| <Show: NPR ALL THINGS CONSIDERED> <Date: MAY 06, 1998>
 <Time: 20:00>
 <Tran: 050610np.212>
 <Type: PACKAGE>
 <Head: Camden Power>
 <Sect: News; Domestic>
 <Time: 20:50>
 
 ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:  This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Robert
 Siegel.
 
 NOAH ADAMS, HOST:  And I'm Noah Adams.
 
 Tonight, a little-known, semi-professional basketball team called
 the Camden Power goes on the road to play in Columbus, Ohio. Camden,
 New Jersey's first semi-pro team is in the U.S. Basketball League.
 
 Some people hope the team will bring a dose of optimism to one of
 America's most troubled cities.
 
 NPR's Eric Westervelt attended the Power's first home game on
 Saturday and has this report.
 
 SOUNDBITE OF BASKETBALL GAME
 
 ERIC WESTERVELT, NPR REPORTER:  The turn-out was modest.  The
 players' uniforms didn't all match.  The team rented the gym and their
 cheer-leading squad consisted of just two teenage girls in jeans and
 colored tops.
 
 But when the Camden Power took the court against the New
 Hampshire Thunder Loons, the locals let them know they were welcome.
 
 ANNOUNCER:  Number 14 from Philadelphia...
 
 WESTERVELT:  Kids in Camden haven't had a lot of home town things
 to cheer about lately.  Drug-related violence, poverty, teen pregnancy
 and joblessness remain staggeringly high here.
 
 It's a city of just 85,000, but with a per capita murder rate
 that's one of the highest in the nation.  The Camden Power's slogan is
 "Power to the People," an attempt, perhaps, to make explicit the
 usually unwritten social contracts sports teams have with their
 cities, an expectation that they'll offer more than basketball --
 perhaps some mentoring, outreach and inspiration to a city whose kids could
 use a heavy dose of all three.
 
 Teenagers Lecole Burgess (ph) came with Delia Belcher (ph) and
 her mother Pamela (ph).
 
 LECOLE BURGESS, CAMDEN TEENAGER:  This is something more
 positive, 'cause Camden's -- it ain't never had nothin' positive.
 Every time you hear somethin' on the news, it's always somethin' bad.
 
 DELIA BELCHER, CAMDEN TEENAGER:  It's a real good thing 'cause it
 gets a lot of the kids off the streets and what not.
 
 BURGESS:  Somethin' better to do than hanging on the corner.
 
 D. BELCHER:  Corner.  Yeah.
 
 PAMELA BELCHER, CAMDEN RESIDENT:  And they need more role models.
 You know what I mean?  So, if they see things coming positive into
 their community, then I think they'll all start -- you know, trying to
 reach out a little bit, you know.  Probably cut down on a lot of the
 nonsense, you know, around the town, hanging on the corners, or
 whatever.
 
 SOUNDBITE OF BASKETBALL GAME
 
 WESTERVELT:  But can the Power be counted on for anything more
 than a few hours of fun basketball?  In the pros, recent on-court fist
 fights and off-court exploits with drugs and sex hardly make some of
 them role models.
 
 Can minor league players be expected to do any better?  Camden
 Power owner Chip Mitchell (ph) hopes so.  He calls his business, Hoop
 City, Inc., a for-profit company with a non-profit consciousness.
 
 Mitchell grew up in a rough section of Camden, where he had
 several serious run-ins with the law.  That is, he says, until strong
 mentors and a love of hoops helped straighten him out.  He plans to
 get the team into local schools and rec centers as often as possible.
 
 CHIP MITCHELL, OWNER, CAMDEN POWER:  We are more than just
 basketball.  Our whole youth outreach program, which is called Kid
 Power, deals with three intangibles -- knowledge is power, information
 is power, and economic power.
 
 And if we can get those messages at the age and demographic that
 we're targeting, which is seven to 12, I think we can start to make a
 difference within the city.  It will be a small one and I might not
 even see the differences while I'm here, but I think we can at least
 lay the foundation.
 
 I'm excited about that.  That's really what motivates me and
 drives me.  It's something that I'm committed to because people did
 that for me growing up.
 
 WESTERVELT:  The team is comprised largely of obscure former
 college players who didn't make the pros, but still hope to some day.
 There's something poignant about watching talented players at work,
 and knowing that most of them will never realize their dream of
 playing in the NBA.
 
 In the USBL's 14-year history, only about 100 players have ever
 gone on to the pros.
 
 SOUNDBITE OF APPLAUSE AT BASKETBALL GAME
 
 In the second half, the Power came on strong.  They beat the New
 Hampshire Thunder Loons 106 to 92.
 
 It was just a minor league basketball game, just a win, just a
 small start.  In Camden, though, that's something.
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