h e By Ii od S. sIIIg R.porler DETROIT - Fresh off n airplane from Florida, R ul Muhammad appe red radiant. Obviously in good spirits, the alion of I lam minister ho is istant to leader Loui rra a, ddreued a crowd of more than 100 people at uhammad's Mo ue II, lo- cated 0 Wyoming near Fenkel1 Avenue. Ref�rring to Loui Farra­ n. head mini ter of the a­ tion ·of Islam. Muhammad talked bout a Farrakhan­ "V! hington Post" imervie . Po t Reporters asked Far­ rakhan ho he could insist that whites were conspiring against African America . F ARRAKHA responded, AIDS, crack-cocaine. the Tus­ keegee experiment. where African American men were unknowingly injected with yphllis - these combined with several other factors. Muhammad told the cro d he w tched a documentary produced in 1956 about the ef­ fect of drug u e and he believed. drugs were expert­ m nted on ra so it could be known exactly what would h ppen if people were intro- '. duced to them. "This wicked thing," Health cia Mercy Memorial Medical Center, St. Joseph and Mercy Center, Benton Harbor an­ nounced their chedule for cI S/clinics offered Cor the month of June. For further in­ formation aDd to preregister call 927-5297, unle other- ise noted. '1 e by CI Sunday, JUDe 3. 1 :30-3 p.m. at Mercy emorial Medical Cen ere R- atal tritio: Monday, June 4. from 6-7 p.m. at Mercy Memorial Medical Center. _ Brea tfeedi CI Monday, June 4, from �-9 p.m. at Mercy Memonal Medical Center. _ Exercl e, ReI xauon and Breathing: Tue day, June 5 nd 12; Monday, June 11 and 18 from 7-9 p.m. at tbe YWCA. St. Jo eph. _ Ex treat Oas- es: Thursdays, June 7, 14, 21 and 28, t 7 p.m. at the YWCA, St. Joseph. _ F coat en: Tue day, June'19, from 7-9 p.m. at the YWCA, St. Joseph. _ C re at Birt Daytime nd evening classes scheduled needed. Birt}ling cl are free of charge for couple delivering at Mercy Muhammad said. "Thi serio ." Continuing. 'Muh mm d said African Americans need to be more informed. "You need a teacher not a preacher," he ide "Preaching only pacifies ,the situation where teaching en bles you to change t ituaitoo." PREACHERS OFTEN TELL c-hurch member to hope for something better in the after life and nothing now. Mubamm d aid. Thi buy into the f ct that most African American stu­ dents bandon their community after they complete their col­ lege education. he explained. If they come back to the African American community and contribute either their skill, cademics in the form of tutoring or money, people' morale would increase. "This is what we need," he said, adding because the con­ spiracy of AIDS and �rack­ cocaine is no longer JU t a conspiracy it's an act. African American leader­ ship has failed, he said, adding his role has been egatively labeled uch as Rasul's father Elijah Muhammad's and Mal- colm X. "You can't tell me I teach hate becau e I point out the hate that hate produced," Muhammad said. es offered Memorial Medical Center. St. Joseph. SIIARE Support Group: Tuesday, June 5. at 7 p.m. at Mercy Memorial Medical Center. Call 983- 8187 for more information. Healt y Weig f: Begins June 5, Tuesday even­ ings at the Green ood Profes­ ional Building. Ca eer S p rt Gro p: Wednesdays, June 13 nd 27, from 1:30-2:30 p.m. in the Mercy Center Family Waiting Room. Call 927-5237 for more information. C rdio Scree g: Thur day, June 14. from 6:30-9:30 a.m. at the YWCA, St. Joseph. Cost is SI9.00. Call 983-1561 for more inform lion. - C 01 erol eree ia : Wednesday, June 20, from 9 a.m.-l p.m. and 4-6 p.m. in the Mercy emorial Medical Center Lobby, 51. Jo eph. Co Ii $7.00. - B Ca eer Support Group: Thursday, June 21. at 7 p.m. at the First Congre - tional Church, St. Joseph. CIIrdilOYiISC1I11 r SC1'UIIID2: ednesday, June 27, from 6-9:30 a.m. at the YMCA, Holly ood Rd., St. Joseph. Co t is $19.00. Call 429-crl27 for more information I ••• " .... . .� -:-." S. Lu e mark pa tor _ anniversary BJ Mal'J G J St. Luke Bapti t Church wit be celebrating their Pastor and Wife, Rev. and MIl. lsa c Moffett's 5th Anniversary on Sunday, June 3 at 3 p.m. Their special guests ill be e Je alem Baptist Churcb and their pastor and other cburches of the city. The public is invited to at- teoe!. Rev. c Moffett is the p tor. May 27-J �1 John Wesley A.M.E. Zion Church ill be celebrating their Pastor and wife, Rev. and Mrs. Harry Spigner's 5th Year Appreciation Celebra­ tion, beginning Tuesday, May 29.through Friday, June 1, at 7 p.m. nightly. The Pastoral Banquet and Church Fello hip will be Saturday night, June 2, at 6:30 p.m. ncte are $10. Their special guests for Sunday afternoon will be the Mesiab Baptist Cburch �f Grand Rapids and their p tort Rev. Qifton Rhode . Rev. Harry Spigner is the host p tor. United Church funds ISE. project in Benton- Harbor The Uni ed Churcb Board for Homeland Mini trie and the National Mi ion Ann of the United Church of Christ. bas made a $2,000 grant to Benton Harbor'S eigbbor­ hood Information and Sharing Excbange (NlSE), according to Executive Director, Richard Ray. Ray said the grant. hich will upport NlSE's ad­ mini trative costs, i given particularly as an undergird­ ing of tbeir ork on behalf of 10 -incom homeowners. The board' ction was ar­ ranged with the support of the Rev. Paul R. Peters, secretary for local churche: in com- .munity mi ion and lb Rev. . Phillip Newell. hared secretary for community or­ ganizing for tbe United . Ctlurch and the Presbyterian Church. U.S.A. Community organizing is 'one of the major focuse of NISE, Ray said. In ddition, NISE bas worked closely with local United Cburch of Christ Congregatio in community mission. He id tbe trongest link bet een NISE and United Church Congregatin i the United Church Benton Harbor Neighborhood �roject � a coali tion of five Uni ted Church Congregation and one Christian Church (Dis­ ciple ) congreg tion to up­ port low income bomeownez:s in the maintenance of their propertie and the stabl ization of an at-risk neighborhood Participating churches in the eighborhood Projects are First Congregational UCC of Benton Harbor, First Con­ gregalional UCC, Pilgrim Congregational UCC,. _St. Peters UCC, Zion Evalgehcal UCC, and Rivervie Par Cbri tian Church (Di ciple of Christ) all of St. Jo ph. The Rev. Richard H. Taylor is chair of the eighborhood Projects. In addition, one of the two eminarians from the Chicago at Firsl Congregational UCC in Benton Harbor i igeed to work witb the NlSE Youth Task Force. NISE's Monthly Forums and their annual meetings, as will other meetings. have been held at First Congrega­ tional UCC in Benton Harbor. Al 0, many individual and familie from a variety of United Church Congregations have helped and supported NlSE in many different way, aid Ray. Micbael Green i President ofNISE. 13 The Usher Department of Spring Street Baptist Church, will be sponsoring a shopping trip to the South Lake Mall in Maryville, Indiana, on S tur­ day, June 9. The bus will leave the church at 7 a.m. and will return at appro imately, 7 p.m. Cost is $25.00. For fur­ ther inform lion contact, Sister Gate , 722-2079 or . Sister Simmons at 773-8414. Dezell Allen. Jr. will be celebrating his 4th birthday on Saturday, June 2, witb a party at borne with his family and a few fri nds. He ill have ice cream and ca e, hot dog and other goodie . They al 0 will be playing g me . Duell is lh on of Gle da DOoley a�d 0 zell Allen S ie 100 Delta Founder W ASHI GfON, D.C. -- Bertha. Pit Campbell, one of the 22 founders of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., died April 2 in Seattle of pneumonia. She was 100 years old. Campbell was one of the two Delta founder still living. The remaining Sorority founder . N 0 i Sewell Richardson of W ingtonville, N.Y. Delta Founder Campbell and Richardson, along with 20 other young college women, fo�ded Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Howard University in W hington D.C. on Jan. 13, 1913 a public service or­ ganization. The Delta founder first public act w to participate in the, historic women' suffrage march in the nation's capital on March 13, 1913,just two months after the Sorority' inception. In 1981 Campbell, at age 92, led 10 000 Delta member in a , . march down Wa hington, D.C.' Penn ylvania Avenue to commemor te the' founders participation in the suffrage march. PAST ATIO AL IDE ona H. Bailey of Seattle recalled how Founder Campbell ctuaDy walked in the march, refusing to ride in the limousine which was provide. Before retiring, Founder a Campbell worked with the eat­ tle YWCA and w charter member of the Chri tian Friends for Racial Equality, an int r-racial organization which promote under tanding among r cial groups. An out tanding tudent, Campbell turned down scholarship from Colorado Col­ lege to accept one from Howard University. Upon graduation he taught for two year at Topeka (Kansas) Industrial In­ stitute. Campbell has been honored with numerous ward. In 1917, she married Earl Campbell and they were the parents of a son, Earl, Jr. Her husband and son both died in the 1950s. Bertha Pitts Campbell w born June 30, 1889 in Winfield, Kansas. Shortly after her birth, her parents, Ida and H�bbar� Sydney Pitts, moved their fami­ ly to Montrose, Colorado. Campbell i urvived by a nephew Herbert H ris of Den­ ver Color do, niece Vessie Br' on and great niece Vi Lyo of Lo Angel ,Califor­ nia, and a ister-in-law, Myrtle Pitts and family of e ttle. Delt Sigma The Sorority, founded 77 year ago by 22 col­ le e women, has no grown to 175,000 members with over 800 ch pter in the U.S. and abroad. •