PI 1ST I ______ Price: 40 Cents Mrs. Walk iftii iifrs Phifer Charlotte Meek Pub Library 310 N. Tryon St Charlotte, N.C. 28202 «r Hacks Urged To Bitter $7 Billion . J —» y y* ft , ic *■>. * Gaming Field ..Lot Angeles - Minority oppor tunity in the $7 billion gaming industry was the topic of a recent breakfast workshop chaired by Leonard Manning, 43-year-old chief executive Officer of Lottery Tech nology Enterprises (LTE). The forum, which attracted se veral black legislators attending the National Black Caucus of State Legislators Conference, served as a briefing for participants in identi fying areas of minority participation as more states eye lotteries as viable generators of revenue. > » LTE, which was awarded the District of Columbia’s daily num bers game contract, is the only minority-owned firm in the U.S. or in the world to operate an on-line lottery system According to Man ning, his firm's success in pene trating Che gaming industry was possible only through the city’s commitment to minority participa tion. ~§4“^ • “The DJD. government, under the leadership of Mayor Marion Barry, required fun minority participa tion,” explained Manning. “We are the first firm to have the oppor tunity to operate a lottery system and there are considerable more iMMi" Sfi '(• • * fa (tart a ktai warn a* ita tra vel*. Thera la ae telBag where the geai It may 4e wM eteg. Jennifer Alexander .“Beauty of the Week” Jennifer Alexander Is *AnAct»e AU>ung+Lady! By Jalyne Strong Poet Staff Writer She’s a dancer and a musician, athletic and a good student. At only 11 years old Jennifer Alexander is an active young lady. She attends Our Lady Of Con solation and is in the sixth grade. ‘‘I like the way the teachers instruct class. I think we learn more,” reflects Jennifer. “My favorite subjects are math and science,” she ‘tells. Concentration on these subjects are sure to help Jennifer in her long rangd goal of becoming a doctor. “I want to be a pediatrician because I like working with children and I’m good at it,” she admits. For right now Jennifer’s interests include dancing and music among other things. She attends Miss Donna’s School of Dance where she studies ballet, tap and Jazz. After eight years of lessons, Jennifer re veals she’s become very good at her dancing. "I him Jazz beat,” she confesses, “I enjoy the music we dance to.” She explains that in Jazz dancing they use popular music such as Michael Jackson’s and Prince’s. Jennifer developed her musical ability on the clarinet and plays in har school’s band. “I want to learn to play the ptano also,” states Jenni fer. She says it will be easier to learn now that she has two years experi ence with the clarinet. Her in terest In piano was perked by her noticing pianists on television She’s looking forward to the time when the win be able to play before an audience. "1 like belt* in recitals,’* relates Jennifer, who has partici pa ted in s few with her dancing class. "I Ilka to show other people what I’ve learned" JhmoU^kahy^of this week’s third SS must do some pretty fancy ball playing because the Grayson team won every game last year When she has time oat from her many activities Jennifer asys ahe does a little needle point Her mother taught her thi* craft and Jennifer aays aha la atUl a novice at It. Other time la spent talking on the phone to her many girl friends Her beet friends are her parents, Ralph and Kay Alexander, Jenni fer potato out She also has two eider brothers, Ralph and Vernon, who are in their twenties Whpt is it like to have two big brothers? “Boring,” laughs Jennifer. “They’ve both gone away’* ' The people she most admires Are her grandparent*. She says both her JTIKtatnother and grandfather are ’ handicapped. “Ait they take the time to come and get me from school every day.’’'After school Jennifer stays with her grandparents until her parents come home. “I help them clean up and I pick up 'gro ceries for them,” she reveals. Jennifer participated in the Pre Teen Cotillion sponsored by the Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority last year. "We wore yellow gowns with yellow shoes and we modeled bathing suits. We had escorts and danced as a group,” she describes the affair. Part of the festivities presented each young lady who in troduced herself and stated what they like to do, recalls Jennifer. She admits that she is anticipating being In another cotillion this year. Back on the subject of her ambi tion to be a doctor, Jennifer claims she is not nervous about the in tense education required. "I do good in school work,” she states. Her parents are proud of her aspiration, Jennifer adds. “They think it's good that I’m going to take the time to help other people.” Jennifer attends Our Lady Of Consolation Catholic Church. Ol Tough Year Ahead For Black America! Special To The Post A slowing economy, growing fe deral deficits, a volatile labor mar ket, and a wider gap between rich and poor is the forecast of the Black Enterprise Board of Economists in its “Annual Economic Out look for Black America. 1985” in the January issue of Black Enterprise. The report of the nine-member Board,' composed of economists from academia and the private sec tor, looks at overall economic pros pects for black America and ex plores such specific components of the economy as income, employ ment, trade policy, fiscal policy, and the stability of the dollar worldwide. “The largest single economic and social problem facing America today is the ever-widening econo mic gulf between the races,” says Black Enterprise Publisher and Edi tor Earl G. Graves, summarizing the Board’s findings. Although blacks represent 11.7 percent of the population in the U.S., 36 percent are among the poor. This is especially true among the elderly where 21 .percent of all elderly poor are black. W' flftgviljbetwean the hlackmiddle class and the black poor is a se parate and equally difficult issue, further aggravated by the lack of quality education available to most black children and the increasing Earl G. Graves .Summarizes board findings number of single-parent households in the black community. The black middle class is in a mor^ precarious position than its white counterpart, says the Black Enterprise Board. Dr. Glenn C. Loury, Harvard economist and Afro-American, studies professor, remarks, “The black middle class is far more dependent upon two earn ers, and the differences, of course, is the income level of the men within the two communities. ” Since a large proportion of blacks are employed by the manufacturing sector, America’s increased pur chasing of imported steel, automo biles, and textiles is hurting the black labor force. Although U.S. Trade Representative William Brock has said that the U.S. may be forced to impose tariffs on steel imports, Economist Dr. Andrew Brimmer, a Washington-based con sultant and former member of the Federal Reserve’s Board of Govern ors, believes that tariffs would hurt black consumers by forcing them-1° purchase higher-priced domestic goods. One solution the Black Enterprise Board has proposed would be for American industry to take advan tage of technological innovations to lower production costs but maintain black employment. Many blacks are trying to start their own businesses, but the Board acknowledges that securing venture capital can be an uphill battle. “There is capital available for firms that already were financed, but al most without exception, new firms - unless they are spectacular deals or well connected - just can’t break in," says Dr. Alfred E. Osborne, Associate Dean and Director of the M.BCA. Program at UCLA. See ECONOMISTS On Page I4A Black Economists Alarmed By Widening Class Division Special To The Post A widening gap between the eco nomic status of the races - and between the black middle class and the black poor - poses major social problems for America's future warns the Black Enterprise Board of Economists in “The Annual Econo mic Outlook for Black America: 1985’’ in the January issue of Black Enterprise magazine. "One of black America’s great est problems has been that of class division. But never has the distinc tion between the haves and have nots been so marked as in recent years,” concludes the Board of Economists, a nine-member panel of leading black economists from the academic and private sectors. “The largest single economic and social problem facing America today is the ever-widening economic gulf between the races,” says Black Enterprise Publisher Earl G. Graves, a member of the Board of Economists. “If current economic trends are not redirected in a manner that will more equit ably distribute our nation's re sources, more black Americans could find themselves on the lower rung of the economic ladder,” In 1970 blacks made up 29.7 per cent of the people living below the poverty line. Today, WMle blacks represent 11.7 percent of the popu lation, 36 perceprt are among the Men In Untraditional Careers By Loretta Manago Pool Staff Writer Women who were fighting for equal right! made headlines when they worked on jobs as construc tion workers, mechanic* and other male-dominated professions While these bold steps were being made in the work force, quietly and without much ado, men were treading into professions that were long consi dered “women’s work.’’ It has kmc been accepted that most chefs are men and even now, the area of Ahmad Dm let* .Male (tripper opportunity for advancement. "Be fore I came to Southern Bell, I waa in a dead end position and a friend of mine suggested I try the utilities companies. Working here, there’s more chance for advancement, groat benefits and good people to work with, ” cited Page. A* ■ telephone operator. Page’s duties are varied. He handlee emer gency situations, credit card and cota cans, collect calls, paraon-to peraon calls, breif telephone pro blems and tine verification calls. As soon at he has completed servicing a person and disconnects, the tele phone computer switchboard he Rwhwy Page .ATAT operator work* with it lit with another per son needing help “Whtn people find out I’m a telephone operator they have the notion that I just sit and answer the phooeall day I have to look at each incoming call as a different per son with a unique situation, ^■teetsed Page. , 7'7 What makes being a telephone operator a great job for Page is his attitude. Ha takas the position that aa an operator ha is the company’s J contact with people and that he* really is reaching out to touch ‘it three me a grant deal^l •ee MEN On Page ISA M poor. The state of the black family and the lack of adequate education are the major factors keeping blacks at poverty level About 50 percent of U S. black children are being edu cated in the 12 largest inner-city school systems, and, in 1980, three out of five black children were being raised by a single parent, 96 per cent of the time by the mother. The impetus for solving some of these problems will have to come from the black community itself, says Dr. Glenn C. Loury, Profes sor of Economics and Afro-Ameri can Studies at Harvard and a member of the Black Enterprise Board. “The welfare state cannot be the sole solution to the problems of these families as we’re going toward the end of the 20th century The services that are delivered through the Department of Human Services are inadequate." The black middle class itself is in a precarious position, warns Dr. Loury. It is far more dependent on two wage earners than the white middle class, and more in the movement away from tional manufacturing jobs more technological and oriented occupations Dr. Phyllis A. and Co-director of the Relations Section, Management, tute of Technology, number of Jobs will begin to manufacturers plants.