4 THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1982 UAACP JACKSON, MISS. NAACP representatives fronv across, the nation went into the small town of Port Gibson on Thursday, July 29. to celebrate a victory of freedom. It was a victory that came 14 years after local white merchants fil ed a $1.25 million suit against the national NAACP and more than 100 local residents who had participated in a boycott against their stores. Now, the weight of the ominous judgment had been lifted by the U.S. Supreme Court freeing the properties and bank accounts of many of the local defendants as well as the national NAACP of any responsibility for conducting what was allegedly an illegal boycott. So. in a manner befitting the historical nature of the occasion, the townsfolk celebrated. Named To API Board Of Visitors The high point of the day-long program . in . Port Gibson was the mass meeting that night " in the First Baptist Church, located at the - entrance to the town square. The First Baptist Church was an ap propriate place for the program to end. for it was there in 1969 that local w"hite policemen fired shots into the midst of a packed protest meeting, killing a black resident. The merchants filed suit for $3.5 million in damages as a result of a" series of earlier boycotts and the demonstrations that resulted from the killing. The mass meeting in the church became much more than a celebration of the Supreme Court's judgment. jt mid-point in the program, young relatives and associates of 34 deceased resident who were leaders of the civil, rights struggle in Claiborne . County, lighted candles in - memory of .: those ' who were no !'. longer alive. Port Gibson is the coun ty seat . of Claiborne County. . .- The program of celebrat ion was led by NAACP executive direc . tor. Benjamin L) Hooks, Mrs. Margaret . Bush Wilson, chairman of the NAACP national board of the directors; Aaron Henry, member of the national board, and local residents. For Mrs. Wilson, who launched the drive to raise the $1.6 million that was needed to post a bond to protect the association's assets after the Mississippi chancery' court handed down the jdugment in August, 1976, the program was especially poignant. She recalled the massive na tional drive th'at awaken ed NAACP supporters' and friends to the crisis. Afi a result, the NAACP raised the full amount that was needed to cover the bond. vi NAACP associate general counsel Charles Carter, who led the (association's defense . during the nine-month ; trial, explained 1 that because of the nature of the case, he could not help but become per sonally involved with his -clients. Such involve ment was unavoidable, he noted, when the cir cumstances of the case were considered' ; . As an example,' he read a portion of . the' transcripts that were sub mitted to the Supreme Court. "This was "; the testimony of Ms.;', Julia Johnson. To S; Carter's question, "How did you observe the boycott," she responded: "I just stayed out of the store because I had , my own personal reasons to stay out of the stores. There were some things I really wanted. And things I wanted were the right to vote, the right to have a title. Mr. and Mrs., or whatever I am, and not "uncle," pr "aunt or "boy' or "girl."- Wo that's what I wante I. And if I wanted a jo , and qualified for the jo , i. I wanted to have the o -; portunity to be hired" n t , because I am black r 'white but just hired." i'r Question: "And this was . your . reason for observing the boycott?" "Answer: "Yes, it. was. ) 7 Question: "You were in favfor of the boycott?".; Answer: "Yes, I was in favor of the boycott,? v Ms. Regina Duval, a local, expert qn Port Gib son history, rejoiced that, as a result of the in creased political awareness of blacks who represent 76 per cent of the county population, Black Theatre In Durham Poses A "To Be Or Not To Be" Question B Josephine Scarlett " To bo or no! ; iV" mas. not he a dilemma cclusie io Shakespeare's Hamlet. Black dramatists in the Durham area must also ponder that question in regard lo their careers. "The only on-going black theatre in this area is at Central," said Johnny Alston, assistant professor of dramatic art at North Carolina C en tral University. Accor ding to Alston, the Durham area lacks a theatre organization, other than the program at NC(T), that constant ly produces plays written by black playwrights that have roles for black ac tors. Alston attributes the low production rate of black plays in this area lo the commercialization of the theatre. Before a theatre or organization will produce a play, tfcere must be evidence of au dience interest to ensure that the play will be pro fitable. "Community theatres too must con sider what is successful,'.' Alston said. F.specially organizations that use professional people." Bud D. Winter, presi dent of the Theatre Guild, says that his organization uses a for mula to determine whether they will pro duce a play or not. "We have a play reading com mittee that helps decide oif the plays, we accept, suggestions from out side," he said, "and we pass out questionnaires lo the audience that ask which plavs thev want to see." The Theatre Guild, which is financed in part by the Durham Arts Council, produces one play of four yearly by a "minority" playwright. ST. MARK'S NURSERY SCHOOL " Registration August 9-20, 1982 FALL SESSION BEGINS - August 23, 1982 Age 2 Years NURSERY Qualified Teachers State Licensed Participant In The Child Food Program , 6 Years KINDERGARTEN 1 ST GRADE t Hot Balanced Meals At No Cost I Transportation Available 688-2092 531 S. Roxboro Street 682-7881 Open 6:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Monday Friday Noa-INwrimtailory Oa Ran. Color, Nttloul (klllii. Ait. Sn or Haadirap MOM PLEASE Lett Us Km w At LEAST 3 weeks in ADVANCE! Then we can keep your copy coming without interrup tion. ' When you don't let us know and we have to wait for the Post Office to notify us, you miss your copies and we have to pay 25 C for every copy the Post Office returns to us. . Quite often the Post Office will not notify us. im mediately that you have even filed an address change with them. Sometimes it is four months before they will notify us and then they will send a big stack of returned papers for the same person - costing us 25C each. This drives up operating costs. We're asking you to help us Hold costs down and serve you better at the same time. We need your old address AND your new address. We need the name that appears on your label. If you want that changed too. give us the old name AND the new name. Don't forget Zip Codes. ; In Advance and well keep up w&h you! meaning Hisnanics. and other Minority blacks-women groups. Since audience interest is a factor that theatres consider before produc ing a play, there must be an audience in order to measure audience in terest. But if there arc only a few black plays produced in the area .each year, how can in terest develop enough vn the black community to create "an interested black audience?"", Alston contends that the "black audience" in the Durham area must be built . "The 'companies that work out of recrca-' lion centers build the au dience and we can start from there." he says. Step two, aflcrHbcau-, dience is establishedor growing, would be the creation of the com munity theatre which Alston says is hard lo form because of finances. "You'll have to have people who arc dedicated lo the arts. But even to soph i st cat ed com mim i t y , finances are important," he said. "The dramatic arts program at NCCO docs not share that pro blem because of its sup port from the state." There is no lack of talent in the Durham area, but playwrights have a hard time getting the exposure necessary to develop a career. While theatre groups and organizations in this area lean toward popular plays and those that create a busy box office. pose some of the rich material of black life that exists in the fields of drama, dance and music. Alston sees the educa tional advantage of black theatre. He inter prets education in the theatre as an opportunity to learn from the life ex periences of other peo ple. "When people are in a situation to experience things they don't or dinarily experience, to have the interaction with other people," he said, t hey-come out to be well rounded individuals." 'Whatever 'the playwright suffers, so docs the actor. Alston 'i says'", that students in terested in the technical aspects of theatre, such as lighting and sound, have more opportunities than the students of ac ting and directing. He recommends that aspir ing actorsactresses leave this area" arid go on to ' Broadway or graduate school. "Alston suggests that playwrights in this area bring their work to the university which could prove as an avenue of ex P o s u r e . The fact is that English society, in the 17th and 18th centuries, refused to bury dead ar tists and today black ar tists in the Durham area have only a slim chance of seeing their works borne onto the stage. As for those who wish "to be" actorsactresses, they could be better off going somewhere else to make a living. I 1 111 I1lllri orlii-l nil but left out in the cold. MltCnGll "Occasionally we pro- , . ' ducc local playwrights."' (Continued from page 3) ; said Winter, "but we. artificial when these in tend to use popular creases are attributable plays.' The cycle continues while there arc, not only black playwrights, but actors actresses, . and technicians in the Durham area who arc capable of producing; black theatre produc tions and have something to say as well. "There arc people who havc.thc expertise, said only to the performance ' of 8(a) contracts which are by n,p means perma nent sources of income, as this latest maneuver demonstrates." Mitchell stated, "I have . received over 200 telegrams, letters and telephone calls in less than three days pro testing this unreasonable and inequitable situa- Alston. "Some of them ) lion. As a result of this aren't involved at this massive community out lime, most arc cry, I have initiated teachers." discussions with the Why all the fuss about White House, SBA, black theatre? Since Members of Congress William Wells Brown l and the minority published "The Escape: business community." or, A Leap for Freedom" in 1858, black artists have attempted to express" their experience in America. Langston Hughes, in his essay "The Need for an Afro American Theatre," contends that black theatre must exist for two reasons: to open up avenues of expression "for us all," and to ex- SCNTRri Flea A Tick Collar To date, neither the White House nor Ad- minis! rator Sanders has responded in a positive fashion. SBA is consistently ac ting to deny economic parity for minority businesses. Programs for economic advancement are being sabotaged by those very persons who, by law, are directed and charged with respon sibility for their proper implementation. SBA's failure to stop these kinds of , abuses is testimony enough to its lack of commitment to the economic revitaliza- tion or this nation in 2$ tf- -32 countywide positions are now held by members of the race. When ; the boycotts began, blacks were com pletely locked out of those positions. , "Thanks to the perseverance . ' of volunteers among us,"; she said, "me .have' con- sistently progressed v to political parity." 'y l v Earlier in the .day, Hooks led a rousing rally and march? in the town ' before returning to Jackson to join a small group - of - NAACP leaders in' having lunch with Mississippi Gover-! nor William Winter in the governor's mansion Making the Most of Leftovers ; If SIMMONS . Dont throw away that extra cornbread. Or thoie biacuita. Crumble them mix in a bowl and cover aecarely with plastic wrap. Uae tpiem aa a basis for poultry stuf fing. Your family wQl love the taste and you 11 enjoy the savings on your food budget. - Leftover vegetables, wise ly saved, can combine to be come part of a nutritious meal. Refrigerate, covered with plastic wrap, and add to a basic beef stew. It's al most like getting a meal "on the house." ' Smart homemakers are praising the anti-fog feature of Reynolds Plastic Wrap, newly introduced by Rey nolds Aluminum. It removes the mystery from covered bowls in the refrigerator. Reynolds has been making the same wrap for the food service industry for the past 20 years. BLACKSBURG, VA. Dr. S. Dallas Sim mons, president of Saint Paul's College in Lawrenceville, Virginia, has been appointed to the board of visitors of The Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (VPIJ. The 4-year appointment was announced by Gov. Charles. Robb. . The I4-member board ' of visitors is the govern ing body bf VPI whiph was founded in 1872 and now has an enrolment of 21,000 students. Black Business Must Go After Mainstream Money By Donald Alderman RALIEGH Reflec ting the sluggish American economy, black business owners watch the bottom line a lot more closely today. Many of them have put expansion plans on a back shelf, halted new hiring for the moment and some are even, laying' people off. Most of them also say they are; wat ching costs a lot,, more closely, and trimming wherever they can. In other words, black businesses are being rocked with the same mainstream business problems that other firms are suffering. Blacks who want to go into business must have an equally tough row! Borrowing ' money from banks and other lending institutions is often like trying to pull hen's teeth. Investors are scarce. But even when these entreprenuers get the start up capital they need, they then must bat tle with tradition to con vince black arid white consumers that the pro ducts and services marketed by black business operators are of high quality and com petitively priced. But that's not all. Market development is a rigorous task, and do ing business with govern ment and large corpora tions is even harder. In other words, black businesses today suffer with . business whether they operate in : the mainstream or not. And since that is true, the question becomes why not operate in the mainstream. The pro blem is how to best do that? About 300 black business ' owners began sorting through that maze of problems and questions last week, dur ing a daylong confab at : Raleigh's McKimmon Center on the campus of N.C. State University. 'The meeting was spon sored by the N.C. , Association of Minority Business, an organiza tion that has both business memebers and members that are business organizations. According to most of the conferees, one of the biggest problems plagu ing black businesses is mismanagement stemm ing from a lack of ex perience. The ,; conference's primary focus was to develop strategies designed to alleviate most business problems and to draw closer ties between the state's eight black business leagues. The delegates decided that - the individual leagues could best tackle , business problems on the association think they're in a good position to make state government work better for black businesses, especially small contfactors. The association attracted the attention of Gov. Jim Hunt and Secretary of Commerce D.M. Faircloth, both of whom said they would support the group's efforts. But even with that potential help, the association must work to get the house of black business in order. . Black business needs a stronger capital base, ac cording to Donald Baker, art official with the state's Minority Business Development Agency, which helped tie' association get started' about 18 months ago. He says black businesses need to pool resources to start joint ventures. It is clear that better communication and trust between the state's black businesses is necessary to do that, but getting the money poses another problem. Baker says black business operators should reorder- their priorities. "You know, hold off . on the Mercedes and put ; the money in a money market," he suggests for example. Most ways sug gested were simple, but conference organizers conceded that a careless, spendthrift attitude mainstream represents a major nrnhlems obstacle to black capital , ... . ucveiupiiiciii. They pointed to the $150 billion gross na tional income of blacks, noting that about $2 billion can be attributed to black business receipts. economic concerns. But many contend that the perceived inferiority of black businesses again leads back to a lack of experience and is a perception that can be corrected. "All we're saying is give us a chance," said Larry Shaw of the Fayetteville-based Shaw Food Services. "We have the ability and its a matter of time now," suggesting that the black entrepreneur is about to enter a new booming era. Julian Brown, a state procurement specialist, sees better communica tion and information sharing as the beginning of that boom. In the con struction industry, where competition for large government contracts is heavy, he says, black sub-contractors have made gains. Though bonding small firms remains difficult, he says small bonding firms are cropping up now making it less dif ficult for small blact sub-contractors to ge more business. A welcomed changi from the past, Browi says, black firms are get ting more professional, keeping up-to-date iinancial and personnel records, which is impor tant for bonding, and us ing information such as market studies more. "Its all about sharing information, Brown says. "You have to throw yourself in that environment. You have to make contacts, par ticipate in . social, political and civic affairs." And, plied, business Speaker as Brown, im blacks need exposure, after sneaker I he country is cased isaid it's incumbent upon on money," Baker says, business oeprators to "As long as blacks don't help young dreamers get accumulate money, we started as well as don't have a base." established businesses But lack of capital banding together to spur doesn't carry all the more economic develop blame. ment in the black corn- Off the record, some munity. businessmen talked can- Mrs. Eva Clayton, ' didly about perc ,)tion who ' directs a Raleigh .that black bus tesses consultant firm, agrees, 'market poor qual .y pro- "I think entrepreneurs -ducts and servi es, the, banding together is going poor competiti nature, to be the only vehicle to of the business s and the allow us to accumulate mixing of social and I capital." Physical Fitness: Profile Of Youth American youngsters are the Amateur Athletic Un- not as fit as they should be. Ion. is based on an analysis flat tlta UAvrl iaI ama " or exercise tests conducted general and the minority local level, with the state bus ness commun tv n w'ii narticular.,raccordina to '. n advisory role. Conaressman Mitchell. V .But But 49ken, this same i That's the verdict of one recent physical fitness study, which reveals that only 43 percent of young people in the United States can achieve the physical fitness standards that should be met by ..the average healthy youngster. , Happily, the study also reveals what the average youngster ; can do to. be come more physically fit, through basic exercising. ; ' The Fitness Profile of American Youth, from Na members of the ' Br,nd, Inc-. "d from 1979 to 198) among more . than four million Americans aged six through 17, as part of an ongoing Physical Fitness Program. ; Each year, some four . million boys and girls in -more than 10,000. public and private achoola take part in the Program by per-1 forming a series of exercises that includes distance runs, sprints, long Jumps, high' jumps, situpa, pushups and pullups. , .