ACQUIbl i iuino 109 E. JONES ST, RALEISH NC 27611 V?*u>ed As Top Candidate mayor Young Eyes Governors'Seat BY CHESTER A. HIGGINS, SR. NNPA News Editor Daytona Beach, Fla.-Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, in a luncheon speech before a delegation of the nation’s Black publishers convening here, all but formally announced his candidacy for governor of his state in 1900. In an ebulient but down-to-earth mood, Young regaled a 49th NNPA Mid-Winter Workshop luncheon with wry insider tales of cabinet meetings in the Carter White House, state of the city activities in Atlanta and reminiscences of his days as a top aide to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., before almost as an after-thought declaring he may try to become Georgia's first Black governor. Said he: "They tell me I’m in the top one or two (with extremely popular Georgia Bulldog football coach Vince Domcy who is also expected to run) amongst Black and white, to be governor of the state of Georgia (an Atlanta Journal Constitution newspaper statewide poll published the result). "Well, whether I become governor or not, I don't have much choice but try...We never know what will happen...," he added, falling Just short of formally announcing his candidacy. < An informed source told NNPA: I Dr. Forbes Tapped To Lead Vigorous “Social” Ministry NEW YORK, N.Y. (AP)-The Rev. James Alexander Forbes, Jr., a black clergyman known for his preaching skill, has been named to lead famed Riverside Church and its vigorous social-justice ministry. The interdenominational church announced the choice last week after a year-long search for a successor to the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, civil rights and antiwar activist. The 2,200-member church, built by the late John D. Rockefeller in 1930, has had a line of noted pastors, begin ning with the late Harry Emerson Fosdick. Rev. James Forbes is the brotehr of the Rev. David Forbes, pastor of Martin Street Baptist Church in Raleigh. Forbes, 53, professor of preaching at New York’s Union Theological Seminary where he has taught for 12 years, was described as being a theologian of eloquence and keen social concern. “No government can function without a living vision of what it means to be human and religion should keep that vision alive... and provide a prophetic critique of government...” —Rev. James Fcfrbes “He is an eminent preacher, com mitted to pluralism, inclusivity and social justice,” the ‘‘key characteristics of our senior minister,” said the head of the search committee, J. Richard Butler. He told the congregation thta the committee had concluded that Forbes was the man “to lead this con gregation through the next decade and into the 21st century.” The selection, already approved by the church’s Board of Deacons, re mains subject to affirmation by members, but that is expected to be a to formality when they vote discharge the search committee. The church, with a $6 million an nual budget, has become an increas ingly ethnically mixed congregation, with a diversified program of help to REV. JAMES FORBES the poor and homeless and working for racial justice an^ disarmament. Although jointly affiliated with the American Baptist Chrches and the United Church of Christ, the con gregation is a composite of denominational backgrounds. Coffin stepped down a year ago, after ,a decade