— IHI THE CHARLI fTTE POST Ft!7 Charlotte s Fastest Growing Community Weekly" __ VOL. I NO B ^ . ■ CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLlNA-28216-Thursday. August 21. 1975 pripf 20c Photo by Jim Black LOVELY ANN STITT ...Love simple things Miss Ann Stitt • „ Is Our Beauty By Polly Manning Poet Staff Writer “I love the simple things in life. In my spare time I just love to walk through the woods and enjoy nature. These type things are free and aren’t taken advantage of enough," was the reply of our Beauty of The Week, Miss Ann Stitt. When she isn't on the nature trail Ann also enjoys roller skating. ‘‘Although some people think roller skating is for kids, I enjoy it. It’s also a good way to exercise,” smiled Ann. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Stitt of 6020 Carver Boulevard. Hank WUmer Announces tor Mayor Hank Wilmer, longtime Re publican leader in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, Wednesday announced his candidacy for Mayor. The municipal elections in Char lotte will be held on a partisan basis for the first time this year under legislation passed by the recently adjourned General Assembly. In announcing before a group of friends at the Red Carpet Inn, Wilmer said, “The people of Charlotte are calling for new leadership-leadership that will steer the city on a course of quality growth growth that will enrich the lives of all the people in Char lotte.” Wilmer further stated, “The people of Charlotte are calling for a new openness in government-where decisions are made in public view, after candid discussion. ”_ Wilmer promised the people of Charlotte, “A forthright and open campaign. I plan to speak out on the issues as I see them. I plan to take my cam paign to the people. I plan to visit the neighborhoods. Miss Stitt is a 1974 graduate of North Mecklenburg High School. While attending North Mecklenburg she was active in the Girls Athletic Associa tion, Booster Club, whose pur pose was to promote school spirit, and the school News paper. “I was considered somewhat as the feature writer of the staff I wrote stories on various topics that were of interest to the student body as well as the faculty," Ann explained. Now out of high school our beauty finds herself attending Central Piedmont Community College studying accounting. She feels that the field is open especially to women. After completing her studies at Central Piedmont Ann has plans of going to UNC-Chapel Hill to get her masters. When asked why she chose UNC Chapel Hill she replies, “I feel that they have about the best graduate schools of account ing in the Carolinas and I do want to stay within this area." Ann is presently working part-time at All-State Insur ance Company in the Claims Department. She handles accident files and records. She doesn’t have plans of keeping this position after she com pletes school. uur Beauty is born under the sign of Taurus. She states that although Taureans are suppose to be stubborn and selfish, she wouldn’t associate these traits to her own person ality. She does feel that they are independent people. The person having the most influence on the life of Miss Stitt has been her Aunt, Linda Nelson. "I admire her mainly because of the way that she carries herself and because of the tidbits of wisdom that she has passed down through the years,” stated Ann. The Stitt family attends Morning Glade AME Zion Church where Rev. C. C. Rev ell is the minister. Ann is very active on the Junior Choir. West Charlotte’s 1962 Class To Meet Sunday The West Charlotte Class of 1962 will have a business meet ing Sunday, August 24, at the Greenville Neighborhood Cen ter. According to John Love, Class treasurer, the purpose of the meeting is to elect new officers, to plan activities for 1975-76 and to finalize plans for the 1977 class reunion. The meeting will start at 6 p.m. All class members are urged to be attend. ^ Urban League Says" . ^ ' _ ' ■ jt ation Facing Minority Americans School Lunch Price Same As Last Year Fees for Charlotte-Meck lenburg public school students will remain the same this school year except for a slight increase in the optional stu dent accident insurance. The insurance will cost all students-kindergarten through grade twelve~$3.2S, an increase of 25 cents from last year. Although the insur ance is optional, school offi cials strongly urge parents to purchase the added protection for their children. The insurance fee is re quired of all students partici pating in junior and senior high school athletics. In addi tion, a separate insurance fee is required of students partic ipating in senior high school football. The fee is $12.50 for tryouts and an additional $16 for students who make the team. The total premium is $28.50. mere are no required lees at the elementary level. At the junior high level, there is a required instruc tional supply fee which is $7 for seventh grade students and $8 for eighth and ninth graders. In addition, junior high students may rent locks for school lockers at 30 cents per year or 15 cents per stu dent if two share one locker. At the senior high school, required fees for all students include $12 for instrucitonal supplies and $1 for school newspapers. Seniors must pay a $3 graduation fee. Othe£optional fees in senior high school are a school annual fee (to be determined by each school) and a 25-cent lock rental for school lockers. Students at the junior and senior high school level who are taking physical education must purchase uniforms. The cost is $4.25 for boys' and girls’ uniforms. Goode Named Vice President Of 1975 United Way Campaign Seddon Goode Jr., senior vice president of Interstate Secur ities Corporation, has been selected as vice chairman of the 1975 United Way Cam paign. Challenge Grant GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES mark ing the beginning of construction to a new Temple Chapel First Baptist Church Assem bly were held last Sunday at the 100 Septem Photo by Peeler ber Lane site in southwest Charlotte. Rev. F. C. Pinkney, center, shovel earth at the historic occasion as church officer and mem bers of the congregation look on UH) September Lane Temple Chapel Church To Build $325,000 Edifice By JAME PEELER Post Feature Writer Approximately 200 persons braved 93 degree that to be present for groundbreaking ceremonies at the 100 Septem-i ber Lane site of the soon-to-be constructed Temple Chapel First Baptist Church Assem bly. The 46-year-old, 400-mem ber church, pastored by Rev. F. C. Pinkney, was located at 219 Remount Road when it was destroyed by fire last March. According to church pastor Pmkney, the new edifice will be located on a 325 by 150 lot. The two-story, 100 by 50 church will cost $385,000 and will seat 800 persons in its sanctuary, ft will have 6 Sun day School class rooms, a kitchen, a nursery, and a Fellowship Hall on its lower level. Temple Chapel Baptist Church's congregation is pre sently worshiping at Kennedy Junior High School and Rev. Pinkney says the new facility should be completed by Christmas of this year. With the 69-year-old Rev. (Pinkney presiding, the Groundbreaking Ceremony began with a song by one of the church's six choirs. The musical selection was follow ed by prayer by Rev. Pinkney, another song by the choirs, and a scripture reading of the 33 psalm. Rev. Pinkney turned sev eral shovels of earth breaking the gound and he and other members of the gathering marched through a spray of water symbolizing the cross ing of the Red Sea. The Red Sea ceremony was followed by the forming of a hugh circle and the pronouncement of the Benediction by Rev. Pinkney concluding the formal cere monies which began at 3:00 and ended at 4:30 P.M. Temple Chapel Baptist Church Pastor Pinkney is a native of Winsboro, S. C. The widower married to the late Sarah Stillwood who passed 4 years ago. Rev. Pinkney is the father of 12 children; Fred, of Detroit, Mich.; Joe, of Charlotte; Mack of New Port News. Virginia; Curtis, of Virginia; Isiah, of New York;. Elizabeth, of Detroit; Jannie Myers, of Charlotte; Beulah Henderson, of New York, Ernest, of Charlotte; Louise Caldwell, of Charlotte, Eloise Boyd, of Charlotte, and the late Missouria, of Char lotte. Also present for the historic occasion were church Deacon and Trustee Willie Dewberry and church secretary Sarah Funderburke. B. F. Goodrich Names Walter Blunt EOE Manager Wallen L Blount Jr. has been named manager of equal opportunity employment for The B. F. Goodrich Company. He succeeds William W. Baughman, retired. _O -— J. C. Smith Receives $100,000 Dr. Wilbert Greenfield, President of Johnson C. Smith University, has announced the approval of a challenge grant of $900,000 from the Kresge Foundation to be applied to the construction of an educa tion building. Payment of the grant is conditioned upon the raising of the balance of funds needed for the project by Novemeber 15, 1975. The University hopes to build a facility which will house the entire Department of Education including early childhood, intermediate and secondary education and pro vide an area for an early childhood center. The center will serve as a laboratory where Smith students can gain first-hand experience in work ing with young children The estimated cost is approxi mately $900,000. Projects for the education building have become the number one priority for new construction ar Johnson C. Smith. The Department of Education is presently housed in Biddle Memorial Hall, the administration building, which was constructed in 1882. The Early Childhood Center is located in one of the campus houses. Dr. Greenfield expressed his gratitude for the Kresge grant and Further stated that “Johnson C. Smith University has moved a long way from its historic but necessarily mea ger concept of an education curriculum. Changes are in progress and long range plans are being projected for cont inued future innovations, not only in this area, but in all facets of academic program ming". The Kresge Foundation, one of the largest in the United States in size of assets and appropriations, was created • sojely through the gifts of the late Sebastian S. Kresge. Al though Mr. Kresge was also the founder of the S. S. Kresge Company, the Foundaiton and the Company are not related in any way Most r oundation support is in the form of challenge grants to institutions in the field of education, health services, the arts, social welfare, and care of the young and the aging Construction and major ren novation of facilities is the Foundation's primary con cern. A few policy exceptions, confined to the Metropolitan Detroit area where the Foundation has its headquart ers. have been made solely on the initiative of the Trustees Dr Wilbert Greenfield J. C. Smith president NUL’s Plan To Deal With Unemployment Voice News Network Special To The Post Atlanta--“Working, fight ing, believing, dreaming, let this conference begin. With those words Sunday night form the keynote speech of its director Vernon Jordan, the National Urban League ended its first day of its convention in Atlanta - an intensive four day survey of the critical econo mic situation facing Black and other minority Americans. Minority Contractors Overlooked Of the more than *175 mill ion spent in highway construc tion in the State of North Carolina in the first six months of 1975, minority con tractors received less than one percent of the funds. This and other problems that minorities have in com peting for contracts were highlighted at the recent meeting of the North Caorlina Association of Minority Con tractors (NCAMC) that was held in Charlotte at the NCMAC’s office on North Caswell Road. mi__a i_i_i j . ui^uiig uciu uii nuguai 14 was attended by minority contractors from throughout the state of North Carolina. It was also noted that only 16 minority contractors who are prequalified according to state standards are allowed to bid on state contracts. This was the first meeting of its type where prime contrac tors on the state and federal levels got together to discuss problems and according to officials it proved very profit able. Teddy Morawski, of the Federal Highway Administra tion said that his group has to find minorities and have them identified because there is a provision in each contract to the state that the state will seek our minority contractors. The executive director of the N.C.A.M.C., Herbert Thomas said that he did not believe sincere efforts are being made on the part of majority contractors in seek ing out minority contractors. Ed Hagen of Barnhill Con tracting Company countered with the argument that all this was due to the fact that when a minority contractor obtains a State license, there is noway of identifying him as a minority. Thomas added that with the help of the Department of Housing and Urban Develop ment more than 400 minority contractors in the state have been discovered. I ennui Tourament Set For September 6 Entries are now being accepted for the Greater Cor delia Park Open Tennis Tour nament to be held September 0 and 7 at Cordelia Park in North Charlotte. The event was sponsored by the Cordelia Park Players and several Charlotte businesses. Entry fees are $0. There will be three flights for partici pants. For more information contact Charles Parker 597-3709 or Hal Seegars 334-S940. The conference theme was "Jobs, dollars and race,” and each workshop and plenary session for the estimated 7,000 delegates from Urban League chapters throughout the coun try has emphasized different aspects of the economic de pression now endured by mil lions. “It has been a year of great turmoil, of terrible depression and of hardship for black people," said Jordan, a for mer Atlanta resident. "Nixon is gone but his legacy lingers on.” "That legacy of divisiveness and of economic warfare against poor and working people must be exercised if our nation is to recapture its self-respect. Jordan then unwrapped the NUL's battle plan to deal with unemployment it has dis covered to be far worse than official Labor Department statistics (15 million out of work, a 25 per cent rate of joblessness among blacks). Since the Republican ad ministration and Democratic congress "have both failed black people on the economic front,” said the NUL director, the League is putting forth is own income security pro; gram. c-i i, or me creau income tax, would provide a "floor" under the income of Ameri cans below a certain income level. It would take the form of a cash grant to the jobless and the poor and a tax credit for the working class. “No means tests, no work requirements, no coercive lo cal regulations or other stig matizing elements would be part of the system,” said Jor dan. “Payments are automat ic through the tax system and would be a matter Of right..” "The essential point is that the universal, redundable tax credit offers a way to rationa lize an irrational tax system that favors the rich at the expense of working people and a means of reducing the num bers of the poor,” he went on. The details and economic of the credit income tax plan must be worked out but in the meantime, Jordan said, "we call for an immediate emer gency, federally-financed floor under the present wel fare system with cost of living escalators and mandated coverage for families in need”. CIT, is "a pro-world, pro family. pro-dignity proposal for a humane, responsive so ciety," Jordan said. Jordan, who served on the presidential clemency board which reviewed cases against draft resisters and individuals in the military who had re ceived less than honorable discharges, also sounded the call for "complete, immed iate, universal and uncondi tional amnesty.” *ne legal and economic burdens placed on the backs of millions of young men must be lifted now," he said. "Those who resisted the war should be welcomed back without pena lty. Those with less than honorable should be restored to their full rights and privile ges." "President Ford, who was compassionate enough to par dom Richard Nixon, should also be compassionate enough lo pardon those who were right about an evil was and those whose service for their country has resulted In the unfair, life-long punishment of a bad discharge," the NUL director stated. MIDDLE AGE is when a person starts thinking about resigning from the JET SET and joining the SET JET.