o c o C 00 zg EFUA KORANT ball gam here. " This' m ho ," E id, "I don� ant fol talki ng loud, ing uncouth, in my house." Giggl uddenly topped in the uditorium nd tuden hifted in their chai and t upright Ii tening to Eve on tell th m what h expected them to do, right now. Everson id, "I 1 ." Aq aDSWEn' riod �Vl�II:'IU go am mof ud n Hatch urged t tud n not to fight, to . t up th ir complain nd giv th m to their coo 10 nd ch Sh mind the tuden t t th role of all the adul to . tth m. Hatcher has two ye and aid," re triving to become an e em­ plary community chool. Th are beautiful children and e have to do ome things to make them better. We are not tis­ fled with th behavio and at­ titud of thi years tudents being late to cl and playing in the halls - we're going to do something about that." Anita Dennis, vice chair of the Parent Teachers Organiza­ tion at Post Middle School held a cherry tart (baked by princi­ pal Robert Everson) and told me why she thought her daugh­ ter Anita, a seventh grader, is getting a good education: "Ba­ sically, th t chers here are great, the parents are involved, they get involved to help are kids. They put up metal detec­ tors, to keep weapons out of the school. I'll volunteer my time, because I want the kids to have the best education they can get." Robert Giles, head of Con­ cerned Parents and Citizens of Michigan, started an in-school Suspension Program at Post Middle School. Giles said "the program will not be dependent on funds from the district but ran, no troit poll fo n cti int 1963 and id ·it organi tion to open ho ing, ur n rec:1,"'9 ment and the displa ent of African Americans beca of th exp ys. Johnson aid there are 12,000 id n in the "Since 1984, a volunt home repair program has paired 83 ho in the a , though,in 1992 17 hom had been pro for repair, but little work has been don" . d J ohnson, "There' a holding pattern with repairs, very Iittl construction has b en done from since 1991," said Johnson. "The home repair program . funded by the Neighborhood portunity Fund (NOF) and the Housing and Urban Devel­ opment program (BUD). The wor is done by volunteer, but the program lost volunteers af­ ter 1987", Johnson said. Johnson said, "the FCC . trying to get back to the baaics. The FCC is trying to get ingle parents involved with their children's education." Johnson says that since television domi­ nates society, he is determined to try a new approach and wants parents to take action, like pa­ trolling the neighborhood to­ gether on upcoming Devils Night. D OIT - Ro rt E rson, principal of Post Middle School, called n eighth grade mbly to ttention in th auditorium Friday afternoon, Octob r 15 nd told hi tuden , "nothing that i wrong i made right be- G chil- Robert Everson (I) confer with Rob rtGIl ofConc rn d Parents and Citizens of Mchlgan at Post Middle School. Rob rt Ever on, prlnclpalof Post Mlddl Head Barbara Hatcher. the Detroit school system. Gil wants to start dealing with students at an earlier age tochan attitude and behaviors before they are ingrained. He wants parents to make it their job to help the school and assist them in doing that. Mackie C. Johnson is the edi­ tor of the Fitzgerald Community Council (FCC) newsletter and a dren are suspended for more than one day, we will contact their parents or guardian and have them sign a referral for their child to be admitted to the program. " Gil will request academic work from the teach­ ers and the student will attend class and eat lunch at the center. The suspended student is re­ quired to spend one hour a day do not want Post to ever have the reputation that students act wild and crazy ... we're going to, teach the ones that are here, we are not going to make the on suffer that get here on time." cause everybody d it," Everson referred to his stu­ dents "hollering and screaming in the lunch room, food on the floor, kids playing tag in the hallway and going to class late ." Everson addressed his stu­ dents' as ladies and gentlemen and told them, "you'r too old, too sophisticated to play tag. Starting Monday, there is a new MRS. BARBARA Hatcher, the unit head took over the as­ sembly and told the students "to come in, and get your education . ' . • • f' '" • .. ' , GOOD F'BI4:I4: FOOD! anti-school violen e program and BY KILEY ARMSTRONG NEW YORK (AP) - Stopping crime by Blacks against Blacks is the new frontier of the civil righ struggle, and young peo­ ple are the key, the Rev. Jesse Jackson ay , Jackson said Monday -that he'll enlist parents in a nation­ wide program to quell school vio­ lence beginning in New York and eventually including De­ troit. He said the goal was "stop­ ping crime in general, Black-on-Black crime in par­ ticular. " , The civil righ leader said that "362 Blacks under the age of 21 have been killed by other Blacks in ew York City this year; mor tha-i 300 in New Or­ leans." He blamed dru ,guns nd "perverse values." The program is being devel­ oped through Black churches as a national, interfaith model. It has b en endorsed by city school Chancellor Ramon Cortines, who appeared at a teachers and parents know each other," Jackson said. As for students surrounded by guns and drugs, "those who do it must stop. And those who know about it must tell it," he said. "Those most likely to be killed must rise up and fight back." Clergy members will discu school violence and other topics at a Nov. 8 meeting in Detroit. Jackson aid the program may expand next to Washington, D.C, Harlem news conference with Jackson. HEAT:rH CARE JACKSON SAID churches will hand out pledge cards to parents. They'll be asked to ex- . change home phone numbers, take their children to school, meet teachers, pick up their kids' report cards and turn off their televisions at least three hours a night. "We know teachers can teach children differently when they know the parents, and children tend to behave differently when for olllen (Pregnant or BreastfeediDg) Boycottt ative eat p e, e e ___ erican ground Children (up to age 5) PASO ROBLES, CaUf. (AP)-A developer redesigned plans for a shopping center anchored by a Wal-Mart tore, after prot ts by Native American actiyi ts who feared it would disturb an­ cient Chumash Indian burial sites. . The National Congr of American Indians last umm r threatened to call a nationwide boycott of Wal-Mart Stor s Inc. if developer James Halferty kep on with his original plans for the 40-acre nter in thi Centr I California town. In a statement Mond y, Halferty, Wal-Mart Stor 'Inc. and Chumash elder Pilulaw Khus aid the new de ign will preserye a 1.5 acre knoll wher parts of a human skull and fin­ ger were found. It al 0 will put a cap of new oil over a nd area of th prop rty b for < building b gins, Khus and oth r India had sued to top the proj I ch 1- lenging wheth r nougn h d n don und r t nviron­ m ntallaw 0 all viat po ntial dama to a cultural r ource. Th P 0 Robl City Council has approv d th tIm nt agr m n , cl aring h w y for 'Con truc ion to b gin a h property, which includ h last known undo turbed Indi n it in th city. For Information witch called ation linton to Call1-800-26-BIR o or on minority ealth Department Call your Local Women, Infants & Children Program (WIC) . OT of I H('P, ( olot. na lonal ()11�ln .• j..(" "" • or hu nd u ap. \ '11tl' unmr-du 1'1,.. II hf' drn m i ... r '\I "111111 S"IVH '·s.: 101 11'llk ("'11 1'1 Ihl 'f' ponsored of Mar-