church Education Fund Offering Grants To Preserve Black Culture, Tradition ATLANTA (AP)— In jail cells and beseiged meeting halls, the low, slow tones of the somber anthem stirred hearts and stiffened resolves: “We shall overcome; We shall overcome; “We shall overcome—someday. "Oh deep in my heart I do believe “We shall overcome someday.” Today, long after the civil rights era, the song that helped change lives is still doing so through a $100,000 fund built on royalties. The fund offers grants of up to $1,000 for groups preserving black culture, esoecially music, in the South. For most of the 15 years of the Georgia Sea Islands Festival, for example, it has made a grant to pay for the apperances of traditional black musicians, including so-called “shouters.” “We rely on it,” said Frankie Sullivan Quimby, a leader of the annual event preserving the heritage of slaves and their descendants. The fund is administered by Tennessee’s Highlander Research and Education Center, a training school for social activists where “We Shall Overcome” was popularized. Thp fund is administered by ill iinaii Tennessee’s Highlander Reasearch and Education Center, a training school for social activists where “We Shall Overcome” was popularized. At the school’s workshops, group singing in the evenings followed group discussions in the day. At one sing-akmg in 1M7, students who were members of the Food, Tobacco and Agriculture Workers Union offered “We Shall Overcome,” which had been sung on their picket lines by black members. Though there’s some debate over its roots, many historians trace the song to a gosnel hymn, “I’ll Be All Right” by Finney, Director, NAACP Youth and College Division, second from right, present? an award to Pepsi-Coia Company tor its "continuous support” of the division’s popular Roy Wilkins Scholarship Lucheon during the Association’s recent 83rd Annual Convention in Nashville, TN. Pepsi-Cola executives accepting the award are, from left, Maurice Cox, Vice President. Corporate Development and Diversity, Betty CONTINUOUS SUPPORT!-Yvonne L. i _m. Shine, Supervisor, Media Services and Public Relations. Pepsi-Coia reel Youth and College Division with 256 Emmy Award winning motion Equal,” that starred Sidney discussions in commemoratieN of the the U S. Supreme Court decisis Public Schools. Church Plans Boycott Of Japanese Products DETROIT (API — A national black Baptist organization is onsidering urging its members to boycott Japanese products in retaliation for alleged racial slurs by Japanese leaders. Delegates to the Progressive National Baptist Convention voyted to send the issue to its civil rights committee, said the Rev. Tyrone Pitts, general secretary of the organization. "We’re calling on all our constituents to not purchase anything that is clearly a Japanese product,” said the Rev. Calvin Butts of New York, resolutions committee chairman of the 2.5 million member religious group. Pitts said the boycott proposal wouldn’t be taken up again until January at the earliest. Black Americans have accused Japanese companies of discrimination in hiring workers for their U. S. plants. They also have been angered by remarks such as that from a Japanese Cabinet minister, who said in 1990 that black Americans "ruin the atmosphere” when they move into white neighborhoods. Japan’s then-prime minister later called the comment inappropriate. More recently, another Japanese official called American workers lazy. The boycott represents a response on behalf of ail Americans, Butts said. "Blacks are concerned about what the Japanese say about us, but also what they’ve said about all of us as Americans,” he said The boycott also is important to blacks "because unemployment in the American auto industry, in particular, Impacts black people heavily," Butts said. W tier Huizenga, president of the American International Automobile Dealers Association said recently he couldn't speak for Japanese companies’ hiring practices. But he criticized the proposed boycott in a statement read by a spokesman. "We find it curious that these people would stereotype a race of people, based on the actions of a few,” Huizenga said. "This Baptist Convention should know better than anyone else that this is a very dangerous precedent to be setting.” Calls to Butts and the Rev. Charles Adams of Detroit, president of the Baptist organization, weren’t immediately returned last week. t THE SAL N ARMY Group Targets Needs of Youth (NU) • The hamn of foe Victo rian nrphanage, fdkd out ao viv idly by 19th-ceomry author Charles Dickens, also gave Salvation Amy founder William Booth panee as he Tint considered opening r*——" homes far chikhen. Need prevailed, as it atiH does, and Booth's fledging nmndininn courageously opened ns MX strictly regulated nurseries, children’s homes and maternity homes in Endand in the 1880s. Today, The Salvation Amy main tains scores of youth-oriented pro grams, focusing an child develop ment as well as social services. There is mose devekmnental help throughcampsandywingcluba.com munity centers vn well-defined programs and services, and scouting organizations. Salvation Amy spon sors 200 scout grtwma chartered by the Boy Scouts of America, for in stance, and Guide and Sunbeam pro grams offer school-aged girls guid ance in citizenship, personal and spiritual values. The Salvation Amy also main tains residential care programs de signed to treat social, emotional, menial, or behavioral problems, and foster normal development and so cial functioning in children. At other Salvation Army centers, young people can find emergency or short term help. On any given day in the United States, The Salvation Amy has re ported, more than 5,000 children ind youth are under its care and supervi sion. C.A. Tindley. Folk singer Pete Seeger often gets credit for spreading “We Shall Overcome” nationally. But, in an Interview, he credited Highlander’s late music director Zilphia Horton and a musician and author at the school, Guy Cara wan. Seeger remembered being at a New York fundraising party when Zilphia Horton came up. “Have you heard this wonderful new song I’ve got?” she said excitedly. Recollecting, he began to sing it: “We will overcome...” Seeger printed it in the publication “People’s Song” in 1948 and took it to concerts, later changing “will” to “shall ” Cara wan, meanwhile, taught it to civil rights leaders who streamed through Highlander; they taught their followers. As the song spread with the burgeoning movement, Seeger, Carwan mid an arranger, Frank Hamilton, took out the original copyright, adding the name of Mrs. Horton, who had died; all royalties were to go to a special non-profit fund supporting black culture. “Like a damn fool,” Seeger said, he did not at first ask himself, “What are four white people’s names doing oo this song?” The copyright since has been amended to include members of the tobacco workers union and the civil rights movement A copyright may be academic Mr a song that, Seeger once said, “Is niver sung exactly the same way twice.” “WeshaU live in peace..." “We’ll walk hand in hand...” “WeshaU all be free...” “It has verses like ‘We are not afraid,’ that people sang in very dangerous situations,” Carawan said. “It has, I don’t know, a blind hope.” And though it has been boomed out by 10,000-voice masses and harmonised on intricately by quartets, he suggested what may be the most powerful rendition of all: “Just one person singing it in a ceU.” Church To Hear Choir At Revival F aith Missionary Baptist Church will hold its annual revival the week of August 17-21. The Rev. William H. Height, pastor of First Baptist Church in Smithfleld will be the speaker for the week. Praise service will begin nightly at 7:Mp.m. Inspirational singing will be at 8 p.m. and worship service will begin at 8:15 p.m._ Choirs„ rendering music for the week are as follows: Monday. The Combined Choirs of First Baptist Church, Smithfleld; Tuesday. The J.P. Rogers Gospel Choir of Johnston Piney Grove, Clayton; Wednesday, Hie Youth Choir of Faith Missionary Baptist Church; Thursday. The Everready Gospel Choir, Oak City Baptist Church, Raleigh; and Friday. The Mass Choir of Faith Missionary Baptist Church. Pastor Ervis E. Allen. Jr. and the church family invite the public to1 worship with them in these services. The church b located at 908 Suffolk Blvd. Drive Safely VISITING OR. KING'S MEMORIAL- Visitors and residents keep the dream alive through visits to Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Gardens on Martin Luther King Boulevard in Southeast Raleigh. The wife of the slain leader, Colretta Scon King dcNvofHii aa address n Ha mmhI NaNonai Youth Assembly at the Raleigh CMc Center, argad yeung people to deal with Mb’! chalenges thrMfh aaa-vMent means, including educaDon ami hard work. (Photo by Cash Michaels) Kev. King Speaks On Violence BREMERTON, Wash. (AP)— The Rev. Bernice King, daughter of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., will give the key note address at a weeklong confer ence on urban issues. Bernice King will speak at the opening banquet Aug. 30. The con ference, sponsored by the Emman uel Apostolic Church and Commu nity Resource Center, will run through Sept. 6. Workshops will cover a range of urban and community topics. One session on gangs and violence will bring together clergymen who serve inner-city churches in the Interstate 5 corridor from Belling ham to Portland, Ore. It is sure that, come what may, will get God’s pay) “You are indeed charitable when you give, and while giving turn your face away so that you may not see the sfayness of the receiver. (Gibran) My heart ached when I read Barbara Reynolds column in the USA International Edition of June 13, while on the airplane coming back from Russia. The article is worth a re-write for the material is not in some of the local papers. “Behind closed doors in the nation’s capital, children as young as 7 are being forced into prostitution, often by their own parents to pay for drugs or household rent Numerous adults are participating in these unthinkable acts, some of whom are infecting kids with the deadly AIDS virus. Par too many lives are destroyed by age 10 says Dr. Jan Hutchinson, a medical doctor of child and youth services for D. C.’s Commission on Mental Health. Hutcinson, a 43-year-old psychiatric pediatrician tries to piece young lives together after they are wrecked by adults. She agonises over why adults- parents, neighbors, teachers, doctors, police, media, and governments- aren’t fighting harder to save disposable kids, a growing phenomen acmes the USA. Nationally, there are about 3 million reported cases of child abuse yearly. They range from an Iowa mother starving her invalid 5-year old son to death to a Detroit woman abandoning her child on a busy freeway. While L.A. rioters exploded publicly on the streets, family mini riots explode quietly behind the closed doors of over-crowded flats seething with Joblessness, drugs, and spiritual poverty. Out of public sight and mind, depression and hopelessness turn to rage. Parents strike out and abuse their children. Maqy with values as weak as those of politicians who ignore the problem, allow their children to be prostitued or killed. Two infants in Washington were beaten to death by adults before their second birthdays this week. About 1,500 more of the city’s children will be beaten raped, burned or prostituted before the year is out. Not one presidential candidate is campaigning on rescuing abused, abandoned, homeless kids from their living bells, which is a main reason they are being turned out. Things have deteriorated to the point that jail is sometimes viewed as a graduation preeent up from the streets. Free food and a place lima or drive-by shootings. Solutions must be found. Orphanages must be considered because 3 J million children stngMlt to survive in zero-parent households Drug teatment must be increaaod for adults, and mental health sendees must be provided for the kids, who are suffering Vietnam War-Uke traumas. Kids can’t wait for political solutions and broken fostercare safety nets to catch them. Bvery responsible adult, whether single or married, must find ways to become a. substitute parent. When adults tail to rescue a throwaway child, that child often flunks out of Ufe.” Dr. Hutchinson’s article addressed a part America that is more than depressing. How tragic that we want to neq> save the wnoie worKL when throw-away kids are everywhere. What has happened in our own country to let this abuse exist? Hutchinson is writing about cruel physical existence, and not even addressing the spiritual emptiness In these children’s lives! It is heart breaking! No, all men (or women) are not born or created equal, and all need a fair chance at life. The one thing that I feel sure about is that these children are loved by a Heavenly Father. He surely know who is miss treating and abusing these children, and His ways are Just God does not interfere with men’s free agency, but he will at some point and time gather those children to Him and address their wrongs to those who were responsible. Eternity is a long time to pay for such crimes against children! Children are an inheritance from the Lord. “It is not the will of the father that any of these should perish.” In the Book of Mormon (Mosiah) 4:14, the Lord tells Us people, “And Ye will not suffer your children that they go brngpry, or naked...” Children are a gift from God and precious in His sight Oh that each child could be protected from those who serve the devil! “This is sure that come what may, who does God’s work will get God’s TVO MINUTES vm IMF MALE SV cotiwum t. SIAM MM. "UNDERSTANDEST THOU WHAT THOU READEST?" Hus was the question Philip asked of the Ethio pian prinee as he sat read ing from Isaiah’s prophecy (Acts 8:30), and it is a quee tion which we should con tinually keep asking our selves as we read the holy Scriptures. There are always those among God’s people who do not much care whether or not they understand what they read, if only it warms their hearts! To them the Bible is little more than a fetish. Taking only those Scriptures which appeal to them, and leaving the rest, they actually feel them selves quite spiritual and often talk about believing the Bible whether they un derstand it or not! But such "spirituality” is far from genuine, and. such "faith” is blind and super stitious at best. While it is true that the Bible teaches many truths which we believe, although they are beyond our com prehension (such as its opening verse!), yet how can we believe what the Bible X unless we understand it eayet God would have us understand what we read and believe it intel ligently. Indeed, true faith will want to know and un derstand more and more of God’s Word. One who does not care whether or not he understands what God has said is not interested in knowing what God has said at all. His faith is based on his own will rather than on God’s Word, for regardless of the meaning of Scripture, he will take any passage that suits his fancy and use it as he wishes. How great an emphasis God Himself puts upon the importance of understand ing His Word! On one occa sion, when our Lord saw the multitudes. He "was moved with compassion to ward than because they were as sheep not having a shepherd: and He began to teach them many things ” (Marie 6:34). And now that the secret of God’s great plan has been made known, how much more reason there is to study the Scriptures with a view to understanding them! How Paul, by the Spirit, emphasises this as he writes of his prayers for the saints: "THATthe God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him: the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope of his calling. . (Eph. 1:17,18).