11 a m ) O bserver » M a w h 77 1996 (Elje tJn rtian b (Ohs enter A Family Thing Is An American Thing seen in along time. With an incredible believable plot combined with wonderful acting "A Family Thing" is a must see. I he plot is simple. Earl Pilcher (Robert Duvall), a bOyearold white man from rural Arkansas, discovers that his mother was a Black woman. In a letter from beyond the grave the woman Earl thought was his mother tells him that his father forced himself on their Black housekeeper and she died giving birth to him. From this point everything that Earl ever thought about life and himself is shaken as he goes on a journey of self discovery and truth in Urban Chicago. In Chicago Earl meets his half-brother, Ray Murdoch (James Earl Jones), a policeman who al­ ready knows his story. Into this mix is Aunt T. (Irma P. Hall) who has the wisdom and the humor to heal this family thing. As he stumbles in the city, his truck is car-jacked and he is forced to depend on Ray. His bewilderment at now being kalf-black is h m h sad r ____ u . w a iiss a ro u n u in a daze and starts to drink in a black night club. He invites himself over to a table where a Black couple is celebrating the wife’s birthday. As Earl explains his new predicament it is clear that he had no Black Iriends and grew up referring to Blacks as niggers. In the meantime Ray has to deal with the unpleas­ ant memories that Earl brings back. With the help and power of Aunt T, who raised him after his mother dies, Ray accepts Earl. And it is this acceptance which makes this movie great. A Family Thing” is about race, sex and class. And those things are as American as apple pie. i * jl IB m « à ' ./* (Next week: An interview with James Earl Jones).\ Editor's note: Lanita Duke is the producer of Grassroot News. a Video Production C, The Black Romance With The Rails: Prize Offered To A Middle School Student What’s New for 1996 ; Kaiser Permanente? B y P rof . M c K inley B urt tion Retrieval is the key.” times in records kept by a family, or When I first researched the role of As the noted comedian Bill Cosby in a publication of some industry or black inventors in the development said in a tape that was used for years scientific journal, or in the records of ol America’s technology, I was sim­ by those seeking to comb at racial a historical society, or an old news­ ply overcome by the scope of their discrimination and to substantiate the paper. Then, too, the main library in seminal contributions. This was es­ vital role of blacks on the world some cities has a “Patent Section" pecially the case with the many rail­ stage; “Black history: lost, strayed or where copies of patents are filed by road patents which pushed the vital stolen! It is a difficult task, some­ “date" - and sometimes cross-in­ . transportation sector to a global first times, when so much has often been dexed by “name”. ranking; so many unsung heroes, deliberately hidden or obscured but Recently the media has described heroines. it must be accomplished if African serious railroad accidents that oc­ One may well understand, then, Americans are to have their proper curred because the engineer could that the table of contents of my re­ place on the world stage. Our eco­ not see a warning signal (semaphore) lated book would reflect such an nomic and cultural future depends on because of stormy weather. But years evocative theme (Black Inventors of the attainment of a deserved parity. ago my research led to an invention America). The general reader and Now, in the past I have researched by a black man in Buxton, Iowa, in student alike are drawn into the and presented to the world such black the early 1920’s. A semaphore right scheme and scope of their ebony inventions germane to the railroad inside the cab of the locomotive that genius: “The Romance Of The Rails' industry (and others) as the Air Brake, did not require the crew to peep and then, next, a series of inventions The Coupler, The Semaphore, The outside in inclement weather. I have of significanteconomic impact, “Cre­ Railway Telegraph, The Third Rail misplaced this information but will ators Of Industry And Jobs”. (for subways), A Railroad Switch, pay $25 to the student who can find Now, the railroad industry, first Electric Railway Trolley, Refriger­ it. And I will come to their school and steam-driven, then electric, then die­ ated Box Car, and many, many more. make a presentation on black inven­ sel (and a possible magnetic future) Now in retrieving this informa­ tors. You will need this skill all your has drawn the documented attention tion for my book, I sometimes found life. Be the first to contact me at the and talent of the African American the record in a special library, some­ Observer newspaper. from its beginning early in the 19th century, up until the present day. And their inventions and critical ad­ vancements of the art have covered a wide spectrum - the areas of speed, safety, comfort and economic devel­ opment. If you: Y ou will note here that I am touch­ • Have been denied credit ing on many aspects of the vital force • Have bad credit and drive which enabled the African • Need to re-establish credit American to play a key role in the development of the ‘Industrial Revo­ • Experienced bankruptcy lution’. And it is true that over the • Experienced tax liens years I probably have fondly de­ • Experienced judgements scribed each and every contribution - book, lecture, radio, T. V. - but the • Charge offs task at hand is to set the stage for a • Late Payments request I am going to make of some young person in Middle School. As the title of this article implies, Many Items you thought would follow you for the rest o f y< there will be a reward for a certain life can be legally removed from your credit record! task to be completed by such student INTRODUCING - and as you might well guess, it will relate to black inventors and the rail­ N a tio n a l C re d it A u th o r s , In c roads. And as you might also sup­ Bonded in Washington and Oregon pose, I will be offering a prize for a For more information, well-executed bit of research. After all, that is what I emphasize in my call your local representative today! (503) 762-2546 or 1-800-683-0728 writings here, just as I did when teaching at the university: “Informa­ Bess K aiser M edical C enter - ■ Hospital remains open throughout the year providing: • Emergency services • Urgent care • Hospital care tor adult medical conditions and low-risk obstetrics • Outpatient surgery • Pharmacy • Laboratory • X-ray. Pediatric hospitalizations move to Oregon Health Sciences University’s Doernbecher Children's Hospital. . 1 1 .iM iH i.w n K aiser Sunnyside M edical C enter ■ Continues to provide the current full rar care loi medical and surgical conditions services and ureent care t h r m i o h n n t BAD CREDIT? WE CAN HELP mlf^û Starting March 31,1996 ■ ■ ■ Kaiser Permanente physicians begin caring for members with a full range of adult hospital services. Routine and high-risk obstetrical care. Emergency services available. OHSU’s Doernbecher Children’s Hospital Starting March 31,1996 ■ Kaiser Permanente pediatricians begin caring for their patients who require hospitalization at this regional pediatric center of excellence. Questions? Stop at Membership Services or talk to your doctor. M M