, DETROIT are re e ery d y of t ye r." m le front bu r but t HOWEVER, ome did not agree with hi "I am making tate­ ment" by leeping ou ide one night and in a "warming helter" another. One by tander rem rked, uddenly the light? HO V R, all were not plea ed with Rev. Jac on, even if he is not" romping." One of Gover­ nor Engler' aid aid if Rev. Jack- . LOVE I THE THEME- Th women nd children from e Hou Of Love trended the hom I rally: tKennedy qu re rlday,December27.Theywantp opletokno th tthehomel 36S-d y,ye r-roundl problem. (photo by N. Scott) I . A TU LLY, TH chan­ ges came about because com­ munity group and other joined together and dem nded that the redlining and di crimination stop. And thing did change-some­ what. The fact i ,di crimination and redlining continue. The fact is, the banking institu­ tions continue to do very little mortgage lending in our neighborhoods. Improve­ ment on their terrible record, of three years ago does not mean their performance is now excellent. Or even good. 'It means their lending pat­ tern are only a little less ter­ rible. We must keep in mind the difference between charitable actions and fairne s in lend­ ing. ·Patche on Main I I Ward includes other poems that go: beyond the Black expe�ence, the: Detroit experience, to pomt out the. parts of life that gladden, adden.; strengthen and humor us all. : "Princess" is the story told by every' parent who has watched a daughter's' oft. wide eyes grow maller and: .. secretive with knowledge and buret geoning womanhood, and i� still: caught unawares. It brings to nund the. times when I catch my mother just: looking at me-the bespectacled face! of a college student, journalist, poet; and bride-to-be (someday-maybe). and seeming to wonder how all this: happened. "Princess" encompasses: every parent's hopeful fear/fearful: hope of a child's becoming an in-. dividual being in his own right. By sharing his poetic vision of his. life in Detroit, Ward has iterated this. city's historical and cultural impor-: tance. In his poetry he reminds us, and. informs others, that Detroit's people: possess a collective heart, soul and spiri 1. Our heart sinks, our soul is weakened and our spirit is broken bY. the sad moments of our past and' present. . . But from the ashes of our disap­ pointments. we salvage a resolve to. move on-and up-by conquering the: difficulties common to all big cities i ways that are uniquely our own. Ward: has done that in his own life, and has: told his story well. With his writing,: Ward shows that he's one of us. • • I Book Review By LEAH SAMUEL sg"Wrlt., "Patches not so old but worn like his coat hangs on the side of life in his earch for truth with a shoestring tied around his soul... " Alben Ward's collection of poem" has been around for over a year, but i \ merits mention here because of what it offers to Detroiters: a source and reminder of pride. Ward himself is a source of Detroit pride. A writer since childhood, Ward was educated at Cass Technical High School, the University of Detroit and Wayne State University. His con­ tinued involvement with Detroit in­ cludes participation in numerous community, youth and political or­ ganizations. He also served as an aide to former governor James Blanchard. Albert Ward, working as a state governor's aide, stood and looked out his office window, staring toward the neighborhoods, the people, t�e memories that are his Detroit. Patches on Mainstreet is the result. One opens "Patches" and embarks on a trek along a Motor City Memory Lane, its eras and events as clearly marked as white-on-green street signs-Woodward, Ewald Circle, Ful­ lerton, Davison .... The line between childhood's beaming wonder and the nostalgic reveries of maturity becomes blurred as Ward gathers elements of his life, simultaneously assembling tiny puzzle pieces of Detroit's past and present history. In the title poem, the character Patches is Detroit personified, full of experiences good and bad, but also full of wit, wisdom and conversation under the old brown hat that is the past, and held together by scraps of old newspaper (replete with Detroit's most memorable headlines), pieces of string and some hope: Detroit walks, garbed in the body of Patches in grey tweed jacket, ambling toward the dream etched in the intense furrows of his forehead. The walk con­ tinue in "Green Hills": "I have come the long distance down dusty roads and dirt paths with a steady heartbeat and deep breaths ... NO MOUNTAIN I TOO TALL-W lterCole u a wheelchair but neither that nor the threat of Inclement weather prevented him' from attending Reverend Je e Jackson's noon rally for the homele at Kennedy. quare Friday, December 27. (photo by N. Scott) THE FACf THAT some of Detroit's financial institu­ tions now fund a few of 'Detroit's community-based development organization, sit on their boards, and speak at many community meetings does not address the heart of the Community Reinvest­ ment Act passed by Congress in 1977.- Whether or not the institution lends to low- and moderate-income people and . minorities. It's the same old story. We're not looking for hand­ outs, but institutional change. The first is relatively easy to win, the latter is a much tougher task. The only way to win is for all of us who seek social jus­ tice' to band together, brace ourselves, and face the storm. If you want to be a part of it, call ACORN at 963-1840. I have trod barefoot on gravel and stone stumbling sometimes holding the pain within Women's 'Auxiliary honors Mrs. Edith Roberts And learned there are green, hills where the air is crystal and each breath comes like a cool handful of spring water" The Women' Auxiliary of the Calvary Di triet Association will honor Mrs. Edith Roberts with an Appreciation Dinner Saturday, 1 January 1992. The 'dinner will be held at 6:00 p.m. at the Union Second Baptist Churrch located at 459 Beechwood in River Rouge. The occassion will allow the Cal vary Famil y and the com­ munity to thank Mrs. Roberts for' 14 years of dedicated service as President of the Calvary Women's Auxiliary. This poem of experiences, and knowledge gleaned from them, offers an assurance of the future. FU{UlY how, when reading the book upon its release, I had just received word that a Washington, D.C. think tank had voted Detroit the sixth most livable urban area in the world. In light of some of the negative publicity Detroit gets, it was refreshing to get such an assess­ ment. The minute I heard the news, I saw patches, "his search for truth" suc­ cessful, wink his eye and give that sly grin of his. Rev. Augustus to be keynote speaker Jan. 121 in the Riverview Ballroom of the Cobo Conven­ tion Center in downtown Detroit. Tickets are $15 per person. Patches on Mainstreet is available; from Broadside Press, P.O. Bo 04527, Detroit, Michigan 48204. The Rev. William Augustus Jones of Bethany Baptist Church in Brooklyn. NY, will be the guest speaker at Wayne County Executive Edward McNamara's 6lh Annual Prayer Breakt'a '\ Wine Sip and Other Deliciou Poem the progression of ideas as they the poem Projects. build and expand toward the She wrote, "Equal people plus metaphorical. property divided by poverty/ mul­ tiplied by needs unattended." By NATHANIEL SCOTT St." Wrlt.r DhTROIT-Wine Sip and Other Delicious Poems, Sharon Smith­ Knight's first volume of po-etry, is the expression of the bud, the bloom and the blossoming of Smith-Knight's adventure into the adult world of love. In this volume of soul-search­ ing poetic thougtu, Smith-Knight explores her adolescence, the erotic, and the maturing aspects of love. She writes about family love through and in the expression of a Mama's Poem, and about a son in the poem "Black Legacy. " Smith-Knight's writing reflects the ability to tell stories and paint pictures that are ure to capture the imagination of many. However, the controlled pen gives way to narration and sometimes hinders YET THE freshness of thought and the ferreting out of the voice of Smith-Knight, which orne­ time is obscure, lends to the beauty which is rough hewn. On the other hand, in Wine Sip and Other Delicious Poems, Smith-Knight clashed sounds and produced the effect that love is a process that continue to evolve into bigger and better things. In "Army Boots" she wrote: "You were my Easter hat/my Sun- � Other Delicious Poems and day shoes,/ my interviewing' ftnd out how Smith-K:n1�ht ctothes.z I was your wash and progres�e from the ope'!,mg wear,! your uniform;/ your poem: Of �e� A_nd Wo�n to brogans with steel toe ." the concluding FUUJlly 20. In addition to the love theme, Beware though. Beware. The dered from Broadside Press by Smith-Knight touche upon the ride is rough-hewn love. writing to P.O. Box 04257, social aspects of man, best it- The volume, ISBN 0-940713- Detroit, Mi. 48204. lustrated by these two line from 06-3, ells for $7 and can be or- , WINE SIP A.ND OTHER DELICIOUS POEMS are deli­ cious and wicked acknow­ ledgments of love and the ti ue, I suppo e, presents an appr pna�e theme for Broadside Pre to beg. n its search for "the next Gwendolyn Brooks. Dudley Randall (and/or the late) Ethridge Knight." We encourage the reader to come into the folds of Wine Sip fRlfNOS DON'l lH fRlfNOS URIVf DRUNK. us oI� Buy 500. o.t 500 fr •• $21.95 Ral •• d Bl'ack Ink on Whit. Card FlaS Publlahlng '553 Woodward, Suit. 202 (313) 964-4247 Please ee Word Makers for Smith-Knight's poem, "Projects."