1
the AIDS epidemic in Africa. hl: is ahk to tell his col- leagues lirsthand the need for American help on that con- tinent. He has spent considerahle time in~ !\frica, amI he and his wife support a mission there through their church. When asked ahout it.Iioughton is humhle and prefers ttl talk al)(H1t his puhlic rcc()rd. He is not your average Illulti-millionaire. hut a puhlic servant who enjoys the joh and what it can do for the peo- pic in his district. Jusr DoN'T OPEN ll-IE "DOOR. one to 21 TY and mdio stations. In addition to supervising station operations, I sought acquisition candidates for the group.Based on profit projections I prepared, Park borrowed the money to buy the stations for cash. I recommended huying a broadcast station only if I u)uld hudget it to pnxluee over 40 per- cenl profit after direct operating expense.Those industry-norm margins pay loan interest a·nd taxes, rctiredeht, provide capital for state-of-the-art equipment, and fuel addition"ll acquisitions. Had J recommended huying a station withexpectations of pro- ducing 5-8 percent profit. Park could have- rightfully laheled me a kook. Hochheimer's co-com- plainant <Ibout the Ithaca radio station merger. Will Burhank. suggests that hy appealing to people with disposableincomes, Ithaca radio stationsneglect "the ptXlr." It follows that his "poor" must prefer classical music and cerebral talk on public radio, bec.ause it makes no profit. TIle late RoyPark never.paid any dividends to himself or oth- ers. He amassed a fortune to establish the huge, private Park Foundation that provides long- teffil, generous funding for edu- cation, includin·g the Park School. From its comfortable <lnd protective confines, Hochheimer's anti-husiness declamation rings false to all pri- vate sector hroadcaster.>. If the professor is teaching such flawed Qench marksto aspiring cnmnlcrcial communi- cations professionals, well now that L'I obscene. , John B. Babcock Town of Ithaca. Oct 24 McGarthyism? Sad that the passing of Cor· nell's P't" President Dean Malin calls forth the guest column from John Schmitt. Schmitt's l."'Olumn Reflections on the role of black men today,.lo OUR READERSWRm Letters/columns pon Letters (suggesled maximur columns (500 words) are publi Include your address and d, Mail 10 Opinion. The Journal NY 14850. Fax: 272·4248 or I Informalion: Gary Siewart. < ror the past year, I have However. for far too long. we- regretted not going to the Mil- America as a whole - have lion Man March (MMM).1 hap- excused African-American pcned to he in Baltimore Ihe day males fn)m taking resrxJnsihility: before but thought it to be ItX) responsihility for theiractions; much 10 stay another day. It respon~ibilily for the successes; would have been tlK) much of a responsibility for their failures; h;L~Sleto call in ~ick, to make and mosl Importantly, responsi- arrangements for 4me more day. hility for themselves. ' ami 10 fight the traffic for those Afric~ln-!\merican males )0miles. Instead. I drove 300 understand that change needs miles back to Ithaca. everyone. hut starts with one. On Oct. Ie). It}t)5, I watched 111ese I million black men came CNN <Ill day. Never before have together to address everything I set.:n such a gathering of mt.:n. that we arc doing 'WTtmg and cel- Grandfathers. sons,frien~s '-lilt! e.hmte cverything~e arc .doing strangers wt.:re all there. rhese TIght. It was an opportunity for men. looking inward first and personal growth. It was a state- then 10 e,lCh other, looking not menl 10 America that 6 percent for an~"Wers. but for unity. I have of her population is ready to lamented on tht.: fact thai I was enact change. We arc not the not present. ·111ishas made the men you read or hear ahout. We arrival of Spike Lee's movie, arc proud. strong ;lIld ready. -Ille "Gt.:t on the Bus'" otrt.:mely MMMwas a day 10 take this vital. I have eagnly awaited responsibility, <.iaept and 0\\11 it. viewing this film and recently, I Spike Lee's movie poetically had that chance. captured all of this on film. ror Idon't know that I have ever those who did not attend the felt a movie to be so moving and Million .Man March or like genuinely rea~.., I sat in that scat.· myself, chose not to, "Get on the with myshoessticking to that Bus'· offers an insider'sltx)k. movie theater Ooor. and all I TIle learning experience and could think at)()lIt was beingnn understanding this film helps the bus. I fclt <l~if I were a part fostcr is immeasurable next to of those African-American men, the price of admis... ion. h(~h young and old. I shared Sean W. BradWell their joy. their emotions, and· City oflthaca, Oct. 16 their pain. I could see my father R d· d fi in one of the charpcters. I saw a 10 an pro Its glimpses of my late grandfather In 'In IthaC<1 Journal business and characteristil.'S of friends in page article Oct. 24 about olhers. Most importantly. Isaw. changes hroughl ahout hy Eagle myself. This filmhelped hring Broadcasting's :lcquisitiof1 of home the reality of the MMM. WTKO/WQNY. John The MMM was not about )-Ilx:hheimer. as.~ociate profeS,.'iOT LouisFarrakhan nor theNation in the TV and radio department of Islam. The MMM was not at Ithaca CoJlege,.laments that about the exclusion of African- profit margins in the radioand American women or white television industry of 20 to 40 Americans. The MMM was an JlCrt .. ru and more .....border.;_on opportunity for African-Anletr---the ohscene," asserting that ca.n malesto addrcss.their pmb- "normal husines.~ profit levels" lems. I would be ignorant to arc in the 5-8% range. believe that the pmhlems facing ,:' .. )served as chief operating African American males arc not o"ffteerof Park Broadc.·lsting dur- shared by the greater society~ ing the period when it grew from wasa reminder of the smears and innuendoes of Sen. Joe . McCarthy's days of power ·and innuence. It was not necessal)' for one to he guilty of an)1hing at all to he a target ofinvestiga- tion. Career.\ were ruined. sound scholarship wasdism"issed_ as tainted hy communist ~ympalhy. and U.S. ·policy toward China and the- FarEast stagmlted for decades thereafter. Under McCarthyism inthe early 1950s. there werefew places in the American aC;ldemy where· one could engage in scholarship on China and the Far East without fear. Honest, even-handed "investigation" wa.~ not what they feared. It Wil" the "drumhead just icc" dispensed hy McCarthy's Un·Amerit;m Activ· ities Committee that frightened many into silence .. Any honest Olina scholar of the day might have been grateful for a statement such as thathy President Malott that one could feci safe from witch hunters at O)men. For McCarthy and his min- . ions, anyone who knew anything about China Lobby wa,labeled a communist sympathizer.-- McCarthy ignored the real rea· sons for the failure of the Qliang Kai-5hek regime to hold power: massive corruption ,and-loss of popular support. Charles J. WIveII Town of Ithaca. Oct. 23

Reflections on Role of Black Men Today

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Dr. Sean Eversley-Bradwell, Ithaca Journal October 29, 1996

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Page 1: Reflections on Role of Black Men Today

the AIDS epidemic in Africa. hl: is ahk to tell his col-leagues lirsthand the need for American help on that con-tinent. He has spent considerahle time in~!\frica, amI heand his wife support a mission there through their church.When asked ahout it. Iioughton is humhle and prefers ttltalk al)(H1t his puhlic rcc()rd.

He is not your average Illulti-millionaire. hut a puhlicservant who enjoys the joh and what it can do for the peo-pic in his district.

Jusr DoN'T OPEN ll-IE "DOOR.

one to 21 TY and mdio stations.In addition to supervising stationoperations, I sought acquisitioncandidates for the group. Basedon profit projections Iprepared,Park borrowed the money to buythe stations for cash.I recommended huying a

broadcast station only if I u)uldhudget it to pnxluee over 40 per-cenl profit after direct operatingexpense. Those industry-normmargins pay loan interest a·ndtaxes, rctire deht, provide capitalfor state-of-the-art equipment,and fuel addition"ll acquisitions.Had J recommended huying astation with expectations of pro-ducing 5-8 percent profit. Parkcould have- rightfully laheled mea kook.

Hochheimer's co-com-plainant <Ibout the Ithaca radiostation merger. Will Burhank.suggests that hy appealing topeople with disposable incomes,Ithaca radio stations neglect "theptXlr." It follows that his "poor"must prefer classical music andcerebral talk on public radio,bec.ause it makes no profit.

TIle late Roy Park never.paidany dividends to himself or oth-ers. He amassed a fortune toestablish the huge, private ParkFoundation that provides long-teffil, generous funding for edu-cation, includin·g the ParkSchool. From its comfortable<lnd protective confines,Hochheimer's anti-husinessdeclamation rings false to all pri-vate sector hroadcaster.>.

If the professor is teachingsuch flawed Qench marks toaspiring cnmnlcrcial communi-cations professionals, well nowthat L'I obscene. ,

John B. BabcockTown of Ithaca. Oct 24

McGarthyism?Sad that the passing of Cor·

nell's P't" President Dean Malincalls forth the guest column fromJohn Schmitt. Schmitt's l."'Olumn

Reflections on the role of black men today,.loOUR READERSWRm

Letters/columns pon• Letters (suggesled maximurcolumns (500 words) are publi• Include your address and d,• Mail 10 Opinion. The JournalNY 14850. Fax: 272·4248 or I

• Informalion: Gary Siewart. <

ror the past year, I have However. for far too long. we-regretted not going to the Mil- America as a whole - havelion Man March (MMM).1 hap- excused African-Americanpcned to he in Baltimore Ihe day males fn)m taking resrxJnsihility:before but thought it to be ItX) responsihility for their actions;much 10 stay another day. It respon~ibilily for the successes;would have been tlK) much of a responsibility for their failures;h;L~Sle to call in ~ick, to make and mosl Importantly, responsi-arrangements for 4me more day. hility for themselves. 'ami 10 fight the traffic for those Afric~ln-!\merican males)0 miles. Instead. I drove 300 understand that change needsmiles back to Ithaca. everyone. hut starts with one.

On Oct. Ie). It}t)5, I watched 111ese I million black men cameCNN <Ill day. Never before have together to address everythingI set.:n such a gathering of mt.:n. that we arc doing 'WTtmgand cel-Grandfathers. sons, frien~s '-lilt! e.hmte cverything~e arc .doingstrangers wt.:re all there. rhese TIght. It was an opportunity formen. looking inward first and personal growth. It was a state-then 10 e,lCh other, looking not menl 10 America that 6 percentfor an~"Wers.but for unity. I have of her population is ready tolamented on tht.: fact thai I was enact change. We arc not thenot present. ·111ishas made the men you read or hear ahout. Wearrival of Spike Lee's movie, arc proud. strong ;lIld ready. -Ille"Gt.:t on the Bus'" otrt.:mely MMM was a day 10 take thisvital. I have eagnly awaited responsibility, <.iaept and 0\\11 it.viewing this film and recently, I Spike Lee's movie poeticallyhad that chance. captured all of this on film. rorIdon't know that Ihave ever those who did not attend the

felt a movie to be so moving and Million .Man March or likegenuinely rea~..,I sat in that scat.· myself, chose not to, "Get on thewith my shoes sticking to that Bus'· offers an insider'sltx)k.movie theater Ooor. and all I TIle learning experience andcould think at)()lIt was being nn understanding this film helpsthe bus. I fclt <l~if I were a part fostcr is immeasurable next toof those African-American men, the price of admis...ion.h(~hyoung and old. I shared Sean W. BradWelltheir joy. their emotions, and· City oflthaca, Oct. 16their pain. I could see my father R d· d fiin one of the charpcters. I saw a 10an pro Itsglimpses of my late grandfather In 'In IthaC<1Journal businessand characteristil.'S of friends in page article Oct. 24 aboutolhers. Most importantly. I saw. changes hroughl ahout hy Eaglemyself. This film helped hring Broadcasting's :lcquisitiof1 ofhome the reality of the MMM. WTKO/WQNY. John

The MMM was not about )-Ilx:hheimer. as.~ociate profeS,.'iOTLouis Farrakhan nor the Nation in the TV and radio departmentof Islam. The MMM was not at Ithaca CoJlege,.laments thatabout the exclusion of African- profit margins in the radio andAmerican women or white television industry of 20 to 40Americans. The MMM was an JlCrt.. ru and more .....border.;_onopportunity for African-Anletr---the ohscene," asserting thatca.n males to addrcss.their pmb- "normal husines.~ profit levels"lems. I would be ignorant to arc in the 5-8% range.believe that the pmhlems facing ,:'.. ) served as chief operatingAfrican American males arc not o"ffteerof Park Broadc.·lsting dur-shared by the greater society~ ing the period when it grew from

was a reminder of the smearsand innuendoes of Sen. Joe. McCarthy's days of power ·andinnuence. It was not necessal)'for one to he guilty of an)1hingat all to he a target of investiga-tion. Career.\ were ruined. soundscholarship was dism"issed_ astainted hy communist ~ympalhy.and U.S. ·policy toward Chinaand the- Far East stagmlted fordecades thereafter.

Under McCarthyism in theearly 1950s. there were fewplaces in the American aC;ldemywhere· one could engage inscholarship on China and theFar East without fear. Honest,even-handed "investigation" wa.~not what they feared. It Wil" the"drumhead just icc" dispensed hyMcCarthy's Un·Amerit;m Activ·ities Committee that frightenedmany into silence ..

Any honest Olina scholar ofthe day might have been gratefulfor a statement such as that hyPresident Malott that one couldfeci safe from witch hunters atO)men.

For McCarthy and his min- .ions, anyone who knew anythingabout China Lobby wa, labeleda communist sympathizer.--McCarthy ignored the real rea·sons for the failure of the QliangKai-5hek regime to hold power:massive corruption ,and-loss ofpopular support.

Charles J.WIveIITown of Ithaca.Oct. 23