t 'n , ham NC 270 V SUNDAY, MAY 9 vy nil i c ijvi'rt iu"'-fL N ' y (USPS C9j-3S0)Lj .... ' '" i I 1 - Words Of Wisdom . Nothing b particularly hard If yon. divide ft Into, small Job. yr;;- nearyford Oar grand business b not to sec what fie' dimly at a distance, bat what Bes dearly at( hand. ' Carfyfe. VOLUME 60 - NUMBER 18j i DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA T SATURDAY, MAY 8. 1332' TELEPHONE (919) 682-29T3 Officials, Citizen Clash Over Itaseb, Utilities Commission Referee V4 - , , 5-f 1 v -I ' By Donald Alderman argue tts case. Coalition, one ot tive- Durham's boiling con- For example, lawyers, plaintiffs in the. suit filed! troversy over bus service, representing the Durham , against ; Duke Power? . swings between being a Citizens Roundtable Company and the city1 ; hen and egg - question, , and a hot potato. - -On the one hand, peo ple, who told the N.C. , Utilities Commission' in ; ;; hearings last weeki that t Duke Power ; should ; restore Durham's bus,? service to 1973 levels, argue hat service cuts and .. poor .marketing,, created the company's escalating losses,' 1 v . Duke Power oa the other hand contends, in justifying its decisions to ; cut service, that decreas ed bus , use ' create substantial losses in '..'revenue, making the ser- vice ? reduction, unavoidable. Since both , sides uset . almost the ; . - same - ' documents to support their contentions, it's not . really clear which came first: decreased ridership or reduced services. But then the issue is a ' real hot potato because, Duke Power contends , that the company can't-make-a 'profit; with the. 1 system, and must con tent itself with trying to , cut 5' losses. , hrankly, Duke Power wants the . iu iac .tins ' rsn if 1 1 ' " ! & ;,' 1 1 after the council honored; ; the company's request to end night J?uf service1 Februarjrl5, argue thatr fttnnanu systematically . - reduced ' service . which - caused; reduced ' ' ridership thereby aiding the com i pany's argument that the; service is not being used and aiding the company in not " providing ade quate transit sefvice. v On the other hand, Duke attorneys argue that losses caused partly by low ridership prompt "service cuts. rr Irrespective of the dif ferent views the service and ridership :v have declined. , Between ' 1968 and 1978, total ridership (in cluding charter service) decreased 42 per cent, from ' 3,546,538 to 2,067,799; hours of ser (Continued on Page 4) I.. Authors Honored r ;Sla area authors were honored last week during a ' reception given by the Durham County library Association recently. The reception was scheduled by the library group to give the authors an oppor tunity to introduce themselves and explain their works. 1 ( Pictured here (L-R standing) are: Lee Green, Ms. Amanda Smith, Mrs. Doris Haynes, authors; and Dr. Benjamin Speller, acting chairman of the DCLA program committee. Seated (L-R) are: Mrs. Norma Royal, outgoing president of the library association; Mrs. Jane B. Wilson, David Guy and Ms. Linda Chandler, aumors. n, , fttt VII. T ' tv Lau v i albatross from around our necks"." , -; r: But city officials simp-r ly ignore suggestions that BRIAN Wanted: Black Parents With Lots of Love To Adopt A Child Bass Elected Vice President RJR Industries WINSTON-SALEM Marshall B. Bass has been elected vice presi dent of R.J.' Reynolds Industries, Inc. " - " ; The announcement was made "by , R.J. Reynolds Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 'Brian, -;. Bass joined the per sonnel department of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in 1968 as director of personnel' development With' the formation R.J. Reynolds Industries in '1970, he moved to the position of nils last names' confidential Is'tWs- ' raui r.agSS, nim.1 . ' I. i r.. ji t -"v''rass'; transit in-uymam . .. ; ' VS!nnM; Brian can perform many self-help tasks. He can SS SSS2.nS: dress, feed and bathe himself. Brian attends special to want the headache of and rising transit costs increased demand. So the matter is now at an impasse, with Duke Power and the city lined up on One side sup porting service cuts and a coalition of local community organiza- lions lined up on the' other supporting in creased bus service. . Now the decision has to be made by the N.C. Utilities Commission that held two days of hearings in Durham on the issue, and wrapped up .last Wednesday in Raleigh. ' And so, though the current controversy was sparked Power eliminated night bus service, the issues are much deeper, and the problems more complex. They go back a long way. ;" ; ' Since 1973, when Duke Power Company, which owns the, local bus system, renewed if s con-, tract with the City of Durham jo provide, tran sit service, the service has been Cut almost to a bare f classes in a local school. In addition to class studies, corporate development continue to serve as secretary of the public policy'committee of the company's board of directors." i , he is being taught basic sign language to aid with , communication. He has a speech impediment which sometimes makes it difficult for him to be understood. He enjoys art, music and strenuous outdoor play such as baseball, running and climb ing; His latest accomplishments iwve included writing his name and identifying numbers. His overall independence will depend largely on extend ed family support and encouragement. He needs a . family who wijl love and understand him and com mit themselves to helping him achieve his maximum potential. , V t - Brian is one of three children in Durham County who have been cleared and are waiting now for adoption; Across the state the figure is 3,420 black youngsters. Generally speaking, black youngsters are harder', to be placed for adoption than white youngsters; harder, both because they are black and because they are older, or for other reasons. This entire issue of adopting black youngsters niroversy was wij be tne subject of a two-day conference session wnen uuKe , o..n g rxv rhru mi c AicfnM ai.ivuaawii iTAviitviiai viti viiuivii, i uj nuivu Avenue. Thej workshop is scheduled to begin Fri day, May 14,'at 7 p.m., and run through Saturday, i The conference, pegged, "One Church-One Child Black Adoptions; Revving Up-Reaching Out V, is sponsored by the Triangle Chapter of the National Association of Black Social Workers. All sessions are free and open to the public. ' Father, George Clements, pastor of Chicago's Hojy Angels Catholic Church, who became na tionally famous when he adopted a 12-year-old son to dramatize the problem of black youngsters who are hard to adopt, will be the principal speaker. Clements, 49, who also operates the nation's minimum, citizens nave southside Chicago church, brings his 4,one church, protested, each cut,, , but one chld mcssage t0 Durham. to almost no avail. . Clements, in his national campaign to find , j j c uCjtSi uC ,n" families for hard to adopt black youngsters, says eluded schedule changes, that if n-biaick church in the nation will urge at route reductions and jeast one family in it's congregation to adopt a elimination bf hojiday, child, some 100,000 black youngsters would find aunuay anu iciiiwiai y nomes - : , v- , , ,1 night bus service, Irt fact ,- Following a 4 p.m. press conference, Clements a company transit of- ipcak at a Community Forum at the Russell '? ficial testified in hearings Memorial Church. His topic wUl be the "Church, last Friday before the and tne FamijyM, . , utilities commission that 0n Saturday morning, Clements will keynote the j since 1973, the company ooenjn session at 9 a.m. and also conduct one of has been betore tne tne tw0 concurrent workshops on the program. His i of Seagram employees. Durham - City Council worksnop wiU , bc entitled, "The Church 'il Since the, program' about forty times re-1 Resource and Advocate''. The second worksnop is i inception in 1 961 , ove personnel responsible for federal and will .contract compliance pro grams,, equal .employ ment, opportunity and policies, pertaining'' to training, promotion and evaluations of perfor- mance. Bass' joined R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Com pany after a 23-year military career during which he rose . to the , grade of lieutenant col onel. Bass is a graduate of the University of Letters from St. Augustine's College, and. in 1982, he was awarded a third Doctor . of Humane Letters from Livingstone College, Salisbury; Bass is a member of uic- university v , - , . j. s' . . .. i . . . thi hnarrt of directors Of power Development Corporation and Pied mont Federal Savings and Loan Association, , and is a trustee of North BASS several honorary doc-. torates. In 1977, Bass received a Doctor of Humane Letters degree from King ' Memorial College, Columbia, S.C. In 1981, he was awarded a Doctor of Humane Carolina University. A&T State lpiGroyf .or Not To Grow Is the Question, Good Public Transportation Is the Issue ' i ; -' - " Analysis questing changes Documents, many a Documents, many oi workshop will cover things to look for when placing them letters from .Duke a chid m an adoptive home, as well as things not to i officials, that were in- be overly concerned about. Each workshop is alsoi troduced as evidencejn scheduled for afternoon sessions. , the hearing, suggest that 5-Basically, according to Ms. Gloria Hawkins, a.: over the last ten years, member of the sponsoring Organization and a i ridership has decreased, chapel Hill social worker, the program will address; losses ; have mounted, the entrc xssuiS 0f ad0ption. Participants, for exam- a service i . hasj , f becn piC wju iernt not only how serious the problem is '' ;; significantly reduced and concerning the placement of black youngsters, but': little marketing or pro- as0 jearn now t0 g0 about becoming an adop- : . motion efforts were, in-tjve fjunjw - rtiated. , ' ' ; The Triangle Chapter of the National Associa- .The effect of one or tion of Biack Social Workers is a ten-year-old,; the other is hard to pin-. organization, composed mostly of social workers, point because each side Dut open to all human rights professionals and ad- uses the same evidence to vocates. , entitled, "Placement Issues and Concerns". This By Milton Jordan Across the nation, urban experts say that effec tive, efficient mass transit plays a major role in ur ban revitalization and growth. ,, Durham's urban experts apparently disagree. This disagreement appears to contradict much of the current discussion among local municipal of-, ficials and urban planners about Durham's bright future as a renewed, vibrant urban center. On the one hand, city officials, especially elected officials, talk glowingly about "moving Durham off dead center", and passionately urge citizens to "invest in the city's future". ' On the other hand, these same officials allowed Duke Power Company to eliminate nighttime bus service in Durham, continuing a, pattern of service reductions that has plagued Durham since 1973. This pattern features Duke Power complaining that providing good bus service is too costly and im provements are out of the question. But, Duke Power; also provides the city's electrical services. That is apparently too lucrative to sacrifice. So the compromise is to cut bus service. . Duke Power, a public utility, owns two municipal bus systems Durham and Greensboro r giving those cities ; the only privately Owned public transportation systems in the state. All others are municipally owned and operated as a public service. In Durham, bus service is tied to electrical power and contracted to Duke Power under two franchise agreements. , In the past, Duke Power has tried to give the system to the city, but city officials have ignored the offer. Thus Durhamites are caught in a type of ur ban Catch-22. The city won't provide mass transit, and it won't make Duke Power do a better job. The contradiction is blatant. ' For example, to sell the idea that Durham citizens should support a $10.5 million bond proposal to build a downtown civic center as a magnet to attract more inner city development, city officials point to Charlotte, In the Queen City, officials say their civic center did in fact have a major impact on spur ring downtown growth, but they say something else , ..as well.'.M::'Vvv-V' ;: ' y,:- ,v :v ,: v- : "This city would definitely be less of what it is to day without our transportation system,'.' says Mead Telfair, a transportation marketing specialist with retired Seagram . Charlotte's Transit Department, "and an ag- employees and in the top .grcssive marketing program is absolutely essen ial to a viab' ; transportation system.' ; The vontradiction could be costly. . , r' "To really analyze the value of a viable transit system, you have to consider what would happen if you didn't have it," explained Doug Sharer, the Ur ban Frosram Manager with the N.C. Department Applications ' vv are', pf Transportation. "And when you factor in,,f for reviewed by the Seagram ; example, parking lots that you don't have to build, (Continued On Page 4) streets jrou don't have to widen and people. who' Seagram Announces 1982 Scholars NEW YORK Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., has announc ed the 1982 recipients of i its annual scholarship awards. Two New York residents, Justin and Richard DeJean, twins, are among the 12 students receiving . full, four-year, scholarships. ; The Seagram Scholar ship, covers tuition and academic fees at the col lege of the recipient's choice in the U.S. or Canada. The DeJean ."twins haye been accepted by Columbia University in New York, Both plan I to v pursue .engineering I careers'. , ' - I After receiving more 1 than 75 applications, the Seagram Scholarship Committee, comprised of v four ; academic representatives, selected the DeJean fwins in addi tion to 10 other children s over 100. students have been awarded scholarships and attended 80 different colleges. 1 To be eligible ap plicants y. must be the children of present or half of their graduating class. Mrs. Colette De Jean, mother of the twins, is a keypunch operator at Seagram in New York. . would be immobile without the bus system, you begin to see that it is worth more to the city than it costs." The contradiction could deal a death blow to Durham's proposals for growth and development. Former New York Mayor, John Lindsay, writing in a late 1981 issue of USA Today, said simply: ". . . .a decent transit system is basic to urban economic growth and to public safety." . In Detroit, where he has presided over a massive revitalization effort, Mayor Coleman Young echoes a similar sentiment. "... .accessibility to and within this urban area always has been essential, and now, new transit studies and agreements with suburban governmen tal units have finally produced a mass transit system plan that will assure convenient, inexpensive and ef ficient public transportation plus a direct road to our economic revitalization." And DOT's Sharer says: "When you look at Charlotte, Winston-Salem and Raleigh, other ma jor urban centers, you can easily see that an effi cient and effective public transit system is a vital part of the city's growth and development." But just because the current contradictions could be expensive, and create major headaches for Durham, one should not infer that getting and operating the bus system would be easy or inexpen sive. - V.'. V V '. "'.' "'. A .t V By 1984, there will be no federal money to sub sidize public transit systems. Local transit systems will need increased revenues, either increased fares, or more tax subsidy just to maintain levels of ser vices that determine if a system is viable: The key words are "effective" and "efficient". According to Sharer, "effective" refers to just how much service a transit system offers per dollar. Effi cient refers to how many riders actually get on the bus. :.- :v. By those standards, Durham falls far short of comparable urban areas in providing bus services. For example, during peak hours, according to data compiled for a twelve month period ending September, 1981, Durham has 22 'buses on the streets. Other major urban areas have twice to four times, as many.. Durham's buses ran about 958,000 route miles, while buses in Charlotte ran about 3.8 million route miles. In Raleigh and Winston-Salem, buses ran 1.5 million and 1.6 million route miles, respectively. But the fact that Durham Has a poor bus system gets almost no argument from anyone. Neither is it seriously argued that Duke Power does not market the local system, does not, in other words, try to get more riders. No, the real question is can Durham ever become a major urban center without ' a good transi system'? v - . j ti . Across the nation, experts say no. In Durham, city officials, say, in effect!, "We hope so." I ' Itseems that only time wQl tell who Is. right. . '