I 't The Pendulum Volume XIII, No. 21 Thursday, April 2, 1987 5tack sees hope for the black family By Aleta Sinkfield Staff Writer fc'm the king. I’m the king,” Its Timothy, a young black ^ shadowboxing inside the |very room of a hospital where a young black woman, has Et given birth to their third t |imothy and Alice are not mar- Timothy has three other ^Idren by three different nen. i'imothy says he plans to marry II because he loves her. He is mployed. Alice receives a fare check of $385 a month 1 $112 in food stamps. ^ice is always telling Timothy i: he needs to get a job, that it tiuld not be hard to find one, that e doesn’t want to spend the rest her life awaiting those monthly checks from the government. Cases like this one are not unusual; they provided the topic for a two-day symposium on the black family in America held here last week. The program began with a Tuesday evening screening of the 1986 CBS documentary. The Vanishing Family: Crisis in Black America, in Whitley Auditorium. Program narrator Bill Moyers painted a bleak picture for black Americans, demonstrating how single-parent families, unwed teenage pregnancies and high unemployment have become the rule in most black communities. However, on Wednesday Dr. Carol Stack, associate professor of anthropology and public policy at Duke University, offered a more positive outlook for the black American family. Stack said that documentaries can tell people anything and that she wanted to give a different pic ture than Moyers presented. Stack asked her Whitley Auditorium audience to recall a scene in the CBS documentary in which Moyers interviewed a 17-year-old unwed black mother named Clardina. Stack noted that Clardina’s mother-a strong- looking woman who had herself been a teenage mother-sat near her daughter but was not inter viewed. Nor did Moyers inter view any of the others in the household who might have been helping Clardina raise her child. The point of her criticism. Stack said, is that people work out different strategies for survival and that they do not always regard living on welfare as an easy or ac ceptable means of survival. Stack also noted that “extensive reverse migration” of blacks may help stop the dissolution of black families that Moyers’ documen tary identified. In the early twentieth century, it was common for blacks to move from the South to the North in search of better jobs. Stack said. “Now descendants of those who migrated north are returning home to their relatives in the rural South,” she said. The Moyers program dealt in part with this idea of “reverse migration” in depicting the case of a black woman named Brenda, who with her children attended a family reunion in South Carolina. “But Brenda’s family was just visiting,” Stack pointed out. “The documentary showed a little hope for the survival of her family, but it took her back to hard times in Newark, N.J.” Stack was critical of govern mental policies such as the welfare system for contributing to the breakup of black families. “The father often has to move out of the home before the liamily receives any payments,” she said. “Furthermore, if the father is pay ing child support, the family does not receive the money. It goes back to the slate to rep^ welfare benefits.” Stack argued that Moyers’ documeittary “presented only one reality about the black family” and suggested that its characterization of blacks may have reinforced the frustration of other Americans about the welfare system. Campus cat gives birth -ni m By Greg Zaiser Staff Writer While students and faculty were enjoying a well-deserved spring break, a blessed event oc- cured here on campus. Ms. Serif, the latest stray feline to take up residence at Elon, gave birth to four bouncing baby kit tens on Wednesday, March 25. They were christened Bodini, Helvetica, Bold and Italica- names derived from printing terms. The kittens are affec tionately known as The Copycats. Laura Bennett, director of the print shop in Cariton Building, is playing the role of hostess (and ' = In their bellies. The kittens were midwife) Ms. Serif and family. flne. She is ™ ..id .ni™, lo.c, who plays an active role in taking care of campus animals. Bennett’s “cat fund” raise: money to assist in spaying oi neutering stray cats that wandei onto campus. Presently, fimds arc being raised to have Ms. Seri spayed. Donations can be made in the Print Shop. As for the kittens, they an growing rapidly everyday. Ms Serif has proven to a wonderfu mom and the future looks ex tremely promising for the nev fanvily. All four kittens have saf and happy homes waiting fo them as soon as they are ok enough. Congratulations, Ms Serif! ‘Outrageous Fortune’ A review p. 4 ROTC program successful Cadets trained in leadership p. 8