• I , , m ti cializi , at the mi ry and di e of her prople ith ant eye and continui to be hite." He then zooms his lens in on the pr cher: " hen gr up in the Bl c Community, I soon became a are, did many of my peer that there ere mainly 0 types of people t rode around in big car . . . unde odd type - the pimps nd cce ul hu I r .. The other type ith the bi , long expen . e car u y of mor bdued color, sty and ppearance, ere the preacher ." .. The author fla in the pr ho, from th pulpit, rails gairlq of ealth urge others to their ffering today. wiD be re ed later' an afterlife proclaims m on day ill mheri the earth, e the same preacher live e tra antly no , off the humble ni - el am dimes from food raffl d the other fUM .. effort of his flo . Perkins kno s the important con- tr utions e by the B church repo . ory of our culture, cia! center d refuge for the bolitionist movement d underground railroad. But the . er inform u that en epa, th pre cher a n: to elp African endure grotesque �ery and to pacify them in- to ccept the' imposed e atu. In chapter three, he write of "our ruggle for civil right and integration," of which he as part. But in chapter . , he rite ' e ould be tur . in ard ing to integrate ith our- I s and forming coalition ng u .. than . h erybodyel .tt Intergration" is the urce of an- gu y under anding of th Civil Right er s that Blac ere I in­ tere ed in integrating, i.e., bein n r hite th t in "desegregati , Le., choosing a hou or hool in the area of one's choi .," in effect realizing our e potential human hich I thi . a rath lofty " , in keep' ith the b traditions of democracy. From this all men could learn le n including r. Perkin T e cond major theme of the boo economic . Afro-American crippled by sl ery imposed by th te, today rem in economic cripple , largely consumers rather than producer , living in a re dive ate,' not kno jog from here our next meals will come. The b church Per ins allege help to fo er that dependency. "Thi is not to y we don't realize th t we have a problem," he m e e cl the b ''The B number on commu- ton ar an Br the ernent of their .d Ughter, Vane Louise, to Loran I ory Anderson, n of r. and rs. Elli 5887 e dow- It d Benton Har- JULY 1 - 20, 19 2 THE CITIZEN PAGE 7 de . "Even duri t of the ruggl for civil rights and integration, there ide recogni ion th t eco- nom prob m ere the urce of mo of the concern of Bla people.' The writing is simp . Even the print k>om I e l' e th t found in a pri er for beginner. The boo run amo . h mi elling. Yet, I rec mmend . for reading. Though' is crude, it grammar faulty at time tho e techni defects- of yle, not th idea e pre . It' th bo 's b nee, not if form, that' the re h. • BERRI SPRI GS - The ndr s Uni er ity departmen and Reg' n IV re ncy on ill on r a pre enti e health reening program for th elde 1 in B nton r or on July 23 t the B nton r/ nton To n ip Senior Center t S3 all Street. This alth re ning all per nor th e of 60 e re . ent of Berri n County. Client ill be given an opportunity to contri­ bute moo y for the IV' e but ill not be denied rvi e b cau the cannot or ill no contr ute. Included hi physi blood health r assessment, blood m tri e ams. and follo Tho uld