Inner City Bulletin-Tampa, 1985

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BULLETIN

VOLUMES NUMBER 15

TAMPA, FLORIDA, TFURSDAY AUGUST 15, 1985

Price 25 cents

rgest Black Oriented

MIAMI — More than two years
after he was acquitted on charges
of seeking bribes from mobsters.
US. District Judge Alcee Hastings

‘ He. til)

still ih ahaa
ee-atripped of ‘Tis robes.
Despite that threat, or perhaps
because of it, Hastings has become,
if possible, even more controversial
when he beat government
America’s me
trials. Florida’s
irre-

aid recently
A few weeks ago, Hastings
ustice Department effort
thousands of dollars in

to Ke
Freedom Floti
heered

re than 60

judge has taken

judicial

ign e Has
quiry sub i

com:

fense
Like
$ makin
No other fed
bee scrutinized like Hastings, un
der @ 1980 law that has never been
sted. And a famous Watergate
wyer is helping the investigators,
five federal judge Atla
meet behind closed doors in ex
treme secrecy. News leaks could be
punished by a stay in jail. The in
vestigation has refused to die. Has
tings has tried to kill it nearly ev:
ery step of the way
Hastings has continued carrying
a full caseload. But he and his law-
yers want the investigation stopped
They say the investigation, and the
1980 Judicial Conduct and Disability
Act under which it is being conduct-
ed, threaten the constitutional sepa:

judge

s ever

a who

ration of the executive and judicial
branches of government. They have

asked an appeals court in Washing.
ton to throw out the law,

Regardless of what. happens in

the coming moaths, Alcee Lamar
only son of a house-

maid and butler, an activist jailed
in a half-dozen civil rights sit-ins in
the 1950s and ‘60s and a law stu-
dent thrown out of Howard Univer-
sity for lacking “seriousness of pur-
pose’ — can be assured
prominent place in the natior
gal history, even if he does it
ing thrown off the bench. N
judge has been impeached
1936

Fund-raiser raises furor

‘| have said it for public con-
sumption before,” Hastings said. “In
the time they have spen’
ing me, they could have inve:
ed Attila the Hun, Genghis Khan
and Hitler. I find it incomprehenst
ble that this matter has taken so
long’

Hastings’ attorneys have sa’

ring investigation is an 4
0 frustrate him or cost hin
that’he is forced
» such plans, he

1 Hastings is bitter about the
current investigation, the time it
has taken from his work as a judge
and the y it has cost him to
fight it, he is not blind to the things
about him that have raised the
hackJes of some judges and lawy

Last month, for instance, Has-
tings was asked to withdraw from a
civil case because he had had din
ner with lawyers for the plaintiff
while the case was pending. Has
tings and the lawyers with whom he
dined said they didn't discuss the
case, and Hastings didn’t initiate ar-
rangements for the dinner, at Re-
gine's nightclub in Coconut Grove

‘Phe Regine’s dinner is just the
kind ‘of thing that prompted the ju-
dicia) investigation.

Ip the official complaint that
started the inquiry, U.S. District
Juriges Anthony Alaimo and William

Terrell Hodges cited Hastings’ will-

accept money from peo-
at who attended a cocktail cant
and:

ingnéss to
raiser ro what 7 Meo

Pay pay Crafers iatthe 1909 bribery tek
of “odious

Hastings was guilt

behavior,” Alaimo and Hodges said.

The fund-raiser was unorthodox
the subject of
talk by lawyers and judges all over

and controversial,

Investigation still hounds embattled
federal judge

Seafood Sales to be stopped»

TAMPA Elton Gissenda-
Florida Department of
PEsources and Alex
an, member of the fede-
Gulf of Mexico Fishery
Management Council from Is
Ismorada. Florida. have both
called for actions that would
prevent non-boaters from
ing seafor
Elton issendanner in a
meeting in Key West re
cently called for the bann-
i nercial fishing nets
pt for nvullet, shrimp and
Gissendanner said that
consumers have no right to eat
Spanish Mackerel and can just
as easily eat catfish or shark
or whatever is available. Jer-
nigan, at a meeting in St.
Petersburg sponsored by the
National Marine Fisheries Ser-
vice, suggested that ALL fin-
fish in the Gulf of Mexico
be reserved for the sport
fisherman and that shellfish be
given to.the commercial fisher-
men. This is s position popu-
lar in Texas anc has been ar-

ticulated by Pobert Kemp of
the Texas Parks and Wild-
life Commission for many
years

If the commercial fisherman
is prohibited from harvesting
1 portion of Florida’s renew-
able marine resources, all sea
food restaurants and retail
and wholesale seafood markets
would be drastically harmed.
The economic loss to the state
would run into the hundreds
of millions of dollars annu-
ally and the loss of jobs would
be severe.

Jernigan has also been
quoted in the press as saying
that, inasmuch as finfish pro-
duction makes up only 9%
of the value of the commer-
cial harvest the industry
wouldn't be harmed too
much, Ne fails to realize
that for the 9% of men making
up this category, the ability to
use nets makes up 100% of
their income

The Inner-City Bulletin Published Every Thursday Morning

August 15, 1885

OPINIONS

The Administration's sweeping
tax reform plan needs to be close-
ly examined by the Congress to
ensure that it doesn’t result in
new inequities. As drafted, the
current plan is a mixed bag, with
some excellent provisions but
with others that need careful
study.

The good part is the proposal
to raise personal exemptions and
standard deductions to the point
where poor families with children
will be removed from the tax

in taxes, including the
Social Security tax, Today, they
pay 10.4 percent — a 158 percent
increase

And whilé the government was
increasing its tx bite on the
poor, it was .sharply cutting
expenditures Ul pruysaiis cise
serve them and cutting taxes for

exclude the poor from paying
taxes, the plan also winds up cut-
ting the tax bill of higher income
groups. And becamse the device
fits poorly with the way the

Poverty line is calculated, many
poor people who are singi¢ or in
multi-carner families would still
wind up paying more taxes than
they did seven years ago.

The overall reform package is
so complex that it probably won’t
be acted upon until next year, but
the poor need tax relief now. So it
might make sense to legislate a

tax exemption for all who fall
below the poverty line now — in
& separate bill that could be
passed this year.

‘The rest of the tax package
presented by the Administration
has some questionable features,
including possible negative ef-
fects on low-income housing and

saying yoluntarism and local
governments should shoulder the
full responsibility for social pro-
grams. That was the idea behind
the “‘New Federalism,"” which
pushed an enlarged, more in-
novative role for the states.

But by making state and local
taxes non-deductible, the Ad-
ministration dynamites its own
“New Federalism’’ concept,
since many states will be under
intense pressure to cut taxes —
and that means cutting services,

The plan will foster competi-
tion among the states to lower
taxes to attract new industry,
while penalizing states whose
taxes are high since they must
cope with national problems

1 94 bi sapier es ai Nias Washington ought to be solving.
Am Gees States with large eee of poor

toward the afftuent in the plan.
For example, today’s biggest tax
loophole — the 20 percent max-

people won't be able to provide
the services their citizens need,
And just about every school

imum tax rate on capital gains —
would become an even bigger
loophole since the maximum tax
would be only 1714 percent.

‘The most controversial part of
the package would end deduc-
tibility of state and local taxes. package could be very negative
‘That could be part of a hidden for the country, Congress should
agenda to prevent governments ea: the plan like the minefield it
from fulfilling their responsi- js — going very slowly to avoid
bilities. doing more harm than good, And

In recent years the federal it should get the poor off the tax
government has stripped rolls — now.
domestic programs to the bone,

district in the country can expect
resistance to local school taxes if
they aren't deductible from
federal returns.

So the implications of many
parts of the Administration's tax

By John R. Marks
Public Service Commission

IT’S YOUR
PSC a

NBA-The Regulatory
Process

This week we will conclude the presentation de-
livered to the National Bar Association, Energy and
Environmental Law Section-

I mentioned the General Service rate earlier in my
speedh. Chances are many cf you are seryed on the
GS or its equivalent at your law offices. I'm sorry to
say that it is typical for this class of customers to
lack representation before regulatory commissions.
It is by far the most heterogeneous class of all. In
fact, the only rationale for having the class is because
of the similarity of their energy usage — not the de-
mand they place on the systen:

It is reguently noted that everyone dumps on GS.
and there's probably some truth to the allegation.
GS as a class has no load research to offer: no experts,
etc, So when everybody else gets notice. CS doesn’t.

Another player sometimes on the field has a very
narrow special interest. Sports stadiums are a good
example. Typically, the sports stadium energy usage
is moderate on a sneithiy asis; but on a demand
basis, the load is staggerling. On one Saturday night
3 sports stadium) can use as much as a similarly sized
customer uses through-out a month. Because of the
premium placed on demand charges. there is a surviv-
ing spoets field rider in sone utilities tariffs. although
the definite trend is to deiminate their use

Large users in electric rate cases are beginning
more and more fo use some leverage previously un-
available to them. Some of it springs from the “if
you can't beat them, join them” mentality.
large customers are now pe
generating facilities themselves.
substantial waste heat. 7 , they are better able
to bargaing with the existing utilities. Where an ex-
isting utility already has adequate or even excess
capacity, the threat of the loss of a major customer is
most unwelcome news.

I thing you can see that the large users oe
significant part in the public's participation in the re-

latory process in Florida. It is our aim to give the

¢ user his due process rights which is to say,
neither more nor less than that to which all citizens
are entitled, whether they be private or corporate.

All all, we welcome the participation of all
parties who appear bevore our Commission, from the
individual intervenor, to users whose budget rival
that of the electric utility itself.

BY: Johnny Jacobs

COCAINE ~->->--->-=-

PRESSWAY
TO HELL

SOLUTION

c| ten that “every day,
some 5,000 teenagers
and adults try it for
the first time. As many
as one million Ameri-
cans are so dependent

The 800-Cocaine hot
line bagan May 6, 1983.
It was during the second
day it was im operation
that they received a call

from a Twenty-Two

ing at her not to tell
about the baby, that it
could get her into trou-
ble. “Hang up the
phone,” her mother kep
kept saying.”

What can hit closer to
home, what can be a
more striking example
of a person reprioritiz-
ing human nature than
a mother giving up her
own child in order to be
able to buy more co-
caine?

As to why the wo-

man actually called is
believed many people
simply gain a measure
of relief in talking about
their problem, and if
they pick up some qual-
ity advice along the way
so much the better.
Probably the second
most memorable call re-
ceived by the hot line
was from a state troo-
per who identified him-
self as a heavy cocaine
addict. “I have a.
pistol in one hand, and

this phone receiver in
the other, and it’s up to
you to convience me
which I should really
use,” he said.

The man was confort-
ed by letting him ratio-
nalize his thoughts..
They kept him on the
phone for as long as
possible and didn’t hang
up until he graranteed
them he was going to go
and call his local emer-
gency room, But they

if he did or not.

It is estimated that
22 million Americans
have admitted to using
cocaine at least once.
And according to a re-
port published in Ame-
rican Medical News. 4.2
million are regular ‘users,
which means they're

iDeesting cocaine in
aieast once aimonth.
In addition, Dr. Mark
Gold, the founder of

upon the drug that
they cannot stop using
it no matter how de
structive it is to their
health, to their family
life, and to their career.
Immediate help to

those in need of in-
formation about the
dmg and its effevts,
especially in terms of
making counseling and
medicakcare referrals is
needed.

have no way of knowing §00-Cocaine, has writ © TO BE CONTINUED

at
Is

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8

OPINIONS

‘The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

Tony Brown's Comments

Blacks Are Smarter Than Most Whites Think

“Farrakhan's Following’’ appeared on the
editorial of the New York Times, It was a com-
itten by Don Wycliff and consisted of two

paris,

‘The first was an analysis of why 10,000 African-
Americans in Washington and 15,000 in Los Angeles
and thousands in other cities are flocking to hear and
‘see Minister Louis Farrakhan, including a full house at
Madison Square Garden in New York.

‘This “Farrakhan following"’ is because
of his to Black pride, wrote Wycliff. They are
assured they are “'strong, intelligent and capable,

_ not doomed to it: victimization but destined
for success power. Black freedom rai self-
sufficiency...depend not on the charity of others but on
a Blacks themselves,"" hye

Wy explained that this is a ‘“‘striking message
to people accustomed to hearing about their shor-
tcomings and deprivations."" The established Black
Jeaders, he wrote, “have grown accustomed in recent
years to emphasizing Black poverty, weakness, depen-
dence." By focusing almost exclusively on what is

these leaders are “reinforcing stereot

Tat they Blacks) ze hae ‘wards of the states."”
> be a, sae Soe ing as well as untruc
are is
taxes and st without Special assistance to

educate their children and put bread on the tabie,””
__ That's the end of the first part, as I delineate it, of
his editorial. At this point, if you're Black, you're
bably saying, ‘Amen. I wish { had said that.”
use, I’m sure, you probably have done so many

Personally, I do not agree with Farrakhan's view
on Jews and Judaism, his admiration for the Libyan
dictator or his religious beliefs. Moreover, I feel that he
is limiting the poltical of his POWER program with his
attacks on Jews.

Furthermore, his debate with Jews over who is
chosen has no attraction for me. Frankly, | would
rather be employed and ‘‘unchosen" than unemployed
and “‘chosen,”’ whatever that means.

But Ehave never heard him utter one word about
economic self-help with which | did not agree,

Wycliff's commentary in the Times also haz =
blind, perhaps, prejudiced component. While
congratulating Blacks for responding to the healthy
message of pride and self-help, he implies that they are
stupid for believing it.

“Few Blacks are so naive as to believe Mr
Farrakhan’s pipe dream of economic independence.
Most know that an “independent” Black economy is
neither possible or desirable," he declares, and fails to
present one shred of evidence to support his assertions.

“Yet many (Blacks) want to applaud the morale-
boosting generalization that a self-willed salvation is
possible? In other words, Blacks are stupid.

of economics and ofthe depentence of cnt groupe

this culturally pluralistic society on culture as an
economit base,

Ask the Mormons who control the politics and
economy of an entire state, Utah, it ‘‘self-will
salvation”’ is possible, Or the Jews, Arabs, Chinese,
Koreans, East Indians and Cubans who live as people-
nations within the United States and share
nationalistic economy.

African-Americans are smart enough to know that
@ part of Farrakhan's message is poiriting that out. And
their ability to do critical thinking—not stupidity—helps
them make that judgement.

They also know when someone is trying to prove
that Sadat is wrong in order to prove that they aré
stupid.

had beld, a yellow
children to a previ-
classroom, a court or-

Bringing back U.S. apartheid

By Jalian Bond

forces trying to scuttle

Coping

z

Multilevel Organizations; & Drags —

Here are some issues and answers regarding some
recent columns - and your challenging letters.

Dear Dr. Faulkner

I really do take issue with you regarding your

column about multilevel organizations and the many
criticisms thal you made g¢ them. I think they
are very good and you should not be so harsh in your
criticism concerning them. Some people bave made
quite a bit of money in these organizations. Joan,
Oakland, CA.”

Dear Joan
Tam quite favorable 1st business oppor-

tunities, particu! offer a reasonable —
chance for ¢ people who.make
money in most of the popul level organizations —
make it by recruiting other people to sell for them
rather than by selling any of the merchandise them-
selves. In other words, the people who generally make
large sums of money with multilevel organizations are —
those who are able to act as “‘sponsors"’ of other sales-
people

Sponsors recruit other people tc
product. Trickery is often used 10
‘tH attend meetings. My recent Co!
the psychological recruited, Th
the most people, makes the most

Thus,
signifi ponsor’’) a.
significant number of other people to sell the merchan-
dise. This factor gives the multilevel organization the
“pyramid” characteristic; it is this factor that makes
the person joining the organization more of a recruiter —
than a salesperson; and, it is this factor that makes it
difficult, if not impossible, for the average person to
earn much money in this enterprise. The above reasons
support my lack of enthusiasm for most multilevel
organizations.

There are other business ente

The present appt a to In

drug use is so unproductive :

equivalent to having no program. icians prescribe

‘valium and a variety of other drugs to calm you so that

you can avoid depression and cope with life. If you are
under acute stress, confronted with marital difficulties,
tormented by job-related tensior

tecommend a drug to r

down, lift you up and ma

Illicit drugs do the same thing. They put you in
“another world” and make lif able, Sure, many
of them have side-effects and are addictive. But so are
the other prescribed drugs. How logical is it to tell a
person it is alright to take a prescribed drug to cope
with severe personal problems, but tell someone else
living in the slums that he should not take illicit drugs?
0 af sei seck a medicinal aid to help them cope
with life.

packtracked ‘Those Americans whe favor racial

govern-
ment guarantees of civil rights here at
home — remains firmly set in yester-
day's cement. In fact, as he retreats
fal reluctantly) on South Africa,
Neca has become more confronta-
tional about racial equality in the
United States.
His Recht on South Africa was

juotas, Meese recently told a college
Todlence, are like those Americans
who argued that “sla was good
not only for the slaves but for eer
These apologists for modern-day
slavery include (are you ready?) the
U.S, Supreme Court, which has consis-
tently ruled that racial and sexual
quotas are tools in. cases
where an employer — a city’s fire de-
partment or a national merchandising
chain — has flouted other court orders
to integrate the labor force.

the job has been so not because of skill
and talent, but because of gender and

race.
The primary audience for these ar-

affirmative-action pians.
democrat

in have
@ majority of Americans
ve" quota system.
which has resulted in “reverse dis-
crimination,” is deeply woven into the
fabric of American life

This argument holds perhaps a
grain of truth for those white men who
long for yesterday, when they — like
South Africa's whites — held absolute
sovereignty over alt they surveyed.
Reagan and Meese, consummate
showmen, have played to this crowd

‘and the crowd has responded.

A middle-class person with a decent job can af-
ford to visit a doctor to obtain @ prescription although
the cost may be $100 or more. A poor person is notable
to afford that amount so he doe: next cheapest and

g (possibly PCP
places (the nei;
borhood corner), <a

It is of only minimal value to tellt he poor per-
40f Not to use drugs but to tell the well-to-do person to
BO to his doctor and get a prescription to purchase a
similar so-called ‘safe’ drug to help him cope. Drugs
ae likely to continue to flourish in the community as
long as they are wanted by the public and as long as
there are agressive drug dealers who find drugs to be
viable (often, the only) way to make a living. The need
for drugs and the people to fill that need predominate in
our society. The problem of illicit drug sean will
Probably continue that need predominate in our
society. The problem of illicit drug useage will
continue unabated until we deal with the reasons people
use drugs in the first place.

November 7, 1985

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The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Teenie poms

GOVERNMENT
NEWS

eee

| THEVIETNAM
58,022 VETERAN 1p

BY: Johnny Jacobs (A Vietnam Vet)

Earlier this year this
observed the tenth
anniversary of the official end

of the Vietnam War. That war,

country

which claimed the
58.000 U.S

lives of
servicemen and
women, left a searing scar on
this country and many of the
veterans who fought in Viet-
nam, No war in our history,
other than the

War

American Civil

so divided this cx

For many veterans of tt

war in Vietnam, the battles

continue. Ten long years after
the last American troops pulled
out of Saigon, we

veterans

still see
who are having
difficulty coming to grips with
their lives, For the past two
years The American Legion

nam veterans to see how
experience

their military
affected them

Legionnaires w

complete questionnaires to

help us determine

heir general
state of happiness. how they
adjusted after the military, and

their general health

More than 6.800 veterans
responded to the call for the
study, Of that group
approximately 40 percent saw
duty in Southeast Asia

Much of what we found is
not surprising. Veterans in the
study the
general with

group, as with
population,
higher educations earned
whether combat
Direct
measures of general happiness
and satisfaction and reports of {

more,

veterans or not

general health are significantly
worse for
under

men who served
heavy combat condi-

tions.

Other results are disturbing
and instructive. When age and
education are
account,

taken into
exposure to intense
combat has a major indepen-
dent effect on family income

Drs
Stellman,

Jeanne and Steven

the project's
directors, estimate that among
men born between 1944 and
1949

(the age group which
experienced the highest
combat levels) the middie
annual income of combat

veterans appears to be $3,000-
$4,000 less than for men of that
age group who did not exper-

lence intense combat

And, posure to combat
has affected marital status. The
divorce rate for veterans with
intense combat is significantly
higher than for other veterans
who served either under dif-
ferent conditions in Southeast
Asia or served elsewhere,

The Siellmans conch as
eid HE caper SE chore

“clear and consistent pr
social effect of exposure to
traumatic situations (combat)
among members of the study
population.” Among this
group the divorce rate goes up

with in

sed combat exper-
ience, as family incomes and
the levels of general happiness

and satisfaction decline.

These veterans of intense

combat “appear to be literally
paying @ financial cost, as weil

as an emotional one, for their
combat experiences,’ the
report says. “These men clearly
bore the brunt of the war and

its aftermath.”

This study reinforces the
view of The American Legion
that America’s veterans cannot
be ignored. The dedication of
the Vietnam Veterans
healed

but others are

Memorial may have
some wounds,
continuing to fester, and that

affects us all.

In the months ahead, the
remaining portions of the study
will be released. Among other
topics to be covered will be the
effects of Post
Stress

Traumatic
Disorder and health
problems which might have

Dear Friends,
As a result of some of the

key legislation my colleagu-
€s and I worked hard to
enact this year. we can all

——

feel s measure of relief in
the knowledge that many of
the crucial concerns about
Florida's rapid growth are

effect of current growth
will not ruin our unique
environmental assets, or
compromise the state’s abil-
ity to meet the future needs
of its citizens.

An equally significant
plece of legislation that also
will improve the quality of
life for a broad segment of
the population is the Small
& Minority Business Assis-

tance Act of 1985.

I sincerely appreciate the
privilege of representing
you in Tallahassee. Please
continue to let me hear
from you. And of course,
if I can assist you in any
way, do not hesitate to con-
tact me.

Sincerely,
James T. Hargrett, Jr.
(Fla, State. Rep.)

been caused by exposure to
Agent Orange or other sub-
stances.

Ask Your
Congressman...

Sam Gibbons

Responds

Dear Congressman Gibbons:

T have been contributing to
the Social Security system for
many years and I still have a
few years left before | can re-
tire. 1 am concerned that
Social Security funds will be
depleted or will not be adjusted
sufficiently to the cost of living
when I retire. Are my concerns
justified?

—N.LR.

Dear N.L.R.

One should always bear in
mind that the Social Security
system is only as sound as our
economy. Our highest priority
must be to keep our economy
sound.

Social Security is one of the
most misunderstood Federal
programs. Social Security was
originally designed to supple
ment retirement income from
other sources, Its purpose was
not to provide the sole source
of income for workers who
stop working for whatever the
reason may be.

Congress passed the Social
Security Act in 1935 and it be-
came effective on January 1,
1937. The”Social Security Act
and related laws establish a
number of programs, basically
to provide for the material
needs of individuals and fami-
lies, protect aged and disabled
persons against expenses of
Inesses that would erode
their savings, keep families

together, and give the oppor:
tunity to children to grow up in
health and security.

When Social Security went
into effect in 1937 it applied
only to workers in industry and
commerce and covered about
60 percent of all working per
sons. In the 1950's, coverage
was extended to most self
employed persons, most state
and local government em-
ployees, household and farm
employees, members of the
armed forces and members of
the clergy. There has been a
steady movement toward cov-
ering as many workers as pos-
sible under Social Security,
and universal coverage has
been the ultimate goal

The Social Security adminis.
tration originally paid benefits
only to workers who retired at
age 65; coverage was extended
to wives, children, the disabled,
and those retiring early. In
addition, payments were in-
creased by cost-of-living ad-
justments made annually. For
decades the system worked
effectively. The inflation rate
was low and there was a high
ratio of taxpaying workers to
recipients. In the 1970's, how-
ever, prices rose faster than
wages. Prices determine the
level of payments, and wages
determine how much money is
paid into the system. In addi-
tion to prices and wages chang-
ing dramatically, the ratio of
contributing workers to reci

—
jents started reversing. As a )
result, Social Security funds

were being depleted at a much
faster rate than anticipated.

In 1983 a major reform in
Social Security took place. The
Social Security Act Amend-
ments of 1983 were passed
into law. The Amendments
assure that Social Security
funds will be solvent for atleast
75 years. In fact, currently
there is a surplus in Social

and Senate budget conferees
have agreed not to impose a
freeze on COLA allowances
for Social Security benefici-
aries. The final conference re-
port, however, will be subject
to approval by the full House
and Senate before it becomes
law. I will do all I can to make
sure that any statutory chan-
ges that are made are as fair
as humanly possible.

In an effort to take some
pressure off of the Social Se-
curity system, I support all
measures that will increase
savings. | was the initial pro
ponent of Individual Retire-
ment Accounts. IRAs offer
Americans an attractive addi-
tion to Social Security, helping
to restore the Social Security
system to its original design as
@ supplemental, rather than
sole, source of retirement
income.

As a nation, we are com-
mitted to assisting senior
citizens so that they have
sufficient resources and in-
come to live with dignity in their
retirement years. All practical
alternatives to achieve a
financially sound system will
be thoroughly considered to
insure that working Americans
never lose confidence in the
Social Security system.

Congressman Sam Gibbons
House of Representatives
D.C. 20515

‘ie

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
URBAN LEAGUE OF THE ALBANY
95 LIVINGSTON AVE.

THE CREDO OF THE BLACK PRESS

The Black Press believes that America can best lead the world away jrom racial and national antagonism when it accords to every person, regardless of
race, color, or creed full human and legal rights. Hating no person, fearing no person, The Black Press strives to help every person in the firm belief
that all are hurt as long as anyone is held back.

ALBANY, NY 12207

Inner-City

MEMHER
NATIONAL
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS

ASSOCIATION

Tampa's Largest Black Oriented

Weekly Newspaper

BULLETIN

Volunie 5, Number 43

price 25 cents

Williams
parents
‘excited’

9 Believe Klan file
will bring retrial

ATLANTA — The parents of
Wayne Williams, convicted of
two of Atlanta’s 29 slayings of
young blacks, said Monday
they're convinced newly un-
covered police documents will
give their son @ new trial

“I'm very much excited
about this," said Homer Wil-
llams, the father of the convict-
ed killer. “They did not have
anything like this information
on Wayne. They didn't prove
nothing in court.”

Wayne Williams, 27, is serv-
ing two life sentences,

The documents, which Wil-
Hams’ lawyers say are conf-

dential police. memos unavail-
able to the defense team dur-
his 1982 trial, detail an
official investigation into alle-
gations of Ku Klux Kian in-
volvement in the slayings.
Said Homer Williams: “I'm
hoping that this is just the tip of
the iceberg”

Kian officials denied in-
volvement.

Georgia Bureau of Investiga-
tion officials confirmed the in-
vestigation took place but said
no Kian connection with the
murders was found. The bu-
reau refused comment on the
authenticity of the documents
obtained by USA TODAY,

MISSING

VINYETTE

Pare
Kathy

FBI, Offic

If you have any inf

child please call 1-800-843-5678

: \Jacob Urges Re
To Help Free

Boesak

)

TEAGUE

er

armation about this

John E, Jacob, president of the
National Urban League (NUL),
has urged President Reagan to
make a personal appeal to South
Africa to release Rev. Allan
Bocsak and other anti-apartheid
leaders in South Africa.

He also asked Speaker of the
House Thomas P. (Tip) O'Neill
and Senate Majority Leader
Robert Dole to lead Congress to
pressure South Africa for release
of the victims of the apartheid
government,

In so doing Jacob recalled that
approximately on July 23, Rev.
Boesak came to the United States
to address the annual conference
of the NUL in Washington, D.C.

Speaking to those who, in view
of his outspokenness, had ex-
Pressed concern for his safety
when he returned to South
Africa, Rev, Boesak said:

“Do not be concerned for me.
Because in my country much
more is at stake than simply the
life of one man. Be concerned for
all those nameless little people
who have no protection, whose
names are not known, who will
die tomorrow and no newspaper
will even write one single word
about them.

es eg eee

agan Bill Coshy’s

Bill Cosby wanted to play a
chauffeur instead of a doctor
on The Cosby Show, until his
wife dissuaded him. And the
top-rated TV comic says in the
December Playboy that he
wanted his wife on the show to
be a carpenter.

Camille, Cosby's real wife of
21 years, had other plans. “You
will not be a chauffeur,” Cosby
quotes his wife as saying “Why
not?” he asked her. “Because I
am not going to be a carpen-
ter." She said nobody would
believe Cosby as a chauffeur,
with his educated image.

Cosby takes the same pessi-
mistic view of race relations he
took when interviewed by
Playboy in 1969,

It isn’t just blacks and
whites. ... More and more in
this country, we're not able to
say the word American for ev-
erybody who lives here. Even
the movie industry —

a chauffeur rather than doctor.

especially the movie industry,
commits aimost blatant crimes
with some of the films it puts
out.” And he criticizes Year of
the Dragon, Tarzan movies
and The Gods Must Be Crazy,

On South Africa, Cosby says,
“Lam waiting for somebody in
the Government of the United
States of America, the land of
Opportunity, to say to its little
brother South Africa, “You
gotta stop this. Period. Forget
that you're making us look bad

iy

education for his kids. But this
week's New York
quotes the author of a new
book as saying Cosby didn’t
really earn the education doc-
torate he got from the Univer-
sity of Massachusetts,

Reginald G. Damerell, who
sat on Cosby's dissertation
committee, says the only class
attendance he saw noted on
Cosby's transcript was for one
weekend seminar. And he said
Cosby's dissertation-committee
meeting was actually a dinner
party at Cosby's home.

Damerell, author of Educa-
tion's Gun_(Freund-
lich Books), said Cosby got
credits for appearances on Ses-

ict
New York.

AN INDEPENDENT VIEW
from CAPITOL HILL

'se022 VETERAN

BY: Johnny Jacobs (A Vietnam Vet)

By Gus Savage
" member of Congress

is not like other por-
trayals. The Green Beret is
wallful, but not violent, He has 4

e's almost

Although one

the success of FR

Vietnam veteran as supert
is today’s preve

radine

many writers, playw
moviemakers

beyond simpli

packed adventure

reach the heart of wh

nam means to us
Americana, a humane an
subtle film made nearly 1
years ago, was recently re
leased by Crown Production

seeing. It was produced and
Girected by David Carradine,
former star of the well-known
television series “Kung Fu,
(The script, interestingly, was
adapted from The Perfect
Round, a novel by Henry Mor.
ton Robinson about a return-
ing World War I veteran.)
Americana is 3 tim about a

| gas town on foot one summer
afternoon. A stray dog lounges
in the middie of the road, then
aimlessly scurries away to
avoid the truck that has just
dropped Carradine off, (It's our
first, sobering view of a grim
and desolate little place prob-
ably not unlike the small towns
many veterans returned to
after the war) He's a stranger
and he’s looking for work. He
wears his uniform like @ flag
and, in his quiet way, de-
mands that people recognize
what he’s done. He finds his
way to an abandoned carou:
sel inan overgrown field within
‘sight of the few stores and the
service station that signal the
beginning and end of the town:
He spends the night at the foot
of the carousel and begins the
next morning, to lovingly re-
build it

A local storekeeper quietly
befriends him, but he is viewec
with suspicion by everyone

Ise. His actions in the face of
Challenges and cruelty are
deliberate. While he's forced
to live with the nightmare in his
head, he must also reconcile
himself somehow to the night:
mare that he realizes he's liv-
ing in the town. The situation
is classic. Most Vietnam vet-
@rans will recognize it

tention. He feels that we are at
@ point, as a nation, when we
might begin to ci the past
of romanticize some of the dif-
ficulties that veterans faced in
the seventies. He hopes that
Americana can help t

vent that

"This portrayal,” says Cay.

tly with:

‘om the outside.

He soldiers his way through.
He uses the discipline learned

in the Army to get through

The Green Beret's choice, ut
timately, is to build rather than
destroy. He comes back from
the war with an impulse to be
gin fixing things. As he pains~
takingly rebuilds the carousel,
he's remily heating a damaged
himselt, na town, that
fae age to otter but coek

lights and aggression.

Green Bere! olfers ony.
‘enough resistance to protect
himgelt, and no more. A young
woman in the town, played by
Barbara Hershey. who is con-
Stantly abused by a group of
young delinquents, sets an
example for the Green Beret
with her gentle, silent opti-
mism. Because she barely re-
sists the abuse, she manages
to survive

Carradine’s Green Beret isn't
sansationalized. We discover,
near the end of the film, that
he's a captain who reenlisted
and was decorated many
times. He's a hero and he's
deeply patriotic, but the
townspeople nearly succeed
in defeating him by subjecting
him to their own brand of cru-
elty. He finally claims some of
his disability pay (we're not told
what his disability is) and re-
turns with enough money to
buy the few remaining parts he
needs. The Green Beret re-
constructs many of the
wooden horses, and strips and
repaints them. But, as the film
makes clear, he is also saving
his own soul.

Carradine has mastered the
art of treating difficult. emo-
tional moments in the film with
images. Dialogue is spare. As
director, he has wisely chosen
to disclose certain truths to us
by way of powerful symbols.
the neglected carousel, the
O stranger entering the

a young woman end
ly pursued by s

Ty-go-round once again
working. for a new generation
of child

ARMS TALKS, “STAR WARS” & THE SUMMIT

With the second round of the resumed arms con-
trol talks between the United States and the Soviet
Union underway at Geneva, and with the
November summit between President Reagan and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev fast approaching,
it is time to determine if the prospects for progress
have impraved since agreement to resume the talks
was reached at the beginning of the fear. 4

Probably the most significant development has.
been the changes in Soviet leadership since that
time. Former Soviet Foreign Minister Amdrei
Gromyko and U.S. Secretary of State Gedrge
Schultz hammered out the talks resumption agree-
ment two months before the death of Konstantin U.
Cherneko, completing the final phase of old“and
ailing Soviet leadership, a phase which already had
seen the deaths of Yuri V. Andropov and Leonid T.

the dour Gromyko as foreign minister.

The second most important development that
could signal progress in the negotiations is the pro-
posal by the Soviet Union for a 50 percent reduction”
in the nuclear arsenals of both, superpowers. This

proposal, however, appears to ve tied to the United
States discontinuing testing and development of its
Strategic Defense Initiative System, popularly
known as ‘‘Star Wars.”

Consequently, despite the tossing of words back
and forth between the two power$ about the degree
of fairness and equity inherent in the Soviet reduc-
tion proposal, the extent to which the Soviets and_
Americans disagree in principle is best
symbolized by the way the two sides view “Star
Wars.”

As they did back in January, “the Soviets seem to,
believe that the very idéa of attempting to develop
pester Mahan fcr oad nuclear _ weapons * is

' or the other of the superpowers 10 6
superior defensive weapons could provide

the ability to engage in blackmail, or with the power
to launch a first-strike without fear of effective
retaliation,

——— —

Ask Your

—-

School Students

Congressman...

Sam Gibbons

Responds

Military Academies:
Help Available for High

but if you are entering your
senior year you still have time
to apply—the deadline for ap-
plying for 1986 is October 31,
1985. My Academy Advisory
and Selection Committee will
review applications, interview
candidates, and recommend
well-rounded young men and
women for appointment, Qual-
ified applicants will have a
grade point average over 3.0,
SAT scores above 1000 and a
record of participation in school
activities and some form of
athletics.

This nation’s service acad-
emies still provide some of the
best training and educational
vupportunities in the world. In
the past we have had good par-

Dear Congressman Gibbons:
1 am beginning my senior
year in high school and am
interested in attending one of
the military academies when I
graduate. Could you please
help me with the application

process?
—HRW

Dear HRW:

Each year I receive many
phone calls and letters from
eager high school students and
their families asking for help in

applying to the United States
Service Academies. As your
Congressman I have the honor
of nominating up to ten candi-
dates for each vacancy allotted
to the Seventh Congressional
District of Florida. If appointed,
these fortunate young men and
women can receive training at
the Air Force, Military, Naval,
or Merchant Marine acade-
mies,

Because the process can
take time, it is best to apply in
the spring of your junior year,

ticipation in these programs.
My most recent records show
that there are over forty Hills-
borough County High School
graduates attending academies.
If you think you may be inter-
ested in applying to an acad-
emy or just want more informa-
tion on the program contact
my office at 813-887-5430. My
staff will be glad to help you.

Congressman Sam Gibbons
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

TILE EB ESSAI NG EAE BES 3 BASES ESA, Vie SS AE

Page 4

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

August 15, 1985

“The peace of God,
| which passeth all un-

derstanding, shall
keep your hearts and
minds through Christ
Jesus.”

1

suse.

WORSHIP

FPR?
til. Toe |

/

"| COLLEGE HILL
CHURCH OF

Gl4 Mech 30uh Stes

Bichop W. E. Duvis, Pastor
ZION HI

A.M.E. CHURCH |
CHURCH |
‘2604 12th Avenue

MT. PLEASANT
BAPTIST
CHURCH

2002 North? Ave.
Rev, C. W Pastor
OAKHILL M.B.
| CHURCH

4202 Eon Polifax Steet
q Bor. 5.2. Harmon, Pusto-

ST. JOHN
M.B. CHURCH

FRIENDSHIP
M.B. CHURCH

“13 Ba Strect
Rew MO Mey, Paso
a

GREATER
‘MT. CHAPEL
A.M.E. CHURCH

GOD IN CHRIST}

THIS
SUNDAY

‘BAPTIST
CHURCH

aw 3 hm
ov. 3. © Getei, Pater

CHURCH OF
PROGRESS

-VILLAGE

<p Noh Sth Sut
Rev. J. D. Morris, Pastor

1417 N. ALBANY AVE.

@RYANT PH: 253-3419
“WHEN UNDERSTANDING
Fi ANS ME 1S NEEDED MOST”
a

Phone BA8-G125

Yalslleow. runeRAL HOME

PUMERAL OLARCTORS
CLARENCE P. WILSON QPth St. ot Lise Ave,

SUMMER J. WILSON Tamps, Florida 33605

DESNIOIEIOZS
| Marriage License

JAY PERCELL MAYWEATHER - 24
ANTIONETTE OLIVER - 24

JAMES HATCHINSON - 40
CHRISTINE COPELAND - 50

JOSEPH GREGORY MARTINEZ — 33
LOLA BELL SINGLETON -- 34

OTIS TEAL - 32
LUCINDA ANDEPSON ~ 26

LUTHER LOUIS CORE ~ 34

LUTHER LOUIS CORE ~ 34
DARIA LOUISE DICKENS - 25

ANTHONY DWAYNE GUION - 20
SYLVIA ANN CREWS — 21

"pesese $213 ENED ENC ENN BENS

Obituary

WILSON FUNERAL HOME
Mrs. Suie Watkins of 2606-38th Avenue, Tampa,
Florida.
Mr. Robert Boyd of 5023-86th Street, Tampa,
Florida.
Infant Joseph Riley of Tampa, Florida.
| Mrs. Creola Sheppard of 1006 Yukon Street.
Tampa, Florida.
| Mr. Samuel D. Ellet of 2717-lith Avenue, Tampa,
| Florida.
| Mas. Alice Daniel of 4313 Arch Street, Tampa,
Florida.
Mrs. Essie Lee Abrams of 2011-20th Avenue,
| Tampa, Florida.
| Mrs. Essie Mae Sturks of 3024 E. Norfolk,
| Tampa, Florida
Mr, Joseph Richardson of 3606-20th Street No.
62, Tampa, Florida.
Mr. Charles B. Yobb
Tampa, Florida.
Mr, Robert W. Lovett of 3205 E. Osborne Avenue
| Tampa, Florida.
| Mrs. Viola Small of 419 E. Adalee Street. Tampa.
Florida.
|Mr. James Smith, Jr. of 808 Dunbar Ct. No. 7,
Orlando, Florida.

of 2907-33rd Avenue.

AIKENS FUNERAL HOME
Mr. Major Owens of IS54 Main Street, Tampa,
Florids.
Mr, Early Harris of 2021 Balfour Cir.. Tampa,

| Florida
= 4
was es
Ea vi

The Inner-City Bulletin

Published Every Thursday Morning

1985

November 7,

“The peace of God,
which passeth all un-
derstanding, shall
keep your hearts and
minds through Christ
Jesus.”

~ WORSHIP

THIS

SUNDAY

GOD IN CHRIST
414 Meorth 30h Sect
W. E. Dovis, Pastor

ZION
A.M.E. CHURCH |
CauRcH
2600 12h Avews 3
3

MT. PLEASANT
BAPTIST

BAPTIST
CHURCH

a
a

}FIRST BAPTIST]
CHURCH OF

PROGRESS

GRYANT PH: 253-3419
y “WHEN UNDERST,
Fl ANSue {S$ NEEDED MOST”
t

1417 N. ALBANY AVE.

Yalallncwn runes. wow

CLARENCE P. WILSON

SUMNER J. WILSON

Phone 248-8125

PUMERAL OYRECTORS

90th Se. of Bie Ave,

Tampa, Floride 33606

EREIEVWED
Preset erer es

Paiarriage Licens

Adali Estes Stephe
Annmare Williar

‘ei

Albert Cuspin Yankah, 25

Tanya Ameicia Raines, 28

Donald Lou

Kelvin Roosevelt Dell, 27
Zoy Yvette Hall, 25

Johnnie Sykes Jr., 42
Janet Marie Garner, 36

Ever Angel Guillen, 27
Glinda Ann Scott, 26

Warren Spencer Williams, 30
Robbie Laverne Cooper, 28

IIe ee Led
=)
oye

| QEAS2CISICISEICINIOZE
al > |

Soe] —o— Aas
Obituary

WILSON FUNERAL HOME

Mrs. Eva M. Jackson of 3403 E. McBerry,
Tampa, Florida.
Mr, George W.
Tampa, Florida.
Mr. Ira J. Thornton of 1805 Kingway Road,
Thonotosassa, Fis.
Mrs. Audry Cox Humphery of 3519-10th Street
Tampa, Florida.
S/Sgt. David C. Silas of 1450 Satakher Lane No.
29 Ynka City, Ca.
Mr. Willie J. Irven of 11201 N. 22nd St. No,
45, Tampa, Fla.

irs. Mamie L. Williams, formerly of 1717 Butler
Ct., Tampa, Florida.
Mr. James Farris, Sr. 1912 Genessee, Tampa,
Florida.
Mrs. Eva M. Jackson of 3403 E. McBerry,
Tampa, Florida.

Dennis of 3420-33rd Avenue,

August 15. 1985 The Inner-City Bulletin - Published Every Thursday Morning Page 5

F FRESH ¢ FRESH .
glue CG) itl runcey WINGS, NECKS, TALS 39%. ] ferse CHICKEN LEGS 39
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BOWELESS BEEF | BONELESS BEEF TENDER JUICY EXTRA LEAN

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eat ae CHOPPED HAM x, 69: BAR-B-Q LOAF >: 69:
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ATTENTION CHURCH Large Whole SPARE RIBS.__30 Ih. CASE $26.75 Large Meaty TURKEY NECKS 30 Ib. CASE $8.95
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ix 89:

$m99 Femity Plastic

pe Ant & Roach Killer coe
= BLACK FLAG VIENNA

ej 5449 1 | SAUSAGE 3%.

can

or
R.C. COLAS
99: 2 Liter
Bottle
Like Magic

CLEANER
aes

LOUISIANA R FAME
HOT SAUCE mi Steese

Betts ‘4 Le! 4.41

MARTHA WHITE
YELLOW « 008. 5
RICE phys

Spanish Style

PORK and cueee akaue TOMATO

BEANS os
“ K etd 6 tx.

White
POTATOES

SEEDLESS
GRAPES

re TA

— ee

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning
Novemher 7 1985

FRESH ;
Blue CG) hitie ever CHICKEN LEGS 49:,, = aoe

"age 5

WESTERN BEEF [| TENDER BEEF EXTRALEAN [| JUICY TENDER

CHUCK | CHUCK | GROUND | T-BONE

ROAST | STEAKS BEEF STEAKS
=o her 1? a

LYKES POWER PAK LYKES POWER PAK

Tae FRANKS 69 3c | BOLOGNA 89: Pie
COLUMBUS DR. WILLIAMSBURG, VA PURE | PRICE SALE ee
Peprreeremal PORK SAUSAGE 99° 1% | COOKED HAMOYS ‘=:

FRESH Lean First Cut Fresh Shoulder Lykes Smoked

WHOLE | PORK | PORK HAM
FRYERS | CHOPS | ROAST | HOCKS

49: ,
Large Whole SPARE RIBS.

ATTENTION CHURCH

GROUPS, RESTAURANTS ire ronntek sone

and CIVIC GROUPS
— CASE SALES!

FRESH WESTERN

PIG
FEET

3 lb. DOWN BABY

Large TURKEY NECKS OR TAILS. 301b.CASE $8.75
Ib. CASE $35.50 Select WESTERN OX TAILS.......... 20 Ib. CASE $16.95
tb. CASE $9.75 . Lean First Cut PORK CHOPS... 10 Ib. BOX $10.75
tb. CASE $11.50 Fresh WESTERN HOG CHITTLINS... 10 Ib. PAIL Sad
“ CASE aD Hickory SMOKED SAUSAGE........ 10 Ib.BOX $12.95

. CASE Lorge MEATY TURKEY DRUMSTICKS. 30 fb. CASE $9.75

sssss

Royal Scott Spread

MARGARINE ya

FLAVOR RICH ALL FLAVORS

CITRUS HILL 100% PURE

ORANGE JUICE $ ] 29 ca

y JENO’S CRISP & TASTY

PIZZA —

WHIPPED
SHORTENING

42 oz. can

FAB By

wo UNCLE BEN’S
BATHROOM RIC Detergent

MAYONNAISE TISSUE

9 ¢ 0.

|, SPRITE, DIET "= DISH DETERGENT
BEER COCA. RE |) PALMOLIVE LIQUID CLEANSER
tae
leen| 22 OZ. 99: ¢ Reg.
ue $69 = Bottle Cans

on Table Treat
@ PAPER ce iii CUT GREEN BEANS
Ly

JUMBO 303 $ 1
ROLLS CANS
HENNY PEN TABLE TREAT

DOG FOOD | MB MACARONI

Vigo
YELLOW RICE

2 10 oz. $ 1 |
Pkgs.

Showboat

PORK and BEANS

3

TABLE TREAT
il GOLDEN CORN
ee

Spanish Style
TOMATO SAUCE

6:51

GEORGIA RED NEW CROP
EET LARGE
PEPPERS | POTATOES | WALNUTS

303914 51] 99s
Page 6 The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

CITY
EDITIO

Cy Of Tampa
Bob Martinez, Mayor

Five arrested for

drug smuggling

TAMPA -- With a national crack down on
drug smuglers those involved are finding it hard
; to do business. In the Bay area, five men were
arrested last Tuesday and booked for being part

of a cocaine smuggling ring. According to

\ authorities, the crooks allegedly brought cocaine
from Colombia to Florida by parachuting bags
of the deadly drug fro sirplanes, some of which
were found in the Gulf of Mexico.

TAMPA — It's still too soon to start counting
money, but the state of Florida has moved close

the Skyway in May 1990. Six
cars, a truck and a Greyhound bus plummeted into
Tampa Bay, killing 35 people.

The five arrested, including a convicted smug-
ler from Pasco County, brought in 2,200 pounds
of cocaine worth about $50 Million dollars if
sold on the streets and 1,400 pounds of mari-
juana, FDLE officials said.

This is s major smuggling group,” Danny John-
son, chief of Tampa’s FDLe office, said at a di
news conference, where nearly a dozen bags of
coasine and a khaki parachute allegedly used by
the ring were displayed. “They have been active
for at least the last 10 years.”

Also arrested were Forest Glenn Sink Jr., 33
of Tampa and his 29 year old brother James
Sink, also of Tampa. Forrest Sink also has been ,
Series twice of drug charges, authorities

Ex-teacher aide sentenced
in fondling case

THE DECISION, filed Aug. 2 in US. District Court

in Tampa, helps clear the way for Florida to collect
damages for the accident.

US. District Judge Daniel H. Thomas last September

assessed the damage and other costs at more than $20-
million, basing the amount mostly on what it would have
cost to repair the bridge. Thomas put off making the

jecision final, however, until he resolved a claim by the

owners of the Summit Venture that Florida, the U.S.
government and the National Weather Service shared
some of the blame for the accident

The Summit Venture slammed into the Skyway when

its pilot, John Lerro, tried to navigate the empty freighter
during a fierce, early morning thunder squall. The ship's

attorneys. “I would say this is sort of another nail in the
coffin of the Summit Venture.”

BEC ES pUBEADY. has paid pesyeea: $10.
oie or and Te arntlies of ne people wits were \illedo the

Thomas assessed the damage to the bridge at $16.2-
million and said that Hercules owed another $4-million to
pay for the cost of removing accident debris, lost toll
revenue and engineering studies of the damage. That
brought the total in damages to more than $20-million,

The

Inner-City Bulletin

The Community's
Choice ia

State closer to collecting i
$2 1-million in Skyway suit

owner, Hercules Carriers Inc., contended that Florida was
partly at fault for licensing Lerro, for not installing
navigational aids — such as high-intensity strobe lights, a
horn or a radar transponder on the bridge — and for not
having system to warn motorists that the span had
collapsed.

The U.S. government also was negligent for the same
reasons and because the National Weather Service didn't
issue a severe thunderstorm warning on the morning of
the accident, Hercules said.

BUT THOMAS threw out all the claims, saying that
none of the navigational aids would have prevented the
accident and that Florida had “complied with all the
regulations regarding bridge safety.” As for the National
Weather Service, Thomas ruled that all weather forecasts
are, at best, predictions and that the forecasters on duty
“acted reasonably and prudently with the information
available to them ...” }

Tampa lawyer Dewey Villareal Jr., who represents
Hercules, said Tuesday that the ship's owners have not
decided whether to sppeal Thomas’ ruling. Hercules
already has appealed several other rulings by Thomas,
including his decision not to limit the company’s liability _
for the accident. That appeal and the others are still
pending .

“We're getting nearer and nearer to a conclusion,”
said Tampa lawyer David G, Hanlon, one of the state's

but Thomas subtracted $1-million for the repairs that the
bridge needed but that the state had not made at the time
of the accident. 7

With interest, the total now comes to i

Teas than TO percent of what fis comting to burla oes
. Hanion said Tuesday that the state should wor

expect any of the money soon. Thomas is expected t
enter a final judgment for the damages later this month,
after which Hercules may appeal.

“Since they've appealed everything else,” said Hanlon
said, “I imagine they'll appeal this.”

A former teacher's aide was sen-
of a 10-year proba-

Reginald Bagone Burns, 36, of

tenced Tuesday to house arrest for Clearwater was arrested in March
two years as
tion for a
the child to f i

and charged with two counts of com-
‘and forcing mitting a lewd and lascivious act on a
child. Burns resigned from his job

“about three weeks after the charges

were filed and had pleaded no con-

test. One of the
Burns had been an aide at Safety

Harbor Elementary School for the

past two years in special

classes for Sheriff's Department said.

emotionally handicapped children.
acts occurred in a

LEGAL PROBLEM,
COME TALK TO US,

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FROM 8 AM. TIL 5 PM.
WE ARE A LAW OFFICE DEDICATED TO THE PEOPLE AND NOT

BIG BUSINESS.
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

« BANKRUPTCY ¢ DIVORCE

¢ INCORPORATION e FLORIDA WiLL
of BUSINESS

© DEEDS. near estare

¢ DWI-rrarnc

@ SOCIAL secunrry pisasury

DELANO STEWART

Attorney At Law
The Family Attorney

3558 N. 29th - 248-1931
Tempe, Florida 33610

| ; PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING

| BY:

| AnJon Enterprises

At 3805 29TH STREET, TAMPA, FLA. 33610
Post Office Box 310002, Tampa, Fla. 33680

Phone: (813) - 238-3563
Johnny Jacobs — Editor

Fete, Ine 45 Wt 45 Some, New You, Now

* PROBATE

* ADOPTION

¢ HOUSE crosinc
¢ CRIMINAL

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

T

“(i

C

‘Shee
@ od

Bob Martinez, Mayor

CITY TO BEGIN $36 MILLION PARKING PROGRAM

The City of Tampa is embarking on a $36 million parking
program for land acquisition and construction with the
Sale of revenue bonds in early November. This program
will support new fringe parking facilities outside the
Central Business District core and provide parking at
Tampa General Hospital.

The majority of the program funds, $23 million, will be
spent to support the downtown parking needs. About $14.4
million will be used to purchase land and $8.6 million
for construction of 2,500 new surface and multi-level

parking spaces.

Three sites have been selected for their proximity and
alignment with the proposed Downtown People Mover (DPM).
These include a site in the North Franklin area, a site
in the Union Station area, and a site south of the
Crosstown Expressway. Ultimately, these sites, along
with a site south of the police station, will provide
10,000 fringe parking spaces linked to the DPM.

The sale of the bonds, scheduled for either November 6
or 11, will be the latest development of a long range
plan to develop a system of fringe parking lots linked
to the downtown core by an integrated Downtown People

Mover system.

‘The is to create a

Central Business Distric 5 ee ws Peart tsi ed
c ‘ansportatio. eds

beyond the year 2000. oa lea

Tue hea Cry
Buurers

PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING

BY:
AnJon Enterprises
At 3805 29TH STREET, TAMPA, FLA. 33610
Post Office Box 310002, Tampa, Fla. 33680
Phone: (813) - 238-3563

EDITIO

Inner-City Bulletin

The Community’s
Choice

So you drive an automobile in the State of
Florida? If so, you should fully insure your veh-
hicle and include uninsured motorist protec-
tion with the package or you or your heirs may
live to regret it.

Uninsured motorist protection is designed to
provide the insured with coverage in those insta-
nces where he or she sustains personal injuries
through the negligence of an uninsured or under-
insured driver. Hit and run accidents, and phan-
tom vehicles among other incidents, are
covered by uninsured motorist’s negligence, and
meets other requirements of Florida law, that in-
dividual may sue his own insurance company to
recover the damages he would have gotten from
the negligent deiver’s insurance company had
that driver been insured.

Individuals who sustain serious injuries but

Pay additional sums to compensate him for his
injuries, assuming other statuto: re: isi

had been met. : fi secatrnare
_If you want to provide maximum automobile
insurance coverage for you and your family, be
sure to purchase uninsured motorist protection.

LEGAL PROBLEM
COME TALK TO U:

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FROM 8 AM. TIL $ PM.
WE ARE A LAW OFFICE DEDICATED TO THE PEOPLE AND NOT

BIG BUSINESS,
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

¢ BANKRUPTCY * DIVORCE :

e INCORPORATION ¢ FLORIDA WILL —
.of BUSINESS ¢ PROBATE y

¢ DEEDS, rea estare * ADOPTION

° DWLmamc * HOUSE ciosinc

* SOCIAL sécunmrpisammr  * CRIMINAL

Attorney At Law
The Family Attorney

3558 N. 29th -
ao te out

ri }¢

August 15, 1985

An Independent
View From
Capitol Hill

By Gus Savage,
Honorable Member
of Congress

New Mid-East Peace
Efforts Essential

Now that the hijacking crisis has abated with the
return of the hostages, it is imperative that the gover-
nment of the United States begins seriously to seek ob-
jective solutions to the problems which caused the
hijacking in the first place.

Although on the surface, resolution of the issues
facing the Middle East appear as complicated as finding
a logical arrangement of items in a cross-word puzzle,
most experts agree that there is one key to clearing up
the confusion: locating the switch that could trigger a
peace treaty between Israel and its Arab neighbors.

Former President Jimmy Carter thought he had
found the connection when, with extreme patience, he
coerced Begin and Sadat. former leaders of Israel and

Egypt, into tne Camp David Agreement. But even them,
many knowledgeable persons knew the parties had been
excluded from the process.

These experts said in no uncertain terms that any
agreement was doomed to failure which had excluded
the Soviet Union from negotiations, failed to bring the
Palestinians and Jordanians into the talks from the
beginning, and did not give resolution to the Golan
Heights, Gaza Strip and West Bank issues equal urgen-
cy to resolving the Sinai question.

In the end, the only thing accomplished was the
isolation of Egypt from the Arab world and the

ination of President Sadat without in the least in-

adventures, resulting in the
hundred marines, a bw

America’s policy under Reagan has been. Following
his theory of over-kill retribution, Begin forced his
country into the immoral invasion of Lebanon, an in-
vasion which was supposed to guarantee the security of
Israel's northern border by driving the PLO out of
Lebanon once and for all. Instead, the invasion has
solidified the Shiites into a strong force against Israel,
where before they had been more concerned with
fighting other factions in Lebanon. The indigenous
Shiites definitely are proving to be a greater threat to
Israel’s security than the vagabond Palestinians, PLO
members or otherwise.

Approximately two weeks before the hijacking of

the American plane forced most other activities out of
the news, two developments had taken place which
could relight the flame for peace in the Middle East

The first breakthough came from King Hussein of
Jordan, who announced that he is ready to lead a joint
Jordanian-Palestinian delegation into direct peace talks
with Israel “sometimes this year. Although the
Palestinian contingent would not include any members
of the PLO, Arafat reportedly approved Hussein's
Proposal.

It was further reported that Hussein is prepared to
conduct the negotiations within the framework of
United Nations Security Council Resolutions 242 and
338. These resolutions call for Israel's withdrawal from

‘About a week later, Prime Minister Shimon Peres
of Israel replied to Hussein's initiative. Although there
were some disagreements with specific details, the Jor-

:
Ea
i
it
Hn
‘

even they are unwilling to pay.
On the other hand, logic dictates that if Israel sur-
vived in 1948 without its borders,

The Inner-City Bulletin - Published Every Thursday. Morning Page 7

evissale

A GREAT FIT, FROM TOP TO BOTTOM.

' ee
Men's Levi's \
R NM
Toi “Soiton, "in Woon Sut or Serge

Aes, Young men'n sz

Pez 17:09; Rex. $24.
100% cotton pre-washed deni
Sale prices ¢ “tfectve thru Sat. rAvgnat 24th.

Boys: Levi's

Boy's back-to-school Levi's _ in 100° cotton
pre-washed denim. Straight leg styling in
regular or slim-fit.

sents Levi's

Reg. Sale
Little boys’ Levi's .. $i4 10.99
Big boys’ Levi's ; $18 12.99
Prep boys’ Levi's. .. $20 13.99

Sale prices effective thru Mon. Sept, 2nd.

mney

WEST SHORE PLAZA UNIVERSITY SQUARE EASTLAKE "SQUARE
water Clearwater
IDE MALL «=—- SUNSHINE MALL

New Port Ricnes
SOUTHGATE CENTER

PINELLAS SQUARE

St Petersburg eh

~VRONE SQUARE

COUN’

Page 7

The Inner-City Bulletin -- Published Every Thursday Morning

November 7, 1985

QBetk Lindsey
DAYS SALE

Body

Suzy Star
Nylon Teddy

1022

Comp. $23. 100% nylon teddies in colors
to suit. everybody"! Choose from two
luscious lace-trimmed styles in sizes S,
M, L. LINGERIE

Warner
Daywear

30% off

Reg. $6.50-$13.50. Ladies tap pant, cam-
isole w/adjustable straps and fashion-
length half-slip w/side slit. Delicate lace
trimming. Choose white or beige. S, M, L__-
(8-7). LINGERIE ——

een

EVERY BELK LINDSEY STORE

——— - 2 = eS —~—~——
Page 8 The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursdsy Morning Avgust 15, 1985

ae

*
% Girls’ plaid shirts } | Our adorable

2 4 for readin’, writin’ | dresses will rate
et ~ & after-school fun | top honors

Sizes 4-6x, 929 1499

Gens yin e's
eich $16 | compare $19. Many cute
Sizes 7-14, 1 1 99 styles in solids and prints
compare $18 ..... . Cool short sleeve styling in
Adorable woven plaid shirts | | polyester/cotton. Sizes 7-14.

in cool short sleeve styles. | {
Great with jeans or skirts!

i | Girls’
| | belted pants
99

compare $14. Stock up on
great fitting canvas pants
with matching belt. Many
pretty colors in sizes 4-6x.

Girls’
Lee® jeans

25% off

Sizes 4-6x, reg. $19 to $23
Sizes 7-14, reg, 23°° to $26
Basic and fashion jeans in 5-
pocket, London rider, stone-
washed denim & capri styles.
Sizes 4-14.

22) pee, jew |!

Jordache®
/ backpacks

999

§ compare $15. Perfect for
| back-to-school! Pretty solid

f (] Mieunag

colors with the famous Jor-
dache® logo. =

———

|
|

GIRLS' DEPARTMENT

~ — —

All panties and socks

25% off

Save 25% off our entire stock of girls’
panties and socks. Panties are avail-
able in print & solids; socks in basic
and sport styles. Sizes 4-14.

Levi's® big tops

149°

compare $24. Two pretty styles to
choose from in sizes 7-14. Lots of
popular colors, too!

Ocean Pacific® sportswear

25% off

compare $13 to $28. Save 25% of our
entire stock of girls’ Ocean Pacific®
sportswear. Items vary from store to
store.

EVERY BELK LINDSEY STORE
Use Your Belk Lindsey Charge, Master Card, Visa or American Express Card
November 7, 198:

© 11 look: front Europe is shapely

and lobster.
bustles, More than
clingy coordinat

Polka dots appear more consistently
than any other pattern. Designers from

Giorgio Armani in Milan to Jasper

gdesege
ate
o iibcee
B egecseaey
@ ecsescdes
Siler
238] 2
HIE q)
i isk
i i
i
:

Conran in London to Yves Saint Laurent Versace in

Other haiimark prints of the season

i eee sea — anchor

or
and

Pants with pizazz Polka dots

i ;
ul ine
g2ece PEE x
file SUH
Pale ] a3
rT | 2 lina
: is |S eee $
i Ei Hy & Sse raeEe
sz ac: 32 boas
A u2 @ Hi
ie au ¥ Bo
fe SaHn

jackets
have back

tight, sexy skirts —

Paris designer Azzedine Alaia

re

are teaming their new
Short skirts that often

fought back

Short, slim skirts
Inspired

— who firs!
Most desi
with slim,
seams. Karl

Pap 9

Augost 15,1985

‘The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

| af aI Y OOO eS ee a oe = ee Odin SS ee era

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The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

85 November 7. 1985

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Page 10

. ee
KP

425 slayings last yea
Miami murder capital of U.S.

MIAMI — Sometimes finishing
first~isn't all it's cracked up to be.
Take murder, for instance.

Worse still, take 425 murders,

Run them through a computer,
toss in some population figures and
what comes out shows that for ev-
‘ery 100.000 people who officially
called Dade County, Fla., home in
1984, 23.7 of them met their maker
being shot, stabbed, strangled or

iten.

The FBI, which keeps track of
such things, said the proficiency
shown by those killing others in
Dade was three times the national
average and good — or bad —
enough for the county to lay claim
to the title of murder capital of the
United States.

It's a claim most cities would
just as soon not make.

“T've been feeling the past cou-
ple of months or so that this com-
‘munity has come to accept crime as
FY Tcomaition ‘of living here,” said Les-
ter @ Southeast Bank sen-

“That's not acceptable to me,”

Freeman and other business and
governmental types here would
rather talk about the international
flair of Miami and its surrounding
county, the blending of ethnic com-
munities, commerce and banking.

Still others point to the popular
television show “Miami Vice.” Ever
since the show went on the air last
season, fighting drug dealers and
crime, the viewing public has been
treated to Miami's sights and sounds
— including, of course, gunfire, car
chases and buildings being blown
apart. Reel or real life, it's often
hard to tell the difference.

Even some among the county's
business, civic and government lead-

NEWS FROM AROUNDT

Through ‘Miami Vice,”
which deals heavily
with the illegal
narcotics trade that has
blossomed here over
the past decade, some
have even founda

way to partially soften
the ‘Murder Capital
USA’ tag.

ership, who first were concerned
that a television show projecting the
seedier side of life here would pro-
ject the wrong image, have come to
embrace the show.

Through "Miami Vice.” which
deals heavily with the illegal nar-
coties jase yeh has pceaied ace
over tl t decade, some have
e found a to. solten

drug trade by law enforcement offi-

cials. Bad
to speak fast
sodes.

“When you look at the homicide
figures,” said Metro-Dade police
Maj. John Farrell, head of the ho-
micide division, “and look at the na-
ture of these case ... 30 percent
drug-related, 33 percent domestic
violence ... the average person in
Dade County is not living with a
threat of being killed any more than
any other big city.”

Actually, Farrell said, Dade
County's murder rate has dropped
each year since 1981, when 621 ho-

killing bad guys, so
like some TV epi-

The Inner-City Bulletin - Published Every Thursday Morning

micides put the county squarely
atop the nation's murder list.

Further, he said, the high num-
ber of murders is not random vio-
lence as a result of a breakdown in
social order. Instead, it involves a
victim and assailant who know each
other in some way — husband and
wife, lovers. business partners, part
ners in a drug deal or some other
association gone sour.

That's little consolation for
those trying to lure new businesses
and families to Miami

“Every year, Miami is becoming
more and more a southern New
York with all the good and bad,”
said Miami Mayor Maurice Ferre.
saying the murder rate is difficult
“Is it drugs? Of course. Is it imag-
ery? Sure. Is it the hot Latin tem-
perament? Sure. Is it permissive
laws? Yes, Is it poverty? Yes. Is it
the availability of guns? Yes.

If recent headlines concerning
1984's murder statistics weren't
enough, last month produced more
for thought. Three bodies were
0 “The bodies bad cash
and jewelry, and two had pistols
stuck into the waist of designer
jeans, an indication that robbery
was likely not the motive.

“T read the paper ... and it said
nothing’s happening and then I see
this morning ... they're fishing
three guys out of the river,” said
Greater Miami Chamber of Com-
merce President Bill Cullom. “Ev-
erybody I know has either been a
victim of crime or knows someone
who has been a victim of crime.”

Cullom numbers among close
associates one man whose wife was
murdered and a business executive
who recently awoke to find machine
gun-wielding robbers in his home.

“There’s no way to hide from

MIAMI — Jackson Memorial

Cass hugs Herby St. Cear, who

AIDS makes youngster a victim too

Hospital worker Delia Gied of the disease, and his father also
fives at the hospi- though Herby has some brain damage, he
the 2-year-cld shown no evidence of the silment that breaks
’s mother down the body's immune system.

has ft. Ab
hes

August 15, 1985

r make Treasury Department
gets dress code

WASHINGTON — Employees at the Treasury De-
partment are being told what is appropriate attire on
the job — ties and jackets for men and dresses for
women,

Treasury Secretary James Baker announced a dress
code for employees Friday in. a two-page directive. tt
tled “Proper Attire for Employees of the Office of the
Secretary.” a division of the department that occupies
much of the headquarters building

“For male employees, proper clothing includes a
necktie and a suit or sport jacket.” the directive said

“For female employees, appropriate attire includes
dresses, skirts with blouse or sweater, suits and pant-
suits.”

Some angry department employees indicated they
were more upset by the suggestion that they needed to
be told what was appropriate rather than by the specif
ie instructions — already observed for the most part,

they say.
Man wins suit against psychiatric clinic

MINEOLA, N.Y. — A Long Island man won a mal-
practice suit and was awarded $425,000 for his claim
that his ex-wife murdered their three children after sh
was prematurely released {rom a hospital psychiatric
unit.

Michael McDonnell, 45, of New Hyde Park, had
filed a $3 million malpractice suit against Nassau Coun-
ty, which operates the Nassau County Medical Center,
where his ex-wife, Kara Lee, had been treated.

The state Supreme Court jury of four men and two
Friday upheld McDonnell's contention that bis former
wife was psychotic and never should have been released
from the hospital on June 8 1972

‘At the monthlong trial, McDonnell testified less
than two months after her discharge, the woman killed
their three young children, suffocating them with plas-
tic bags.

Island official pleads guilty in drug case

MIAMI — The government agreed to drop charges
against a former junior minister of works of the Turks
and Caicos Islands in exchange for his guilty plea to
‘one count of conspiracy to import cocaine.

Aulden Smith, 33, entered the plea Friday in US.
District Court. Smith was the last of four men, two of
them also former government officials in the British
dependency south of the Bahamas, to be found guilty of
drug-related crimes.

The four were accused of taking part in a plot to
help import cocaine by facilitating the refueling of drug
planes.

Acid fog threatening lakes in California

LOS ANGELES — Fog with the acidity of toilet
bowl cleaner has been found in California, a state that
has more lakes highly sensitive to such pollution than
any other state, an environmental group reports.

Acid rain and fog not only threaten the state's sur-
face lakes, but particles of acid falling from the sky
scald be inhaled, according to the Coalition for Clean

ar.

DRY CLEAN WHEN YOU CARE.
rofessional Dry Cleaning Will Keep
Your Clothes Looking and Feeling
Like New!
They'll Last Longer Too!
ALTERATIONS
PICK-UP and DELIVERY SERVICE

(1818 15th Street Phone 248-3979
NEWS FROM AR

.

OUNDTH

—

E NATION

Negro Almanac Salutes
Black Americans

Black history in’ the Western
Hemisphere can probably be
traced back to the Santa Maria,
with Christopher Columbus’
crewman Pedro Alonzo Nino iden-
tified as a black sailor. Without any
doubt, black seamen and explorers
played key roles in the Spanish ex-
peditions, as well as the success-
ful English colonization that
birthed the United States of
America, Nevertheless, standard
references have failed to identify
the historical role of the Black
American. A new reference, now in.
its fourth edition, boldly salutes
those Black Americans in history,
and features Black Americans of
this modern era.

Blacks have continued to con-
tribute to our seemingly success-
{ul society, although viewed as be:

eide the mainstream, These
Americans and inéir-ances-
tors have truly contributed to, not
only the history that has become
today, but to the successes of

greatness and creativity that have
maintained our great nation as a
wonderful nation in which to exist.
The Negro Aimanac: A
Reference Work on the Afro
American salutes Black
Americans of past and present, in
addition to providing a focus on
the great contributions ta the
press, military, civil rights, law and
politics, family relations, labor,
education, technology, science,
the performing arts, and numerous
categories. A listing of Black
organizations, as well as a focus
On prominent Black Americans,
women and the future of Black
Americans. This complete refer
ence, covered in 1,550 pages,
should be in the home, school,
university, library and mere
possession of every American,
Inquities concerning the pur
Chase of the BOOK SNOUIG be for.
warded to Survival Assocjates,
P.O. Box 403, Short Hilts,* NJ.
07078. '

tunity.

Herbert L. Bright, Sr., Senior Manager of Personne! Services and Programs, Nabisco
Brands, inc., /s the 1985 recipient of the Whitney M. Young Jr. Memoria! Award, He
was recognized for his leadership in human rela'ons and the quest for equal oppor-

Byrant Gumbel, co-host of the NBC “Today” show and perhaps America's best-known
black television personality, has been named the recipient of the Modern Black Man's

(MBM) first “Man of the Year” award, Gumbel, who is arti

pretentious, attributes his success to talent

ulate, well-informed and un.

MAY PREVENT STROKE!
Proper diet
Reduce high blood pressure
*End smoking habit
View diabetes and high blood
pressure as high risks
Biminate stress
Wotify your doctor of stroke
warning signs
Take your medication as prescribed
“Sinoking is a possitie risk of stroke
For more information on stroke. write: Stroke
Council, Amencan Heart Association, Florida

Atfiliate, P.O. Box 42150. St. Petersburg, FL
33742

charge of tomorrow.

August 15, 1985

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

RISE 'N FLY
WITH BLACK HISTORY

Last August, Kevin Olds informed his mother, Linda
West Olds, that Geraldine Ferraro was the first woman
vice-presidential candidate. She in turn informed him
that no, Shirley Chisholm, a black, was also a vice
presidential candidate. That exchange led Olds, a black,

er what else Kevin didn't know about black
“He knew about Martin Luther King,”’ she
“but he knew more about the Kings of England

says,
than he did about the civil rights movement,’ Not long
after Olds, who lives in Rockland, Delaware, learned

about ‘Trivial Pursuit, the popular trivia board game,
and she had her business idea.

“I wanted my children to know their heritage,”” she
says, “and felt that a book of facts was likely to turn
children off. Kids learn from their play, their leisure time
so we decided to develop a game.”

The result is Rise "N Fly, a game that entails
answering a list of questions. “The name comes from
the way it is played,"" explains Olds. “If you don’t make
your bid, you have to get up and leave your seat!” She
quit her job teaching lab technology at a vocational high
school and for three months researched black history in
libraries and archives. A list of 2,000 questions were
prepared for the game, and two academics were hired to
check the accuracy, Meanwhile her husband, Merton
Olds, a chemist at DuPoint with marketing experience,
developed sales contacts and marketing strategies.

The Olds formed a company, Olds, Ogden and
Johnson (named after people who helped develop and
market the game) and reserved the rights on black,
Jewish, Irish, Caribbean and American Indian versions
of Rise 'N Fly. “We will find people from the ethnic
communities to research the games," she says. “A

Native American woman has already started working
on their edition.””

Olds received a $15,000 loan from a local bank to get
the prototype made and then a $45,000 loan for
production and marketing. She had quit her job by the
time she applied for the second loan and was pleasantly
surprised at her ability to get the money. ‘’I was a black,
unemployed female," she says, “and it made me feel
good that they believed in my product enough to give
me a loan.”

The bank was not the only business establishment
with faith in Rise 'N Fly. A Coke bottler bought the
game for his daughter and was so impressed, he
recommended that Coke help Olds market the game
The soft drink company agreed. So far the endorsement
has entailed attending receptions around the country; a

MAR. MAYOR- WE WANT YouR CITY To BUT THE PLAN WORKS, WE LIKE IT, AND. OH NO, YouRE THINKING OF THE
IT WAS Your IDEA TO BEGIN WITH DEPARTME

SCRAP HIRING QUOTAS IMMEDIATELY

promotional campaign is set for 1986. In addition to
backing the game as an advertising and public relations
tool, says Olds, “Coke wants to make a contribution to
the black community.”

A percentage of sales from Rise 'N Fly's sales will go
to black charities. About 30,000 games have been sold in
department stores nationwide, retailing for $29.95,

WHERE THE ‘’ANGELS” DWELL

‘Traditional venture capital is getting scarcer and scarcer,
which really doesn’t matter too much to small businessown-
ers since they usually didn’t qualify for it anyway. But what
is getting stronger is the informal risk capital provided by
individual, mostly local, investors. We've previously re-
ported on Prof, William Wetzels’ networking project at the
Univ. of New Hampshire that's computerizing the grape
vine linking entrepreneurs with friendly risk capital. (See
“New Help for Informal Investors,” July-Aug., 1984 IB)
Ata recent meeting of entrepreneurship professors at
Philadelphia's Wharton School, Wetzel provided an update:
Individual investors (“‘angels”’) make available $3 billion to
$5 billion of capital a year, financing as many as 25,000
firms annually. That's about 8 times as many as financed
by formal venture capital firms. The Venture Capital
Network—a non-profit effort of the New Hampshire Busi-
ness and Industry Assn. based in Durham—invites poten-
tial investors to join its database without charge, and
charges entrepreneurs seeking capital a fee of $100 to have
their business plans circulated to those on the investor list
Presently Wetzel reports there are about 135 investors re-
ceiving descriptions of companies (about 65 on that list) that
most closely match their preferences. An investor doesn't
know the company’s identity until a meeting is
with its management for investment purposes. According to
Wetzel, other private and government agencies in Okla-
homa, Texas, Indiana and Florida are attempting to estab-
lish similar networks between individual investors and small

firms
(CIVIL RIG

MILEAGE RECORDKEEPING
RULE REPEALED

Responding to cries of protest from across the country,
Congress repealed a law it passed less than a year ago
requiring that daily mileage logs be kept to substantiate the
use of cars for business. The regulations were intended to
end tax benefits for executive perks such as use of a
company car—but the business lobby and taxpayers
convinced Congress they and the IRS had gone too far.
Users of cars and other business equipment will be “
encouraged but not required to keep written records of their
business use.

IRS Commissioner Roscoe Egger has said that more
than $3 billion in unjustified tax deductions are claimed
yearly for business use of automobiles. To compensate for
the lost tax revenue, the new legislation reduces the
maximum investment credit to $675 (from $1,000);
depreciation limits are reduced to $3,200 from $4,000 in the
first year and to $4,800 from $6,000 in subsequent years
The new’rule is generally effective for taxable years
beginrfing in 1985.

action Based Economics, are
available for $5 from Clear
Glass, Box 257, Bodega,
CA 94922

LIFE AMID
FALLEN
ENTREPRENEURS

Citing Adam Osborne.
founder of Osborne Com-
puter Corp., as an exam:
ple in an article on “Fallen
Entrepreneurs in Silicon
Valley Find Failure Is No
Disgrace.”

o- fal-tepor
‘else (but California's S

con Valley), a business fail-
ure taints a carrer. hurting
relationships and hamper-
ing efforts to start anew
Here, though, perhaps the
only dishonor is not te trv
again, Failed high-tech en-
trepreneurs write articles
for trade magazines. give
interviews for books on
high-tech history. entertain
job offers and establish

ew ventures on their

own, They ski in Aspen.
sunbathe in the South
Seas, and. when time per-
superior service, His com- mits. they read their fan
plete observations in Trans- mail.”

SLOW PAYERS MAY BE SIGN
OF EARLY RECESSION

Collection agencies report that their business is up
over a third compared to a year ago. as bills get increas-
ingly overdue. Slow pay has become common in both
government agencies as well as the private sector. In
past years. such trends have indicated a downturn in the
economy. Some bill-collecting companies also report
that not only are they getting more requests to collect
overdue accounts, but their collection rate has dropped.
Not everyone attributes slow pay to the national econ-
omy. One observer finds that many of the people he con-
tacts blame the Internal Revenue Service tardiness in

WHO NEEDS |
A COMPETITIVE
EDGE?

Business startups would |
be far better off if they'd
forget about forging a
competitive edge, writes
Michael Phillips in Fansac-
tion Based Ecanomics. ““Co-
operation and niches are
more accurate (models),"
he stresses, using the expe-
riences of the Briarpatch

sheep ranch, an elegant $2
million restaurant, a circus
and a unique school which
awards doctorates in hu-
man sexuality. Other Phil- |
lipsisms: Personal values |
play a major role in busi- |
ness; Pricing. merchandis-
ing and marketing are

more successful when they
are based on positive social
values; Social costs can be
rewarded when included in
the business pricing struc-
ture; Monopolies can oc-

cur in ordinary circum:

sances and arise from

mailing tax refunds for their own inability to pay bills on
time
“THE OWE THAT USED‘Tc TeUL Loca.
OLD Jusnce NT one OFFICIALS HOW To RUN THEIR AFFAIRS

fe
November 7. 192

ORIFTERS CONVENE IN CINCINNATI — The 29th anni

‘The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thusdsy Morning

MAY PREVENT STROKE!
Proper diet
Reduce high blood pressure
*End smoking habit
View diabetes and high blood
pressure as high risks
iminate stress
Notify your doctor of stroke
warning signs
Take your medication
as prescribed
Smoking is a possible risk of stroke
For more information on stroke,
write: Stroke Council, American
Heart Association, Florida Affiliate,
P. 0. Box 42150, St. Petersburg,
FL 33742

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

of the Drifters, inc, was held In Cincinnati, Ohio at the Omni member, Cincinnati Dritters and publisher of the Cincinna!

tional president trom Montclair, N.J.

Netherland Plaza Hotel. The organization, composed of upscale Ethel Lee from Washington, D.C., winning of two round-trip tick
women, is primarily 8 social organization involved in public service the Bahamas from United Airlines; and Vera Jone:

outgoing ni

\

a

Step Johnson has been promoted at A&M Records to the
jent of promotion. He received his VP
ing most recently as National Promotion

position of vice p
stripes after
Director of Black Music.

What Is the value of 1961 Ronald
pe A Rh ey
recorded on only one side.

— Norm Grimstad, East Moline, ltl

Your recording may be worth $10 to $20 to a red-hot
Reagan fan, says Al Anderson, whose Anderson Auction
specializes in political campaign memorabilia. Generally,
says Anderson, collectors are less interested In records than
in political buttons, ribbons and autographs that have more
of a visual impact. A record jacket with Reagan's picture

_ would increase the worth of your recording. For informa-
tion on including your item in a mail auction, write: Al
Anderson, P.O. Box 644, Troy, Ohio 45373,

on Spratiey has been named brewery accounting
manager tor the Miller Brewing Company's Fort Worth,
Tex., brewery. In her new position, she will be responsible
for overseeing all plant accounting systems — including
budgets, acco ributor billing and payroll

THE DOLLAR

Doss devaluation of the doliar benefit individuals?
— Mrs. E.K. Steinkoptt, Winston-Salem, N.C.

‘The diminishing dolar, which has declined about 20%
in value since February against the West German mark,
affects people according to their circumstances, says David
Wyss, Data Resources Inc. vice president. For example, a
smailer dollar makes imported goods and foreign travel
more expensive for USA consumers. However, workers in
USA businesses suffering from foreign competition, such as
the auto industry, will benefit because domestic companies
will be more price-competitive in relation to imports.

ee few clubs in your aren. Beyons

Johnson Wax has announced the appointment of Victor A.
Thomas, 43, as vice president- regional director, Consumer
Products, Africa/Near East, He will be based in England at
ity, headquarters for the

TEEN-AGE INVESTORS

‘As an 18-year-old Investor | find that financial
specialists do not like to advise teen-agers. Any sug-
gestions for me?

— Christopher Camal, Oxford, Ohio

Brokers distike dealing with minor teen-agers because
in certain cases minors are allowed to back out of a
contract, such as an order to a broker to buy securities,
without penalty. However, at age 18 you are now legaily an
adult in Ohio and should have less trouble investing

If you are looking for financial advice, why not try an
investment club? Any broker should be able to suggest 8
i that, you can receive

_——aOe_R(G—OOIN_NaaNN\* information about local investment clubs by writing The

Se ee SE EES Mile Road, Royal Oak, Mich. 48067.

National Association of Investment Clubs, 1515 East

The Inner-City Bulletin - Published Every Thursday Morning

August 15, 1985

By Robert Kaplan
Speciat to The JournalConstitution

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Cold
political winds from Moscow are
deflating the festive summer spirit
in this most reform-minded of East
Bloc capitals.

As Hungarians leave Budapest
for vacations on Lake Balaton
Southwest of here, they are serious-
ly pondering whetber the ascension
of the relatively young reformer,
Mikhail Gorbachev, to the post of
Soviet party secretary was a good
thing after all.

bachev was a protege of the
late Soviet leader, Yuri Andropov, a
former ambassador to Hungary.
Both men, according to the prevail-
ing wisdom, were thought to look
benignly on’ the continuing liberal-
ization of the Hungarian piebgmyen OG
1964 ioRectecn replaced by Kon-

sage at a pltenmtes t
the era of Leonid Brezhnev — was

old guard.

But now both Hungarians and
Western diplomats are reassessing
their attitudes. And depending upon
the future, the short-lived Cher-

period

The article branded privatiza-
tion and other kinds of market-ori-

press,
ians both in and out of government
indicate that they are uncertain and
worried as to the article's signifi-
cance.

East, West opinions vary

tween reformers and hard-liners
within the Soviet Union has still not

Changes in Kremlin
worry reform-minded
East Bloc countries

been decided, and therefore the
“Viadimirov” piece must be viewed
a3 a frontal attack on economic lib-
eralization by the still-remaining
hard-liners.

Western diplomats in Budapest,
however, see this interpretation as
“wishful thinking.” ‘They explained
that the article appeared after the
hard-line faction associated with
former Politburo member Grigori
Romanov had already been purged.

The second gust of cold air
came a month later, near the end of
July. It was in the form of a speech
in Sofia delivered by the Soviet am-
bassador to Bulgaria. The speech at-
tacked the desire of small states to
‘act independently on major world
issues and was an obvious jab at
Bulgarian leader Todor Zhivkov,
who at the time was concluding an
official visit to NATO-member
Greece, where he and Greek Prime

Minister Andreas Papandreou dis-
the od ation of the
Here in Hunga , Western diplo-

mats and some arians saw the

speech as confirming the impor-
tance of the “Viadimirov” article in
Pravda.

“The message coming {rom
Moscow is clear,” said one high-
ranking Western observer. “It says
that you guys in Eastern, Europe
were getting off the reservation a
‘dit during a time when there was a
vacuum of power in Moscow. But
now the empire has to stick. togeth-
er.”

Gorbachev's age a factor

The reprimand from Moscow
comes at a time of increasing eco-

economists interviewed confirmed
the assessments of such Western
“think tanks” as the Philadel;
based Wharton Econometrics
Chea which have revealed
‘that is paying more and
more or | joviet raw materials,
while the Soviets are paying less for

leadership
change in Moscow — has made

officals even ei

MIKHAIL GORBACHEV:
Hungarians wonder what his
ascension will mean for their
country.

“These middie strata people in
Moscow are very hard. They are not
modern people, We in Hungary have

postponement

arya issues from fo
referred upward for quick resolu-
tion,

While Hungary may be encoun-
tering problems in the short run
with , Sipos, who has just
returned from Moscow, believes

East European

ty, Comecon, in
the years to come will unleash
“backwinds which will be favorable

Hungary, Sij
choice but to do much of its trading
with the Soviet bloc, therefore a

i
i}
i

unsultable for sale to the
fest — a situation with which Gor.
orn degen ote unhappy, The
last lungary needs, according
to these observers, is to be
forced its good products for

Hundreds freed
from Uganda jails

KAMPALA, Uganda — Some of the hundreds of po-
litical prisoners freed Saturday by the new military
government told of harsh prison conditions in which
dozens died of starvation or suffocated in jammed cells.

The 1,203 prisoners, including 44 women, were re-
leased from the Luzira maximum: security prison out-
side Kampala and brought in trucks to the capital. An
estimated 70,000 people jammed the main square,
choked side streets, stood on rooftops and climbed trees
to watch the arrival

All of the prisoners had been jailed during the 4-
year administration of exes Milton Obote, who was
toppled in a coup July 2

One former prisoner, James Namakajo, said he had
been imprisoned with a group of 274 people, and in five
months 68 died of hunger, suffocation or lack of medi-
cal treatment

American wounded in Israeli settlement

JERUSALEM — An American Jewish settler was
stabhed and wounded by two assailants as he returned
Saturday from the market in’ the tense, occupied West
Bank city of Hebron. The army closed off the area to
search for the attackers

The knifing of Yaakov Reitner, a New York City
teacher who is living in the Jewish settlement of Kiryat
Arba near Hebron, was the iatest act of violence
against Jews in the West Bank and elsewhere in Israel
Seventeen Jews have been killed in the last 15 months,
three in.the last month.

Israel radio said that two attackers jumped Reitner,
46, a3 be was Kirvat Arba irom the central

with a penknife in

returning to
market, and stabbed him
der and the neck.

Guerrilia bombing cuts electricity in Chile

SANTIAGO, Chile — Electrical power was restored
early Saturday to a 1,000-mile-long area blacked out by
a leftist guerrilla bombing at the end of a day of na-
tionwide demonstrations against the military govern-
ment.

Troops in combat gear patrolled turbulent working-
class sections of Santiago early Saturday for the second
day in a row and guarded main road junctions.

Initial reports said that at least 60 arrests were
made during a day of opposition marches and protests
against a recent wave of alleged political killings.

Police said 45 demonstrators were arrested and five

others injured in Santiago.

Slain rebel linked to San Salvador attack

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — The Salvadoran
armed forces said a leftist rebel leader killed earlier in
the week was one of the “intellectual authors” of the
June killing of six Americans.

After an investigation of more than six weeks, the
Defense Ministry Friday released the first statement
concretely aking any individual to the June 19 attack.

Four U.S. Marines and two American busi
were among the 13 people killed when ett rebels,
wearing army uniforms, opened fire on a crowded out.
door restaurant in the exclusive Zona Rosa section of
‘San Salvador.

‘The military said “Commander Arnulfo,” Uiapheaad

killed by government troops, was a leader of
the Central American Workers Revolutionary Party, the

Group that claimed responsibility for the slayings.

Soviet youth straying from party line toward violence,
alcohol, hooliganism

young people matter, boy
sel adr toc en ioe Cr: Dik sla, the Bevies Unies nat generation aap.
Soviet agency it many
Raia chien ler to love Lain Ie 8p Bit gdh fern porate alin,
called Octobrists, to red-ecarved, scoutlike should be, are prone to “alcoholism, theft, hooliganism
Pioneers, and age 13, are propelled into the and parasitism."

Page 12

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

Sudan: US. citizen released after 3 days
SARIN 8 US Oboes exTegeed no erin ot

underground nuclear device in the South Pacific that was
three times as powerful as one detonated last week. P

8 formality,” said Cerezo, a
center-left Christian

Democrat
who has been dubbed the
“master 1” by the Gua-

i
:
i

fl peltili
adie
: Le au
Ht ie

if

AROUND THE WORLD

Special for USA TODAY

Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak and Palestine Libera-
tion Organization leader

sty

i if
233
é
f

Both and Mubarak
ren flit Leela
rorism

i
a
g
8
8
a
$8

PLO and Israel to bring peace

closer. Arafat said he hoped to-

day’s meeting would accom-

plish “unity and more solidart-
”

ty and ing.

The fragile Middle East
peace effort became even
more delicate after an Oct. 1 Is-
reel! raid on PLO headquar-
ters in Tunis and the Oct. 7 hi-
jacking by four Palestinians of
the cruise ship Achille Lauro,

‘The United States and Israel
called for exclusion of the PLO
in any peace talks, after the
death of Leon Klinghoffer, the
69-year-old, handicapped
Achille Lauro passenger mur-
dered

an officials in Damascus,
where peace over
weekend.

Monday to plan the agenda for

the US.Soviet summit later
this month.

Shultz, accompanied by Na-
tional Security Adviser Robert
McFarlane and arms control
adviser Paul Nitze, is the first
secretary of state to visit Mos-
cow since Cyrus Vance in 1978,

Shultz sald he wanted the
meeting to be a thorough prep-
aration for the Nov. 19-20 sum-
mit in Geneva, Switzerland, be-
tween President Reagan and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba-
chev. Shultz was scheduled to
meet Gorbachev today.

November 7, 1985

Argentina: Vote forwards austerity plan
BUENOS AIRES — President Raul Alfonsin called the
outcome of Argentina’s midterm congressional election &
“victory for democracy” and a further step in the “search
of modern Argentina.” Alfonsin's Radical Civic Union
Party's impressive election gains are seen In Argentina as &
solid endorsement of Alfonsin's economic austerity plan.

Persian Gulf: Iran says bombs ‘chemical’

Iran accused Iraq of dropping “chemical bombs” and
claimed its navy intercepted a Panamanian-registered ship
in the Persian Gulf. Iraq claimed its warplanes struck a
“large naval target” in the gulf and pounded Iran's Khare
Island oil terminal.

Also...

BCATANIA, Sicily: A bus traveling on a ralnslick
highway near Catania skidded off a bridge and plunged 100
feet into a dry riverbed Monday, killing 15 people,

MSAN SALVADOR, El Salvador: Leftist guerrillas at-
tacked an army post in the usually peaceful western part of
El Salvador. Four soldiers were killed and seven wounded.

@ MANAGUA, Nicaragua: The Sandinistas marked the
first anniversary of their election victory with renewed calls
for the USA to halt efforts to overthrow the government.
Headline ahead:

El Salvador President Jose Napoleon Duarte, who

arrived in Paris Monday, begins his first official visit to
Spain today.

Suicide-bomber in Lebanon
attacks militia post; 3 killed

A suiicide-bomber drove a cor packed with explosives
into @ militia post in southern Lebanon on Monday,
“siltinig at Waist three PSrEONs, The attack was directed
at the loraeli-backed South Lebanese Army. Police
said Ammar Al Aathar, 24, a member of Lebanon's
Syrian Social Nationalist Party, attacked 8 militia post
near the village of moun, 6 miles northwest of the
Israeli border. Aathar, a militia guard and lis wife were
killed and another woman was wounded, police said.
The Syrian faction said, however, that 15 Israeli
soldiers were killed or wounded in the attack. On
Sunday, @ woman fiding a donkey and carrying
explosives was shot by South Lebanon Army guards:
the resultant explasion killed three persons.

Bombs go off in two Belgian banks

Two terrorist bomb attacks were made on Belgian
banks on Monday, and a group calling itself the
Fighting Communist Celis claimed responsibility for
one of the attacks. Two bombs went off in Brussels’
Banque Bruxelies-Lambert, injuring a night
‘watchman. Another bomb went off at the Societe
General Banque in the mining town of Charleroi. No
one was injured in the second attack, for which the
Communist group claimed responsibility. Sources
‘Suspected that the group also planted the Brussels:
bombs.

Iranians mark embassy takeover

‘Some 50,000 demonstrators burned an effigy of
Uncle Sam and chanted “Death to America’ on

Monday as they gathered in tne neart of Tehran, rar,
for a Shiite Moslem holy day, witnesses reported. The
demonstration was officially called to commemorate
the mourning period for the 7th century Shiite martyr
Iman Hossein. But it was also the second march in as
many days marking the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979 by students backing Iran's
revolutionary leader, the Ayatollah Ruholish Khomein:

15 killed tn bus crasi: in Sicily

A bus traveling on 9 rain-slick highway near Catania
Sicily skidded off a bridge and plunged 100 feet into a
dry riverbed Monday, killing 15 people and seriously
injuring six, police said, Thirteen of the victims,
including the driver, died instantly. Two others died in
a hospital and six were being treated for serious:
injuries, doctors said. The bus was carrying about 30
People, most of them students and workers.

August 15, 1985

The Inner-City Bulletin -- Published Everv Thursday Morning

Page 13

NORE MMM ROO ES OD

BY: Johnny Jacobs

“WMNF BRINGS SOUL LEGEND
PERCY SLEDGE TO TOWN

Ask any two devotees of
soul/rhythm & blues music to define
that music. and you're in fora lively
debate. Often the term “soul” is
used in combination with rhythm &
biues to describe the genre of Black
music that reached its peak of
popularity in the early 70's. Since
then, the term has been used to
describe the music of a wide variety
of musical artists whose music is far
removed from the soul music
tradition that was personified by
James Brown. Otis Redding and the
man whom WMNF is bringing to
town this month—the Alabama soul
stytist with the funny haircut. Percy
Sledge

In the South. when traditional

3s
man who could consistently stand
‘on the same peak as the great Otis
Redding

Sledge was born in Leighton
Alabama in 1941. into a poor
farming family. He began to sing at
school and by the age of 20 had
joined a local group. the Esquires
Combo. In 1965, looking for a solo
career. he was pointed toward Quin
Ivy. who ran Norala Sound Studios
in Sheffield,

ESS

The song that Sledge auditioned
with—"Wnen a Man Loves a
Woman.” was. to Say the least. one
of the most memorable songs of the
eta and topped the R&B charts in
the Spring of 1966 While Sledge’s
career has often been defined by the
immortality of that big hit, soul
music enthusiasts recognize "Out
of Left Field” (1968), “Take Time to
Know Her (1968). “The Dark Eng of
the Street (1967) and “Warm and
Tender Love’ (1966) as. classic

fecordifigs of the golden. era ot soul.
= fecgrerfios.of the sateen erat 49

Percy Sledge will perform in
Tampa on August 16 at WMNF's
Soul Party °85 benefit concert
Joining him will be soul blues artist,
Benny Latimore Latimore. who Is
currently lwing 19 Miami and
recording for Malaco Records, has

CROSS

SOLUTION ELSEWHERE

IN THIS

1 Ms. Sommer fr oN
And others
r is ie
i
1S ry 7
|
1. id 20
garment PF zy r} r7
15 Landed at
Ararat oT key
16 Hemingway
sisters film [ia 35
18 Awry
20 Pulitzer ae GF as
winner, 1961
21 Article of e) te “e.
emphasis
22 Parched re #
24 Ump
26 Horse feed = f* ad
28 Game of lew rT
chase
30 Wild West rey
group
34 Succulent >
herb
36 Research 63 Swiss 8 U.S. zone 33 Sounds of
place painter 9 Way of hesitation
38 Feline sound 64 Beret walking 35 Energy unit
39 Flame burst 65 Poverty 10 Nickneme 37 Gift tie
41 Floor ; for Bunker 40 Aristocrat
rubt 11 Levee 42 Golf concerr
axcicua cals BouN A Trickle 45 Mauve color
ABR eee } Volcano in 19 Humor ist 47. Varnish —
46 Weavin ecg Sicily 23 Arabic element
48 Long, irs < Author Anita letter 48 Ina frensy
51 Fit a 3 "East of 25 Dandy 49 Frenchmer
53 Stinks Java" 26 Lout 50 Fiend
56 Ist circum- 4 Anesthetic Y § bee 52 Affair
navigator 5 Building nothing 53 Crinkle
59 Take 2 wing 29 Herd of cabbage
picture 6 Labor whales 56 Dashes
60 Yours & mine 7 Pickled 31 Mystery 87 Language
61 Mohanmed condiment 32__ Lanka suttiy
62 Wight or Man 58 Bite
b

This month marks our 50th year in
the automotive industry. We've had
vast experience in all phases —
service, sales and we've watched
fads come and go. We still offer the
basics. We treat our customers
with courtesy, punctuality and in-
tegrity...we believe in fair exchange
and we'll stand behind any car we
sell — new or used.

That's why much of our business is
repeat business. And we want to
thank you, because your loyalty is
what we're really all about.

Autos in Tampa
Since 1935

SCHULSTAD MOTORS

NE, ————

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Moming

TERRA A MME HEI I I OO

Entertainment | *

a *4
24+ MUBIC & RECORDS » MUSIC %

vt > 2 .

——— =|

scanning
room. “We

ordered pineapple, didn't we?’

's. The creation,

in seaweed, arrives
1983 production of

“Can I have a California

“Where's the Pineapple we
1 asks,

wi

times on welfare; to supplement
id shopping bags on street corners.

Born Dec. 19, 1939, in New York's East Hartem,

|| Ccely Tyson we

“For years I was doing noth-

ing to bar talk,” he said shortly

“We're opposites of the zod!-

ac,” says Tyson, a Sagittarius al
Davis is a Gemini. "I bal

Dressed in black skirt and
Stockings, she tops itoff with an hand roll with very little rice’

oversized print sweater Tyson

‘Snatched from her husband.

one, dangling, moon-shaped the now-deserted

after their marriage. "I wasn't sot
going to do that and be married

to Cicely, so I stopped.”

earring slaps her cheek.

| Tyson with changing his life.

face is co-produce and star in."

sa

UNICEF's oot ‘Trick or Treat’
her
fe statue.

her
te “ust (s."
FASHIONS

says. “When you come down,

f

Bae 5 &

ate

pif |
2

se 2
i,

half.

she

of
ing speed.
was a strict v1

stay

exhilarati

¥
f
1 §
a
=

; smoke and
you'd — mountain climbit
“It's so

Tyson

an for 12 years, but
fish

SPRING

don't question it at all. It has
1986

4

skin tingles or my stomach move with amazit
i:

“That's the one,” she yips as churns. When I have the slight-

“There, but for the grace of ifshe'd found the one pearlina est apprehension, I walk the
God, go I,” Tyson says of the sea of oysters. “That's the aph- other way. ... I've never been

mothers with their sick chil- rodisiac! She plays the one to work

TYSON THE ACTIVIST: Award-winni
On a tight schedule touring the count
where I go. Otherwise

re

“This is the home of my forefa-

vs aftencritical crite |p 4) Ae *“

for an impromptu Junch before Pauline Kael of The New
in,” says Cosby, “She's

Friends say she caneat anyone and I don’t fool with truth.”

‘She will play only strong . a
right, and as toughminded as [°F {4X \ ay

black women — Harriet Tub- | } t walt
‘ ‘

And that was all with her man in A Woman Called Mo- |*

ruby-red lipstick still fresh.

thers,” she reflects. Their
ses; Jane Pittman in The Auto-
7 The mood changes. Tyson
epic Roots, leans back and announces see a lot more of me with a lot
at going home. she's led by divine providence, tess quality.

ICEF, secretary,’ but Cicely actually

— Tyson traveled to Afri-
the

annual Halloween “Trick or can open an office and use my
ca. The trip hit a nerve.

Now, settling into a seat at Boece, of Miss Jane Pitt-

afternoon appointments, she Yorker: “She's an actress, all
To prepare for her role — under a sushi bar, and she

dents, a meeting with Illinois she likes to call “humankind.”

CHICAGO — On Friday it and vi
was Washington, D.C. Saturday
and Sunday it was New York.
one of her favorite sushi bars man.

“It's Monday and

Gov. James Thompson, a press
conference, TV/radio tapings.

“I wanted to give my name
and energy to a cause — not
celebrity to tour for UNICEF.

reveals a range of emotions —

By Craig Wilson

USA TODAY

her convictions — stron

roles, good causes

The actress acts on

The Inner-City Bulletin - Published Every Thursday Morning

BY: Johnny Jacoh«

August K, 1985

‘Ex-Tulane player

goes on trial toda

David Rothen-

in ex-
change for their testimony.
Kranz’s former roommate,
Ken Terkel, was the ninth ar-
Test in the case and is also

munity from prosectuion for
their testimony. Convicted

*y Harry Connick’s offices un-
covered both the alleged gam-
bling scheme and apparent
NCAA recruiting violations.
Basketball coach Ned Fowler,
not implicated in the point
shaving, admitted paying play-
ers cash. He and two assistants
resigned last April.

‘These developments led Tu-
lane President Eamon Keily to
abolish the men's basketball

Program.
Williams’ lawyers had tried

charge accusing
tempting to fix the score of Tu-
lane's Feb. 16 game against

By Bryan Bertaux, New Orieans Timea Picayune
HIS DAY IN COURT: John Willams, photographed in Apni after
Pleading innocent to sports bribery charges, goes on trial today.
Virginia Tech. Defense attor- dance records for Williams
ney Alan Tusa had argued and other suspects, as well as
Prosecutors provided no de- records of meetings by schoo!
tails showing plans regarding administrators to discuss Wil-

that game, and that any plan ams’ problems.
was never ‘ Among lense witness-
~~ Oser did’ order ‘summoned for

tre
fo turn over additional infor- al are basketball coaches Dana
mation. He also ordered the Kirk of Memphis State, Charles
university to turn over aca- Moir of Virginia Tech and M.K.

demic, admissions and atten- Turk of Southern Mississippi

RIGHT TILT MEANS
PUSH OR HOOK

A golfer who tilts the spine ex-
cessively to the right or hangs
back on the right side too long
into the forward swing will tend
to swing on an exaggerated in-
side-to-outside path, which usually
results in a hook that curves
sharply fron: right to left cr a
blocked shot that starts right and
keeps going that way.

LEFT TILT MEANS
PULL OR SLICE

If your spine lists to the left
it will encourage an ovtside-to-
in swing path, the clubhead stray-
ing outside the target line and
then back inside it as it swings
through impact. When this hap-
Pens, a slice or pull usually re-
sults.

OK fellows,

let's try it again

One might say the Bucs “Picked-Up™ this year right where
they left off last year LOSING
But would that be fair? After all there is a new captain at the

helm, Coach Leeman Bennett.

“Sure I'd like to win the game,” he says.
every game. But we m st continue our preparation for the reg-
ular season. We must continue the process of evaluating a large
roster for the poses of cutting down eventually to 45 players.

“Td like to win

Let's appr. -h this wih a little optimism. Last year the HY
Bucs starte season by winning the pre-season games. Put, W en ] $
end> sosing their Division Champisionship (Didn't even
COMet wt). =—S

y, if Coach “Grinning Bennett” is to turn the Bucs around
¢ has them on the right track. Look at it this way, they have
already started losing the pre-season games. Maybe this year
they will win their Division Championship. And —- — — from
there ~- - - WHO KNOWS - — — One step at a time.

1985 FAMU

—————

OFFICIAL FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
DATE OPPONENT PLACE TIME

Aug.31 Kentucky State University Tallahassee 7pm
Sept.7 Georgia Southern Jacksonville, FL 7 p.m.

Sept. 21 Youngstown State 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 28 Tennessee State
Oct. 5 Albany State

Oct. 12 Jackson State

Oct. 19
Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov, 16
Nov. 23

Youngstown, OH
Tallahassee 7 p.m.

Albany, GA 1:30 p.m,
Miami, FL 7pm
Morris Brown Tallahassee 7 p.m.
Tuskegee Institute Homecoming 1:30 p.m.
Alcorn State Lorman, MS 1:30 p.m.
Southern University 7 p.m.
Bethune-Cookman 2pm.

The Inner-City Bulletin — Published Every Thursday Morning

November 7. 1985

Gooden Of Mets Sets Record In

Gordon’s Gin Black Athlete Of The

Year Award,

DWIGHT GOODEN

(aso
Dwight Gooden, the record
setting pitcher for the New York
Mets, has been chosen as the
third finalist in the 1985 com-
petition for the Gordon's Gin!
Black Athlete of the Year award.
with the greatest number - o!
ever accumulated by a
quarterly winner.

Gooden received 219 points in
leading the world's most talented
‘black athletes in the third-quarter
voting that could lead to the
$25,000 cash prize donated by
Gordon's Gi
In fourth place was Debi Thomas
winner of her first National
figure skating championship and
a candidate for the 1988 Olympic
team, with 43 points. She was
followed by Said Aouita, the
Moroccan distance runner with
38 points. Aouita set a world

d_of 3 minutes

Valerie Brisco-Hooks, the
track star and Kareem Abdul-
Jabbar, in the twilight of his sen-
sational basketball career with
the Los Angeles Lakers, were the

= eeeerarat uapeeer oat
first two quarterly winners. The
Gordon’s Gin Black Athlete of
the Year will be selected from the
four quarterly winners by a panel
of black sportswriters and sports-
casters.

Gooden, who set a major
league strikeout record in his
rookie year and went on to win 24
games while becoming the first
National League pitcher to strike
‘out 200 or more batters in each of
his first two seasons, was
followed in the voting by Michael
Spinks, the new world’s heavy-
weight boxing champion, with
117 points. Spinks became the
first light heavyweight ever to win
the coveted heavyweight crown
by outgoing Larry Holmes.

Behind Spinks, with 45 points,
was Willie McGee of the St.
Louis Cardinals. He led the
National League champions with
a .335 batting average in the re-
gular season and stole 54 bases.

Former Rattler
Great

Retires

EUGENE EDWARDS

By Denise Wilson-Ei

Eugene Edwards announces his
retirement as sole administrator
of the Dade County Housing and
Urban Development (HUD)
Business Relocation Section.

Edwards, 47, started his work
for Dade County as a youth
counselor at Youth Hall in 1965.
He joined HUD in 1969.

In the mid 1950s, Edwards
teamed with the legendary Bill
Lucas at Florida A&M University
(FAMU) to give the Rattlers the
best Deystone combination in
Black college baseball. Edwards
played briefly in the Pittsburgh
Pirates organization before an in-
jury curtailed his careers. Lucas
played in the Milwaukee Braves
system and went on to be the
highest positioned Black in the
history of major league baseball.
He became vice president of the
Atlanta Braves.

The signing of Lucas and Ed-
wards from that championship
era of the 'S0s led many major
league scouts to the Tallahassee
area, paving the way for the even-
tual signing of several other stars
to the major leagues, including
Hal McRae of the Kansas City
Royals, Andre Dawson of the

Montreal Expos, and Vince Cole-
man of the St. Louis Cardinals.

Edwards plans to devote full
time to the science of the stars,
astrology, owing to the ever-
growing demand for this service.
He has studied long and hard to
prepare himself and is considered
among the best by his peers. He
has been a guest on radio locally
and as far away as Philadelphia.

Edwards’ many affiliations in-
clude the Myan Fraternal Order,
YMCA, South Florida Astro-
logical Association and: FAMU
Alumni Association, with which
he works very closely. He is
founder of the Aquarian Astro-
Center located in Miami. He has
written astrology columns for
several local newspapers, as well
as Washington's - Capitol
Spotlight. His column can cur-
rently be read weekly in this
newspaper.

Edwards has published one
book and has two others on the
way. In June 1985, Dr. Edwards
was recognized as one of Greater
Miami's outstanding and most
influential blacks.

A gala retirement celebration
will be held in Edwards’ honor at
The Studio in Miami tomorrow.

August 15, 1985

The Inner-City Bulletin -. Published Every Thursday Morning

CLASSIFICD ADS

Page 15

HOWARD
NIVERSITY

ASTRONAUT BRINGS SPINGARN MEDAL BACK TO
HOWARD — In ceremonies at Howard University recently,
Astronaut Col. Frederick Drew Gregory (I) returned to the
university Dr. Charles Drew's Spingarn Medal which he took on

the Challenger flight April 29 to
the university was Dr. Michael

Drew, who earned international

plasma during World War tl.

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Box 3 (2-Subject Files), Folder 8
Resource Type:
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Date Uploaded:
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