
News Item
August 25, 2008News & Record
Prayer Day focuses on school discipline
About 100 people turned out Saturday afternoon on the Halifax County Courthouse grounds for the annual Day of Prayer sponsored by Citizens for a Better America, an organization formed by the late civil rights activist Cora Tucker.
Leading the event was Tucker's granddaughter,
Ebony Guy, who was assisted by Rev. Kevin Chandler, president of the
local NAACP chapter and the Rev. Dr. William Keen of the Southern
Christian Leadership Council.
Prior to the Prayer Day Service, about 40 people had assembled for a
march from the Bethune Complex to the Courthouse Square to bring
awareness to the problems with school discipline. Chandler said 36
black students compared with only six white students were suspended
long term and 19 black students were expelled compared to only four
white students during the past school year. The inequity in the
expulsion and long term suspension rates were alarming, Chandler said,
as he explained that parents need to be made aware of how their
children are expected to behave at school.
"Those students are not getting an education," Chandler said, noting "we are all aware that individuals without an education are destined to a life of trouble. We are also all aware that all the blame does not fall on the school system, that is why there is a need for the community to rally together to create change, because drugs, weapons and gang activity have no place in our schools. We need for parents to know there are consequences when their children mess up."
Rev.
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