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ARMY ROTC Tniauimrooujn COURSE TOO CU TAIL ARTIST S SUPPLY 20% Uhh WINSOR & NEWTON WINTON OILS and COTMAN WATERC0L0RS 15% OFF GRUMBACHER PRE-TEST OILS and ACADEMY WATERCOLORS 15% OFF ALL ARTBIN BOXES 15% OFF ALL PALETTES NEWSPRINT/DRAWING 6 1 A ft ft BOARD PACKAGE ?1U.77 18x24 PAD WITH 23x26 BOARD: $14.30 VALUE A 25% OFF , DRAWING PADS 1 I STRATHMORE MORILLA BIENFANG 20% OFF WINSOR & NEWTON SCEPTRE BRUSHES 15% OFF MORILLA BRUSHES assorted sable, sabeline, and bristle brushes SALE ENDS 1 16/91 LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND NATIONAL Church decries racism WASHINGTON (AP) - In an effort to "sound a national alarm" and reinvigorate the civil rights movement, a major church group is issuing an un usual pastoral letter warning that racism is a deepening problem in America. More than three decades after the start of the modern civil rights movement, poverty is worse for non-white Americans and racially motivated violence has increased, the United Church of Christ contends. Racist attitudes, it concludes, "permeate most of our institu tions" and systemic racism un derlies economic and social disparities between whites and non-whites. "As a result of racial discrim ination. all over the United States there are 'quiet riots' in the form of unemployment, poverty, social disorganization, family disintegration, housing and school deterioration, and crime." church leaders said. Next Sunday, a day before the Martin Luther King Jr. holi day, church leaders will read the letter to more than 6,000 congregations of the United Church of Christ, a 1.7-million member Protestant denomina tion. The past carries both theolog ical and social meaning for church members, but it is in tended to draw wider attention to show that racism has wors ened. said the Rev. benjamin Chavis Jr., a veteran civil rights leader and church official. "We are trying to sound a na tional alarm." Chavis said in an interview last week. "We (relieve the leadership of our nation has focused so much on the world situation that we’re losing sight of the domestic — the internal deterioration of our society. “We should have made much more progress toward ra cial harmony." The church calls on itc fol lowers to recognize racism as a sin and to become active in the political process on behalf of equality. The pastoral letter is only the third in the history of the Unit ed Church of Christ, said Chav is, who is executive director of the church's Commission for Racial Justice. In the 1970s. Chavis spent 4'j years in North Carolina prisons as a member of the Wil mington 10. a group including nine young black men convict ed of fire bombing a store and related charges during civil rights unrest in Wilmington. N.C. They were cited by Amnesty International as the first case of U.S. political prisoners, and a federal appeals court over turned their convictions in 1980. The church’s statement voices alarm at an increasing frequency of violent acts against minorities. The vio lence cannot be dismissed as isolated acts of fringe groups and extremists, it says. The attacks are. in fact, "visi ble consequences of racist atti tudes" permeating society, the church says, and reflect a grow ing climate of racial intolerance and hostility. An accompanying back ground paper cites federal sta tistics showing increasing in equities in living standards for whites and non-whites: Minorities make up 30 per cent of the population, but 58 jrercent of the American chil dren living in poverty; black males have a life expectancy of 65.3 years, lower than the level of white males in 1950; infant mortality among blacks is twice that of whites; and health care is far less accessible for non whites than whites. In addition, unemployment among blacks is 2'/» times that among whites, and blacks are far more likely than whites to receive the death penalty in cases involving capital crimes, the church notes. A small percentage of ethnic Americans gained some socio economic status in the 1970s and 1980s, the church says, but the quality of life for most mi nority Americans is worse to day than it was in the 1960s. "Virtually no progress to ward social and economic equality for African Americans has lieen made since the earl\ 1970s." it says. Racism extends far beyond black-white relations in a na tion growing in ethnic diversi ty. the church says. Racism is a daily problem for Hispanic Americans, Native Americans. Asian Americans and Pacific Is landers. it says. Chavis pointed a finger at the Hush and Reagan administra tions. saying the federal gov ernment "has become the ob stacle" to racial justice. "I think what we're witness ing is the federalization of rac ism," he said. He cited an Education De partment decision last month, later rolled back, barring uni versities from setting aside money for scholarships to mi norities only. Chavis also pointed to Presi dent Bush's veto of the 1990 civil rights bill passed by Con gress and political exploitation by Republicans of white back lash to affirmative action hiring practices. Without change, Chavis said he feared American society "could explode from within" in ways worse than the urban riots of the 1960s. (HARK! j Who Throbs j for Thee? | Pluck a few heart strings I Heart Throbs mess; 7 Valentine's Day. Be sine I sexy, be funny but don't be | LEFT OUT!' Place your ad today ^ I at the usual places 3 Km <00 I MU • I Ml Mam Desk 6 UO Buoi»iort I^PtAIM.lNf^yrd ajrb. 13. 1_