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Having a
Voice: Dr. Joseph Amprey and Mr. Ronald Rouse
David Mory and
others contributed to this article
Dr. Joseph Amprey
Dr. Joseph Amprey, Professor of Student Support Service,
director of Multicultural Studies, and International Students’ Advisor at
Kutztown University, has been a major influence in the African American
community in Berks County. Amprey is the founder of The DRUM, a bimonthly
newspaper that is written by African Americans for African Americans. The
DRUM displays the talents of local writers and columnists, and is a place
where African Americans can be creative. Poetry, short stories, and columns are
included in its pages. By publishing The DRUM, Dr. Amprey allows
contributing authors a space to voice their views and tell their stories, and
the paper creates a sense of community.
Prior to publishing The DRUM,
Dr. Amprey was a columnist for the Reading Eagle and Reading Times newspapers. He tackled tough topics such as urban education, racism, and ethics
in the city and surrounding suburbs. Often, Amprey received praise for his work,
but there would be also be conflicting viewpoints expressed in other articles.
Dr. Amprey, who has a Ph.D. in Student
Personnel Administration, an M.Ed. in Education, an M.S. in Psychology, and a
B.A. in Spanish, is a former Dean of Academic Services at Kutztown. As an
accomplished author, educator, and community advocate, Dr. Amprey has been a
catalyst and a true leader for African Americans, using his resources for the
betterment of others around him.
Along with shaping the young minds of tomorrow
as a professor at Kutztown, Dr. Amprey also is an accomplished speaker,
delivering speeches for numerous conferences. He has spoken in celebration of
Martin Luther King Day at Lebanon Valley College and was the keynote speaker
during the civil rights portion of a United States Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) Equal Housing Fair in 2004. At a Berks County Chamber of
Commerce luncheon, Amprey spoke at great length about the African American
community and the need for public intervention. He said, “If you’re going to
understand a man from Muhlenberg or Birdsboro you have to get inside of his
skin,” and the same is true for getting to know African Americans beyond the
stereotypes: “We need to get church groups from Exeter and Wyomissing and get
them into center city Reading to talk with kids, to find out how they think” (Amprey
1994, 17).
Dr. Amprey is a member of the Pennsylvania
Black Conference on Higher Education and has been appointed by the mayor of
Reading to the city’s Ethics Board. Dr. Amprey has also published a book on
student services which can be found in local libraries. He has also won many
awards, including the Boy Scouts of America Spirit of Scouting Award.
Mr. Ronald Rouse
Mr. Ronald Rouse is the “chief
reporter-photographer-editor-publisher and ad salesman” for M Voice, a
monthly newspaper that aims to convey the positives of the African American
community in Berks County and to provide a sense of hope and encouragement,
especially for young people. Rouse founded M Voice in 1989 in part
because “There is no question,” he says, “that most [African Americans] regard
the Reading Eagle as a white newspaper” (Forester 1996, 6). Although
Rouse writes most of the articles for the paper, community members submit
articles and other writings, including letters to the editor. According to Dr.
Amprey, M Voice “has been eastern Pennsylvania’s minority voice” (Amprey
2002, 2).
Rouse moved to Reading from the Bronx, New York
in the mid-1980s to work as a regional security specialist for a retail chain
that eventually went out of business. He took that opportunity to create M
Voice, modeled after The Minority Voice, a newspaper published by his
relatives in North Carolina (Forester 1996).
Although Rouse does not necessarily intend for M
Voice to be controversial, he lets readers comment on controversial issues
through letters to the editor, and Rouse himself is very willing to fight for
what he believes. He led a 1998 effort to develop a group called the Dialogue on
Race Commission, which aimed to be an active voice for African Americans. In
1998, he organized a two-day teen summit, “Excellence without Excuses,” at the
YMCA for approximately 150 youths, and also fought to open a game arcade and
teen dance club and café in Reading. In 2000, Rouse began a grassroots
anti-crime task force, Operation Crush Crime.
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