I
01-
it h
the
d
ded
clo ing the college bec u e
the building w in such b d
h pe , "I think th t' the
number one thing on my
mind. Would the college
h ve existed tod y without
th t effort nd $2 million
gr nt from t te r e pr e
sen live Hood." He th said
t the time, the college only
received SIS,OOO from the
st te for construction.
IRONICALLY SAID
HEATH, an enrollment
decline prompted the then
board of trustees not to
renew his contr act, ome
thing He th said was politi
cally motivated. He was
reassigned as a dean in the
. college.
According to Heath, visits
by the North Ce nt r 1 Ac
creditation board in 1981
and 84, revealed the college
to still be in bad shape. The
college was cited for main
taining antiquated
trooms and cia sroom
=-';jf:�i!!.�.'�· t' de te p r -
rw._,._,_ a ae of a
rgariizatio I
structure, a cont1nuing
decline in enrollment, and
r========��=====t doubtful fi nanc ia l stability.
It was also deemed as being
a nonentity in the communitr_
bec rro ndin coi-
le e uc y e Cou ty
Community Colle e.
ith e t' return
pr ident of t e colle e in
9 6, the coli e ble to
ecure 10- year ccr edita
tion from orth Centr I c
credit tio. e th id t is
the fir t ti e in the
colle e' i tory of chiev-
e id in order to
obt in thi ccredit tion the
coil e h d to elimi te
host of problem cited from
North Centr I' e rlier
vi it .
He th cited the remodel
in of th college in 1988,
two new pring lot, n in
cr e e in enrollment, nd
the recognition of the col
lege s n entit in the com
munity nd st teo He Ii ted a
number of progr min
titi ted to help student , like
the Center for Instructional
Support to help tudent
with intermedi te st dies,
the Dubois Honors Progr m,
and the implementation of
performing arts into the cur
riculum. He s id the college
ha better relations with
loc I, st te, and nationally
elected offici I , but with
the college moving ahead he
i faced, once gain, with "
ho tile bo rd."
THE BOARD ACCUSED
Heath of failure to recom
mend and supervise efforts
to reduce the college's al
ledged $3 million deficit.
Heath said the figure i not
known because the audit has
not been completed, but th t
last year it was nearly $2 mil
lion.
He said he proposed and
implemented deficit reduc
tion plan which the board
approved, that would have
gotten the college out of
debt by the 91-92 school
tion in tate aid, and
repairs done for the 1 O-year
accreditation. .
He th aid he plans to
nswer 11 the ch rges at the
March 26 hearing, saying,
"they are a f ls e and
frivolou attempt to not
honor my contr ct."
Heath thin s the charge
against him are an attempt to
undermine the college. "It
appears as though there's an
element in the community
who does not want the col
lege to survive, for whatever
reasons, I don't know," said
Heath.
HE SAID HE FINDS it
inconceivable that board
members Humphrey and
Waterhouse, who brought up
and supported the charges,
ci e char es l<1ill
to 1 86 when the have
served on the board le s
than a year.
Heath said he asked the
board to be more specific
with the charges.
Heath, who said he has
never received an unsatisfac
tory evaluation,' said he
thinks the charges are either
made up or political in na
ture.
"I think the college is at a
crossroads in terms of going
forward or down," said
Heath. He says. the college
has had five chief ad
ministrators in the last 10
years. According to Heath,
this instability does not bode
well with obtaining state
funding, will conjure up
negative images for stu
dents, and may further im
pact negatively on future
accreditation.
o U.
•
roop
-Become.
mechanic
-Obtain your G.E.D. certificate
amlng good I'
- yne County
ngOetroft
ber of thing to the b .
of the deficit, inclu mg a
reduced millege; a board
approved 22 percent pay in
crease (or college employees
over a three-year period
totalling $1,880,000; a bo rd
approved decision to drop
the Adult Education
program resulting in a loss
of $300,000 a year; r e duc-
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by NATHANIEL SCOTT
their skin but b-y the content of
their character."
Correspondent
A Black History Month
celebration c me to Highland
Park, Saturday, February 23. It
was held at Highland Park's Mc
Gregor Library.
Thi was the third year that
HISh' nd • yor Martha
a. Scott has presented a program
in honor of Black history. I
The theme of the program was
"A Celebration Of Culture And
Achievement." But the underlin
ing theme of the m yor and the .
other dignitaries who spoke was
children.
"Our fore parents paved the
way for us." the mayor said. "We
must pass on our history to our
young people."
They were there, tbe youth.
They were spectators. They were
performers, They were (are) the,
life-blood of Black people. The
soul, the seed. the aspiration, the
hope, the next generation who
must reach for the baton of our
"struggle;" the fulfillment of
Martin Luther King's dream
"that. .. (Black) children will one
day live in a nation where they
will not be judged by the color of
CARL PETTWAY, principal
of Ford School and rna ter of
ceremony for the afternoon, in
toned in his opening remarks that
"to a emble a number of young
people, tor.a good cause is.wlW
n u4 o d !)It
I heard' your acappella songs,
Cecelia Perkins. It was said tti 't'
you, a Black songbird feast, a
member of the Order Of the East
ern Star, came to hare your
talent with, for, and because, you
dare to care enough .
The tight, rhythmic sound of
Highland Park's Ferris School's
Band, under the direction of
Henderson Weatherspoon,
echoed in my mind as you sung.
And I believe that Duke El
lington himself would have been
pleased with their ver ion of
"Take The A Train."
Cass Technical High School's
Dance Workshop, under the
direction of Vicki Holley, wa a
. smashing success. They
received a standing ovation for
their piece, "Bonds Of Apart
heid, tt choreographed by Cass
Tech student Tedra Marble.
The dance troupe also danced
!�eir interpretation of "Spirit In
The Dark." The dance troupe
members were Marble, Leslie
Poster, Milissa Stewart, 'Denise
Ward and Taj Bell.
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AND THEN THERE were the
word makers; the poets.
Sharon Smith-Knight and
Brenda K. Perryman, teachers in
the Detroit schools system, and
yours truly, Nathaniel Scott.
The blend in sound, tone,
direction and focus, enhanced the
reading and gave it purpose.
Perryman. whose recently
published book entitled "Mood
Swings and Magic Carpet
Rides," read love poetry. Poetry
that talked about the bud, bloom
and withered stages love some
times goes through.
Smith-Knight is a dynamo.
Her poems are folksy. They reek
with every day life.
And Nathaniel Scott writes
and reads "social poetry."
And so the curtain c me
down on another afternoon of
" ... Cul ture and Achievement."
But I would be remiss if I didn't
include the words of Cio'la
Nde ga , Director of McGregor
Library.
. She said, "We have a respon- .
sibility to pass on the heritage
and legacy to our young people."
And tho e words were heard by
the approximate 200 who at
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