Thi fi ature i Q ne com­ pilation from more than 100 bloc -owned and oriented n papers Q ross t h na­ tion. It deal ith hat blue . who are all-too-often lilll rem nil. d. are doing to promote full participation in .. , merican life by black A III ricans. It i thus Q alute frosn ull of our r. aders to 1111 'unR h roes ... and is de­ "i 'ned to be Q chatteng» for till of u to keep on doin our "(Ir: I .51. he merican Thor cic Soci­ nd man other profes­ I or anization . • . ' • r it raci m .. "Blac merica i f ced it h three major ocial afflic- t ion : as i e unemploy- 1111.:111. 'rime. and the all goo \ rongd ling f black elected uft i 'ial .' cc rding (0 R p. 1itchell. irchcll accu: d til\' \\ hire media or over rea 'ling. in the rep rting of t he many and aried inci­ dent. of aile ed ron doing of our blac elected official . Hc a1. 0 pointed out ho Black Arneri a a. i t the media by agreeing with the media .•• � e got orne dumb pet pie in t he I blac com­ munit .• t ." H referred to 1 he neare t and mo t recent Ie eland indictments again t their blac council­ men. He continued to ac­ now ledge these incidents part of the current "anti­ razy" and "raci m" in America today. Propo ition 13, anti-bus­ in and anti-affirmative ac­ tion are not th cause of. the many probl ms in America today. He cited the 117 billion dollar defi it budget as the on oing culprit: He aid 1 hat CUlling (hi lid ct u ed f r killing and redirc ning the mon y to ard the elimination of the ocial plight of Bla America and I he poor i, needed, As long a. merica continue to pend billions of dollar on defcn: e, the health education and unemployment and ot her deplorabl ocial con­ dition of Blac America and it poor will continue to flouri h. Rep. Mitchell went on to ay, "We cannot e peer black to face this perilous itu tlon, inflation, n III pri unemployment, by ta jng hom hun ry and reeling here others are eatin and are keeping arm Hun ry people ill eat and eel' arm." The non violent people died in th 60' he id.' We are dealin ith a n breed of re pi . A people that can ur i e through lavery, Iyn 'hin and a depression is not a hopeles people." Th 14th Di trict Congres­ ional Blac . Caucu i a non­ parti an organization con- 1.IIIIg of Republicans, Democrat and independents or ing together for the urvi al of the blac com­ munity. . ill .c thi� i, black unity it ha PUI p iwcr in th blac ------ .. __ • vote. A vote hich ha. d - cidcd ma 'or electi n. includ­ ing th . e of 197 . The Black aucu ha mad rhos elected official a 'are that as . uch el 'ted offi .ial. he i accountable n t only to th publi ,but al 0 to I he black community who gave him th ed e. Rev. EI in Brown made a report on respon 10 ac- .ountabilitj . Out tanding community -crvice a ard were present­ ed 10: Mr . Jo ephine Blair, chairwoman of the In esti­ gating Committee of the 14th on res ional Black Caucus; 1r . Van y assey, 1st ice pre. idem of the 14th Con-l gres, i nal Black Cau us for OUI tanding community wor ; Re . Atty. iIIiam R. '1Ii • edit rand publi her of The Reporter ne paper; Chri iian All Stars, leading Go .. pel singing quartet doing much community or k ; Community hair. out rand­ ing community work; Art Men n, out tanding com- munity rk in Ea. t Akron; Dale iller, director of Operation Fight and Crimi­ nal Ju lice Chairman of 14th Con re ional Black Caucu , out. .. anding c ommunit y or ; Jeff He ell, ho t of Blac Community Hoo on radio tat ion CUE, great community or er; Ally. °d in Parm, outstanding community worx: illie an. t pre ident of Black l.aw nforcem nt Offi er.; and Dr. m. K. Ha kins, p .Ior of Greater Bethel Bapti. t Church, or anizer. • • • J yi,1979 political have died in South African pri on sin e /963. How a it that this particu­ lar ca e got 0 much publicity and that an inquest held? eral hundred pro on r , if n t th u and, have died in , uth, fri an jail eith r from natural cau or a j reo ult of beatin and 0 on. BUI th 45-and thi is n important qualifi ation­ were held under th urity la which allo a man or man to be h ld indefinite­ irhout trial. h 0 much fu caused b Bi o's death? It i m view that the interna­ ti nal outcry hich folio ed th determinin element. The uth African ere genuinely caught off baJan e at d they ere p hed into holding an inq t. They eren't prepared for the events hich too place in that court-room, nor did the realize they ould catch t orld' imagination th did. Thi ho no only ho • naive, but ho closed the uth frican are. Their reaction as not one of shock and horro as the detai of the e idenc ere unfolded. but of com pla­ c n . That, in my v' t i very traightfo ard expr - sion of hat is ron 'th South frica it is ruled today by the hite minority. liTO y-mAlln , Our readers mQY wish to end conKratulQtory mages and me. ages of encoural!,e­ ment 10 the papers whic'h report hQPpeninKs of interest or concern to us. 'uch me. - Ul!.e. mQY be ent to the flubli hers. editors or 'ther per. ons b simply add", inK them. u ing th, nam. 0/ th, pupn. do BIQck Resource. Inc .• 410 Central PQrk We. t . PH C. New York. N. . 10015. Th Iotlo in material beg in a four part ri entitl. d "A Miserable and Lonely Death ••• th name of a dramatized version of the la t days of Ste Biko's journey from his arrest until his death in outh A/rica. It us written b Jon Blair and orman Fenton durin th thr. - e trial in Pretoria. The folio ing is an inter­ view ith Jon BIQir concern­ in� the death of teve Bi 0, the most' prominent member of the BIQck Consciou ness movement in outh Africa, Courtesy: Un co Features PMlof or a a H "hat prompted ou and orman Fenton to do this dramatization? John Blair: It gre out of our ordinary jobs or in on a current affairs progr m for a commercial tele ision company. A colleague ug­ ested doing a dramatized er ion of the inquest hlle it a till ta ing place. e ern omeone to South Africa to blain th inquest tran- ript and orman Fenton and I et to or, primarily fr m ne report. The court three ee and w began riling at the beginning of the third It too to produce television script and, t h inques fini hed, e left tho e thing hich e kne ere till 10 happen. e filmed it er a priod of t 0 da '. immediately after the ,"erdict on December 2, then pUI it out the folio illl Thur day, December 8. a re-ult of ·the television ver ion. which half an hour Ion • the Royal Shakes­ peare Company as ed whether e ould be pre­ pared to. rite a to-hour lage ver ion. e ere pr mpted I thin by a num­ ber of c n iderations other Ihan ju t our job. e both felt that this a unique eveht. not only in South frican hi tory but in orld attitud to ard South Atn- LAC HAPPEnlnG/: {For your continuing cQ/�n­ dur oj mQjor black events. Pleo� ('ul out this column Qnd ke 'P it in your own not.­ book. Please mQr. th� dQt, of ch entry.) a This blac African nalion, ith the African continent' largest .. i1dlife population, has ked thai the ealthier, d veloped nations provide financial aid to protect the vast but d indlin wildlife resources of Tanzania and other underdeveloped n­ tion . The Tanzanian inister of alur 1 Resources, Mr. Solo-. on Saibull, noted that Tan­ zan did not have enoup fin DC' I resources to control the id pread poachina of e rhinos, zeb lion ,cheetahs and leopards. These animal. are smuUled from Tanzania into Euro­ pean countries, Japan and the United States, thus help­ in to deplete the dangerous­ ly d indling ildlife of Africa. Mr. Saibull, referring to T nzania' hUIe investment in ildlife park, stated: "It can't be right for th orld to say to Tanzania, or any other Third World country, that it must guarantee the survival of these parks even if Tan­ zanians must go wit out adequate food, clothing, shelter, health or education." He dded: .. 1t ill be all ri ht if the orld told Tan­ zania that she should guaran­ tee the surviv I of these parks� but it must be the understandina that her ic needs ill not be made to ·uffer ... KII(NI�i (Zi e) - uncertainty.liII remain the rule here, lhree percent of Ihe population who are hite retain an iron grip over a upposedly "one man, one vote" democratic African nation. In the a e of a peaceable Iran ition to supposedly blac majority rule. whites have continued to flee from the countrysides here the black liberation (i.e. guer­ rilla) forces under the reader­ ship of Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mupbe have m their mosl successful raids. Methodist Bishop Abel Muzorewa, the symbolic head of the precarious ne b ck- hite coalition in Rho­ d . , has steadfastly refused to enter into any formal nqotiations with either of -the two major rebel I det ho h ve called for a genuine majority control of every aspect of t e nation' life. U af ---- U. Ambassador Andrew Youn made an indirect attac upon the political tactics and stance of Republican Senator S.I. Haya a a of California. Haya awa, in a cleverly posed motion, h d called for American support of the Ian Smith regime. r. Youn., in line with ro ing unofrlcial sentiment at' the White House, has urged that any U.N. endorsement of Mr. Smith's hite plan for black Rhodesian rule ould lead to Soviet and Cuban interven­ tion and di ter for bl ck in Rhod crimination i al ay rong ·enl on trial in Ih Brian F. eber affirmati e action c before the U.S. Supreme , Court. Th pro-affirmati e a lion side of the ar ued that "E ery choice you ma e is di r mination," to hich Chief Justice arren E. Bur­ ger replied, "You re yin, .hal you can d' riminate for· good motives. but not for bad." That is the 'ay thin be n in hat promised to be major post-Sa e c in- volvin affirmative action in beh If of inority oppor- can life, the Hou of Repre­ sentatives Ethi Committee opened and dosed a precau­ tionary in tigation of bri­ bery repons invo in 0 Ho member. t • D.C ....... The Justice Department con­ tinued to pursue i efforts to t h art t Sear, Roeb and Company wt chargin that the U.S. Go ernment h created an "unbalanced or force dominated by hite m ." Th' uit held the promi of bein a major opportunity opener for all b Americans.