INFORMATION FOR EMPOWERMENT SyRonS gel Corrgpoltd.", The Michig n Stat Legi lature approved budget reduction pro d by Governor John Engler completely eliminating General As- i lance aid for tho e who do not have children and are not "di abled." The predominantly 'Democratic State Hou e of Repre entative passed 8 bill which would provid South African family fight d port tion. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Iph and n Gu tell d 't nt t home to South .Afrlc - where they carried h ndguns and lived behind eight-foot walls. So the Guastellas, fed up with the government's racist policies and treet battles, came to the United States and claimed politi­ cal asylum. In January, thcy ended up in Knoxville, where Ralph Guastel­ la found work as an electrician and the children enrolled at the Knoxville Baptist Christian School. But the Immigration and Naturalization Service issued an opinion saying Guastellas' claim to political asylum is not valid. The INS says conditions have im­ proved in South Africa, and the government should be "rewarded" for making those im­ provemen ts. In July, President Bush lifted U.S. sanctions against South Africa after the Pretoria govern­ ment.repealed racial segregation laws. Earlier this month, Presi­ dent F.W. de Klerk announced proposals for a post-apartheid constitution that would allow Blacks to vote. Guastella said he understands immigration has to be strict, but the family has provided INS a seven-page affidavit detailing threats against them because of their outspoken opposition to apartheid. "If they only knew how bad it is there. If they want to send me back, fine. But don't send my children back," he said. help for th e who agree to p r­ ticip te in a work training program, but Democratic le de are uncertain bout wh ther this would pas the Republican dominated Senate or whether it would be igned by the Governor. As of now, many client re receiving no aid whatsoever. M ureen Taylor of the Highland P rk b ed ch pter of the Welfare Rights Organization. aid, "It's not good. 100.000 people (who were removed from General Assistance) cannot p y th ir rent." David Weiner, aide to State Rep­ entativ D vid Holli ter, who i leading th Democratic fight for providing ome aid through work training program, expres ed that many of th e people would be un- ble to get b Ip frOm chariti or from th ir f roili dod forced twit the GO VE 0 Engler' office h ugge ted that this would pre - Se PAIN, A-10 . Community organizing helping poor escape shackles of poverty BY DAVID PACE self-help, out-of-poverty pro- _;,,;A;...;;.S.;;_SO_C_I_A .... T_E_D_P_R_ES_S_W_R_I_T_E_R__ • gram that I've ever seen th at's an unqualified success," said en. WASHINGTON - For more Wyche Fowler Jr., D-(J a., a than two decades, Don Ander- longtime friend of Ander on's son has toiled quietly in the and member of the association's Black belt of the rural South, board of directors. striving to prove that poor Blacks Indeed, counties where as- can break the cycle of poverty scrnblies have been organized through organized community have shown remarkable progress action. over the years, not only in With a' small budget and a eliminating poverty but also in staff often numbering no more improving relations between the than two, the NationalAssocia- Black community and white tion for the Southern Poor that Anderson founded in 1968 has power structure. organized more than 40 coun­ tywide "assemblies" of poor Blacks in Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia. The assemblies, based on the principle of democratic par­ ticipation, are designed to pro­ vide the structure for entire communities to identify, attack and solve the problems respon­ sible for their poverty. . "I can say without the usual qualification that it is the only . THURMAN WILLIS JR., a ' bank president in Monticello, Ga., said the assembly organized in central Georgia's Jasper County two years ago has been a positive force in industry recruit­ ment and development of a recreation complex. "It's been used as a vehicle, as a mouthpiece for anything that they have wanted to do," Willis See POVERTY. A·10 Scientists link slavery, to Black hypertenslon rate Scientists have found a genetic link that may explain why Blacks in the Western Hemisphere have a high in­ cidence of of high blood pressure. A "salt retention gene", magnified by the horrible conditions under which slaves were shipped from Africa, and which they endured in the ' New World, may be the culprit, according to a report from . the Drew/UCLA Hyperten- ion Research Center in Lo Angeles and Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Barbados, reported by the Reuters news service. ��!!!!!!!I1!JI�1Ik� Blacks taken as slaves as-H�-.j may have died of exces­ sive salt loss enroute to the West and in the hot and oppressive conditions they endured later, according to Clarence Grim, director of the California center. Those Blacks who survived - and from whom today's Western Hemisphere �,� Blacks are largely descended - did ,�o be- cause they may have carried and passed on a gene that' increases body alt and water. High body saltlevels are a principal cause of high blood pressure. Blacks in the United States and other Western Hemisphere countries including the Carribean and South and Central America, have twice the rate of high blood pressure as do, people of European, Hispanic and native American ancestry. Scientists have recog­ nized the phenomenon, . but disagree over the cause, be it diet, stress, heredity or a combination. "The tudies provide strong evidence that a greater African genetic heritage tends to be associated with a higher blood pressure in Western Hemisphere Blacks," Grim said. LIEG cau e they ma e promi e during election and if they haven't lled tho e promises we can get rid of them."