[ ' K. Page A4-The Chronicle, Thursday, August 30, 1984 - Winston-Salem Chronicle Founded 1974 ERNEST H. PITT, NOUBISI EOEMONYE ALLEN JOHNSON < a / outih f t \r\uh\t tdutf ELAINE L. PITT MICHAEL PITT ? ? m iiuu; niipviiHiu uuuiiiiia mat niiDi uc lurinrignuy addressed and handled quickly. It will not be an easy matter. Black Americans continue to face profound economic, affect the power of these citizens to master their destinies. But we suggest that other institutions and organizations should begin addressing those matters, specializing in one area or the other, if necessary. This approach does not suggest that the black church should not also continue its efforts, but rather that it needs support and help. We believe the black church must accelerate now addressing a number of more fundamental questions. Some examples include: If God has a plan, what is it? What is mankind's destiny? What is the true gospel oflesirs-Gfirist? These questions, purely theological in nature, lead almost naturally into other fundamental and practical questions, the answers to which should set a new tone of life for black Americans. For example: What is the human family? Why does it exist? What is its role in helping humans achieve their destiny? What is the actual and productive role of man in the family, woman and children? How do we teach each other an understanding of our transcendental purpose so that all our energies are devoted to achieving that purpose? This is not an easy task and the black church should not Please see page A5 t I j* ^ ? i it ^ _RBPUBUCAW v , i-lflkfr V " ;Mitara<)u * .. V up i i* ^ .." ' 'Up Soutl CLIFTON E. GRAVES JR. Chronicle Columnist To be honest, for the Black man in America there is no difference between /4 Down South" and "Up North. " Indeed, everything south of the Canadian border is "Down South" for us .j^ So, realty, there is only "Up South" and "Down South" ... Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X) Up until, perhaps, 20 to 30 years ago, African-Americans - in the main - had been brainwashed to believe that the northern, eastern and western sections of the country offered far more opportunity for economic development 4 and social advancement than the "land of cotton, tobacco and rice." To be sure, there was (and to some extent still is) a legitimate basis for our families and friends to literally flee from "Down South." Klan terrorism, slave labor, lvnchines. and Jim Crow in justice created and sustained an environment so oppressive that it is analogous only to the suffering presently endured by our brethren in apartheid South Africa ^ an environEpperson, By VERNON L. ROBINSON Guest Columnist Recently, Congressman Jack Kemp (R-NY) flew into Winston-Salem to campaign for Stuart Epperson, who faces incumbent Steven Neal in this year's Fifth District congressional race. Epperson hopes that Kemp's symbolism is not lost on the black community. Kcm& the most, vocai iwk Uowol ftapMb&WMiB ing to regain a foot hole among black voters." He points out that black Americans switched loyalty to the Democratic Party during the '30s, '40s, '50s and '60s because that party offered jobs, food and hope, while the Republican party of the same period offered little or nothing. Kemn believes that the tables have turned and that now the Republican Party has the most credible vision for economic justice and opportunity for all Americans, but especially for black a : A\rncr leans. Based on the assumption that social progress is best Powvj wrtH/ Down WHH , W&i&A. ! P9oects?vtiwts! Nfr OF THE ^Tvr \ ^w^snSSSy f '-.' 'f>i,fcp . I ; ?.^ '^PNTRol/J?1 k ' *' a *?' " %- -. r > 'ifi 4 ^ OTuwj1.T'|?r str^pr ifmr'Wm i' and 'Dov vrx? fi^fl ^L Clifton Graves ment so oppresive that it made the. Jewish Holocaust in Nazi Germany seem like a Sunday school picnic! . So, who could blame our brothers, aunts and cousins from picking up their roots in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee and Alabama and relocating to the large and not-so-large centers of New York, Washington, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Chicago, Boston, Newark, Camden, Hartford, Bridgeport and, yes, New Haven! Who could fault our daddies, mamas and uncles for leaving their daddies, mamas must have J facilitated by an expanding economy, Kemp's initiatives seek to enhance the recovery and bring that recovery to depressed communities. His proposals include the KempKasten FAST tax reform plan that would allow lowerincome families to keep more income (anyone earning $14,375 or less would pay no ' 'Indeed* hi& fmkuce* to inU of his campaign staff hat municate effectively with ti tax); the Urban Homesteading Act that would allow public housing tenants to buy their dwellings at 25 percent of market value and to finance mortgages at low rates; and the Kemp-Garcia Enterprise Zone, Employment and Develpment Act that would provide tax incentives for businesses to expand into economically depressed areas. The enterprise zone bill, called the most important piece of urban legislation in this century by Congressional yoww wrrH/ boww with H6OVT\0U ' I ttftAATWfcKCJ \OH[ A ^^HJPr r ^j/ttMlt -1 SSSS^^S? * ?t ' ^ ^?. ; " ^ f *"* ;/ --I' r 'f .fc-** Lv? .:;# Am.??dme?t [(j-yOef(. m South' and uncles in the attempt to fashion a "better life" for themselves and their children? The North wasn't heaven, but it damn sure was better than the hell-hole of the pr&1960 South! W/^l 1 or U/v# U ?1 Ttbii, as uuui nisiuj y ctiiu experience have taught us, the North -- the place of "jobs, dignity and opportunity" ~ was not the "Aand of milk and honey" that it was cracked up to be. While each city has its own history of racist intolerance and injustice, generally speaking, the experience of the AfricanAmerican in the North could be characterized as one of crushed hopes and deferred dreams, a characterization based on the fact that the jobs were not as plentiful, nor the opportunity as great as our folk had been led to believe. The tremendous influx of thousands of European immigrants (i.e. Irish, Italian, Poles, Germans, etc.), competing for the same jobs and opportunity as black brethren, coupled with the subtle yet pervasive racism already existing above the Mason-Dixon line, resulted in the unsettling and unexpected transformaPleasB see page A5 black votes Black Caucus leader Rep. Bill Gray (D-Pa.), has over 260 cosponsors in the House oT Representatives, has Reagan Administration support and has been passed in the Senate . twice. Twenty-six states have enacted their own version of enterprise zones. Even though states can offer a mere fracMfffks kntfh $ hurt his ability to comhe black community." tion of the federal incentives, the result of these efforts have been so promising that the liberal Sabre Foundation has given the Kemp-Garcia bill their enthusiastic support. Kemp's efforts with this bill and other legislation of concern to black Americans has earned him recognition as the Legislator of the Year by the black-led, national job train . _ /"v ing organization, opportunities Industrialization Please see page A11 / IfcT'S THIS MOTION To 1 ' >NUM IT ONCfc STOOD fOfc f * letters ? All walks of I life featured I To The Editor: Let me add my congratulations to the many others who wrote celebrating your being named the best black newspaper in the United States. You're carrying on a great tradition in North Carolina in the notable tracks of the late Louis E. Austin of The Carolina Times in Durham and the Wilmington Journal, ^edited hv Mr. XXL.Jer.Yay itu?.. , ~myhomc?toiwfc^? t--You're not only in the forefront of awareness in the H struggle for the rights of black people. In a time in which H we're told, all of us, that we don't count if we're not rich H and famous by the time we're 25, the Chronicle in widely ranging articles, nurtures all kinds of human beings, telling us we are all worthy, that we all belong to the human race and to each other. You not only keep us up to date on those who make it in the sports and entertainment world, you also encourage I young actors and artists and musicians, you let youths know it is all right for them to I become dancers and young musicians know they have as great a right as anvone to make classical music. You show respect for differ. ing spiritual choices - in the I Muslim and Christian faiths. In the shadow of R.J. Reynolds, you make an open space for outspoken radical voices, and still you give honor to black women and men who make it in the business and political worlds. You exercise courageous conscience without being either narrow or exclusive. f You give life on every page to the real makings of a living democracy. In a Lazarus age, you keep breaking away stones and saying to young and old alike, "Rise! Awaken! Don't lose heart! You're worthy! Come to life! Believe in yourself and in each other!" i i: i tiM?-? ?- - i nvcu in w insionoaiem from late 1948 until 1956 (1 made my pen name legal in 1973 on moving to Arizona; when 1 lived in Winston, I was Bill McGirt). 1 was taught firsthand how to fight racism in my then-young, white, male, Southern mind by black i i ?i ? " - icaucrs ana memoers oi Local 22. God, how patient and loving those people were with this stubborn, know-it-all white boy. I I read your paper not with just nostalgia for those days, but with respect and hope and joy. You make a healing leaven in the bread of Winston-Salem. I'm grateful to be reading your paper 'way out here in Arizona. _ rgTOMttm:-: Arizona An excellent job To The Editor: I am writing to commend Audrey L. Williams on her well-written articles on Winston-Salem State University's Project Upward Bound, which appeared in a recent edition of_ the Winston-Salem Chronicle. She Hid an evrellent ir*h wifh Please see page A5 wwn&, imue wms&eff V: