvard University. The acclaimed teacher and attorney, charged with Plagiarism, recently adenitved that sev- cra! paragraphs in his memoir “All De- liberate Speed” had been taken ver- batim from another book. He said the error occurred during a rush to meet a deadline, “when a pair of research as- sistants inserted the material into a raft of his manuscript and acciden- tally dropped the quotation marks and attribution,” reported a New York Times article. While a date has been set for the departures of Mfume, Smiley and illingham, we will have to wait to see what happens to Annan, Jackson, Lumumba and Ogletree. Herb Boyd wirtes for the Amsterdam News - New York City bondage. Let us really practice the message of hope inspired by the Nativity. Let us unite and forge networks of business and charity that begets each family the opportunity to come out of the chasm of chaos. Let us continue to unite as we did the week Mrs. Minnie went on air to ask the community to come forth for a family in need on one of the coldest days this season. ay us reid ne fiat but let Us not wait for the coldest, hungriest or needient a bho to shake our love and appreciation for one another. Let not those of us who have use and thereby exploit the poor as a vessel for our greedy Bains and sinful activities. Fa, la, la, la, a,lalalala.. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! I remain Yours in the struggle, Susie Clemons, opinionsandtalk@yahoo, com Is. Clemons, A elance writer who writes for the M- oice Newspaper has a BS Degree from East Caolina Universi and works asa Job Developer for NCOA Landscape? 6 disposition. For example, when foreign theywakk aren the United States, €y quickly realize that they must'adopt American modes o me behavior if they expect to make Positive impress-ions in the business world. Are these foreign businessmen thereby reject- ing the heritage from which they came? Surely, they are not. . urther, notable figures like Denzel Washington, Colin Powell and Michael Jordan are respected and admired by Americans across the demographic spec- trum. Are they any less blac by heri- tage and culture as a result? Again, this is not the case. It would be disingenuous to t that racism no longer exists in Ametean life. In some environments, it continues to be an everyday phenomenon. More often than not however, American racism now consists of slights and indignities rather than tet measures used ‘ ma Jugate people as in years past. This fact alone demonstrates ust how far American society has come in lessening the relevance of race, per se, as a barrier, The Minority Voice Newspaper | by The minty Volce, Inc, Publisher/Founde Gaius 0. Sims, Sr. Operations Home ditor White Physicians Slower to Prescribe HIV Medicat FOR FREE LEGAL CONSULTATION ON DEBT PROBLEMS? Blacks are twice as like to be victims of race-based hate crimes cans arid Alaskan Natives, the Transactional —_ Records Clearing- house, a data gather-ing, data research and data distribution organization, ly to be j. Actiminal civil rights vio- lation involves the use or threat of force, and can occur with hate crimes, migrant , December 17 - 31, 2004 The Minority Voice Newspaper Page 3 hate crime targets By Makebra M. Anderson African-Americans, 830 against Whites, were prosecuted in civil rights cases; only bombing and slavery rings. CHAPTER 7 OR B BANKRUPTCY WASHINGTON (NNPA) - African- 231 against Asians and Pacific Islanders 62 were prosecuted the following year. “The number of hate crimes has ete hie : Americans were more than twice as likely and 76 percent against Native Ameri- The Department of Justice did not not decreased,” says Shelton. “There re- ally is no excuse. They've [FBI] chosen returned repeated phone calls from the mey last year than all other racial groups com- FBI data shows that hate crime re- National Newspaper Publishers Asso- not to be vigilant in protecting human bined, the FBI reports. ports havi& increased. In 1991 there ciation News Service seeking comment. rights,” Attorney And Counselor at Law According to the FBI, racial preju- were 4,558 hate crimes reported. It rose “We're extremely concerned about Of more than 7,000 hate crimes, ) dice accounted for more than half of for two consecutive years, oe to we aro in wit ee racial bias represented 51.2 i of 196 Dito te, a cn the 7,489 .hate crimes reported in 7,587 in 1993. The number fell to eve had a number o: and meet- incidents. Bias against religions 12s. Pitt Street Greenville NC27835 2003, up slightly from 7,462 reported 5,932 in 1994, but just one year later ings with Congress and we're pushing represented 17.9 percent; sexual orien- fic: Hy] ly : wy 2h) in 2002. Of the 3.844 incidents tar- the number rose again and has contin- _ them to do a better {ob of enforci tation bias represented 16.5 percent. (} . ax (132) geting race, 2,548 were directed against ued to rise. civil rights laws,” said Hilary Shelton, Ethnicity bias 13.7 percent and ; . Although the number of hate crimes —_ director of the National Association for disability bias only represented 4 per- a against Blacks showed a slight increase, the Advancement of Colored People cent of reported fro teces Religious q the prosecution of civil rights violations (NAACP) Washington Bureau. intolerance was the motivation behind has declined. In the last three years, the Aipough the enforcement of civil 1,343 incidents, The majority of those number of FBI referrals for prosecution rights laws has dropped, the number — were against Jews, 927, approximately in civil rights cases dropped | by 514.In of civil rights complaints remains € same as the year before. Reported 2001, the FBI referred 2,060 cases and _ steady at approximat y 12,000 annu- attacks against Muslims fell from 155 analysis of Justice Department data by Crime Statist, Report. the FBEThe number of attacks based on sexual Orientation was 1,239 in 2003, slightly less than the 1,244 re- ported in 2002. ® ee eC, 0 28 * Ons for Afticans Americans — ~s!onmninnayiciente weld ger i . a ‘tween a patient and doctor of the same would impact sah oa of LOS ANGELES - A new UC ences are not because of patient's income tion over three months sooner than every 461 days) than they did when their pro- face, and as a result the patient is more ‘or example, prior studies shows that African American HIV+ = levels, years of education, en 0 up. viders were also African American (342 likely to Participation inde- have shown that most doctors delay treat- treated by white doctors receive Siar erage. On the doctor's part, the know/- The researchers found that African __ avs). Thev also received medications later csion-making, longer visits and ulti- ment for patients they think are not likely ing HTV medication less than those who edge, specialty, of training and years © American patients received their HIV compared with white patients who had mately be more likely to trust the pro- —tostick to their drug regimen— with sev- an African American doctor. of experience did not affect the results. medications a median 439 days versus _ white physicians (353 days). "_ Vider and accep the life-saving HIV medi- eral of those studies indicating that Afri- “Does Racial Concordance The fact remained that African American 277 for whites. They also found that Af- There may be a number of explana- . cation. African Ameri patients in fa- can cans are among the patients of- HIV-Positive Patients and Their Physicians __ patients seen by African American doc- _ rican Americans received Protease inhibi- tions for the great differences, the research- cial-discordant patient/ provi telation- _ ten placed into that category by their doc- eae the Time to Receipt of Protease In- tors, received better care than African torslater from white physicians (amedian ets write. Fee cxample, verbal and non- ships may experience direct or indirect tors. tae . ibitors?” is pub-lished in the November American patients seeing white doctors. N C R | ll f 4 ° E T ll issue of the Journal of “ ings are signi 2 [ tt t “Nerina S=natemem= NI Congressman Rangel calls for action in Emmett Till inquit clinical implications of the find- _ ing associate Physician in the department NYG,NY- Co Charles Rangel sissippito promptly begin anewinvesti- last May. ol heal ings are that delay in effective treatment of infectious disease, UCLA Center for this week joined a bipartisan group of — gation into the een murder of “With its decision to reopen the in- ~ could result in more deaths for African Clinical AIDS Research and Education members of Congress in calling on the Emmett Till. The Department an- vestigation into the murder of Emmett erican patients. The researchers con- (CAKE), and the study's lead investiga- —_ Justice Department and the state of Mis- nounced its intention to reopen the case Til], the Justice Department eased the pain _ clude that policy changes boosting the tor. “One, our study advances prior ree of the Till family with the assurance that number of African American physicians _ search in this field by demonstrating that their son's killers would finally be brought are “imperative.” patient-provider racial concordance can « to justice,” Rangel said. “They had waited “This is an important study because impact access to medical treatment, We 40 years. Every day of delay in following . so many African American people have _ are the first study to demonstrate this ef- through on that commitment makes it HIV infection and African Americans die fect. Two, our study on Patient-provider look more like an empty promise. The more frequently from the disease than any racial concordance Provides an explana- search for justice and Awe must begin other group,” said Dr. William tion as to why African Americans are the now.” , Alexander Acosta. a Cunni » professor of medicine and __ least likely to receive annretrovirals com- ’s statement was released at a. The Justice Department's decision Public health and a study co-author. “We pared to other racial and ethnic groups. Pfess conference at the U.S. Capitol an- _ followed revelations by New York docu- need to improve the relationship between hece, our udp peo dete rtance nouncing the introduction of a resolu- mentary film-maker Keith of ican Americans with HIV and their of incorporating patient-provider racial tion in the House and Senate urging the the existence of new evidence in the case (mostly white) doctors. We need to teach concordance in analyses of patient-pro- Justice Department and the state of Mis- and the discovery of several survivi doctors to communicate effectively with vider relationships, par-ticularly sissippi to move expeditiously in reopen- _ individuals who may have been involv patients ofall races, parti with Afri- involving racial disparities” ing the case. The resolutions were intro- in the mur- der. can Americans who may fee they have The patients and doctors icipat- duced in the House by Democratic Con- Emmett Till was a 14-year old Black ; feasons to mistrust doctors (most of whom ing in mis study were part of the only, men Bobby Rush of Illinois and youth from Chicago who was abducted, are white). Better training would helpdoc- nationwide HIV study of its kind in the Rangel of New Yer and in the Senate by beaten and murdered in Mississippi in tors to follow published treatment guide- United States from 1996 to 1999. Par. Senators Charles Schumer, a Democrat 1955 after he supposedly “mpc ata lines for all patients. And ultimatel ,we ticipants were adults who made r from New York, and Jim Talent, aMis- white female store clerk. Two white men need to increase the number of African visits to their HIV doctors. The research- souri Republican. were tried for the crime and found inno- erican physicians who can treat Afri- ers studied a group of patients of which ‘ ' The resolution reflects concerns in cent by an all-white jury. The brutality of can American patients with HIV” 61 percent were white with white doc- ul i Congress, the civil rights community and the murder of an innocent vic-tim, which In this study, the researchers found — tors, 32 percent were African American ee other interested parties over the apparent was widely publicized by the Black press, t African American patients treated by with white doctors, 6percent were Afri- [Above is 14 year old Emmett Till with his mother shortly before his brutal slaying. In lack of movement in the investigation and ified the entice nation and helped to white doctors receive their HIV medica- can American with African American doc- _| late May, the Justice D ent re-opened an investigation into the 1955 murder of the Justice Department's refusal to re- inspire the Civil Rights Movement. tions nearly four months later than Afri- tors, and less than 1 per-cent were white | Till whose vicious murder laid bare the violent underpinnings of Southern segregation! — spond to Congressional inquiries. The Editor's Note: Charles Rangel has served can American patients being treated by with African American doctors: Although | and helped launch the civil righte movement. His death and susegent news coverage ents decision toreopen thecase _in the U.S. Co for over three de- Aftican American doctors. Furthermore, _ the last group was very small, the patients _| preceded Rosa Park's dramatic stand ona sinningham bus by two months and is cited was announced last May by Assistant At- _cacles. He succeeded C Adam . the study confirms these startling differ- of this group received the HTV medica- as one of the incidents that dramtically ignited the Civil Rights Movement. torney General for Civil Rights R. Clayton Powell, Jrin 1972. In addition to the decrease in the number of referrals, the number of ac- tual prosecutions from the referrals has also decreased. In 2001. 128 people worker exploitation, law enforcement misconduct, religious interference or property » health care access in- terterence, such as phone threats or The report shows that the states with the highest number of reported hate crimes were California with 1,472 (19.7 percent of crimes), followed by New York with.602 incidents (8 per- cent of crimes), New Jersey close with 594 (7.6) percent of crimes), Michi- COLDWCLL x 42) repens, BP ene gan ports (5.7 pe BANKER () crimes) and Massachusetts reporting, 403 incidents (5.4 percent of crimes). 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Tobe sure, the problems associated with children growing up without the influence of both male and female par- ents are numerous, not to mention the economic hardships the family is likely ap only one parent in the house- But there’s an equally important ‘factor in the sie as that is too often oe That factor exists in the phenomena of the stoma male who employs irresponsible sex with vul- nerable women (young and poor as of ten as not) as a means of satisfying a variety of their personal peat ie though this is not a characteristic that is peculiar to Black males, it is the Black socio-economic environment that can Tou Wixan (NAPSA)-According to a recent survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than two thirds of Ameri- cans are consid- ered overweight . or obese. Man , of them will welcome these five ways to THE AUTOMATIC DIET, enemas eee make dieting automatic from Catwnart be Uartene Goth. Feb “The Automatic Diet: The Proven 10-Step Process for Breaking Your Fat Pattern” (Hudson Street ress, $24.95) by Charles Stuart Platkin. 1. Dont be a Diet Hero-Clean your cupboards and throw away those WAY CORNERSTONE LOAN CENTER, INC| STRAIGHT may have aided Bush far more in publi relations, as the President has ycon- tended Britain dispelled allegations of a, the US. itself, Britain has Across the Atlantic, it is widely held that America focuses too much on Iraq and hot enough on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, whereon some America’s un-wavering support for Israel. Blair's dis- AIDS was seen mostly as a gay men's i- demic and the life-prolongi os we have today werent araibsble, I lost three wonderful men in my life to the the spread of the virus us all, but it is affecting African-American women at disproportionate rates. Black women account for a shocking 72 percent of all new HIV/AIDS cases among women in the United States, and Black girls repre- sent 76 percent of all new cases among ing numbers have been reported in news- Papers and in this magazine, so I was stunned to hear Vice-President Dick Cheney, during his campaign debate with vice-presidential nominee John Edwards, express surprise at this grow- ing threat to African-American women. Questioned by moderator Gwen Ifill, he seemed to be hearing of the crisis for the When Phill Wilson, pictured with me here, approached us about working least afford this infraction. _ Many single Black women who are young and poor and who themselves of - on giew in single parent households, are parti vulnerable to me advances of men who prey upon their need for attention, affection, inclusion or, as often as not, financial assistance. Many can recall living near public housing projects where the overwhelm- ing number of residences were jaded y poor, single mothers. During the y- light and mind evening hours Few auto- mobiles could be observed along the streets and drives that wound through me As the evening pro- moved toward the wee morn- vm ing hours, however, virtual traffic jams were not uncommon. If you carried a Paper route in the morning hours, it was not at all unusual for you to see the male visitors leaving and hurriedly head- ing to their automobiles in efforts to get home before they wives and families awakened. Married men with good jobs tempting treats. 2. Discover Calorie Bargains- Great-tasting foods that are lower in calo- ries than your current choices. 3. Plan for your Eating Alarm Times-Figure out when you overeat- prime-time TV,, office afternoon munchies-and prepare in advance with 4. Prepare for your Diet Busters- whether you're ing toa party or out to dinner, think ahead about what you're going to eat so you can make the right choice. 5. Usea Life Preserver-imagine fu- ture events, and how happy you'll be when you've reached your goal and run into your ex, attend a class reunion, or go to the beach in a bikini. Platkin is one of the country’s lead- ing nutrition advocates, whose syndicated health and fitness column, “The Diet De- tective,” appears in more than 165 news- nationwide. THE AUTOMATIC DIET isavailable wherever books are sold. TALK: A B males are hel 31, 2004 | d America and cussion with Bush was based amplifying American action on behalf of Palestinians. T hough slight, even this hint of criticism marks a change in tone to- ward America. The leaders did agree on a few un- trip, but President Buch sil ret sol ner concerning his support for Ik : : 's withdrawal from certain Palestin- Palestinian President Yassar Arafat's death has renewed hopes among some that the US will renew the vigor dis- played in the Clinton administration in approaching the conflict. President Bush was resolutely loath to deal with Arafat, whom he consi a terrorist. “What Today reflects is a commit- together to raise awareness of the spread of HIV among Black women, we didn’t need convincing. As the director of The Black AIDS Institute (BAI) in ns Ange les, Wilson is widely respected as a gl warrior in the fight against the disease. ‘Two years ago, his organization enlisted this ine, along with huridreds of other Black media outlets, in the Drum- beat Project, in an effort to bring our audiences simultaneous coverage of the crisis. Earlier this year BAI partnered with the Ladies First concert tour featurin Alicia Keys, Beyoncé and Missy Elliott. Wilsons group held Town Hall meetings on HIV in 12 cities along the concert route, convincing 2,000 people to be tested for the virus. Now Wilson wants to focus on the spread of the disease among African- American women. This is where you and I come in. We've devised a way to help him fight the good fight—and make your Christmas shopping more mean- ingful. From now until the end of De- could be often heard bragging abéut how they had to “leave a couple of bucks on the dresser for milk and cereaPor for the children’s lunch money.” > - Then there’s the male predator who use his ability to provide transportation as a unstated tool of bribery Pe sexual favors from vulnerable woman. The young women has various need for trans- portation. If she already has children, there are periodoc visits to the pediatrician’s office that must be made. When food stamp or welfare check day arrives there are necessities of getting to the grocery or supermarket or the furni- t-a-center to be made: ¢ male who gets to “sleep” with this usually young woman at his conve- nience is usually more than happy to ful- fill her transportation needs. Another area of vulnerability is the “cute young thing” who might be employed as a cleri. in a downtown government office and has decided to move from her par- ents home before she has attained the Britain May pin Be Fading ment. Now everyone will watch to see how you act on that commitment,” ore Dennis Ross, former special to Middle East, about Bush’s commas. Much of the call for exer- tion of influence on America derives from perceptions that the alliance has not yielded much for Britain. This was furthered when the na- tion sought to share secret American mili- tary technology but was-rejected. Sym- bolicall, Britain joined ‘Unions Galileo Project plan, an answer to Americas Global Positioning Satellite: system (GPS) used worldwide. Britain, like other nations, currently uses GPS for, devices like cell phones, but it is now more importantsince America has incor-porated it into military equipment. attle Worth Fighting cember, we will pass on to BAI the net proceeds from every new Essence sub- scription ordered through essence.com/ blackaids or (800) 52 525, includ- ing every new gift subscription you buy for that special woman or man on your gift list. Spreading the word is the first step in raising consciousness and encour- aging safe-sex practices, so a portion of your contributions will help fund a na- tional summit next year. Our favorite funny girl, actress and comedian Mo’Nique, has agreed to be our spokesperson for this fund-raising campaign. The sorors of Delta Sigma Theta have also agreed to partner with us in this special subscription drive. Our goal of $250,000 is a relatively modest one, given the need. And we're confi- dent we can reach it one subscription at atime. I'll be sure to let you know how we're doing. Meanwhile, I wish good health, happiness and love to you all. Reprinted from the December 2004 issue of Essence Magazine necessary financial stability. In many in- stances the bulk of her income goes to pay her apartment rent, car note, cloth- ing bill (she has to be sharp at work ev- ery day) and upkeep of her Pair and nails. Put simply, she needs financial help par- ticularly if she is a single parent! On Fri- day evenings she heads to happy hour | in hopes of “catching” — enters the mate predicator. His “smooth game” and de- meanor overwhelms the young woman's judgement and her ail for “Help” of- ten allows him to have his with her” be- fore me night is gone. The fact that this guy might be married often of little con- sequence.’ After all; ‘the celephone’ and fais; bills are past due! Ow, any young wornan who be- lieves these guys don't broadcast their vul- nerability to their buddies is being very naive. What happens then is that the young woman unknowingly finds herself on the guys” trick list.” Once on that list, the intentions of almost every guy who “hits on her” is simply to “take her off.” NEED YOUR CHURCH BULLETIN TYPE? NEED YOUR SCHOOL PAPAER TYPED? FAST, ACCURATE AND ON TIME! GIVE AUDREY TYSON A CALL! 252-695-2020 Papers, School Work Just $2.00 per Page Church Bulletins... Negotiable (YOU MUST PROOFREAD YOUR OWN WORK... CORRECTIONS WILL BE MADE AT NO EXTRA COST) | CUT AS | eo College Night FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES Friddayis Hip Hop Nights! HOP HOP MUSIC'S BEST BEATS valuirdayis Old School Nights! ,ULU SCHOOL Ran VIEEKMLY! LIVE Mi sunday is ports Night! PREL HON OERWES GIANT | 11331 MARTIN LUTHER KING STREE S209699) | GREENVILLE,NC (252) 759-1774 \ \ SCREEN TV One issue whereon the nations sand ato el he or ia cs se ution emissions back below 1990 lev- els. Blair, his countrymen, and his fellow European leaders are staunchly for it, and ing him. to attempt forcing fa- mously steadfast hand. An irate environmental group Bah one gcuenee} wih toensure “tis properly i mented by the Ameri country might one day play a greater role in Iraq, and is peice Afghanistan. ! ion, French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac called for a healing of the French-Ameri- can alliance and said | his country would not send troops to raq, it desires pear emma opposesany participation in the re-bu treaty or policy that would cause the loss Spanish Luis Rodriquez of a single American job, let alone the who removed his nations troops from Iraq neatly 5 million jobs Kyoto would have his election, has been curiously un- carly million jobs Kyo upon his election, cost, said James ton, chairman —_ successful in getting a congratulatory call of Environmental Quality for the White to President Bush through, causing specu- House. The White House oncecriti- _ lation that the US-Spanish rift is widen- cized the effort due to European apathy ing, __ ple. stems from the efforts of the 1951 stu- ue bh 0 | Fumie sora pener hee tea = ee Farmville, now a part o: ivil Rights in Education Heritage Trail throughout southern Virginia. The Crooked Road, Virginia's Heri- tage Music Trail, tells the story of tradi- tional music i through family ties, faith and ily livi generation to generation, acini barriers. From church hymns carrying hidden m along the Un- derground Railroad to the mountain mu- , ieniifianteerensecenuties Shan ose etd the Appl Jrginia Of lovers of Airica PTICA chian Moun ° an ll , many . Wed Te Egle eo ining An Aner, o A) i i (NAPSA) Family, faith, fellowship, fee- fave cagendered growah inthe fabric dom. These staples have been the back- For a sobering journey down other bone ofthe African-American pommunity trails, explore Virginia's Civil War Trails, since the first Africans landed on Ameri- www.civilwar traveler.com. The nation’s can shores at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619 unresolved issues in the colonial and pre- Te feu det Persons These values laid Cis War eras led vo the Cool Wear the foundation for an African-American these trails, including historic sites as well ona strong sense of community. The as battlefields, offer the opportunity to educators, activists, musicians andentre- eflect on the men and women behi ee ale qePorated into Virginidsheri- th racial and economicinne Exposing tage tralls reflec this sense of community. more than slave stories, Virginia's sites in- The monumental Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of Education g perpetuate poverty Now, some _People have a very nega- tive definition for the overt motives of young women who essentially trade sexual favors for either emotional or financial sup- port or both. The bottom line, though, is that such could not be acomplished with- out the presence of a very willing male predator who is just out looking fora “good roll in me hay” with no long-term inten- tions and basically says, “use me baby!” But if you really want 3 to see a man “head for the hills,” just watch what hap- pens when one of these “users” becomes regnant. Ito see a man “head for the hills,” just watch what happens | When Onie'of thiese “users” bebomes 'preg- Nant. ¢ terpret the d ily lives al aera towns 0 r the 0 the moe black barbs Union and Confederate. Other sites of interest include the Fredericksburg Area Museum. i offers two self-guided walking tours that include a slave auction block. George Washington's Mount Vernon estate and his sister’s plantation, Kenmore, offer looks at slave and free Af. rican-American life. One of the slaves at Mount Vernon, West Ford, started a com- munity for runaway slaves and freed blacks in Fairfax County in 1833; youcan leam more about it at the Gum Springs Historical Societys Museum & Cultural Center For details on Virginia's Aftican- eee in Virginia, visit WWW.Virginia.o ~‘orcall aie request a Vir ginia Travel Guide. Now Getting A Haircut Is Easier Then Ever ull’s Mobile H, Haircuts.- $8.00 Shapeups - $4.00 “™ Children's Hair Cuts - $7.00 ie HOURS: Mon - fri 10am - 7pm FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL (252) 412-9735 wilmodel@yahoo.com NC LIC: C - 53705 - aircut Loanelleg LIMOUSINE SERVICE INC, Let us ride you in Style Comfort & Clase 6-10 Sarburmt Cull, nes Ligt “wing, a «: , ireore The 1999 Pontiac 2-3 Spactaty cute soclding, 20,2004 -N.C. A&T head coach George Moye graduated from N.C. A&T in 2004 with a degreé in liberal studies with a concentration in business econom- icsadministration. He played quarterback at Greenville Rose High School before coming to N.C. A&T. Onceat N.C. A&T, ten coach Bill Hayes decided to move Moye to safety. He played there a season before playing a season as linebacker. He also chipped in as a special teams layer. His ambition when he signed with N.C. A&T was not to play defense. Moye wanted to call cue goal behind center. When George Small’ staff took over, they allowed Moye to do just that. “Quarter: You New Medicare Benefits Go i if You Have Had ‘Matter How Bad They May Be... Call 1 CAN HELP yo Contact Glen Coward at atimeceo Aggies receiver Doug Brown sets team’ siglo Sena it best wo st Marshall Glenn . gene eiving yards mark in a 7 in favor of year senior Adrian Moye HARLO t : E, N.C. - Novetnber i Star Quarterback leaves North Carolina Arts Degree E back is all I had ever played before I came “Tt was tough play- rapa wees tir : ing another position, but I was to play they put me, Phnevif just stayed with it I could get back to playitig qneneback: A i new was No. 4 on the de ractice, Rankin’s absence left the quarter- Back battle down to Marshall Glenn and Rico Watkins. Glenn won the job, but was supposed to platoon with Watkins. Over tee ine i SIX But in the second quarter of a game at Alcorn State on Sept. 11, Watkins broke his foot, and Glenn twisted an ankle. Moye stepped in for a brief mioment in the sec- ond quarter. Those few brief lays were foreshadowing. The next week at Wake Forest, Glenn separated his shoulder in the second quarter and did not return. Moye finished the game 9-for-18 for 79 s. Glenn’s injured shoulder forced him — to miss the next game against Elon. It was truly official; Moye actually was the start- ing quarterback for the N.C. A&T Aggies, Instead of being a linebacker, Moye was Now trying to avoid them. “I made it,” Moye said, “I felt like I finally made it. It wasa n ON Not giving up.” Moye ‘won his first start as an Aggie as he threw for 168 yards and a touchdown. » CALL ME! Credit Problems No U RESTORE your CREDIT!!! | tmail.cc a When spring practice started Moye _ aH chart. Randall dal Rankins did not return for the pre-season uarters of the season, it is exactly what Glenn and Watkins did. - Adrian against Noro M stands in the pocket looking for an o reciever olk State, Moye feested cones an season and wen 1-1, work during his N.C. A&cT career put him in a deserving position to start. The change up and the well-deserved start al- most resulted in an upset of S.C. State. But S.C. State running backs Coty Mar- tin and DeShawn Baker saw to it that the Bulldogs keep their layoff hopes alive with a 34-28 win at Memorial Stadium in Charlotte. Martin finished the night with 160 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries, while Baker added 121 yards and two touchdowns on 27 carries, The Aggies werent without their outstanding num- bers Moye, who was making his third start J ‘of the season, finished with 340 Passing, two touchdowns and one inter- ception on | cpl passing as he came 35 yards short of surpassing Alan Hooker's single-game mark. Doug Brown did erase a team record. His 202 yards receiving (seven catches) broke Steve Shipp’s 2000 record of 183 yards as Brown became the first Aggie receiver in history to exceed 200 yards receiving in a game. “They played like they wanted it,” Baker said. “We knew itwasnt going to come easy but we wanted this one. “Every time I stepped on the . field all I could think about is getting a share of that conference championship.” The Bulldogs finished the season 9-2 over- all and 6-1 in the MEAC, but lost to Hampton who also finished 6-1 in the When I was in J; , | observed that folks greeted one aa eae placing their ina prayer position over their chest and bowing. In the U.S most folks will Eyes and nose Christian Barber Shop “| BOB'S BARBER SHOP 921 Dickenson Ave., Suite #1 Greenville, NC 27858 (252) 758-0773 Barber/Stylist - Bobby $6.50 Brush Cuts Tues & Wed Barber/Stylist - Anthony Military Cuts Barber/Stylist - Carlos Women's Hair styles Mon-Fri 9:00 - 6:00 Walk ins Welcomed Sat 7:00 - 1:00 Hemby. Tarboro, NC (252) 823-5129 Mutts Scotland Neck, NC (252) 826-4406 Floral Creations Scotland Neck, NC (252) 826-5094 “Family Serving Families” _ Hemby Fountain, NC (252) 749-3256 grave. tages Oe ae For more yaw we " ey ing Unnoticed in Black Community - Aggies End Season With Tough Loss To S.C. State Moye found Kenneth ‘ae = = a Now is the time - to Commemorate the sacred your loved ones. Maybe much to do at the time... but, now, we can help you select a fitting way to mark the Come in and let us assist you. Affordable Rates. Layaway Plan ava ES inch ey ek 17 - 31, 2004 The Minority Voice Newspaper Page 5 ing preventive care or disease prevention. Thete are several Passages inthe tobe nomore than opportun ists running with chronic illnesses, Until on the moon has become passe and great Medicare has now realized that seniors can Bible ing much is expected from _ confidence garne. Regardless of how the alent of Medicare, many families technological advances in pharmaceuti-_be kent healthier— and taxpayers can save those so whom much is pace . arrived, they now have an obligation of were financially by the bills thar cals have cut many hospi stays in half, money — if Medicare reflects the realities Keeping that in mind, there is no ” chin, ied long hospitalizations and Diabetes and h nsion, which once _ of 21st century health care. shortage of people claitning to hold lead- Medicare was designed as a health surgical procedures . devastated the black community, are now However, few know about these ership positions in ‘community, care safety net for America’s seniors. Like the space pr back then, fought with medications never imagined monumental changes. Why are black Some Eee reasonable argu- Launched in the mid 1960s, around the | Medicarestill offer It mil- just 20 years ago. leaders” not telli everyoneabout the ments.as to how they earned this moni Same time as America’s space rogram, it lions from financial ) Until now. Medicare strictly adhered $600 that Medicare] made available to but others seem self ordained. Some ex- filleda void in our society, Througheut Almost 40 years later the world has to is original 1965 model — not offering Seniors se for their Ste drugs? | it sincere motives, while others appear most of human history, old age often was Our obsession of putting a man Prescription drug coverage or emphasiz- Why do few know of the aut orized pre- conference. The Aggies close out their sea- son ot 1-6 in the So oe ought and fought and fought this sea- son,” Brown nt “Our ie been fighting despite all that’s happened to this team. The way we played tonight shows we still have a lot of heart and pride in what we do.” The Aggies trailed 34-21 with five minutes remaining in the game. But on a 2nd-and-10 from the Aggies 37, Perry ona post pat- tern for a 63-yard touchdown. The Aggies would force the Bulldogs into a three-and- out setting up a final drive to win the On 4th-and-16 from the Bulldogs 45, Moye connected with Brown for a 23- yard reception to the 22, The Aggies ad- vanced as far as the Bulldogs 16, but a delay of game penalty on 3rd-and-4, an ihecmpletiae 3rd-and-9 and a Pierre Johnson's sack of Moye on fourth down gave the Bulldogs the win. “I likeall the MVP stuff and all the yards, but as se- nior I would traded it all end fora win,” said Moye, who was named the Aggies MVP for the Rivalry Classic. “There were some mental mistakes made that cost us in the end. It’s a tough way to go out.” Baker was named SC eee “We executed tonight on offense,” Baker said. “Once we got into a rhythm it was hard for them to slow us down.” The Bulldogs jumped out to a 27-7 lead thanks to a couple of touchdown passes by Brett Young, who finished the game with 264 yards passing (18-for-32). The Aggies would end the half on a positive as a 36-yard reception by Brown set up Oritz Green for a two yard touchdown with 11 seconds retaining in the half. The Aggies continued their momentum in the second half with a l-yard run from Moye. But Baker would score the game-clincher early in the fourth quarter. Heappeated stopped on second-and-goal from the 3, but he bounced off several N.C. A&T tacklers and bounced his run to the outside and leaped into the end zone to avoid more Aggies tacklers, “All I could think about is being co-champions,” Baker said. South Carolina State vs North Carolina A&T on Nov 20th. is where the flu virus stretch out theu hands to shake another's. As one leaves church, they are instruct ed to take each others’ handsas they sing and are dismissed. I. would that shak- ai) dng and holding of hands should belim: ‘ited during the flu season since'the flu ‘ wifus can be easily spread. Hands are very accessible to the flu virus on door knobs, poles and subway grips handrails, escala- tor rails, steering wheels, and even on play- ing cards. Any contaminated hand is ca- able of transferring the virus to another and, The other day, while walking down the hall where I would observed, in the distance, a person blowing his nose with a tissue coming to greet me with out stretched hands. Now, I didn't want to be impolite, but rather than grabbing his hand, I embraced his shoulder, thus avoid- ing that virus from finding a home on my hand. How does the flu virus get into your body? It is usually transferred by a con- taminated hand to the lower eyelid or the nhose.opening. When the virus finds its resting place, it multiplies by the millions and enters the blood stream to infect ev- ety part of the body. This the reason why memory of there was so ilable, a ne) all 3 scription drug cards that provide addi- tional Often, diabetes and hyper-tension go hand-in-hand in the black community. There or many in a Pisa across this country who are forced, leomey netary rea- sons, to make the unimaginable choi between food or medicine or one medi-- cine over another. There is something sin- ister when the so-called black leadership .Seems to be withholding useful informa- tion because knowledge of the source may benefit the wrong politicians, inning in 2005, Medicare will offer early detection ings for cardio- also offer beneficiaries a wellness exam. This dan addition ea additional prescrip ug cove: t begins on January 1, 2006. These things will, lly, lead to black Americans not only livi 7 but having healthier lives —ang closing the current 12-year life incy gap between black males and whinefeae in effect since June. Studies have shown Medicare be ra 20 perrent on their prescription drug costs with the discount cds tow incene se- niors save even more thanks to the $600 annual credit Congress included in the Medicare law. Those monitoring the pro- gram say prices have not increased as crit- ics predicted. Rather, they have remained level, if not gone down. ~ _ Critics must realize that progress is as’ inevitable as it is necessary. Modern medi- cal technology is keeping people healthier longer and saving taxpayers moniey ‘by covering the pharmaceuticals and preven- tive care that can ree the need for emer- room tripsand icalizat TAS for then pan assertions of the toll-free number. pe nee are Ty not enough signing up for this program. News of acai drug benefit must be ivered to more minority seniors. So- called leaders should assist in this effort. The new Medicare bill is ‘not the panacea that will cure all the ills of the American health care system, but — like man landing on the moon — it is one “giant leap in the right direction, _ Council Nedd II isa member of the black leadership network Project 21 and the executive director of the Alliance for Health Education and Development. Dr. Lesie 0. Anderson is director of commu- nity, health and inner city ministries emeri-_ tus for the Northern California Confer- ence ofSeventh-Day-Adventists. Com- ments may be sent to Project! 1 @nationalcenter. org. . OWS you have muscle pai grov nau- sea and a wasted fecing, The only de- fense you have against the virus isahealthy immune system. This system produces killer cells tordestroy the virus, ifsit is healthy. Iris therefore important to eat an ample amount of fruits and vegetables ich contain vitamin C, beta carotene, vitamin E, selenium and a host of other nutritional factors. During a flu season it is therefore important to avoid the contaminated hands of others and to keep your hands from your eyes and nose. It is also impor- tant to wash h hands frequently when at work, traveling or at home. Ifa person is infected in your home, be sure that you do not handle their tissues; instead, give them a bag to dispose of them. Do not kiss the runny noses of children, If you choose to hold hands in church or else- where, be sure to wash them as soon as possible. And finally, keep your hands away from your eyes and nose because that is where the virus grows. ees A Hip-Hop Crusade (NAPSA)-MTV2 VJ Amanda Diva is on a crusade to use song and hip-hop to take poetry to another level. That's why she’s released her first full-length mix tape, “It’s Bigger Than Hip-hop Mixtape: Vol. 1,” imanda [1 tyle of mu: Hip-hop poe’ ing a unique masses, $ Creat- sic for the combining her mesmerizing style of spo- ken word poetry over popular, transfixing hip-hop beats, Amanda’s poetry has been said to possess the spiritual and conscious yearn- ings of Donny Hathaway and Lauryn Hill coupled with Marvin Gaye's confessional blues and the ferninist affirmati Critics say it transcends race, time and penre while speaking directly to the hip- P community and shedding light on ma- nity, __, Inaddition to catching her rock the airwaves on Sirius Satellite Rac during Primetime — weekdays, go to com for information on www. her mix tape. neficiaries are savi atleast 6 The Minority Voice Newspaper December 17 - 31, 2004 | . . a : av" anes _ tune that almost destroyed his career, oT eekaea drew away from him have succeeded in state that prohibited marfiage across the ™ tte ae __|n televised confirmation hearings he carob lily orted his making his very name asynonynn fos op race line until the Suprenie Court barred ! yy oO Ces was charged with incompetence, indif- confirmation have now. renounced. portunism; for many blacks, to pull a _ it from doing so in the most titled case iat’ are CTR Feat ference to the plight of racial minorities Among professional blacks, especially law- Clarence Thomas means to sell out. Soe Vicie lega hsnoey—{Lov- . . nan and other vulnerable groups, he is widely ostracized and routinely Note: Justice Thomas is married toa ing. Virginia). Thomas's wife is also a Reviews rnophilia and sexual harassment. A Labeled as an “Uncle Tom”. Those who white woman (Barbara Bush's niece) ina lawyer. . . i: ormer aide, Anita Hill, alleged that he nae na es, . ot, a Sone . Justice Under Bush II?” Ken Foskett’s had im upon her with lewd talk and % En me mm aE, book Judging Thomas, explores the that he threatened to ruin her profes- | . on i | : | : i times of nce Thomas, the sionally if she ever revealed his miscon- rom € 4 ce ; § S ; nation’ 106th Supreme Court Justice. duct. Thomas peel but ~ wesw eS ee ~— a s - Randall Kennedy has reviewed this only after a bru e in the Senate / ; . . vie ag which he called a fascinating subjers fo rite which he obtained the required | A monthly column by East Carolina University Chancellor Dr. Steve Ballard } a biography. number of votes by the slimmest margin — : . ; EEE Leeann "Born in 1948 intoabroken home (52 to 48) of any Supreme Court nomi- With the ringing of holiday bells international film festival, a in Pin Point (outside Savannah), Geor- nee in American history, and the end of 2004 almost here, this 4 internati ding gia, Thomas suffered from racial slights In the decade that he has served as isa good time to take breath and con- day, student discussions about differ- and isolation in the early phases of de- a justice, Thomas has voted to reverse siderwhat we've omiplished this year ent perspectives on ways to bridge the segregation, obtained a law degree Roe v. Wade, to uphold the constitu- hereatECU. _ ea inter-racial gap on campus, and.acom- from Yale (one year behind Bill and tionality of a law thatcriminalizedcon- _ Onapersonal note, this year was munity festival for of all ages. Hillary Clinton) and worked for a few sensual sex between adult homosexuals, oneofdh and upheaval, as : Undetstandi other cultures isa... ears as an obscure lawyer-bureaucrat and to invalidate racial affirmative ac-_ ilyand Ileftour home in Kansas City growing concern for all of us in this fore shrewdly hitching himself to tion at the workplace, in schoolsandin to join you here in Greenville. It has community. In fact, we currently have the Reagan Revolution. President electoral politics. He has not only ex- been a time of leaning and atime of 201 students at ECU from countries Reagan appointed him to lead the pressed conservative beliefs in judicial growing, AsI spendtimewithourfac- other than the U.S., and we are fortu- Office of Civil Rights in the Depart- opinions; he has also done so in ulty, students, stafFand communi nate they have chosen our school. Hav- ment of Education and then chose him _ speeches, in the selection of his law clerks members, I find an exciting and diverse _ ing ats from other countries en- to head the Equal Employment Op- and in social affiliations that have led to penn that comprises the ECU ces the overall experience for every- > - a ortunity Commission. In 1990, the such gestures as officiating at Rush . one involved. “7 ef! : d Rest President Bush nominated him Limbaugh's wedding. Armed with life Hereat ECU, y isanim- Asglobal commerce continues to %) aby! to a judgeship in the U.S. Court of enh ee as the rer tishes . poowe when upon break down the barriers sramongcaun- (Mn Appeals and a year later nominated rooted African American in the hi lest. US, thoughts of family are esp tries, it is imperative that we The Saga of Clarence Thomas him to fill the seat on the Supreme circles of government. He obtained his popularnow. So itis with of our ing of the cultures and by Sete Jones : Court vacated by the legendary position in no small measure because of fami in mind that] would like to out- Customs of other people so we can live Minority Voice Newspaper Th Marshall. the racial allegiance of blacks who” line just a few of the nts peacefully and p: ively, (Oct 16-21) carried an article,"Could t precisely that point, however, yearned to see the elevation of “one of ourECU “family” has been working Another exciting development in- Clarence Thomas Be the Next Chief Thomas encountered a reversal of for- their own” even if they disagreed with oninthelastfewmonths. volvesan element of timely significan st _———— — : — Despite the tough economictimes Christmas trees. Dr Ronald 2 thestate. Butit should be just another . that have p over the past oe Plant physiologist and chair of ECU’ S choice for consumers when it comes . , eral years, our employees found the oe ge Partment hopes provide time to visit the local Christmas tree N OF A GENERATION 22508 Seitenende A a ore anastounding $220,000 for the witha tree that will withstand And that meanssomegpodnews - sion of sin, a religion without blood WITH FAITH MAY 2004 State Employee Combined Cam- disease and drought. for ECU and those communities sun atonement, a religion without the new | Bee Sonate to last years totals of Forseveral years, Dr. Newton has rounding us. birth. So Spiritalism is a teligion~a false forgiven, But I tell you now earnestly $193,400, years total contribu- been engineering thegenesofcertain trees In dosing, on behalf of my fam- religion, putting people at the mercy, an prayerfully that you need more than Hons surpassed them b $29,000. tomakethem moresutable tothedimate ily, the faculty, students and staffof often, of evil spirits. _ the word of any man for this. You need _ The Division of Health Sciences in this part of the state. His vision of this ECU, we would like to extend our ' Clearly, one can be very religious, the absolute certainty of God’s own taised nearly $109,000, up from process involves recreating the attributes ishes to everyone in eastern but be utterly lost. THose who Say, Word and the Sweet assurance of the $101,000 in 2003, for ‘an increase of ofahealthy treeand ing certain char- North Carolina fora safe and health- "Lord, Lord, open unto us," will be very Holy Spirit within.. 7 percent. In otherdivisions, the cam- acteristics that will make treea good ful holiday season, and avery prosper- religious, but religion does not keep =“ "What must Ido to be saved?" you paign raised moze than’ $113,000 in seller in this part of the state. oray ae people out of Hell. ask. Here is God’s answer given in Acts contributions, up from $93,300 last As Dr n said, he doesnit ex- We look forward to sharing a __ Saying Prayers, going to church, 16:31: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Yeats oran increase of 21 percent. pect this tree to compete with those tra- bright new beginning in January giving money, being baptized, observ- Christ, and thou shalt be saved." Many Tall, Our campus participation ditionally grown in the western part of 2005. ing the Lords suPperthese are pe gious are deceived, yet they should not be. It fon aso increased = Percent, up ~ . . exercises Dut they do not save the soul. —_is not hard to be saved i one sincerel m last years rate of 30 percent. ‘. You say, "But I was baptized." And wishes to come God's way. To do the ___Thiseffort reflects the kind of car- WOW I TRE NEW LOCATION what if you were? If you depended upon will of the Father means sim ly to trust ing, family attitude Td like to instill as It is a sad and shocking ing fact that 4 Gry sinner, and came up a wet sinner. you. He paid for all your sins. God is Notonlyv ” 4q many cs people are in Hell. Re- The water does not change the heart. satisfied with the price Jesus paid, and the university in its efforts to serve oth- | member that there are many religious Water will not save--it takes blood! Per- offers free pardon to all who depend _¢t, butitalso will help the coommuni- besides the true religion of Jesus Christ.” you were sprinkled asa baby, and upon the Lord Jesus Christ for mercy. Wes weserve through outreach efforts, Religion is no guarantee of salvation. someone else took your vows for you. All thro the Bible that blessed truth |Community endeavors and service The Bi isees were religious but they Do you believe that could change the js given. Read and claim theses blessed Projects. ; crucified Christ. They were wicked in nature of your heart with al it’s inherent promises for yourself today and on into ; Another key component in our their hearts tho outwardly they ap- taint of sin? As a baby you were kept the new year. (John 3:16, John 3:18, family ishealthy respect for and oel- to men tobe righteous. Remem- safe by God's mercy, but when yoube- and John 5:24). ebration of diversity and multi- came an accountable sinner, you were N that Cain was religious. He offered sacrifices, but God was not pleased with _ lost, and nothing but the blood of Christ day! as Diversity Week and International them. He » but Goddid nothear aN save you. It may be that you were Education Week. This year’s theme, | : —_ favorably, Crean Soe itn hear ‘ It may be that some preacher Source: Sword of the Lord Publishers potent Actoss the Globe: Celebrat- Barbers 4 Be Clans Wanted : is a religion--a religion without confes- Ff priest told you that your sins were Religious But Lost- John R. Rice pee Flavor, prince peal ete all astors OUTS “= > FiSee fae aa bythe Rev. Barbera Reynold from our treasury for good schools, safe tion? Orlef Generation! Confronting the A Columnist streets, and better hospitals in Iraq rather Youth Crisis in Black America, says Blact Before Rev. Jesse Jackson preached ata than at home. And when Bush finishes ministers must take the lead on moral is. certain African-American church, the pas- packing the Supreme Court and federal sues. In the past Whites followed radica tor made a disclaimer, separating himself Judgeshtps with right-wingers, Blacksand Black spiritual leaderships because Black: from the views of this Democratic cheer- women could be hindered for generations. _ were on the cutting edge of major socia leader. “The pastor was shaking like a leaf” With so much at stake, we need pro- issues, formrom slavery, segregation to anti Jackson said at the Howard University — phetic voices like Esther and Amos, the war movements.” School of Divinity shortly after President risk makers and me in-your-face trouble- If democracy is to flourish in America Bush's re-election. makers. What we have are too many are —_ Black Christians can't allow the spiritua His pathetic image presents a too many disciples like those who sleptas mantle to be hogged by the wacky Rev convient metaphor of what is happening Christ agonized in the Garden of _ Falwells of the world who are promotin, in Black ee Is the threat of From both side oft heya a White-led evangelical estate ing government or political capi- From both side of the of the political Increasing numbers of Black Chris ae might include Oe to the spectrum there is an abscence of challenge, —_tians voted Republican fearing mora White House, turning the tradition of critique and criticism from so-called Black — meltdown from gay marriages which af prophetic, cuig a ck church lead- spiritual leaders “Too many preachers are fects less than 1 edits popula: ers into irrelevant little wimps? beholden to Republicans and Democrats tion? I can't argue with their faith wall Why are most of our fancy mega- and can't take independent moral posi- but I canask: Isn't the abominable killing mouthed churches with magnificentedi- tions,” says Rev. Clarence James, aformer of innocents in Iraq a moral issue? The fices, huge congregations and ento dean at the Morehouse School 01 Religion same Bible that says adultery and homo. offering fle leadership during one of “Historically the black church placed mo- sexuality are sins says” Thou Shalt No most crucial political of thiscen- _rality above leglaity and tighteouness above _ Kill.” ? politics, but today we have flocks of Black Conversely, progressively Blac Thousands of our young men and spiritual leaders helping Black Americago church leaders cannot ignore the senti women could die in oil wars in foreign nowhere.” lands. Billions of dollars are being drained Rev. James, author of lost Genera- Continues on Page 9 tism, you went down into the water Jesus Christ His Son who died to save Have a Blessed and Happy Holi- lng we create a “culture of giving” here at ECU. Notonlywill suhaciturchele Some of the events included an ! Nours: Tues- Fri 906 &,| i) . a . . ¢ Satara $-6 Affordable Housing Rates Weekly $175.00 Daily $32.95 rr balina ar er Pailin with Private Bath | i m rh dg © Telephone, Cable with HBO i ull © Free Parking er Lasadib © Indoor Heated Poo! & Courtyard GUESTS COMING FOR THE HOLIDAYS» © Maid Services Now is the time to reserve your rooms - Deposit required COLLEGE STUDENTS WELCOMED! lemorial Drive Greenville. NC ) 7834 PlaMtoninne! Yah EYE O.COM December 17 - 31,2004 The Minority Voice Newspaper Page7 io! tenough sleep. __* Surround yourself with “what is It’ a sure foundation ) 1 oo “Amano ae true and good and right.” Tm holding up te bcd ined Our Military '* Learn how to keep a healthy and * Think about things that are pure banner for my Lord. _—— balanced diet. and lovely, and dwell on the fine, good As soon as I get thro * Drink lots of water. ings in others. Workin’ on the building, * Keep your body clean. * Think about all you can praise God I'm going up to heaven to get my — ® Keep your surroundings (like your for and be glad about (Philippians ; réewa. ; is your opinion?” room) neat and clean for yourown , 4:8). ah Thee solid. Build joyfully. The three most i ; ' Avoid things that pollute your spirit ¢ Moly Family awaits occupancy. _ The three most important words... seoeeof cpietand peace. (You need to (Mather ie Ay a tans 5:19°21), From: The Rea Dea Spi fall The two most important words. * Learn how to properly care for and _ a8 well as the people who bringsuch Guide for Black Teen Gi by Billie nh you" | “Ww pamper your skin, hair, and nails. pollution into your personal space. Montgomery Cook The most important word. * Be mindful of what you putin * Goto the library and begin to read Acknowledgement ee | your body that harms it physically = prod books on African American er a 5. Traits of an ideal teacher: Tact, (including cigarettes, aleohol, drugs, ory and literature. O° earnestness, -adaptability, humility, and junk food). | ~_ * Listen to alll kinds of music. idurance, and reliability ° Rise eatly (yes, early) and appreciate © * When given the opportunity go to 6. Cocuidee the words of Paul.” As the the dawn seca jand every de, i recitals, Say the ballet, the opera, lin rei _ by chankine God; | art galleries, and museums. : | forgi CLR) ets mus wading Rin penper an e ake mental notes so that you learn a ‘Pictured above is Air Force Sargent Ray 7. Beo le who have friendships live — * Praise God for thinking enough of _t0 recognize good things (as well as Barnes, Jr., the son of Greenville na- ) longer, Copies healthier lives. This is one - you to choose (yes, choose) you to see garbage!) when you sé and hear them. tive, Ray Barnes, Sr. Recently Barnes, ‘ of the reasons women outlives men; another day, another week, another * Pay attention to how broad and - 121, who has been a member of the ‘women have people to talk with who year. 7 sweeping God's creativity is in _| armed services for just under 4 years pee — "Really listen to each other. _* Breathe long and deeply the air humans... how God’s gifts and talents | was recently promoted to'the rank of = oe 8. Can't is a first cousin to failure. that God has provided. : . in us are not narrow and one- Sargent.’A jet engine mechanic, Rayis ACKNOWLEDGEMENT |} _ 9. Readings to the mind like exercise is * Be quiet, attentive, and awakein dimensional. - - _— the father of two girls. He and his wife . to the body, your classes at school. ° Ask God to show you ene own ~~ | Delanna are stationed in Abilene, Tx. As the Year 2004 draws to the\|_ 10. You listen to lean and learn to listen. * Be respectful of authority, of your Creative talents, whether those ~ Ension M let end, I want to thank you, the||_ 11. Agood laugh issunshine inahome. parents and your elders, and of your Music, drawing, sewing, cooking (learn one Indoce, Comp Co aders, who continue to si 12. A Prayer: “Lord, we all have our peers, for they have much to teach how to do that!), knitting, gardening, _ Miliicer “ncoctrnation Course my articles, give word: 0 differences, but let us be tespectful'of — you. ; - writing, acting - Whatever! God has: NORFOLK - Navy Ensign Tawanda M. y Sg of ; th will encouragement, and let me know|| one another, allowing us to love in peace —* Practice self-respect and self.” given you those thir - The Spirit .. Moore, daughter of Deloris A. and what you liked. You are the reason|{_ and harmony. Amen - control. . reveal them to you you ask. Charles Moore of Farmville, N.C., re- 1 do what I do. « 13. A good woman inspires aman — * Take time for yourself to thinkand ° Value your talents and use them in cently completed the Officer Indoctri- |. _ hope you enjoy them as much A brilliant woman interests him reflect about yourself, your world, and _setvice to others. a Oe M= nation Course. as I enjoy writing them. Be blessed!!! A beautiful woman fascinates him your place within it. * Develop pride and respect for your Congradulations to Mother Ida Pearl During the course at Officer Indoctri- Beatrice Maye . A sympathetic woman gets him e Walk in the sun, run through the ‘family. Thank God for them. Willams br beins elected the Mother of _ nation School, Naval Education and (Helen Rowland) ~ rain, and play in the snow. * Talk to members of your extended the Year during The Old Original Free Training Center, Newport, R. I, students 14. Acultured person has refined taste * Rejoiceand be thankful forGod’s | ° family and try to trackdown your yr Baptist Conference. Mother Williams are prepared for duty in the Worth R, beri and behavio expressions, €ss, grace, and mercy to you as physical features through your family was presented the award for outstanding naval staff field corresponding to their Sinpradtiandden: § To: Black Girlsin Particular = you pull yourself up to the table that _—‘tree. ; | leadership‘ and volunteer, work in the civilian profession. 1. Two good tips: Always say less than, God has given you only one temple; ‘ the tord has provided . * Choose to believe that God loves church and in the community, Mother: The first five weeks of studies include ~~ ee how you “therefore, you are required to take care of *Thank God for the movement of 1 youand wants only the best for you. Williams is the wife of Herbert Williams. naval history and traditions, 7 2-Domortan il sysomething, {hitter (out hear and pi a Legian ees what does his pandmotherety Mea nana he enn! administration, military lw p ° ; je ; . i other of /. Mot isa m ’ ri reople view tall much say nothing. * So, learn to do just that: To love, . how care and concern for the Passage teach you about youth? About oemby of Selvia Chapel Free Will Bap- general military subjects i ;, Mportant Words respect, honor, and take pride in your — thin you put in your emotional, — wisdom ut repentance? About tist Church located at 400 Watagau Ave, During the final week, studies con- "7 “dbnit lane important words... temple. . ological, and spiritual templeby. God's grace? . Greenville, NC. Her pastoris BishopA.H. _centrate on the application of ve I made a mistake = Farn that stuff from the media off ‘Monitoring what you read, listen to, n old Negro spiritual says, Hartsfield. May G continue togiveher civilian professions within the Navy. most important words... (especially that raunchy musiconTV ‘and absorb, Tim workin’ on a building, a sweet, caring spirit. Moore joined the Navy in May 1994. : interest on their smaller wage-based con- Privatization Destroys Communities — programs important to African Ameri- i] Cornerstone Christian Bookstore 1095 Allen Road, Greenville, NC Bus: (252) 752-3846 Fax: (252) 752-4405 ~ tribut } disability and survivor aspects of Social Security that are vital to African Ameri- can families. Private accounts also elimi- nate the progressive aspects of the cur- rent system that provide more help for African American seniors (those Privatizers who say they maintain Progressivity by allowing low-income earners to contribute more to their in- dividual accounts are only guarantee- ing them more exposure to the risks of the stock market), ‘And will-African Americans be able to make up for these’ reductions through earnings from their individual accounts as privatizers claim? The an- swer ranges fom maybe to no. First, is the obvious that the stock market’s no- torious fluctuations cannot guarantee the long-term growth of amounts con- to individual accounts. But income inequalities would still be exac- erbated for African American families under healthy stock market assump- tions. This is true because, in the ab sence of a real progressive benefit struc- ture, black families would only accrue Since 1949 Wi toeana Rica et Wee cies Lionouse Services > Circ raced Groupe tributions. And, because of higher un- employment rates, African Americans would be doubly vulnerable to having periods of zero earnings where no con- tributions at all are made to individual accounts. Unlike Social Security, indi- vidual accounts would not offset this labor market disadvantage. Finally, the higher adinintectatinelice associated with these accounts are likely to wipe out a significant portion of any accu- mulated earni Thus, the unsteadiness of the mar- ket, smaller wage-based contributions, reater periods of unemployment, and Bigh administrative fees make all Afri- can Americans, but seneriall low-in- ‘come earners, vulnerable to the tisk of having an inadequate level of retirement benefits under private individual 4c- counts. The problems are even greater for disability and survivor benefits. While the President's Commission did not ad- dress what would happen to these ben- efits, it is widely understood that indi- vidual accounts cannot make up for their value because these benefits are often needed in the prime of a worker's life - long before accounts have had time to accumulate significant earned interest. Poor Pregnancy Outcome Linked with By Charnicia E. Huggins, Reuters’ NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Afri- can American women who report expe- . riences of discrimination based on their race or skin color appear to have an in- creased risk of poor outcomes, according to the ndings of two new studies. In one study of black and white women, researchers found that a history of perceived racial discrimination was assdciated with premature delivery and low-birthweight babies among blacks. In the other study, investigators found that black women who reported experi- encing racial discrimination were more likely to give birth prematurely than lack women who did not report racial tion. Previously published reports indi- cate that black women are more likely than white women to experience pre- mature delivery and to have low- birthweight babies, but the reason for the discrepancy is not fully explained ts such as prenatal care, genetics and socioeconomic factors. Increasing Privatizers consistently argue that African Americans will experience a greater rate of return under a system of individual accounts. Their assertion, however, misses the point: it is mislead- ing to measure Social Security benefits by rates of return. Unlike the private securities market, Social Security is an insurance system that re-distributes eco- nomic assistance to contributors and their families on an as needed basis at various points during their lives. The value of this assistance for working and middle class African Americans families, particularly in the event of unexpected occurrences like disability or death, is Pgjelese when considering how expen- sive jt would be if offered by the privaté ‘idiSutrance market. Overall, African Americans are likely to experience a negative rate of return. This ts true particularly for younger gen- erations who would have the triple Bur. den of paying for current retirees, pay- ing for their own individual accounts, and figuring out how to meet living costs in the face of diminished disabili and survivor benefits. This state of nf fairs would be complicated by the fact that heavy borrowing will lead to the reduction or elimination of other social evidence suggests that chronic stress from racial discrimination may play a role. To examine this hypothesis, Dr. Sa- rah Mustillo, of Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, and her team examined information on 352 births that occurred between 1992 and 1995 among black and white women involved in a long-term study on heart disease. Their findings are pub- lished in this month's issue of the Ameti- can Journal of Public Health, Fifty percent of the black women and 5 percent of the white women who delivered their babies prematurely said they had, at some point in their lives, experienced discrimination in at least ree situations, such as at school, on the street or while getting medical care, Mustillo and her team report. The same was true of 61 percent of blacks and 0 percent of whites with low-birthweight infants. Overall, black women were about 2.5 times more likely than white women to experience premature delivery, When the black women's experiences of racial We've oved!" Heel/Sew Quik Carolina East Center Di Across From Ryan Steak House Suite #24 3400 South Memorial Drive Open Mon-Sat 10AM - 8PM Telephone (252) 756-0044 Full and Half Soles Heel Replacme can communities. There are 101 very good reasons why Americans of all backgrounds should rise up to defeat attempts to priva- tize the Social Security system. African Americans, however, should be hi ly alarmed about privatization’s implica- tions for the economic stability of their families and community, For it is a guar- anteed formula for disaster when senior citizens, disabled workers, and children whose caregivers are deceased no longer have the ability to put food on their table or a roof over their heads. Dr. Maya Rockeyméore is currently Vice President of Research and Programs at the Congressional BlaskGaucus Prendaion Pretiously serdinotethe Social Security Subcommittee of the U.S. House o Repre- sentatives Committee on Ways and Means, she is the co-editor of Strengthening Com- munities: Social Insurance in a Diverse America and author of The Political Ac- tion Handbook: A How To Guide for the Hip Hop Generation. Dr. Rockeymoore completed her Ph.D. in Political Science and Public Policy at Purdue University in 2000 after earning her M.A. in Political Science from Purdue in 1996 and a B.A. in Political Science from Prairie View AGM University in'1993. . Reports of Racism discrimination, were taken into consid- eration, however, this value decreased to 1.88 and to 1,11 after factoring in to- bacco and alcohol use, education, in- come and depression. “ . . . . . ° Experiences of racial discrimina- tion were associated with preterm deliv- ery and low birthweight, and such ex- periences appear to contribute to black- white differences in these outcomes,” Mustillo told Reuters Health. She added that “racial discrimina- tion ¢nay underlie racial/ethnic dispari- ties in health rather than any biological notion of race.” Dr. James W. Collins Jr., of North- western University, Chicago, and his team also looked at the role of racial dis- crimination in pregnancy outcomes in 312 African American women. These women delivered either very low birthweight infants — less than 1,500 grams (3.3 pounds) or infants weighing more than 2,500 grams. Study participants were asked if they ever experienced racism while at work or school, or while getting medical care, getting a job, or getting served at a restaurant or store. Those who said they had been dis- criminated against on the basis of their race in at least one of those areas were almost twice as likely as their peers to have a very low birthweight infant, Collins and his team report. Women who said they had been discriminated against in three or more areas were 2.6 times more likely to have a very low birthweight infant, € association between very low birthweight infants and racial discrimi- nation was particularly strong among women who said they had been dis. criminated against at work or while find- ing a job, study findings indicate. Our study suggests that a mecha- nism by which institutional racism af. fects fernale reproductive health is likely to be found in the reported incidents of racial discrimination in the workplace,” the researchers write. “In conclusion,” they add, “the re- ported lifelong accumulated experiences of interpersonal racial discrimination by African American women constitute an independent risk factor for infant very low birthweight.” _ SOURCE: American Journal of Pub- lic Health, December 2004, Page 8 The Minority Voice Newspaper December 17 - 31, 2004 People, Places and Faces.... “Good Times at the Princeville Parade” __ A Jim Rouse Pi to SER seen te, & a REA SA a LOREAL AE ARN tht EAN 6 x ! JNM SSRIRER TOL A HARRIS q PREACHERS ... Continues from Page 6 ments of their parishioners over the percieved cultural rot surrounding ho- mosexuality, Pornography and lewdness wt \ that the Democrats seem to embrace. Stud- ies found that blacks are more hard-line on Gay Right issues than Whites, “Forty- six percent of Africam Americans op any legal recognition of homosexual rela- tionships compared to 37 percent of . tion to Bush. I have whites.” I was born in Columbus, Ohio, the state that probably gave the recent elec- Frends who were life- long Democrats until recently. For ex- ample, Ella Coleman, publisher of Pur- December 17 - 31, 2004 The Minority Voice Newspaper Page? pose Magazine, is a smart, progressive woman, but her understanding of moral- ity and conscience is ing her politics. Homosexuality and same-sex mar- rages are abominations. You can't straddle the fence on that. That's the kind of thing - that the Bible. Thats the kind of thing that will bring down the wrath of God on us. Morality is number one for me. not unemploymernt , not wars because there have always been wars. I am not a right winger. If Kerry would have addresed ke © TWA f ‘Only In House Service De 7 » 70 Wits tated gyro e peawed + | Ntbven 3 adn, HMR hata & hee i 18 (00 Payakty + Forma: OVD Audios Video “1 * NESCDinead Direct Pragsenive PC en ey THMGOS | [2 SOND ChaanperRapeess Stat DDE rom Output Pe By OetinSagerm visa | Carreed Ipo Reeth ead fate softener dispensers ity: 3.2 ev, Bai fl Ano Ps agitator Voll extra rinse Pal *®eeee eee * High Resolution VGA ( 853 x 42 is / Bie . 43 picts, “HodnlseX liege Serer HOOP ch enaneten jy WASH white porcelain-en-sicel wash basket: iv biad Why Choose | * - ag + Stim, 4 i 4 susnesMAnaNAnGnOURNNDAIONNINSRNIRA caer ee maining LLL —— « isis sits aa 4 ees ‘ ¢ set sonia aenae decree mac sao age ‘COMMUNITEE, * KBUVING POWER “DEDICATION | * Sony's Wege LEASED * Paoel Type: 13" Active Matrix (asi TED LOD = 7oottant Toad heeee eH 6 Viewing Anglos: 190°) iner * © Sigil Circe Prngresdve Sean FE * Audio System: ZW 2 2,1 * SChipAY Dewoder | * Taner Type: Electronic FLL Tuner (NTSC/PAL) Se a | * Speakers: 4x 7em x2 | * HD ment Input: ¥/Pr/Pb » 1 | * S-Video Input: 4pin DIN x 1 > SVAN ota e }* Infrared remote 2 audio inputé VATURAL SOUND _ONE-BOX HOME THEATER AUDIO SYSTEM sgl a a 7 «5.1 Channel Surround sound |° Expanded bass response * Pee with 4 video and SPS UT te Gear et et ee memmanancensenanannnes HOME * D.LS.T. 480p (Digital image Sealing Technology | ny ors eny bender vernal + Flicker Froo High Resolution Picturo «A+ tmages sa it9%s como 80 He wth Enhanced Momory Sich meds * Digital 4 Point Color Management |] + spend te tiect your tv to, we * 16:9 Aspect Rath ny cuttonding apnea | Eogive™ Sytem maimars pieruie in the digtel Comein * Foued y ard constant ligh wiminate flicker festa detail and clarty y * knages and MP3"s come t file wih Enhanced Methory Sick media Expord 2 he of your TV wih —~ * 14 cu. ft capacity * Turntable a? © Bib, Quick Dutroat * Convenience cooking contrels PSAMSUN |] OLP TV (Wighat Light Proces Contrast i] + Semon Film Like images ol Redus Ooor P| FutLengih Door Heading : : EZTouch™ Crushed Cubed ice and Water Xxepenser j] & Month Uttradinge™ 1 Water Faug PL Fitar indicator Light [ ms AdcwONN™ Tam |] Adjustablo Glass Shatvos i | Ful Width Freezer Bin Na lle Cyctes H} * 6Clean Toceh™ Conirel Pods Uy Sigh temper Wash Opec i « re é * $ Hours Delay Wash Option Hl + Ae/llen OME ote Your Local BRANDSOURCE Store ~“VALUE * NAME BRANDS *'PFACEKE OF MIND | HE]? 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Polls found that-71 percent of voters had heard from the religious right while only 38 percent heard from the re- With preachers within SCLC are more involed in fighting each other than the system and some conseivative preach- ers just happy to bein the Big Ouse, the black church must regain it’s voice, even it if may seem only for a season to . only be crying out in a political wilder- ness. , The Rev. Barbara Reynolds, the re- ligious columnist the the NNPA, is an author of four books, including “Out of Te ving Wel Healiongfrom the Inside Out.” She is a graduate of the Howard School of Divinity and the Legal Aid of NC initiates Access to Justice campaign to help the poor - RALEIGH - Legal Aid offices across North Carolina are reaching out to their communities for support during the an- nual “Access to Justice “ campaign this - winter. “The funds raised by our Access to Justice campaign enhance our capac- ee representation in civil matters to low-income families,” said George Hausen, Legal Aid of NC's ex- ecutive director. “The Access to Justice donations and pledges help us fill the gaps in our struggle for equal justice and demonstrate the strong support of our legal aid proejcts.” Legal Aid of NC ) is a statewide, nonprofit law that provides free legal services in civil matters (non-criminal) to low-in- come people in order to ensure e juaj, access to justice and to remove | Thar. riers to economic o portunity. Operat- ing 24 geographically located offices and five statewide projects, LANC provides legal services to eligible clients in all 100 counties of North Carolina. Hausen noted that for the poor and disadvan- taged, access to the legal system can of- ten be the single most important factor irt determining the course of their lives, LANC helps children, families, individu- als and migrant workers solve problems that affect their basic needs, such as health care benefits (Medicare or Med- icaid), subsistence income (SSI or SSDI), consumer loan problems, environmen- tal safety, protection from ic vi and legal help also complement the ef- forts of local family shelters, children’s organizations, community development groups and other nonprofits in North To be eligible for LANC’s free legal services, clients must have incomes of 125% or less of the federally established poverty guidelines. For example, a fam- ily of four could have an annual gross income of no more than $23,563. The annual “Access to Justice” campaigns have raised more than $2 million state- wide over the past 12 years to help pro- vide free legal services for low-income people in North Carolina. Although contributions are requested throughout the communities of North Carolina, the Access to Justice campaign has primarily targeted attorneys and private law firms, both for financial donations and com- mitments for pro bono work. Expecta- tions are high for support from the legal community. “Many law firms here in North Carolina respond well,” said Hausen, “Some firms ask their attorneys "to donate the equivalent of one billable hour per month to help our programs fill the gap for equal justice in our com- munities. Some firms are also willing to provide financial as well as pro bono support.” During the campaign, local LANC advisory board members staff and approach law firms, businesses and in- dividuals for support. The requests are made through mailings, telephone calls and presentations. “All donations made during the annual campaign can be des- ignated,” added Hausen. “This means t local donations and pledges can go toward support of legal aid within the local community, to one of our state- wide projects or to the general fund of LANC.” “The success of our Access to Justice campaign will be critical to our. capacity to provide legal services this year,” says Chris Marks, Legal Aid of NC’s assistant director of finance & adminis- tration. “Inflationary costs continue to impact us, even at a time when we are making technological advances to in- Crease our capacity, artd foundations Woe to have less dollars to give due to ¢ downturn in the economy.” In ef- forts to encourage donations in the ru- ral, less populated areas of North Caro- lina, the NC State Bar's IOLTA (Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts) fund has ma provided “Rural Incentive Grants.” These matching grants have provided additional incentives to those offices to achieve specified fundraising goals during the “Access to Justice “ cam- paigns. The seven LANC offices that ve been eligible for the IOLTA Rural Incentive Grants included: Ahoskie, Boone, New Betn/ Greenville, Morganton, Pembroke, Sylva and Wil. son. “IOLTA’s support for these cam- been greatly appreciated,” is another ex- ample of how strongly the legal com- munity in North Caroli supports our work for equal justice.” iscom- Page 10 The Minority Voice Newspaper December 17 - 31, 2004 alone C"A¢GE + 92008845 : TERSIEVA eee ee , * od * Hy . “= 4 ¥ ee | Y FOSTER y il : ‘ STARTING ‘Bigs NEW 2005 DURANGO ‘ i NEW 2005 CHAYSLER ? iV LOE 249: Do ae NEW 2005 CHRYSLER 4 os Soma | wr A PASSER ; “a | | | : en fl ar | et ee not 2 oe Ads We 4! 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