THE BETTER WE KNOW US ... SALISBURY — A man who is com- munity-oriented, community-minded and community-active describes this weeks personality, MR. WILEY LASH, a small grocery store owner and manager. A man who has been, and still is, active in the development of his community for Whites as well as Blacks. Mr. Lash is a native of Salisbury where he attended public schools, but as his father was a Lutheran minister, he attended high school at Emmanuel Lutheran College in Greensboro. Fol lowing high school, he came back to Salisbury to continue his education at Livingstone College where he gradu ated majoring in ijociology. by Miller Mr. Lash got into the grocery business through his father who started the business in 1929. As a matter of fact, there was a chain of seven stores; but through the years, five of the stores have closed down leaving two, one of which is operat ed by Mr. Lash. Mr. Lash recalls the year he opened the store, commenting “1 was the second black businessman ever to have a store in my block. The whole block was filled with white businesses.” Now, all of the other businesses have moved or closed down - but “Lash Groceries” is still in its original spot and Mr. Lash says, “The business is doing O.K.” The 45-year-old grocery business is Carter, Jr. only part of Mr. Lash’s life. He is also involved in a number of civic organi zations. Mr. Lash is a member of the Salisbury School Board and has been on it for eleven years. He is also a member of the Board of Re-Develop- ment Commission, the City Board of North Carolina National Bank (N.C.N.B.), the Board of Directors in the local Chamber of Commerce and a number of other organizations. He serves in an official capacity as Presi dent of the Lincoln Park Apartment Development of Salisbury and is the Treasurer of the Negro Civic League of which he has been a member since 1930. Mr. Lash reveals that during the integration era he was the only black on the Salisbury School Baord, and a large part of the integration in Salis bury schools was on his shoulders. Besides being the first Black on the School Board, Mr Lash was also one of the first Blacks in the NCCJ (National Conference of Christians and Jews) where he presided as Chairman. Integrated housing, low cost hous ing and recreation facilities for young people are just a few things that Mr. Lash has seen come to pass through the years of his community efforts. One of the most memorable experi ences Mr. Lash has faced was that of Continued on Page 2 THE TR BUNALAID A VIABLE, VALID REQUIREMENT RESPONDING TO BLACK NORTH CAROLINA r ■■ VOLUME III, NO. 24 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12,1975 $5.00 PER YEAR PRESS RUN 8,500 MEMBER: North Carolina Black Publishers Associatioi; - ” i'orth Carolina Press Association, Inc. Notes & RemindersI The High Point Jaycees will once again sponsor the High Point Junior Miss Pageant on November 15, 1975. The pageant will be held in the auditorium at High Point College, and will begin at 7:30 p.m. This year twenty-three contestants, all high school seniors, will compete. pre-registration is available by calling 869-7010. BASKETBALL OFFICLi- TING CLASS Mondays, thru December 8:30 p.m. a persons intrested in officia- tin basketball for the City Leagues will be held at the Leonard Street Recreation NCCU Founder And Wife Named To Hall Of Fame representing Trinity, Allen Center. Call 883-2735 for Jay, High Point Central, further details. Andrews, Ragsdale, and Ledford High Schools. Tickets are available at the Jaycee office. MEN’S OPEN BASKET BALL LEAGUE Anyone interested in play or coaching in an adult men’s open basketball league please call the Leonard Street Recreation Center, 883-2735. Play is scheduled to start Decem ber 2 with practice sessions going on now. Also, anyone desiring team practice that will be participating in City recre ation leagues please call the Leonard Street Center for space and time reservations. CAKE DECORATING The Oakview Recreation Center is offering a second 5 week cake decorating class just in time for Christmas lovelies. Novem ber 18 at 7:00 p.m. is the scheduled starting time. CHATTING WITH EBONY MODELS -Mrs. Emaretta Felton, [extreme right] newly-elected President of the Fayette ville fN.C.] Chums, Inc., and out-going prexy ivirs. ayivia Alien, cnai wiin two Ebony Fashion Models prior to showtime. The affair was sponsored by Chums of Fayetteville, and was very successful. North Carolina Central University enshrined the names of its founder and wife as the first members of the North Carolina Central University Hall of Fame on Monday, November 3 at its 28th annual Founder’s Day Convocation and on the 100th anniversary of Dr. Shepard’s birth. Dr. James Edward Shepard and Mrs. Annie Day Shepard, both of whom died in 1947, were the moving forces in the birth and early development of the institution of higher learning. The NCCU Hall of Fame was aeated to mark the university’s 50th anniversary as a senior state-supported college. North Carolina Central University became Uhe nation’s first black state-supported university with a liberal arts orientation in 1925, when Durham State Normal School became the North Carolina College Black Children^ m Confidence And Self Esteem Are Development Keys NEW YORKi N. Y. - The black institutions as a means of creating a sociai-protest movement has been new generation of blacks seeking **the most single powerful force” in ‘*some values and goals in common fostering national black jpride but with their white contemporaries in more needs to be done at the grass order that some sort of integrated roots level to help individual black republic can eventually arise.” underclass children develop The authors, professors of self-esteem and 'confidence, pyschology at WilUam Paterson according to a nejv psychological College of New Jersey, contend study. that by the time ghetto youngsters TTie study, “Children of the start school they have already Dark Ghetto: A Developmental developed distinct personalities, Psychology,*’ states that black most of which are typified by ghetto ditldren still “face the same antagonism toward adults, problems their parents faced*' when especially teadiers. they were young. While their Professors SUverstein and Krate “group and individual identities are broke the personalities down into changing in large measure because four type - The ambivalents, of the i^ck ethnic ideology,** they constituting the majority, who nevertheless lack the longed for warm relationships but ^'community-based support for “often were pulled in the opposite their development.** direction by the desire to appear The study, made possible by self-reliant”; grants from the Anti-Defamation — The precocious independents. League of B*nai B*rith and fte ^nerally * stubborn,” unfriendly to Carn^e Corporation of New York, adults and peers, although some ha* been published as a book by were “known to associate with Ifraeger and is being distributed by older children who were heavily ADL. Barry Sflverstein and Ronald involved in street culture -- The mainstreimers, most process that results in functional despite the wide acceptance of resembling middle-class white illiteracy*’ for most poor black may be “encouraged in the children who if not friendly to students, marking them for life and mainstream development,” but adults, “were at least cooperative “further diminishing their sense of most are pushed into ‘ being ‘one of and usually obedient.” pride, dignity and self-confidence.” the gang,’ ” or if not deeply The first three types, according It notes that only those pupils who committed to the street-based dis(^y behavior which appeals to group, are left to “languish administrators and teachers are pro^iack slogans, relatively few placed in the “best” Classes, where • •• . j — the instructor can “push them harder to read.’ Little is expected of the rest, who are deemed “less like middle-class children, and therefore, less promising as achievers.” to the psychologists, seemed to suffer “intense feeling of shame and doubt*’ stemming largely from a lack of adult emotional support in their own family life. Professors SUverstein and Krate found “a pervasive mistrust of adults” among the children they saw growing up. Their pupils “appeared to be remarkably self-reliant and independent.” Many possessed the “strength, toughness, callousness and even brutishness” which equipped them for survival, but 'these very characteristics had the effect of interfering with adult control and influence” over them. “Neither the threat of withdrawal of emotional support nor fear of beating (after a while) could make many of the children obedient to adult direction or keep them away from the peer and street Professors Sflverstein and Krate indigenous structures and programs have been created in inner-city black communities” to work with and help the children. Even with heightened racial pride, the authors continue, ‘'mdividuals are left to face the consequences of economic say this “sorting process” commits exploitation and racism with very ei^t-year-olds to^either “a middld Httle support and direction, dass or street- oriented lifestyle” Survival is often bought at the price of diminished group cohesiveness and heightened suspiciousness.’ Krate, ^»1to spent a combined 11 activitie -- The submissives, influence partnts feared,*’ the years teadUng in Central Harlem, representing “a significant psychologists said, are the authcvs. They call for “a minority,” who tended to be closer tic between black “quiet, inactive, nonass»tive, stok, nationalism” and neighborhood ^d socially isolated”; The study contends that ghetto schools participate in “an insidious for the rest of their lives. A fe^l apathetically.’ Acknowledging that there have been developments in the past decade to increase black self-pride, they cite the rise of new organization, election of blacks to public office, and more authentic portrayals of black American life and culture in the media. They go on to say, however, that the Black movement remains “a relatively unguided process.” According to the psychologists, Lacking are the kind of self-help institutions which many white ethnic and religious minorities established to maintain positive identity and meet specific group needs. According to Professors SUverstein and Krate, “the major tasks of black-child sociatiza^n and development today may lie in planned efforts to orient dhildien Continued on Page 6 for Negroes. Dr. Shepard, who was bon. November 3, 1875, founded in 1910 the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua. He led the school as its president during five years under that name, eight years as the National Training School, two years as Durham State Normal School,, and 22 years as North Carolina College. He was a native of Raleigh and a graduate of that city’s Shaw University, where he received his professional training as a pharmacist. He was a leader of the International Sunday School Association. Mrs. Shepard, who married Dr. Shepard in 1895, worked closely with him during the university’s early years. She served as Matron of the Dining Hall for a brief period, but for most of the years of her association with the university held no title. As the president’s wife, she was remembered as a guide and counselor to two generations of students. Mrs. Shepard was the author of the Ijrics to the uiiiversily’s Alma Mater. I'hose words, which begin “The sloping hills, the vcrdani green, itie lovel)' blossoms' beauteous sheen,” are still sung today at every athletic event and formal university convocation. The principal address was delivered by The Reverend Phillip R. Cousin, Pastor of St. Joseph’s AME Church, Durham. The Invocation and Benediction were by The Reverend Harold Cobb, Pastor, West Durhani Baptist Church. William A. Clement, Chairman of the NCCU Board of Truestees conducted the induction ceremony. Chancellor Albert N. Whiting presented a Tribute to the Shepard F'amily. Other participants on the program were Miss Celia t. Davidson, organist, Lena McLm, Marion Wiggins, Paula Harrell, Miss DeEdgra Fozard, "Miss NCCU”, Jonathan Davis, president, Student Government Association, Miss Vatara Copeland, C. Bruce Butler, Howard Hansen, the NCCU Choir under the direction of Charles H. Gilchrist and the NCCU Band, under the direction of Dr. Joseph T. Mitchell, Government Should Aid Minorities Also Governor Makes Appointments RALEIGH-Governor Jim Green serves on Holshouser announced the Durham City Board of reappointment of Billy M. Adjustment, the Board of Sessoms, a Durham attor- Directors and Management ney and the appointment of Development, Inc., and the Cicero M. Green, Jr., of Board of Directors of The Durham to the North North Carolina Society of Carolina Central University Financial Analysts. He is a Board of Trustees. member of the Kyles Both will serve terms Temple A.M.E. Zion expiring June 30, 1979. Church. Green, a Durham native. Green is married to the is vice president and former Dora A. Jenkins treasurer of North Carolina They have one daughu’i Mutual Life Insurance and one son. Company. He received his Governor Jim Holshous- B.S.C. and M.S.C. degrees er reappointed two mem- from North Carolina Cen- bers and named one new tral University and com- member to the North pleted the Executive Pro- Carolina Agricultural and gram of Professional Man- Technical State University agement at the University Board of Trustees, of North Carolina. Reappointed for terms He served four years in expiring June 30, 1979, the U.S. Air Force. Cbntinued on Paffe 2“ WSHINGTON, D. C. - Attacking the federal government for passing-the-buck in response to demands by minority American for the formal establishment of minority economic participation in the nation’s proposed plan for the reorganization of the “railroads in bankruptcy’, the National Business League recently released a stinging status report on the organization’s push for one of the mechanisms to deliver parity to minority people in this country. Thwarted in its initial efforts to incorporate provisions in the official plan prepared by the United States RaUway Association, prior to its submission to Congress, the 75 year-old association is now seeking to wage a battle against a proposal which is slated for passage or veto as a whole, with no provisions for amendment. NHL President, Dr. Berkeley G. BurreU, in analyzing the current status said: “What the federal governemt is saying to us, and ^ecifically USRA and CONRAIL, is that the Final Systems Plan is more sacrosanct than the United States Constitution, in that it cannot be amended. We have forwarded to Senators Birch Bayh (D.Jnd.) and Clifford Case (R., N. J.) and some 30 selected members of the Congress and the Administration, recommended language for the amendment of the current plan.” ‘ We seek only to assist this country”, he continued, “as it attempts to recover economicaUy, and to use the process of parity for the people as the vehicle. The time is short and unless action is taken immediately to (1) establish legislative policy, (2) create the NBL-proposed National Railroad Resource Center (NRRC), and (3) to provide adequate funds to support the national effort the Center will undertake; ‘he opportunity for substantive minority economic participation in the railroad revitalization effort wUl br seriously eroded, and probably lost.’ Senator Bayh, Chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Transportation Appropriations addressed the NBL 75th Annual Convention in Boston on Oct. 10, and in support of the NBL push for minority participation said: Continued on Page 2 Bishop Warns Black Non-Voters FLORENCE, S.C. - About 3,000 btocks mtreh«d through Fk>rtnc«, 8.C. itrMtt to mttt at 1h« 11'Story, dty-eounty jcomplex here to protest the shooting to death of a black man by a white city policenMn. It was the second shooting of a black by a white policeman in Florence this year. SANFORD - Whfle some black voters in Durham were staying away from the polls, Tuesday, Bishop W. A. HiUiard, presiding over the 95th session of the Central N, C. Conference, A. M E. Zion Church, of which Durham is a part, warned blacks that they had come a long way, but they had a longer way to go. In his episcopal address, after reading the editorials of the two Durham daily newspapers, in which the whites were being warned that blacks were taking over, he veered from his prepared text and said “we must become involved in the econon^y and politics of this nation or we will continue to be the last hired and the first fired.” He told the churchmen thi.i the black children had to be educated or they would find the door of employment closed and the lock on promotion frozen. He took a close look at the economy of the blacks in this area and told them that they must become concerned about the aisis that is facing the tobacco industry. He was referring to the fact that subsidies are being threatened, quotas for growing tobacco are being discussed and farm employment opportunities are opening. He saw 9 new day dawning for blacks returning to the state if they become involved in producing some of the commodities that make life possible, take a closer look at Dolitics and provide proper Muca^ion for their children. The prelate also took a crack at church leaders who still hold to the tradition that young people are to be seen and not heard in church operation. “Church administrators must be willing to accept change or accept a revolution in church circles”, he said. The conference opened Monday and is devoting much time to “church policy”, ' Choirs from St. Mark Church furnished the music Monday night. Revs. L. A. Miller, L. P. Perry, C. C. Satterfield, M. F. Ward,Lawrence Turner and Virginia Pitchfood are playing important roles. Alexander Barnes, Revs. Ward Miller and Satterfield are active in the institutes, of which Rev. D. L. Blakely, former Kyles Temple pastor, is the dean. SUPPORT THE ADVERTISING MERCHANTS OF THIS, YOUR NEWSPAPER!