Dl IQ*P V A | I ,N LUCRATIVE * " ~ V JL RLACIC MARKET ununilx " ““ ”‘-4~ % _ ll>ry 10’ 1985 Price: 40 Cents Esaftto Sanford Jr. Dr*. Jon— And - tjjl "Fyu ' T ■ V ■ • I ■Ills Strive To I;»y. jjP ‘«4 tlrjt * * / • noop raiomi won SeeC$*—» Dr. Jerry Jopes Poors Per Women ^^MM_^__StOT2>QnPageJ3A allows her to always be outfitted in the latest, chic fashions However, that’s not the reason Tanya says her mother is her favorite person. “I look up to bar,” she comments concerning her mother, Mattie Studivant. “I take the advise she gives me. After all, they say, ‘mother knows best,”’ Tonya relates. Tonya’s father, Giles Strong, is a supervisor at Johnson C. Smith Uhiversity. “I enjoy the time we spend together,” she adds. About herself, Tonya admits she likes solitude. “I like to be myself,” she points out. “I don’t mingle with big crowds." She wanU most in life to “be happy in the near and far future,” claims Tonya. She would also like to see peace in the world and food supplied for the people of Ethio pia. 1984 Was “Rough tear” ear: Blacks Can No Longer Afford To Be Captive Of One Political Party By Jalyae Post Staff has been a As North Carolina State President erf the NAACP (National Association Peopn, ^]dvan^ient of Co,ore<* “murky.’’ pictur® **|n terms of mainr nrnhljtiriM M pi uuiciiiB, _**■ F*®* * OUl 8100 pjyi, riflhts ’* forcement of ■j Vgv Charlotte Community Leaders e For Dr. Martin L. Kbig’s Birthday Celebration By Loretta Manago Post Staff Writer In less than a week, people all across the country will pay tribute to a great leader, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Marches, memorial pro grams and all types of activities have been scheduled to honor the man who died for equality, who suffered for justice and who taught the whole world the message of love. Charlotte will be no exception. Already, the stage is set for an unforgettable birthday celebration. Beginning Sunday, January 13, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte’s Black Student Union will sponsor a worship and remem brance service at 6 p.m. in Mc Knight Hall. The speaker for the evening will be Dr. Clifford Jones of Friendship Baptist Church. on Monday, January 14, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Community Relations Committee has planned a celebration to commemorate the birth of iJr. King. The seventh an nual Celebration vriffbe heldhtTSttWi Rock AME Zion Church, 401 N. McDowell St. An art exhibit and soup service will set off the evening’s activities. The art work scheduled to be fea tured is the art work of local elementary, junior and senior high school students. This segment of the program will last from 5:30 until 8145 pirn. At 7 p.m. the main program will commence. Dr. Leon C. Riddick, chairman of the Community Rela tions Commitee, will preside over the program. After the prelude by organist Steven Cooper and invoca tion by Rev. William White, the key address will come from five indi DR. MARTIN L. KING JR. ...Slain Civil Rights leader viduals who were prominent in the community’s civil rights struggle. Marion Cannon, Dorothy Scoggins, Charles Jones, Kitty Huffman and Kelly Alexander Sr. are the chosen speakers. Special presentations will be made by Jack Bullard, director of the Community Relations Committee. Also, during the service an offering will be taken and the proceeds will be donated to the Crisis Assistance Ministry, in Dr. King’s honor, to help in its services to the needy of the community. This celebration is being planned in conjunction with Pepsi Cola Bot tling Company of Charlotte, the Afro-American Cultural Center, the local chapter of the National Con ference of Christians and Jews, WBTV, Little Rock AME Zion Church, the Charlotte Area Clergy Association and the Chris tian Ministers' Fellowship The purpose of the celebration i6 to bring together citizens of Charlotte, Mecklenburg County and surround ing communities to pay tribute to Dr. King's memory and to recom mit to his ‘'dream." Johnson C. Smith University’s plans for King’s birthday celebra tion wjll begin Tuesday, January la. A full schedule of events has been set for the day. Beginning at 10 a m., a convocation service will be held at the University Church. The speaker for this event is tentatively Delano Rackard, a local citizen known for his striking rendition of Dr. Martin Luther King's speeches Throughout the day, an art exhi -bit featuring works of King and other works of black artists taken • from the university's library will be showcased. from 12:30 p.m. until 3 pjji., a film festival will be held in the Science Hall, room 107. Film clips of Dr. King in various phases of the civil rights movement will be high lighted At 3 p.m. the Lyceum Dance Group will present a Cultural Dance upstairs in the Student Union. The culminating activity begins at 6 p.m. with a candlelight march beginning from the entrance of the University proceeding to the school’s church. At 7p m , a worship service will be held As of this writing the speaker is yet to be announced Admission to all these events is free and the * public is cordially invited to attend. For Civil Rights Economists Advocate Minority Coalitions In Fight Blacks must form coalitions with other minority groups - including women - if they are to make further gains in the fight for equal rights, says the Black Enterprise magazine Board of Economists. Their recommendation is part of “The Annual Economic Outlook for Black America: 1985" appearing in the magazine’s January issue. The "Outlook" examines the overall eco nomic prospects for black America and analyzes such specific com ponents of the economy as income, employment, trade policy, and the stability of the dollar worldwide. The recent Supreme Court deci w sion in Memphis Firefighters v. Stotts, which ruled that federal courts could not bypass “bona fide seniority systems” in favor of min ority workers hired through affirm ative action programs, poses a major setback for affirmative ac tion, in the opinion of the Black Enterprise Board. ; Kelly Alexander Jir, ^ * .NAACP state president who were employed through Af firmative Action Programs.) More decisions such as those pasaed down in the Stotts case are likely, predicts Alexander, as the * Supreme Court bn increased it* conservative perspective with the addition of Reagan appointments in agreement with Alexander s assessment of 1M4 is Horace Shef field, columnist for the Michigan Chronicle. He wrote on December 8, 1984, “Civil rights and social justice are no longer at the bottom of the nation's agenda, where Mr. Reagan placed them at the beginning of his first term in 1980. Surely you must know that with the Reagan landslide victory, civil rights and social jus tice are no longer even on the national agenda." Sheffield went on to urge, "What all this means is that we are in a period now when we need our most effective leaders, men and women who can really articulate the needs and interests of the black com munity and also galvanize our peo pie." wnat is the NAACP s strategy tor resurfacing and reconstructing hope in the black community? With Alexander, the discussion begins with politics, For It was, sftar promises, promises, in the political arena that blacks confronted their biggest disappointments of 1W4. M retrospection many have concluded that blacks suffered from the “putting all your aggs in one basks*” syndrome, "blacks mads a great mlatake in their partisan views of supporting the Democratic Party," remarks Alexander, who admit# he Is a Democrat See ALEXANDER On Page I4A - ^ ’.af V as si bays Dr Phyllis A. Wallace. Pro fessor and Co-Director of the In dustrial Relations Section, Sloan School of Management, MIT, and a member of the Board of Econo mists, "Immediately after the Mem phis decision, the Reagan Admin istration saw this as a chance to turn back the clock not only on seniority layoff issues but on a variety of affirmative action procedures that for the past 20 years the courts have ruled on.’’ “I think the Memphis case is just the beginning, and the private sec tor will clearly go the way of the public sector," warns Black Enter prise Publisher Earl G Graves, also a member of the Board As relative newcomers to the public sector, blacks lack strong ties to public sector unions, notes Wallace, and may be laid off in massive numbers if state and local governments are forced to take belt tightening measures. Wallace suggests that blacks unite with other minorities, especially white women, to ensure that affirm ative action measures are kept intact. "Blacks initially bore the brunt of (civil rights) legislation. They were on the ffont lines," says Wallace "Now it’s time for black men and women to work with other groups and let them step forward to do the righting " Dr Beraard E. Anderson, an other member at the Board and Director at Social Sciences Divi sion at the Rockefeller Pounds tion, goes one step further and re commends that the coeHtiom be based on shared issues, such as comparable pay. “We have to assess what we have to trade and (work to) form coalitions that bring results that (can) give us a share of the decisions that are economically be neficial."