. . -. . Fed. Gov't Announces New LOS ANGELES The Carter ; Administration recently i1' launched a Minority Bank Development Program to coordinate public and private resources in support ' of minority owned. ; and operated banks. ' This program was intro duced at the 51st annual convention of the National Bankers Association by John G. Heimann, Com troller of the Currency and Acting' Chairman of the Federal - Deposit , Insurance Corporation. According to. Heimann, two distinct seg ments of i the program are management and market development. .' ! Claims Ho -. . V", ' -:,.v-.. ; In Arm For The Durham Coalition Against Police Bmtality has chareed the DumanR CoOtiea" 'prorfitsftirto ! bad faith to conduct inves tigations into allegations of , police brutality and miscon duct J toward Durham's, black and poor.i; Council man Wade Penny, chosen by . the Council to chair a probe into police conduct, was in a council, committee session and could not be reached for comment. . ' ,The charge against the council followed six weeks of waiting for Penny to con vene the " committee after the council heard 'citizens complaints of . police mis conduct thai ; spanned a three year period. In the wakfe of a Durham Public Safety Officer shoot ing a black man last week, the Coalition! Against Po lice Brutality members indi cated they may be i getting -ready to "hit the streets. 'Hitting the streets" is a term that refers to street demonstrations and simi lar actions. 1 - Coalition .spokesman,, Mrs. Rosalyn PeUes, told THE CAROLINA . TIMES' this week that citizens have Minority Enterprise Dill Signed By WASHINGTON,; D.C. -The long-awaited" Mihortiy Enterprise Bill, which will , substantially increase Black , participation in the free enterprise system, if was , signed into law October 24" by President Carter, ; reaffirming his commitment to provide a more equitable ' share of federal - contract ' dollars to Black businesses. Eugene Baker, President of the National Association of Black Manufacturers, Inc., (NABM) applauded the President, both Houses of Congress, and the many sup , porters of the Bill for their efforts to assure minority , businesses an opportunity for a small business owner ship among minorities and , to bolster their participation in . Federal ' contracting opportunities. ,v The Legislation, com- monly referred to as The Omnibus Minority Enter-,. : ; prise BUI (HR; 11318), was introduced by Congressman ' Joseph' P. Addabbo (D. NY), Chairman of the House Small Business Sub-. "For the last year," Heimann laid In his speech before the more than 300 minority bankers attending the NBA convention;" the : Comptroller s office has worked with the Inter Agency Council for Minority ' . eBusiness Enterprise -(coordinated by the Department of- Com merce) to develop a pro gram which addresses 'the needs of the minority banks, the TVnartmnt of Commerce and the three federal bank regula tory agencies -will fund a three to five year program to address management development, market deve lopment, and , if all of our Uas SB' 1 - .i'-'V- Ho Reason "gone through the channels to get : police brutality : J ' " ... -. t.s.. U:.' .nl..f . '. .o...ti.. the streets." ' ( " -r Mrs. Josephine Turner, a Coalition member represent ing ; the Durham County NAACP, said she has re quested that Penny convene the Public Safety Commit tee which he hasr promised to do, but has not. One month ago, this re porter inquired of Penny when .the committee would be convened Hit reply was that Mayor Wade Cavin was going to appoint re placements for former Councilmen Clarence Brown and Howard Harris before the committee would begin its work. NEW CHARGE OF BRUTALITY Durham Police Major' Talmadge Lassiter said this 1 week the k shooting of Robert McAllister of 1415 Lakewood Drive, Friday, October 27, by ' Publig Safety Officer Jasper Gor ham, was an accident. Mc Allister has been charged with : illegally parking a - Continued On Page 11) Qcrtcr committee on Minority Enterprise and : General Oversight.; The Law makes substantial amendments to the Small Business Act and the Small Business Invest ment Act of 1958." It requires the filing of a subconstruction . - , pro- ' curements of $500,000 and ' above; ; and conferral ? of bond waiving authority - to the Small Business Adminis-. tration under the terms of a two-year pilot program. According to Baker "Passage of this Legislation provides a ' well-deserved' opportunity for minority business ;, development throughout the : country. NABM has been a leader in assisting the Congress in drafting . ; legislation ' that , would be for the betterment of Minority Business Enter prise. We feel that many of the problems inherent in the 8 (a) Program and in Pro-, curment Procedures will be eliminated through the action adopted ; by the President in signing this bill into law" ' 1 ' plans can be translated into reality , capital support. Heimann warned that, if the ' program is to work, "its success will be attribu table not to anything government has to offer minority banks, but to a lot pf hard work on your part to take advantage of the resources being offered, and to find solutions beyond are able to conceive." The management development component, Heimann said, will address the needs of all levels of minority bank per sonnel: tellers and clerical staff, loan officers and cashiers, ohief executive COALIIION CHARGES- m Ill THIS WEEK'S EDITION African News , - -"A Rev. Cobb Vows To Take WiL Infant Mortality Rate In U.S. At All-Time Low i nil 'I l ll ll l III T, S, ill i i I y 1 i ' - - c' . i - -1 - ', . . SENATOR EDWARD BROOKE, R-Mass., in his second day before the Senate Ethics Committee last week! got an Informal ruling from a majority of the Committee members that he was not personally responsible for delaying the Committee's Investigation of his financial affairs. (UPI) BE SURE TO CAST YOUR VOTE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Cong. Louis St olios Koynofor at Criminal Justice Confab RALEIGH-"Despite a constitutional presumption of innocence, and a consti tutional guarantee of a speedy trial, many accus ed criminals do not receive these rights and many are -held for unconscionable periods of time," remarked . black Ohio ' Congressman Louis Stokes at a criminal justice conference this week. "Many times bail is set so high that the poverty of the defendant is the dominant cause of his de tainment." , officers, and bank directors. management and staff The objective 6f the devcloPmePt program . for management development indivia-al bank partid segment will be to assist Pants-"Thc Program repre participating banks to wi meet: with the develop more effective r chief executive officer of an manaeemen t teams, imorove man ana investment per formance, enhance the mar keting capabilities of the bank, reduce its personnel turnover, and increase pro ductivity. Heimann explained that the program will deal, with problems which, while common ' to most mino rity banks, are unique in their effect , on individual banks. "Upon request, a highly skilled program representative will prepare i COQIG. The - lawmaker's com ments were part of his keynote . address to a con ference "On the Pursuit of Justice", sponsored by the Offender Aid and Restora tion Project, held at i St. Augustine's College in Rileigh. -f f j. -f ' Stokes advocated passing laws at the state and nation al levels to' require reason able or no bail in pretrial detention, and wider use of fines, probationary sen tences, halfway houses, group homes and , other -. -. - , . . . . . Minority Bunk Program "aiYiauai name to discuss and negotiate a scope of ' work that both meets the wishes of bank and is within the guidelines and resources of the program," he said. THeimanh pointed out that individualized mange ment development effort will be relatively modest in its outreach during the initial year during which the bank will provide individua lized assistance to some five to"iseven of the banks which (Continued On Page 7 yiarlotto 3 Pardon IBpncndcd k group of supporters br'aved y drizzling rain Saturday to march, to the state capitol to demand a pardon for the Charlotte Three. Convicted of arson of a Charlotte horse stable in 1972, two of the Charlotte Three were ordered back to prison October 17 after the U. S. Supreme Court , refused to overturn their convictions ' and long sentences. Another was , already in prison" for parole violation. A 1974 probe by the Charlotte Observer docu mented that the Three had been convicted through the testimony of witnesses bought for more than $4000 in cash each, not to men tion prosecutorial favors.. , : "The FBI, SBI, CBI and the Nixonian faction within the judicial system were in volved in a conspiracy to limit, u eliminate the Black protest movement in this , country,"' said Charlotte Three defendant, T. J. Reddy in a statement Continued On Page 7 Harry Groves, Dean of the North Carolina Central University (NCCU) Law School, has reconsidered his resignation from the pre dominantly black institu tion,. Groves explained the circumstances surrounding his resignation last month to the N. C. Association of Black Lawyers at a Durham workshop on trial advocacy. alternatives - to incarcera tion of the convicted crimi nal. "Incarceration may be absolutely .necessary for some offenders, but - for many who are incarcerated, it is not," said Stokes as he gave statistics depicting overcrowded conditions in federal and state prisons. Work; f Stokes said, has greater , rehabilitative value than any activity. Lack of education and unemploy ment he said, are root v Continued on Page 2) a Jofin ll VJhcckr Schokrship fond Established ot Satur. Fund doner RALEIGH-Approximately 600. persons, pri marily business and poli tical leaders, attended a $100 a plate dinner at the Raleigh Civic Center Saturday, October 28, in honor of John H. Wheeler. Wheeler, late president of Mechanics ' and Farmers Bank and chairman of the Durham Committee on th the Affairs of Black People, - was praised by Governor James Hunt and other - political leaders. Revenue from the affair will establish a scholar ship fund in Wheeler's name. Wheeler was generally regarded as a political broker, the most influ ential black politician -following the registration of large numbers of black voters as a result of passage of the Voting Rights of the sixties. Evidence of Wheeler's political influence was the broad-based group of politicians convened to pay tribute. Attending were big names in state and national politics of the last two decades. Allard Lowenstein, politi : cal assistant to U. S. Am bassador Andrew Young, ------. r. me , aoumern Regional Council, and former Secre- tary of the U. S. Depart- IContinued On Page 12 "i- N'ti'jxt.m ,..r... TfciVii,i,.iy jf. V . ' '' COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD - of the I manual Tempi savtntt Day Advantitt Church was presented to S.J. Henderson last Saturday by U.S. Attorney H.M. clux Jr. (I) as Mrs. Gloria Moore, a church leader looks on. (Photo by Kelvin A. BallL G roves' v resignation brought into public focus a dispute between Groves, NCCU Chancellor Albert N. Whiting and University of North Carolina President William Friday. The dispute centered around an accredi tation report of the Ameri can Bar Association (ABA) which Groves termed "use ful". The law. school's accreditation has been pro visional ' for several years pending construction of a new building and expansion of the library volumes, plus outlay of significant re sources for the school. "It was particularly con cerned that we should have not merely the new building . . . .but more support re sources, not teachers, neces sarily, but more librarians . and. clerical people, particu f larly," said Groves to the lawyers. The ABA team. Groves said, "wanted to be sure that it made clear that it expected the school to have more of these resourc es when it moved into the new building. Groves said that he was .not "dissatisfied with the report and thought it was useful "' however. Groves Pi"" ' - ' - i , . ':- n i"" i'CgssM k - "i .. ' J L. vH k'.Vi WINNER OF SCHOLARSHIP RAFFLE - Mrs. GjBY-ilto dirta tl nMiant'nn ,1m. U:!tirli nt l-t fni f ibjh ummu uiflLi. f Miss Smith was the winner of the "Grocary Raffle" wftkh , part of an effort, by tha Class of "54, to raisa fundi for scholarship. (Photo by Kelvin A. BeB.) said that UNC President Friday didn't agree. The ABA called for response from Groves, Chancellor Whiting, and Dr. Friday,, but Friday answer ed the ABA for all three. That triggered Groves ; " f ft o - HP lillillltv-. ips- isiK-Ss.v wis;;, ;?s.;:ii:;s;i::S!:i:5, .i;;;?! ) MAYOR BRAD LEYO LYT?IC HEAD S1CM AC.U-MENT-Los Angeles Mayor Tom Brtdtey, left, and LcrJ KUIanin, president f of the International Cyrv3 are all smiles as they prepare to sign an asrtemtr.t at t l White House designating Los Angela at host for f a V. . Olympic Games. ('- .) i'jr min ri ri2 resignation. ' "President Friday, with out choosing to discuss the matter with me at all, responded very angrily to the report of the ABA. . : . protesting that they (ABA) (Continued On Page 3)