HighPoint49er
08-29-03, 02:29 PM
Skip Alston may have bitten off too much to win this battle.
Dudley trip on despite boycott
By Jennifer Fernandez, Staff Writer, Greensboro News & Record
8/29/03
GREENSBORO -- Dudley High's South Carolina basketball tournament is still on.
But so are discussions with the NAACP, which wants the school to pull out of the prestigious match and honor a national NAACP boycott of the Palmetto State for flying a Confederate flag on its Statehouse grounds.
Parents leaving a 90-minute closed-door meeting at the school Thursday said the overwhelming majority want to go on the trip.
"The issue right now is for us to support our children. And our children want to go to the tournament," said Lisa Walker, whose daughter Eboni Morrison plays on the junior-varsity team.
Jason Wilson, who is the guardian of freshman Sierra Little, agreed.
"The flag issue, it's an important issue, but sometimes you kind of overlook the welfare of the kids," he said.
Emerson Girardeau III, president of Dudley's Student Government Association, said most students also favor their teams going on the trip.
"We made a decision as a school," said Girardeau, a 17-year-old senior. "Why come in and fight us?"
However, he added, that doesn't mean students support South Carolina's display of a Confederate flag.
Both the boys and girls teams have been been invited to play this December in the Beach Ball Classic and the Holiday Invitational in Myrtle Beach, S.C. The school decided last spring to go. Teams from as far away as Maryland, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Texas have agreed to participate.
Melvin "Skip" Alston, president of the North Carolina NAACP and chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners, asked Dudley officials to honor the organization's boycott and withdraw from the tournament. Deena Hayes, a Guilford County Board of Education member, also made the request.
"It was our first attempt to address our concerns," Alston said after the Thursday meeting. "We have three months before they go."
He said there will be more community meetings. Earlier, Alston had said if he was unable to persuade Dudley officials to abandon the trek, he and Hayes would appeal to the district's administration and the school board.
Meanwhile, the trip is still on, said Dudley principal Tony Watlington.
The media were barred from the meeting, which drew more than 70 parents, students and Dudley staff.
Basketball players, who said they were told not to speak to the media or attend the meeting, hovered outside the glass doors to the media center. As they joked among themselves, some complained about the NAACP, an organization that supports minority issues, trying to influence a school decision.
Dudley's student enrollment is 99 percent minority and, according to some students, a big beneficiary of NAACP scholarships.
Kennitrish Means, a 17-year-old senior who is not a member of the basketball team, said she is worried that the NAACP will stop its support of the school if the teams don't honor the boycott.
"Many people need that scholarship," she said. "Since they fund a lot of stuff we do, I do think they (NAACP) should have a say-so."
N.C. A&T, a historically black college in Greensboro, still sends teams to South Carolina.
But that is different, Alston said earlier this week, because the college has contracts and conference obligations to play those teams. Dudley chose to attend this tournament and could join another one.
Alston said he doesn't know whether other state NAACPs are protesting team trips to this high school tournament.
"I'm not worried about those," he said. "I'm just worried about my hometown, Dudley."
Dudley trip on despite boycott
By Jennifer Fernandez, Staff Writer, Greensboro News & Record
8/29/03
GREENSBORO -- Dudley High's South Carolina basketball tournament is still on.
But so are discussions with the NAACP, which wants the school to pull out of the prestigious match and honor a national NAACP boycott of the Palmetto State for flying a Confederate flag on its Statehouse grounds.
Parents leaving a 90-minute closed-door meeting at the school Thursday said the overwhelming majority want to go on the trip.
"The issue right now is for us to support our children. And our children want to go to the tournament," said Lisa Walker, whose daughter Eboni Morrison plays on the junior-varsity team.
Jason Wilson, who is the guardian of freshman Sierra Little, agreed.
"The flag issue, it's an important issue, but sometimes you kind of overlook the welfare of the kids," he said.
Emerson Girardeau III, president of Dudley's Student Government Association, said most students also favor their teams going on the trip.
"We made a decision as a school," said Girardeau, a 17-year-old senior. "Why come in and fight us?"
However, he added, that doesn't mean students support South Carolina's display of a Confederate flag.
Both the boys and girls teams have been been invited to play this December in the Beach Ball Classic and the Holiday Invitational in Myrtle Beach, S.C. The school decided last spring to go. Teams from as far away as Maryland, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Texas have agreed to participate.
Melvin "Skip" Alston, president of the North Carolina NAACP and chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners, asked Dudley officials to honor the organization's boycott and withdraw from the tournament. Deena Hayes, a Guilford County Board of Education member, also made the request.
"It was our first attempt to address our concerns," Alston said after the Thursday meeting. "We have three months before they go."
He said there will be more community meetings. Earlier, Alston had said if he was unable to persuade Dudley officials to abandon the trek, he and Hayes would appeal to the district's administration and the school board.
Meanwhile, the trip is still on, said Dudley principal Tony Watlington.
The media were barred from the meeting, which drew more than 70 parents, students and Dudley staff.
Basketball players, who said they were told not to speak to the media or attend the meeting, hovered outside the glass doors to the media center. As they joked among themselves, some complained about the NAACP, an organization that supports minority issues, trying to influence a school decision.
Dudley's student enrollment is 99 percent minority and, according to some students, a big beneficiary of NAACP scholarships.
Kennitrish Means, a 17-year-old senior who is not a member of the basketball team, said she is worried that the NAACP will stop its support of the school if the teams don't honor the boycott.
"Many people need that scholarship," she said. "Since they fund a lot of stuff we do, I do think they (NAACP) should have a say-so."
N.C. A&T, a historically black college in Greensboro, still sends teams to South Carolina.
But that is different, Alston said earlier this week, because the college has contracts and conference obligations to play those teams. Dudley chose to attend this tournament and could join another one.
Alston said he doesn't know whether other state NAACPs are protesting team trips to this high school tournament.
"I'm not worried about those," he said. "I'm just worried about my hometown, Dudley."