pound. lDauraoce Lonnie Baker told an iDq panel convened by Nlcbo and FBI in tf to , he .. Sharp e ins P eu, and bad got Involved'll he told Sharp that Powell hiding near a h con­ tainer. Baker aid he Po ell alive on the ground and he moved out of the way. "I didn't the man getti shot. I didn't know who got bot, . .1 w just 0 stunned that the gun went off," said Baker. Tbe boo in of a bopllftl ''''pect Ju e 18, by an In­ diananapoll police 'officer b prompted the ocaI NAACP chapter to demand a overhaul of police department. Edmund lathe fore who d c him down. Tbe County Coroner Dennis Icholu ay' the auto y how Powell w true in the h d by bullet fired from above. Powell w taller than S ,0 Nichol con- cluded be �hot wbll on the SHARP, 40, id the gun fi� ccidentally when Powell struck him with a board. The NAACP wan 'Sharp and Police Chief Paul Annee to be fired, and it wan a federal In ti tion of all fatal sbooting by t In- , d I Police Depanment in the tlO . We need a pol ee depll1ment ���������������a�.;�� _ p. �YL�������:��'�S��.I������8�������!�������J������������ ,j 88M HARBOR - The drownln death of Eric Mc­ Ginnis, 6, bo 'II lut aeen , alive on May 17. remains a mystery. Berrien County ProIecutor Den­ nis Wiley released a tatement to the p on June 14, almost a month after the boy'. body w found in tbe St. Joeeph River on May 22. The Prosecutor told the preas that pollce bad at that time, "logged in of 300 hoWl in an effort to explain the disappearance and death" ofMcOfnnJI. ,; ,The lack of information from 'authorities continues to fuel rumors in t racia�ly divided southwest Michipn communities of Benton Hatbor and S1. Joseph. Wiley lilted a number of aUega­ dooa aDd rumo tbat continue to cit­ culate and, have "contributed greatly to not only diverting tbe attention of inveatiption from its normal path, but also lOwed ( le) to create unnceuary racial tension in both ,communfd " he lald. McGinnis, a' resident of Benton Harbor, 93 * Btack and Michigan'. aooreatcommunity, w droppedotI dance club in downtown St. .JJ ph Friday evenina May 17 by his fatber. St. Joseph, a city across the river from BenlOO Harbor is both 't'bfte and aftluent with alona hlatory of hostility to Blacka. n OWNING, OME Red tape straps program by D RRlCK c. LEWIS Staff Writer He aid priority is given to the first applicant, and the other must tart the application process over again with a different property .. Part of the blame given to th .: low amount of occupancy permits can be attributed to frustration from all of the red tape . d. One woman said she knew of two people who have tried to obtain a house for over a year. She said the proce involves a lot of work and per everance. A testimonial to the work in­ volved in obtaining an abandoned home WJlS given by LaRochelle Cook, a single working parent. She told of having a house he applied for in 1989 isqualificd be­ cause someone else got there first, and finally having a contract for another house approved by the city council. ' had to spend the night in. car out- e side of her house to make sure no one broke in, after omeone had brokin in earlier and tole some paint and a latter. -Sbe also said he finds wine bot­ tles around the home when she comes to work on it. work, but urged people to "keep going." CEDD can provide a "forgivable loan" of $7,000 to applicants, providing they stay in the house at least five years after they 0 tain an ' occupancy permit. Even after obtaining financing, Cook till faced obstacles in renovating her home. She said she After' over 10,000 inspection and 5,460 applications for aban­ doned housing with the city' Nuisance Abatement program, only 83 occupanty permit have been awarded since the program began in 1988. Contract have been awarded to 386 people for them to begin renovation of bandoned property. People who receive contracts to renovate an abandoned home must bring it up to code before they are given an occupancy permit. Some of the participants in the Nuisance Abate-Repair & Own Workshop at the 4th Annual Hous­ ing Conference, hosted by State Representative Raymond Murphy last Friday, expressed disbelief at the low number of people who ac­ tually obtained an occupancy per- mit. ' SeeHOMES, 3 $9 Billion 'In Aid Unspent In recent tudie, most tember. Americans do not know that nearly The problem is that when eon ... $9 billion in United States aid to gre approves aid to a country, the other countries is currently unused. money goes into an account. The Due to this money being un- U.S. Agency for International claimed, there is a growing concep- Development sometimes spen tion in Congress to constrict the the money immediately'. number of years that funds are un- But other times, the receiviag used in the Foreign Aid Pipeline. country may have to provide mate- Republican Toby Roth said, "At a ing funds that it cannot promptly time when program for Americans raise, or the U .S. Agency may are being cutb ck, like Medicare decide to hold their funds until that and housing, the foreign aid countrie' next election. pipeline is an imult to the people Diosdado Oracio Jr., Minister­ we are here to erve." ragures of un- counselor in the Philippines &n­ spent aid were recently calculated bassy aid "Sometimes we have to howing an increase of about $6 bil- come up with the same amount in lion in 1981 to $8.8 billion last ep- '"Oiii'"" currency to match the U.s. CU N11., Y. GYPT ,eU more U.S. aid than any otber country except lareal. ElYpt . rece� total of S2.G4 •• • unspent money. P . the secoad Jaraeat ai� , . ell eIcalatecl by more than $16 million to $756.7 million in 1990. UNSftNr, 3 COO SAID SHE put all of her financial resources into the house to bring it up to code, and when that money ran out, he went to the city' Community Economic Develop­ ment Department (CBDD) for al­ ternate financing. She de cribed the process bcing very slow, with a lot of paper- JOE SALOMONE, the city's ac­ ting as istant chief of Ho . g, Buildings Safety and E . cering . Department, attribute the low number of permits ssued to 3 hundreds of people ap . for the . same abandoned prope