Winston-Salem Chronicle I'he Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly" Established in 1974 Ern?$t H. Pitt ? Ndubisi Eg?mony* Editor/Publisher Co- Founder Member in good standing with: Hmmptpm North C?rot?? Audit BurCWJ knwtjmmmi AwooKion Pr?M Aa?ocw?on Of Circulations PwMMct, Inc. Editorials CIAA Fever When news of Winston-Salem's successful CIAA bid rcached the city this week, city and community lead ers were nearly jumping up and down with excitement/ But hot everyone shared in the jubilation. No doubt, some folks are wondering just what kind of people (20,000 of them) are going to invade the city in the win ter of *94. The CIAA is akin to a reunion for the many alumni of 14 prestigious histori cally black colleges in the southeast. Ask anyone who has been to an ACC event and a CIAA event: they will confirm that CIAA fans are on the sophisticated side of the scale. J Downtown area businesses must be eagerly planning how to lodge, feed, transport, entertain and otherwise care for the needs of thousands of visitors, many of whom have never spent the night in Winston-Salem. Ironically, it will be white-owned businesses that reap 90% of the revenues from this historical black sporting event. It will be important to respect the impor tance of this first impression, and not gouge the unknow ing customer. The CIAA will be to Winston-Salem what the furniture market is to High Point. We look forward to seeing the community at large continue to work together to make the tournament a success for all of our visitors. Value of a life The recent rape and kid naping of a white woman, appearing day after day in the news, brings to mind trou bling questions. The most recent publicity over this case had to do with how quickly the local police and the SBI responded: how seriously they took the case from the beginning, how determined they were to find the woman, how long and hard and tirelessly they worked. There is a heavy implication that the life of this woman is more valuable than that of another: is it more valuable than a poor white woman? more important than the life of an old woman? how about a poor, old black woman? Does God feel the loss any less? We must constantly ask ourselves these questions. Each day we are influenced by messages that we should measure ourselves and each other by our achievements, by the things we possess, by the power we wield, the people we know. When a crime takes place, it is not more tragic because the victim is a white woman and the alleged assailant is a black man. The tragedy of a crime is not reduced if the victim is a black woman and the alleged assailant is a white man. No justice, no peace. The CIAA represent* Winston-Salem's first opportunity to feel the power of the black dollar. Is a crime against a prominent white woman worse than any other crime? Vote November 2nd About letters . The Winston-Salem Chronicle welcomes letters from its readers, as well as columns. Letters should be as concise as possible and should be typed or printed legibly. They also should include the name, address, and telephone number of the writer. Columns should follow the sarnaauidelines and will be published if we feel they are of interest to our gener al readership. ^ ^ . We reserve the right to edit letters and columns for brevity and grammar. Submit your letters and columns to: Chronicle Mailbag P.O. Box 1636 Wlnston??im, 27*62 ^'^^ ^ Ms. Mack: when will we honor her? To the Editor: (I originally wrote this as a white man for the white citizens of Winston-Salem to appear in the Journal.) Mrs. Lee Faye Mack went to jail this week/month. "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, killing the prophets and stoning those as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you would not! Behold, your house is forsaken!" Jesus understood his life with the image of a mother hen w ho would care for her brood. Ms. Mack has been a mother in Winston Salem. O Jerusalem. Jerusalem... Perhaps some of us in the w hite community do not know much about this woman. I want to share the little I know. A single, black mother with a house full of young children. Defeated, overwhelmed? Not this woman. With little formal education herself, she had the good sense to raise her children to value it. With help from Upward Bound at WSSU and college scholarships, they went to college. Those children today are all productive citizens in this city and include two teachers and a lawyer. O Jerusalem, Jerusalem..., when will we sing the praises of this woman? Ms. Mack has also been the mother of an extended family of children. Through her Back to Life organization and her work with the Urban League's program, Family Focus, she has inspired many sin gle, black mothers to take hold of their lives. She has been able and willing to lead others through what she had been through. Some of them gained the courage to take non-traditional jobs for women, like construction. She has worked with individuals, male and female, with the whole assortment of problems that characterize the disadvantaged ? of America's inner cities. O Jerusalem, Jerusalem..., when will we honor this woman? ? 1 '**? - I first met her twenty years ago when she was mothering a group of young blacks who were carrying out a preschool breakfast program and raising money for the first free ambulance service for blacks in our city. This was a group of Black Pan thers, a group whites were taught to fear in those days. Larry Little and Nelson Malloy, who today serve this city well, were in that group. She has been through the years a grass-roots neighborhood organizer on behalf of social justice. I have known her for most recently as a " VVA$ fc?R PAN