7 VU&k Duke University Library , Newspaper Department : Durham NC 27706 1 : : f&tesn' Words of Wisdom "The love of liberty is the love of ethers; the fort of power is the love of ourselves." WftJani HttHtt VOLUME 58 - NUMBER 11 DURHAM,. NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, MARCH 15,1980 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913, PRICE: .39 CENTS llJ ro urn? cyiipF ifum Vernon Jor dan, Jr. , Elected To Board of R.J. Reynolds W I NSTON SALEM Vernon Jordan Jr., president of the Na tional Urban League, was elected to the board of directors of R.J. Reynolds Industries, Inc., last week. Jordan has headed the Urban League-since 1972. The league, with Il6 af filiates, four regional of fices, Washington opera tion and New York head quarters, is engaged in the securing of equal oppor tunities for blacks and other minorities. Before joining the Ur ban League, Jordan was executive director of the United Negro College Fund. He also has held positions with the Southern Regional Coun cil, the federal Office of; Economic Opportunity, and the National Associa-, tion for the Advancement of Colored People. A native of Atlanta, Georgia, and currently a resident of New York Ci ty, Jordan earned a bachelors degree from De Pauw University, and a r JORDAN law degree from Howard University Law School. In addition, Jordan is a , fellow, of the Institute of Politics, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. Jordan's ac complishments have earn-' ed him numerous civic and professional honors, in-, eluding honorary degrees , from many prestigious colleges and universities around the country. He also received the Alexis de Tocqueville Award of the United Way of America as a tribute to his leadership in voluntarism. Jordan is a director of a number of corporations and organizations, in- i eluding such major enter- j prises as American Ex press Company, Bankers Trust Company, M.I.T. Corporation, The Atlanta University Center, J.C. Penney Co. and Xerox Corporation. R.J. Reynolds In dustries, with head quarters in ' Winston Salem, is the parent com-' pany of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.; Del Monte, Corp. (processed foods and fresh fruit); R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Inter national, Inc.; Aminoil USA, Inc. (energy); Sea Land Industries, Inc. (containerized shipping); RJR Foods, Inc. (convenience foods and beverages); aod RJR Ar cher, Inc. (packaging). UDI Community Development Corporation has. added three employees as a means of expanding and improving the capabilities of the staff to cover three project areas in its economic develop ment strategy for the Durham community. The project areas are: (I) Development of the In dustrial Park; (2) Rehabilitation Program (curently being developed) and; (3) Monitoring of current ventures. Mrs. Lottie Hayes Killett has assumed the position of Administrative Assistant and Fiscal Of ficer. Mrs. Killett is a native of Havelock, previously employed as Director of Admissions and . Financial Aid at Durham College. Her work experiences include the Foundation for Com munity Development, the North Carolina Fund and -.Oneati,oitLBrtaiajuetlfi She has a B.S. degree in ' Business Education from North Carolina Central University. Edward Conners, employed as Business Analyst, is a MBA and is a candidate for a Master of Science degree in Planning at the University of Ten nessee. Prior work ex periences include working with a revitalization pro gram for the city of Lon don, Tennessee and in the areas of marketing and planning in Knoxville, Tennessee. He will be responsible for developing and im plementing a program designed to revitalize a designated impact area within Southeast Durham. Emphasis will be on the restoration of a selected commercial district. Ms. Vivian Henderson Presidential Candidates Ignore Plight of Blacks By Norman Hill If the recent presidential primary campaigns in New Hampshire,. Maine and Iowa are a preview of things to come, then black people indeed all Americans have a great deal to worry about. I am not talking about the results of those primaries. Rather, I am disturbed that virtually all the can didates have consicously avoided any serious discussion of the real pro blems of our time, pro blems like black unemployment, chronic inflation, trade policy, the fiscal crisis of urban centers. My point, I believe, is well illustrated by political events in New Hampshire. Judging by what the media focused on there, one might conclude that today's most critical issues ' are Ronald Reagan's sense ; of humor, George Bush's attitudes about debates, Ted JKennedy's family life and Jimmy Carter's per sonality. On the rare occasions j' when issues did receive some attention, virtually ! all the candidates dealt ' with them vaguely and' with broad, meaningless generalities. On the Republican side, for ex ample, candidates talked about need to bake a larger "economic pie," the desirability of massive tax cuts, and the goal of a greatly reduced govern ment. However, all of these proposals, no matter how eloquently stated, are little more than empty rhetoric. They provide some hints about the possible direction of a Reagan, Bush, or Baker Administration, voters can hardly make in telligent political choices solely on hints and impres sions. Similarly, ihe Democratic candidates have also failed to offer any substantive or well formulated economic or social proposals. Aside from an occasional disagreement about wage price controls and gas ra tioning, the Democrats have limited themselves to nebulous discussions about leadership qualities, administrative talent, and personal integrity. These issues are, of course, im portant. But they are not the key questions confron . ting America. As things stand now, there is no reason to ex- will serve as secretary and rpiioruuiSh:mies to ; UDICDC from the City ' of Durham Employment and Training Office, where she served as a clerk-typist. She is a graduate of Durham High . School and is currently a student at Durham Technical Institute where she is on the Dean's List- In further explanation of the activities at UDI CDC, Ed Stewart, Ex ecutive Director stated that UDI-CDC, operating with Federal, State and Private Funds, completed the infrastructure of its 41 acre Industrial Park and a 33,000 square foot facility for its first tenant in August, 1979. The in frastructure included pav ed streets and gutter, water and sewage lines, gas and underground elec trical wiring to make it the most developed industrial site in the area. The first tenant in the Industrial , Park is Automatic Systems Developers who manufacture ' electrical components and employ 125 persons. UDl-CDC's venture in vestments include a con struction company and an injection molding com pany that supplies plastic parts for many major cor porations on a local and national scale. Details of the revitaliza tion project are not specific enough for full disclosure. The strategy involves a development process to address certain commercial development needs within UDI-CDC's designated impact area. The project should be ready for implementation this summer. if lit (A ns t Vi si INSIDE THIS WEEK Complete TV Listings Including HBO Entertainment Section 16 Pages Dr. Cobb's Statement Wilmington Ten Case Page 2 City Schools Only One-Seventh White Page 2 Senator Whichard Heads Cancer Crusade Page 12 Vera Marable Gets . Promotion At Kraft Page 12 Durham Native Honored In N.J. Page 15 Omega Psi Phi Plans Fifth, Annual Mardi Gras Festival Beta Phi Chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity will hold its Fifth Annual Mardi Gras Festivities during the week of March 24-29. Omega Round-up ..will Jake ..placA on; WtffWes-,,,, day , March 26;" a "Queen contestants' reception; a Fashion Show sponsored by the Quettes on Saturday, March 29 and the Marui Gras Grand Ball on March 29 at the Durham Civic Center. Proceeds from the acti vities are used to support the Omega's community service program. Funds from past Mardi Gras acti vities have been used to send needy children to summer camp; provide needy families with Thanks giving baskets; support needy families at Christmas and to provide assistance to local high school bands. The fraternity has made a. pledge of $250,000 to the United Negro College Fund over the next two and a half years. The public is invited to participate in the Mardi Gras activities and should contact any member of the frfitprnttv fnr tirWpK n x V MS. HENDERSON V t V 4 ;:.t. V - l J' '.$ v 9 .V FINALIZING PLANS FOR OMEGA FESTIVAL - From left. Dr. Tyrone Baine, chairman of the Publicity Committee; Clyde Thorpe, chairman of Mardi Gras Committee; and George Quiett, Basileus, Beta Phi Chapter, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, work on the final plans for the frat's Fifth Annual Mardi Gras Festivities to be held during the week of March 24-29. Time Funds Book Publishing Program At Howard University NEW YORK-Time Inc. has granted $61,000 to Howard to help start a new book publishing in stit.tite? there, it was an-Boufleei:4.y- MfcHJoafl-D . Manley, Group Vice President of Time Inc.'s book publishing operations. The fundSvill be used, Mrs. Manley said, to set up an intensive, Five week course to acauaint students with the basic tasks of book publishing. According to Charles F, Harris, Executive Director of Howard University Press, the program's cur riculum will include lec tures and workshops on the role of the editor, book and jacket design, production and typography, and marketing and financial managen.ent. It will run from the last week of May through the first week of July. Harris explained: "The . Institute- will "Strive par ticularly to recruit minori ty group members in order to increase fhe oppor tunities for access of minorities into the publishing field. Recruit ment will be mounted on a national basis, with a special effort made to recruit students from predominantly black col leges and larger univer sities located mainly in the east and southeast." Total enrollment will be approx imately sixty students. In making the grant, Mrs. Manley said, "We are very pleased to be able to help fund this in novative program. For some time now, Time" Inc., has been searching for ways to encourage minorities to enter the book publishing field. (Howard -University's Book Publishing Institute is an important step in this direction." Time Inc., a diversified communications and forest products company with headquarters in New York, owns and operates several book publishing subsidiaries. The largest, Time-Life Books, Inc., is located in Alexandria, Virginia, not far from Howard University's Washington, D.C. cam pus. Little, Brown & Company of Boston and New York's Book-of-the-Month Club are Time Inc.'s other major publishing subsidiaries. Fund Will Be Nearly At End Dy May 31 WASHINGTON -Food Stamp benefits for close to twenty million Americans may be suspended June 1, Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland said last week. In a letter to the fifty gjvernon, the District of olumbia, and the U.S. territories, Bergland said he has advised Congress that funds for food stamp benefits will be nearly gone by the end of May. "Unless Congress appro- Eriates additional funds by lay 15, 1 wiD be forced to order a suspension of food stamp benefits effective June 1 " Bergland said. The food stamp program is running out of money, according to Bergland, because the legislative cHl ing on expenditures for fiscal year 1980 was set at $6189 billion. That figure established by Congress in , 1977, was based on predic tions that unemployment would average S.7 per cent in fiscal year 1980 and that food prices would increase thirteen per cent from fiscal year 1977 to 1980. Each one per cent in crease in unemployment adds 750,000 to one million people to the program, while a one per cent increase in inflation adds $58 million to food stamp costs, Bergland said. .rSftjo extfemety tight Con gressional schedule and re quirements of the budget ary process complicate the food stamp situation, Berg land said. Although the Senate has approved legis lation to remove the cap on food stamp spending and the House Agriculture Com- iiuiicc wmpieieu us wor on the measure Wednesday, action will still be needed on the House floor and in the Appropriations Com mittees of both houses. But the actual appropri ation of more money for food stamps may not be possible unless and until Congress passes a third bud- Continued on Page 5 Dr. R. F. Mettler Appointed National Chairman Of UNCF Drive For '80 CONNERS MRS. KILLETT Dr. Ruben F. Mettler, Chairman of the Board of TRW Inc., has been ap pointed National Cam paign, Chairman for the 1980 annual drive of the United Negro College Fund. Dr. Mettler suc ceeds Lewis W. Foy, Chairman of Bethlehem Steel Corporation. "As a businessman and as a citizen, 1 am deeply concerned with the soar ing unemployment of minority youngsters," said Dr. Mettler. "The black colleges supported by the United Negro Col lege Fund have tradi tionally offered minority and Financially needy young people a quality education and the founda tion for a secure future. We are at a point in the history of our nation when we must not only assist in the survival of the schools, but we must see that they are strengthened. We can not afford to do other wise." The United Negro Col lege Fund is the largest na tional black fund-raising organization in the United , States. Its 41 private, predominantly black col leges and universities enroll some 50,000 students annually. In announcing Dr. Met tier's appointment, Christopher F. Edley, Ex ecutive Director of . the ':. i W I 'X' 1 I' ' -1 " u' -" h United Negro College Fund, praised his ac complishments and his leadership ability. "Ruben Mettler is a thoughtful and articulate man who has played a key role in the success of many public and private endeavors. Wc believe that his strong leadership and unquestionable dedication will be a valuable asset for our campaiun. We are proud that 'v. has placed the United Mcio College Fund a.-, one of his top priorities," said Edley. DR. METTLER Dr. Mettler was elected Chairman of the Board and CEO of TRW Inc. in1 December 1977, after serv-' ing as president for eight years. In June, 1978, he" also became Chairman of the Executive Committee. He is a graduate of the California Institute of Technology, from which he also received his M.S. degree and Ph.D. degree in ' Electrical and Aeronautical Engineering. Dr. Mettler recently served as National Chair man of the National Alliance of Business, an organization to help train and find private jobs for the disadvantaged. Previously, he was on the Advisory Committee for the UNCF's Cleveland campaign and he con tinues to serve in manv other national and local capacities: Board of Ad visors of the Council for Financial Aid to Educa-' tion; Trustee, National Safety Council; the Cleveland Clinic Founda tion, and the Nationr. Fund for Minority Engineering Students; member of the Policy Committee of the Business Roundtable,Th Business Council, The Board of Trustees and Research and Policy Committee of the Committee for Economic Development, the Emergency Committee for American Trade, and the Rockefeller University Council, among others. The money raiseefby the UNCF's annual fund drive is used to help operate and maintain the organization's 41 member colleges and universities. According to a recent survey, half of the students at these; schools, come from families earn ing $9,000 or less annual ly. - Graduates of the UNCF schools include such noted public figures as U.S. Treasurer Atie Taylor Morton; U.S. . Solicitor Continued oa Page 3