( Winston Sale 722-8624 O Ernest H. Pitt Editor & Publisher Melvin Eaton Circulation Manager Winston-Salem, N. C. ME\ NORTH C ~ jyj BLACK PUBLISHE _Spirit L Nearly every religion evolved stori< and culture in the human why the ea experience has some sort every winter of celebration at this time came back ne of year. It is as if man every spring. _ knows instinctively that The seasoj this is a time for rejoicing, religious ce] Anthropologists have man's "seco long explanations for the and a time myth of rebirth, explain- because the ] ing how primitive man is behind us Ban Pr< The Board of Aldermen has proposed its decision on beer sales at the city!s__ ?matter does come to a voteTtheclecisionwill be a favorable one. Many golfers are indignant that the city should consider a ban on beer at public golf courses. The result may be a J L l _ 1 - r * .t cunsiuerauie ioss 01 revenue ior tne ~ city, if the golfers take their business to private clubs or to municped courses in Greensboro or High Point. "Golfers are gentlemen!" protested? one Reynolds Park player. "They know that having beer on the golf course is a privilege, and they won't abuse it!" True To a young man making his way in the world, a character in Hamlet advised: "... This above all, to thine own self be true. . . " Larry Little is one- young man - who seems to befolio wing-that advice 7 Before his election to the North Ward aldermanic seat, Little was very much a "grass roots" leader, a critic of the ?status?quo?and?the?black "bour ? geoisie." People wondered if his elections to political office would transform him into a briefcase-carrying member of the establishment. Apparently it ?~ hasn't--- not if the president's visit is? any indication. Wait Uhapel was full of dignitaries awaiting Carter's arrival last Friday morning. Most of the city's black officials, and Little's fellow aldermen, were seated in places of honor, representing the city. Larry Little was conspicuously absent. While his fellow community leaders were mingling with visiting dignitaries, Larry Little was outside in the cold, KILLING THEIR HOPEi " Ffi HOPELESSNE, PICTURE THAT Wanted 141 WT i */ i v) :m Chronicle ?r 723-9863 V Isaac Carree,ll General Manager ( < Ndubisi Egemonye ! African Correspondent \ Saturday March 25, 1978 ( t 1BER . 1 AROLINA . 5 ==s -1 RS' ASSOCIATION - ?7~ \f Easter ?s to explain year. nth "died" It is probably easier to , and then be "thankful" on Easter w and green than it is on Thanksgiving. In November we manufacn is both a ture our excitement by_ lebration of preparing a special feast, nd chance" but at Easter, the exciteof rejoicing ment is already provided. harsh winter . for another See Bottom Page ohibition Opponents to the beer sales contend that beer cans still litter the golf course, and intoxicated duffers will infest the park. This~does~~not seem "to" be a problem at Tanglewood, which sells beer, nor at private clubs. Why should the city assume that just because a golfer does not belong to an expensive country club, that he is a potential drunk? Golfers on city courses should" be treated with the same respect and privileges as those who golf elsewhere - otherwise the city might lose^some very unsatisfied customers to other ~ courses, which treat golfers like gentlemen and not like children. To Self with a group of Wilmington Ten protesters. They carried signs criticizing the president's human relations policies, and asking him to pardon the - W ilmington -Tern Larry Little was where he has always been* with the people. Now we are not suggesting that the city's other black officials should have been iiuLlhfire protesting Tb^h p^r formance was very correct, and a credit to the city. We are saying that it is nice to see a politician who still identifies with the group he represents, even after he has 1 'made it." Larry Little has ^ been known as the champion of the underdog, and it is a refreshing political note to see that he is still with them. The other leaders accomplish their goals in their own ways, which are different from Larry's ways. We are merely noting that Larry Little is not I trying to be like anybody else. He is still - "true to self." It is a good sign to those he represents that they still have a friend at City Hall. 3 AND DhhAKL...? 9 ? LUSTRATION, SS, IS THE ' EMERGES ^^1^1 SI m/'' ' fl Jobc By Hep. Shirley tost of sending their children Chisholm to college almost overIn the past 10 years, the whelming :ost of higher education has It. other ..ords, the middle accelerated at an alarming class is realizing for the first *ate According to the College what has been a fact of Entrance Examination life for many poor and Board, the average annual n nioii'y groups families for :ost ol a public university generations: Higher education increased more education may become the han 40 percent in the pas! exclusive privilege of the ive years, from Si 7H2 -to wealthy unless the federal >2,^06. and state governments, can The cost of attending a provide financial assistance jrivate university went un for CQo.ta. aotc" '?iian ^'pmteiif' fiurn 1 "hrrfw wb CumnTW ftfuji?. M'<> Ha** families find the higher education for those s waSko*-:. 8 \.^^% ^ ^B ^^B <3 o -O ~ * THE SOCIO ECONOI* ?? ?To Be Equi /)v F/Prnnn .. Dealing With Inn President Carter had an rebuild some houses or to educational experience pepper the area with recently, and hopefully it playgrounds. The South will spur him to revise his Bronx didn't become what it Administration's priorities is because of the state of its and begin a head-on assault housing or the lack of play on the problems of the inner- areas, cities. The President went to the . .. South Bronx, one of the most J^e ?^er ur^fn slT?' ^ blighted urben neigh- .?r? borhoodt in the country, but , ^5? _-nv Th^ there don t have decent jobs typical of m ny. The section decent wages. As one U . .ymbol ofurban neglect man called to the of poverty, end of the wasted ^ and hl8 party: ? The President walked through the slum streets. He With jobs, people will be walked across desolate man- able to afford to upgrade made urban deserts that their housing. They'll be looked as if they'd been buying in stores and that will pounded by B-52s He saw revive the area's economy, burnt-out buildings standing creating even more jobs, amid the rubble. And most Their taxes will enable the important, he talked to some city to provide more services, oi the people there giving thus halting the further them new hope that the deterioration of the neighPresident cares about their borhood With higher tenant plight. incomes, it would be possible According to news reports, for housing to be sharply he was appalled by what he improved instead of having saw. He talked about landlords w^lk away from rehabilitating the South their buildings. Bronx's decrepit housing stock and of turning its open areas into recreational Th?n there are other steps facilities. that need to be taken ? measures to stop banks But that's just part of the from redlining slum areas, problem. It's not enough to better city services like * A Warning Or Tuition Tax Cre families who cannot afford ur"Sj !fie lanui^dly the cost of their children's spiraling cost of higher college education. That education. Furthermore, I program, called Basic ' oppose y as an inappropriate1 Educational Opportunity federal attention Grants, lias been tremen- away Irom the neediest dously successful in in- segments of our society and creasing access to higher inwards those who are by any education measure we can devise, Now. we find that the better able to survive and middle class is pressuring for prospei w ithout this kind of their own form of higher federal support, education financial aid ? on^> are middle and they have insitufed a unner income families Dy campaign for a fax credit definition more financially T'TgKij'i1' euiW a' iih?'** * is an ilf-adviserf way lo ad-^*,,''',^?^L^ = -jjj ^ - aj! _ AlC LADDER rdan er-City Problems garbage collection and police tempt to educate the nation t< protection and improved the needs of the cities. Simpl> education. by making that one visit, the President did more to make Areas like the South Bronx nation conscious of the don't just happen, they are Phght of urban America than . anything? since Lyndon made And the manner ot Johnson made hjs im. their making constitute a passioned plea for social national shame. Dis- jjV r crimination, neglect and artificially high joblessness all contribute to the making Now he can follow up on of urban blight. t^t beginning by using the leadership capabilities of his The President must realize ^'8h office to continue to that the federal policies of press upon the American preceeding administrations people the reality of the needs helped create urban those locked in our urban wastelands like the South ghettos. Bronx, and has to make the connection between what he saw and the need for revising Along with symbolic his Administrations's gestures designed to shape priorities - public opinion, there musi u* solid programmatic After walking through the '"!tiatiV.e\. fr0"\ h'5 rubble of the South Bronx he Administration, with a a should now realize that full nat,onal fu 1 emp.lo)'menl employment has to take program ai me top ot tne list precedence over balanced budgets, and that providing the human right to a job is as There are many hot issues crucial as trying to extend *ncl pressing problems the other rights to countries that President faces, but his visit don't observe them. to the South Bronx should impress him with the fact that America's number one The President's visit will problem and his number one have meaning if it becomes priority ought to be urban the first shot in a broad at unemployment. I dit family income has been keeping up with rising school costs According to the CBO, median family income rose 72.9 per cent between 1976 and 1975, compared to an increased in college costs . . during that period of only 65 per cent. The tuition t?* credit proposal would shift to the taxpayers at large a major expense for higher education^ assistance of the middle and unru>** claSSCS. ssaggtegcaaa 'fu.tim.Hffl1 ? MpBBBWr Ul lilt'11 mgWffWff pressures middle class families experience due to the oust of higtier education. national cooperative effort - among colleges and universities,- governmental entities and financial institutions to improve the effective operation of federal student loan programs. As- part of the Education Amendments of 1976, Congress enacted many improvements in the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, improvements that were lobbied for heavily by the governmental and private _ agencies that deal with student loans. In addition, the Depart ment of Health, Education and Welfare ha,s announced a policy of Vigorous enforcement against student V loan defaulter. Therefore, the time is clearly right for a national effort to improve and expand these programs. t We^must-develop?ptfpf?? government, bankers and higher education so thai more private loans are-made available and families can defer payment of education expenses until the student is graduated and is earning sufficient income io repay.HEW has stated that it will propose a massive infusion of new?funds?into the Basic " Educational Opportunity Grants (BEOG) program so that more middle income families will be able to particiapte in that program. While I understand the rationale for such an approach, I cannot endorse any proposal that will shift the focus of the BEOG program from the very needy students it was designed to assist. The federal government's grant program should remain targeted _on -those who, without such assistance, cannot even hope to enroll in any institutional higher - education Higher Pay Offered "What lies in store for my = son after high school graduation?" If you're one of many parents asking that question, there's good news. You can hfcjead your son toward a job that will teach him a skill that will pay well while he learns. A ONE-MONTH VACATION is just one of the benefits of a job open to your son. When a young man enlists in the Marine Corps, his starting base pay is $4,7 70, which has just been raised from $4,493. And, with the dollar value of all the other benefits he gets, the total comes to about $7,768. That includes clothing, medical and dental care, clothing allowance, housing and food ? and 30 days paid vacation each year! That's pretty good for someone just out of high school. The Ma nne Corps, of course, offers more ?a chance to learn a valuable job skill. If a young man qualifies, he is guaranteed special training in one of the Option Programs ?to get info a field that's right for him. For more information on what the Marine Corps offers the potential recruit, call, toll free, 800-423-2600 (in California 800-252-0241). ? Spirit Of Easter Just take a look around at the first spring flowers, and feel the warmth of spring sunshine, ? no special celebrations or dinners are needed. The whole world is adorned for the occasion. For those who will take the time to appreciate the wonders of nature, the stone will indeed be "rolled away" for another year, and the earth becomes an Eden, as brief as the original, but still a paradise.