yui.fcj VII iv» 1 ALU ■ Over $6 Million In Loans Approved for Black Businessmen Report Says American Methodism Headed For Trouble Chg VOLUME 48 No. 49 DURHAM, N. C., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1969 Low Income Housing Plans Greenville As One of 3 Centers V j 1 Yaffil FINAL TOUCH—Dr. John Now- Lin of the Duke Medical Cen ter attaches wires to the head President Clark Trustee Of For NEW YORK—Dr. Vivian W. Henderson, president of Clark College, Atlanta, has been elect ed to the Board of Trustees of the Ford Foundation, it was announced this week by Julius A. Stratton, chairman of the board An economist and civil rights authority, Dr Henderson be came president of Clark Col lege in 1965 after serving as chairman of the Economics De partmet at Fisk University. He has also been a govern mental advisor, particularly on the utilization of Negro man power in the South. He was a member of the U. S. Civil Rights Commission Advisory Committee for the Study of Race and Education, the Presi dent's Commission on Rural Poverty, and a task force ap pointed by Secretary of Labor Wirtz to develop a new man- Harlem Activists CommeDd Nixon Administration on CR WASHINGTON Black acti vists from Harlem spent two days in Washington conferring with officials of the Nixon Ad ministration and the Republi can National Committee in an effort to determine what the Administration is doing to car ry out President Nixon's cam paign promise to give the Black Community "a piece of the ac tion." Clarence L. Townes? Jr., As sistant to Republican National Committee Chairman Rogers C. B. Morton, in addreaalng the group known u the Liberal In dependent Republican Club of Harlem commended them for their interest in the affairs of government and "for taking time to come to Washington to get a better inaight into the many outstanding programs of the Nixon Administration and the Republican Party." The group composed of ten profesaiooai men and women from Harlem, headed by John Cottman, Recruitment and Training Coordinator for the Housing and Development Ad ministration of New York, de sribed the trip to Washington at a "fact finding miaaion." "We want to find out first hand of Miss Margaret Smith prepa ratory to making an electroen cephalogram a measurement DR. HENDERSON date ior the united States Em ployment Service. He is also a member of the U.S. National Commission to what the posture of the Ad ministration is toward the Black Community and to see what steps are being taken to in volve Blacks effectively In the governmental process." Following two days of meet Cultural Differences Discussed in Publication WASHINGTON - Cultural ly different does not mean culturally disadvantaged, but this semantic misunderstanding may be one of the major rea sons why education is failing great numbers of children in America. This belief is expressed in a publication, "Media and the Culturally Different Learner," published by the National Edu cation Association's Project Ur ban and the Division of Educa tional Technology. The authors include Joseph M. Conte, as sociate professor of education. La Verne College, La Verne, Calif.; George H. Grimes, su pervisor of curriculum labora tories, Detroit public schools. George W. Jones, director of of brain waves—from inside her home. UNESCO, chairman of the Georgia State Advisory Com mittee of the U. S. Civil Rights Commission, a life member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple, and a director i,f the Na tional Bureau of Economic Re search, the Southern Regional Council, the Urban Coalition, the National Sharecroppers Fund, the Potomac Institute, and several other professional, civic, and church organizations and institutions. Dr. Henderson was born in Bristol, Tennessee on February 10, 1923 and completed his un dergraduate studies at North Carolina College at Durham. He received master's and doc tor's degrees in economics at the State University of lowa. He is married and the father of four children. ings with Agency personnel and Robert Brown, Special Assistant to the President Mr. Cottman said, "we were genuinely Im pressed with the minority representation at the policy making level and the track rec Project Urban; and Anna L. Hyer, director of the Division of Educational Technology. The book is designed for use by teachers, administrators, publishers and producers of media materials for distribu tion in the public schools. The publication consists of two chapters dealing with the learning characteristics of cul turally different children, and how media can be used to teach them, and an annotated list of audiovisual materials that can be used in the class room. While the opening chap ter stresses that the book deals primarily with the poor in ur ban communities - and pri marily the black poor- - it alao states that "it must alao be PRICE: 20 Cents OEO Will Fund New Effort to Help Housing By MILTON JORDAN (Times Staff Writer) GREENSVILLE—The Low In come Housing Development Cor poration of North Carolina an nounced recently that an area surrounding and including Greenville had been selected as one of the three rural "devel opment centers." Each of these centers will share in a pro gram designed to build at least 1200 units of new housing for the low-income families in North Carolina in the next three years. Selection of the Greenville area by the state wide, non-profit organization followed an intensive, six months series of meeting with community leaders throughout the state. Money for this new effort will come from the Office of Economic Opporunity on a re volving fund plan. The termi nolo.Ty stems from the fact that LIHDC strategy is to parlay $300,000 into the erecting of low-cost, top-quality homes, using the same money several times and then giving it back to the Office of Economic Op portunity. The money will be used' to buy land, develop streets, sew er systems and water systems, and build houses. LJDHC will work with local agencies and groups to find buyers and help arrange mortgage financing that will be insured by Farm ers Home Administration, or the Federal Housing Administra tion. The program wil also use mortgage monies available through local lenders when pos sible. Plans call for mostly three bedroom homes in the $12,000 range, the type that can be af forded by someeone making $3,- 500 to $6,000 annually. A spe cial government subsidy of in terest rates will make it possi ble for a person in the $3,500 (See HOUSING 2A) ord which has been set by the Administration in the field of civil rights suits. The Nixon approach is more positive to ward the Black Community than we have been led to be lieve." recognized that the children of the white middle class are cul turally deprived in a very real sense. In many cases they are nutured in and limited to an unrealistically all-white world. Boy Saves Man As House Burns MORAVIAN FALLS, N.C. - Hal Hawkins Jr.. 16, knocked out the window of a neighbor's home Friday and pulled Mack Reavis, about 90, to safety as flamea engulfed the structure. The youth noticed fire com ing from the house but smoke prevented him from entering the front door. He heard a noise coming from a first floor bedroom and went around tc the ,window. The house waa destroyed. ft *^»ff / .* yr REVIEWING FINER POINTS be held December 14 in the B. Laßue Cunningham, Soprano; OF MUSlC—Reviewing some of N. Duke Auditorium. From left Tropzie White, Senior Alton; the finer points of music are to right, they are: Charles H. George E. Hatcher, Jr., Accom seven members of the NCCU Gilchrist, Choir Director; Bren- panist; and Melvin Batten, Choir Choir in preparation for their da Doub, Publicity Manager; President. Annual Christmas Concert to i Linda Shaw, Soprano Soloist; National Business Makes Important Statement Cily Involved in $1.2 Million Loans for Race WASHINGTON, D. C. The I approval of more than $6 mil ' lion in loans for black busi i nessmen, with $5.9 million pending, was announced by Berkeley G. Burrell, President of the National Business League. The loans were obtain ed since January through the League's Project Outreach, a ♦management and technical as sistance program. Burrell made the announce ment in a nine-month report of the activities of the Project, which is funded by the Eco nomic Development Admini stration of the Commerce De partment. Evaluating its per formance on a $55,000 EDA contract, he commented 1 , "The favorable cost-benefit ratio for minority business development is clearly indicated by the ac complishments of Project Out reach." Burrell also cited the cooperation of the 58 NBL chapters as a vital factor in the implementation of Outreach goals. The Project was initiated in July 1967 and now offers mi nority entrepreneurs specialized training and counseling in areas such as loan packaging, market ing and site location, business nroblem solving, contract and boning procurement, and the establishment of local develop ment companies. Project Outreach is operative nationally in ten cities: Atlanta, Chicago, Cleveland, Columbus, Durham, Jackson, Memphis, Norfolk, Richmond and Seattle. The National Business League maintains a professional staff in each city to provide program services for the local minority business community. According to Ed Stewart, di rector of Project Outreach in Durham, the local chapter has either had approved or has pending some 1.2 million dol lars in loans to assist Black businessmen I* the climb for success. F. W. Allicon, president of the Durham Business and Pro fessional Chain, which sponsors Proect Outreach locally,lauded both the National Business League and Project Outreach for the invaluable assistance it has rendered in Durham. Carolyn D. Edwards Elected Corporate Sect'y of GLMLI Co. DETROIT, Mich. —Thaddeus B. GaiUard, CLU, President of Great Lakes Mutual Life Insu rance Company, announced the unanimous election by the Board of Directors of Carolyn D. Edwards as Corporate Sec retary of the firm. Mrs. Edward succeeds Datis B. Norton who has accepted an executive posi tion with the American Wood men Life Insurance Company (See EDWARDS 2A) ■Kmi f RfilfJl IJH I F fV I I |l> InSptpS^^^B, I ■ * J ■ . Br - : KEYNOTER —F. V. Allison, President of the Durham Busi ness and Professional Chain addresses the audience attend-1 Duke University "Takes Clinic to The People" in New Experiment By VANCE WHITFIELD The Duke Medical Center is conducting an experiment in "taking the hospital to the peo ple" with the operation of a mobile unit. The unit, which can be described as a portable hospital laboratory, is a panel truck outfitted with sophisti cated electronic equipment that visits homes of people involved in Duke's long-term study of the aged. In 1954 the Center for the Study of Aging and Human De velopment at Duke began a pro gram involving 260 community volunteers over 60 years old. Participants came to Duke for a comprehensive psychological, psychiatric and medical evalua tion. The intent was to obtain health data on the 260 volun teers, compare the data with similar information gathered later, and analyze the results to determine the effects of aging and how they varied among the individuals. Dr. John B. Nowlin, assistant professor in the department of Community Health Sciences at Duke, is in charge of the mo bile unit. He is assisted by Dr. Shirley Hastings, research fel low in the aging program. Also helping are Stephen Harkins, research associate, and Michael Zollinger, who plans to attend Duke Medical School. Each person visited receives a physical examination. Blood samples are taken and an elec trocardiogram (EKG) and elec troencephalogram (EEG) are al so given. This two hour pro cess requires teamwork be tween the doctors in the house and the persons manning the I ing the annual event, capping the yearly fund raising drive of the affiliate of the National [ Business League. monitoring equipment in the truck. The electrical signals from the patient is recorded and) stored on tape for future reference. After the informtion is ana lyzed, doctors write a patient summary and send it to the personal physician of each vol unteer, noting any health irre gularity that should be exam ined. ■HHBT 111 WSk Hi REV. SAUNDERS Hickory Elects First Negro President of Ministerial Ass'n | Rev. L. O. Saunders former I pastor here in the city (Hick jofy) presently pastoring the Mt Pisgah A. M E. Church I was elected president of the Greater Hickory Ministerial As sociation at the group's month ly meeting Monday, November 24. Rev. Saunders was the Vies President, another that before his being elected PiesMsot. Present Crisis May Surpass Former Split NASHVILLE A report on racial unrest in the United Methodist Church sees Ameri can Methodism "headed for a severe racial crisis, perhaps its worst since the bitter schism of the 19th Century." The report, "Black Protest: Will It Split the United Metho dists?" was released recently by the Race Relations Infor mation Center (RRIC), a private agency based in Nashville that prepares journalistic studies on various aspects of race rela tions in the United States. "Less than two years after the Methodist Church, largest Protestant denomination, wel comed its once separate black contingent, laid the ground work for a racially inclusive institution, and formed the United Methodist Church," the report notes, "a seemingly in evitable confrontation is brew ing." The study notes the widen ing rift between the Black Methodists for Church Renewal (BMCR), an activist body of black clergy and 1 laymen based in Atlanta, and the church's white middle-class conserva tives, the majority of the Wesleyan denomination's 11.3 million members and the group that contributes most heavily to the church. BMCR has accused the Metho dist Church of racism, demand ed recognition of black achieve ments anu emphasis on black problems and aspirations, in sisted on representation in all church activities—from national to local levels—and pushed the church to seek reunion with the African Methodist Episcopal. African Methodist EDiscopal Zion, and Christian Methodist Episcopal churches, the three (See METHODIST 2A) $lO Million Suit Halts Memphis School Boycott MEMPHIS Following filing of a $lO million damage suit by the Board of Education against leaders of the Ameri can Federation of State, Coun ty and Municipal Employees Union and of United Black Coalition, a school boycott has been called off and suspended students re-admitted to classes. The joint action, which had been initiated by the Memphis NAACP and the union, split when the union and some other elements in the coalition re jected the NAACP call for a moratorium to permit a cool ing-off period after an outbreak of arson, vandalism and vio lence in the predominantly Ne gro schools. The Rev. Ezekiel Bell, chair man of the ÜBC boycott com mittee, said that the filing of the damage suit had nothing to do with termination of the boy cott. Both the NAACP and the ÜBC said they had received as surance from the Board of Education that no punishment would be meted out tq teach ers or students who who sup ported the boycott. The coalition had sought to hasten desegregation in the city. Prime NAACP concern had been with the public schools and the local Board of Education. The union was seek ing to organise employees of St. Joseph Hospital. Black stu dents participated in large num bers in demonstrations to achieve the combined goal. The NAACP board had agreed ! to a ten-day moratorium during which it urged students to re turn to classes as negotiotiona were conducted with school officials. Others continued the student demonstrations in a move designed to use the dam onstrations to force the hospi tal to accede to onion demand* As windows were broken tn several schools, fires sot in two and rock-throwing attacks won made, Lsroy Clark, BOW NAACf president, said that the NAACP and its members "deplore sad condemn the violence that Is currently being wrought en schools." Ho said the NAACP win con (See SCHOOL 1A)