2-THE CAROLINA IIMt&—o/ai I, ucucmdch m, 1993 1993 Home. 1983 Fnce. Think of it. You can buy a Cimarron home at Wingbrook for what homes sold for 10 years ago. A brand new, 4 bedroom, 2-1/2 bath home with an attached garage is selling at a cost-per- square-foot comparable to 1983. For as little as $119,950, you can own a new 2,003 sq.ft, home. complete with fireplace, energy- etfcient Apollo Hydro Heat system, hardwood entry floor, walk-in closets, GE appliances and a garden tub in the master bath. And there're several floor- plans to choose from. So, should we pihch you now or when you get here to see our model home? CIMARRON t=r WINGBROOK Sales by Prudential Carolinas Realty 490-1295 Model Open: Mon.-Sat. 12-5, Sun.1-5 2,003 sq. Jl. $119^950. BECAUSE ONLY BY . Celebrating Culture Can we hope to inspire art. Whether made with words, images or music, art resonates through African-American life. Recording our experience, revealing our humanity, depiciiAg our soul. It can soothe or excite, enlighten or entertain, constantly compelling us to look and listen. At Kraft General Foods, we're proud to help bring the visions and sounds of ethnic culture to the community. Not only helping people to experience the art of others, but inspiring the artists themselves. Because only through the celebration of art can we begin to under stand what makes us human. KRAFT General FOODS \«iveeta. Whip, GOURMET. V An Explosive Word Still Divides the Black Community By Jesse Washington (AP) Mothers use it to call their children, and rappers wield it like a weapon or bestow it like a title. It seems the right to call black people "nigger" is one of few privileges reserved exclusively for blacks. The word has been used for centuries as a racist term to describe blacks as property. These days it thrives among many blacks as an expression of affection and familiarity - despite efforts to purge it from the black vocabulary. When whites say it - emphasizing the 'cr' - the effect is less than friendly. But when 17-year-old Marcus Driscoll says "That’s my nigga," ho’.s usually describing his best friend. "There ain’t really nothing wrong with slang, and that’s all it is," said Driscoll, a Detroit high school student. "There’s a right time and a wrong time to use it. When you’re just hangin’ with your friends, it’s OK." The word is so ingrained in black speech that even many older blacks feel it is acceptable in the right situations. "There arc 101 situations in which 1 would never use the word," said Robert Steptoe, 48, a Yale University English professor. "But I’ve got my friends, ni;. home boys, and when I’m around them, I use the word. And 1 don’t think I’ve sinned." Still, the word is hardly universal among blacks. For years, many have never dreamed of using it. And these days, blacks who casually drop the word in conversation arc more likely than ever to get a dirty look or a rebuke. "The use of llic word (by blacks) ... has a dehumanizing effect," said thC' Rev. Jesse Jackson. "In a time when African-American males arc seen as less than worthy, the use of the word ... only maximizes dial condition." Even rappers considered some of the worsi offenders by people who dislike the word - arc speaking out against it. Public Enemy, one of rap’s most respected and popular groups, included a song on its third album called "1 Don’t Wanna Be Calleil Yo’ Nigga." The theme: Don’t call me nigger - especially if you’re black. The song hit home for rap fan Mtu Pugh, a 22-ycar-old chemical engineer with Procter & Gamble Co. in Cincinnati. "Using that word is like oppressing myself. Why do I need to do Uiat?" Pugh said. "White folks have done a good enough Job of oppressing my people. The last thing I’m going to do is help them. I’m sure they love it when they hear black people using that word. Then, they think they’ve got us trained to denigrate ourselves. ’’ The most common argument against black use of die word is that whites who hear it may think they too can use it the way blacks do. That’s apparently what happened at Central Michigan University, where a white basketball coach was fired in April after telling his mostly black team, "We need some more niggers on this team." The coach, Keith Dambrot, said he used the word to describe toughness and tenacity and that his players gave him permission to use the word as they did. All the players agreed Dambrot isn’t a racist, and most weren't offended by the incident. In fac-t, nine of the 11 black players on last season’s team joined Dambrot’s lawsuit against the school, although four later dropped out. A federal judge dismissed the suit last month. Dambrot’s lawyer, Robert Sedler, said the coach’s use of the word in that situation was acceptable. "The language of black America is not the language of America. The word has a number of meanings for blacks," said Sedler, who is white. "We’re not going to apologize fi what happened." Tell that > Tommy 'Williams, a 23-year^)i part-time supermarket worker. ’"There ain’t a white person alitj that thinks we don’t eare if tht] eall us nigger," Williams said whi| waiting for a pickup game aij Detroit basketball eourt "The way we say it, it’s elear if a black thing," he said. "As much as we say it down hci if a white boy was down here at said it, he’d leave with a coup less teeth." For years, the word E sparked debate in the blat community. When northern blacks began i forge a new cultural identity duhi the Harlem Renaissance of i[ 1920s, many black intellectuj were horrified by the celebration i words and images that had ncvi been available to a white audicnct In 1965, activist-comedian Bit Gregory titled his autobiograpi "Nigger.” It ends with the won ’’When we’re through, Momm; there won’t be any niggers i more." In the 1970s, comcdii Richard Pryor’s liberal use of # word provoked outrage along vt laughter. Yet even the rauncl Pryor denounced the word aft returning from a trip to Afrit; "There ain’t, no niggers in Africi The use of the word "nigger" ■’entirely opposite what people a trying to do in perpetuating ( heritage of Africa," said Vivj Buffington, director of rat relations for the civic organizaij New Detroit Inc. But even as Afrocenu: awareness increases, images ai products of black ghetto life ai moving into mainstream America. Rap groups like the no* disbanded N.W.A., short ft Niggas Wit’ Attitude, top the pa music charts. Black urban cloihii styles appear in suburbia and liij! fashion maga"zincs. Quality .mpvit about black ghetto dwellers rakii dollars and garner critical prais from w'hitcs. The culture of being poor ai black is becoming a grudginjl accepted, even celebrated, parii America. And although use i "nigger" is by no means confincili the lower classes, that’s where thrives. "It’s just part of the language aj the culture of being black," sai Williams, the supermarket worka "There’s lots of things that ulii people took from blacks and niaj their own - just look at Elvis, II was copying black people. So why can’t I take this that’s used to keep me down ai use it in a positive way?" Somes^ younger blacks wouldn’t be ^ quick to use the word if they la ever heard it used in a rac^ fashion. "White folks used to figure it« an honor if they called you ‘nigpj or ‘boy.’ They thought at least ibi were talking to you," said U Jackson, a 67-ycar-old Arkaiia native who lives in Detroit. "Blac folks who use that word dm respect what their people have gd through." "For people in the sub-) generation, a‘ lot of them hai never been called ‘nigger’ by white person. It doesn’t have i same context for them as it hasfl a lot of older blacks," said aiiili Nelson George, who has wriiB eight books on black culture. And George said the word li carved a permanent niche in bliJ English. "It’s here for good," he said. "II it to disappear, it would have to| rejected by the people who J saying it. Not by the ones ivl don’t say it." William Pitt, otherwise knowiil “Pitt the Younger.’’ became prinl minister of Britain in 1783 at III tender age of 24. THE CAROLINA TIMES L.E. AUSTIN Editor-Publisher 1927-1971 Christmas) ... - - -. ^ P.O. Box 3825, Durham, N.C. 27702-3825. Office located at 923 Old Fayelti Street, Durham, N.C. 27701. Second Class Postage paid at Durham, Nol Carolina 27702. Volume 71, Number 50 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE CAROLINA TIMES, P.O. B: 3825, Durham, N.C. 27702-3825. 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