Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1972 — Page 2
i
p Ar , , THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER SATURDAY. JULY 12. 1172
Training programs fail to oaso black joblossnoss
WASHINGTON - (NBN8) - Black Americana aharad vary Uttla In the alfnUleant drop In unemployment durlnc June, giving aupport to the contention of NAACP Labor Director Herbert H1U that many federal Job training programa are a waate of money aa far aa black* are concerned. Hill crittcUem eapecial-
ASK THE MAN FROM EQUITABLE ABOUT
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GEORGE W. THOMAS DISTRICT ASSISTANT 1840 N. MERIDIAN ST. 926-2365 THE f EQUITABLE Thf: C'l'i.UiM': AiS-.rufiCC SV. fcty ot 1n«r Un,t«.-d Uuj YoiR N Y
ly the failure of Labor Department effort a to Inarenae the number of blaoka In union apprentioeahlp and Job training programa. Speaking at the annual NAACP convention In Detroit, he aald theae federallyaubaldlaed labor training programa have produced few fullfledged minority Journeymen becauae of labor union raclam. He cited a Chicago program which promlaed black more than 4,000 J o b a and coat $711,™?. When audled later by the Labor Department, fhe program warn found to have placed fewer than iOOperaons in a year and a half. Hill said on-the-job training programa are more effective In getting blacks into construction work. Threefour of all construction workers become Journeymen through on-the-J o b training not apprenticeship, he said. The NAACP National Labor Director said the apprenticeship training program was an example of “government subsidized racism” because of the anti-black attitudes of construction unions. The latest Labor Department figures on unemployment support the contenion that racist job patterns prevent blacks from benefiting from rising economic activity in the country. The Department reports that the nation's unemployment rate dropped from 5.9 percent In May to 5.5 percent in June, the lowest rate since October 1970. Black joblessness showed a much smaller decline, and continued at almost double the national unemployment rate. The unemployment rate for blacks eased from 9.6 percent in April to 9.4 percent. The rate for whites dropped
from 5.4 percent to 5 per-
cent.
PROTECT YOUR HOME!
Man planners PoliC8 to S06k FBI aid in Starch Researchers to study rscelvt Ford for mlnisttr Charged with IRUrdor resegregatlon dangers
Motnr Cn. (rants Ten urban and aocialplanners from the Detroit, Mich., and Cleveland, Ohio area have been awarded Ford Motor Company Fund echolarahlpe for urban atudiee In Manoheater, England, this summer. Ray C. Kool, director of the Ford Fund, announced t h e scholarahlp recipients at a dinner held last month at the Ford Motor Company World Headquarter* In Dearbor n, Mich. Dr. Howard Cutler, executive vice president of the Instlture of International Education (HE), congratulated the recipients at the dinner. The HE assisted In arranging the acadmic program at the University of Manchester where the students will study and also assisted In selecting the scholarship recipients from among black and other minority groups. “Past experience has shown that persons pursuing HE programs involving training abroad have found the programs helpful to their work in the United States.” The scholarship winners will begin the four-week academic program June 28 with an introductory lecture series. Emphasis will be placed on urban and social policy in Britain. In addition, the students will select one of three optional courses of study including “the new town,” “conserving the environment,” and “management and planning of health services.” To qualify for the program, candidates must have been enrolled in graduate programs or have substantial professional experience in environm e n t a 1 or social work, Mr. Kooi said. The summer scholarships will cover tuition, living and transportation costs. The Ford Motor Company Fund is a non-profit corporation operated for charitable, educational and scientific purposes. It Is supported by contributions from Ford Motor Company and Is not related to The Ford Foundation.
‘REV/ EPHRIAM WILLIAMS
Capt. W. Robert Greene, head of the Indianapolis Police Department's homicide and robbery division, indicated thle weak that federal help would be sought in locating a Black reporters refuse to spy NEW YORK—Black journalist have taken the lead in opposing a U.S. Supreme Court ruling which would deny newspaper reporters the right to refuse to reveal confidential sources before grand juries Investigating criminal cases. Black Perspective, a group representing m o s t of New York's black Journalists, said its 150 members would resist the ruling. “As black reporters, we wish to reaffirm our intent not to be used as involuntary agents of the Justice Department of any other police agency,” the group said. “We will not allow information or sources given to us In conficence to be ‘shopped' by legal ‘fishing expeditions' armed with subpoenas.” Black Perspective said the court decision opens the way for official intelligence gathering agencies to make the black reporter a “spy” in the black community. Several other news grouos including the American Society of Newspaper Editors and the Newspaper Reporters Association, have crltlzed the Supreme Court decision, but none of these have urged their members to defy the ruling.
61 - yew • old self-styled minister sought since last March on a warrant charging him with murder in connection with the shooting death of a 14-year-old youth. Greene aald Wednesday that hla office would eeek a federal warrant charging u n lawfu 1 flight to avoid proaecution for the crime of murder against the Rev. Ephrian Williams, formerly of 2300 N. Capitol, liauranct of the federal warrant would automatically bring the FBI Into the search f o r williams. Williams has been sought since March 17when 14-year-old Jerry Shorter was shot to death while playing with several companions near a grocery store operated by Williams at 23rd and Beilefontaine. At the time of the shooting, Shorter’s companions told police that Williams had demanded that they move away from his establishment and
that they had refused “because we weren't doing anything wrong," In etatemenis to homicide detectives, tfle teenagers said Williams at first thrsatened them with a pool cue (stick) and then went back Into the •tore and returned with a revolver According to the statement* given police, the group ran down jin alley at the side of the store and Williams stood at the entrance to the alley and fired a single shot which struck young Shorter in the back. Following t h • shooting, Williams locked the store and fled the scene In a late-mo-del Bulck automobile. Neither Williams nor the car have been located since although police at one time received information that he might be holed up in the Milwaukee area. However, an investigation by Milwaukee p o 11 c e failed to turn up any trace of the elusive minister., •
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my
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parents to comply with or resist school and residential In-. tagration. It t« prompted hy the fact that white parent* > frequently withdraw their children from desegregated public schools and move loot-, her areas, returning the communltles to patterna of racial segregation.
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As education improves, so will “Teams of RCA educational spe- In 1966, Dick was appointed Special the relationships between people’; dalists are helping these people Assistant to the New York City says Mr. Richard Dickerson, Manager evaluate their systems, and develop Board of Education, of RCA Educational Project relevant educational programs to And since 1968 he’s been a key Development. meet their special needs’. member of the RCA Educational Across the country our company Mr. Dickerson, 33, has been involved Development staff at Cherry Hill, is working intimately with parents, in many phases of education over New Jersey, community groups, teachers and ad* the past eleven years. When teachers, school admlnistraministrators to improve the quality He was a junior high school science tors or community leaders consult of education and job training pro- teacher and instructional supervisor with him, he advises them on the grams, Dick explains. in his home town, Philadelphia. wide range of RCA’s educational ‘ 1 1 1 ' 1 “ services and equipment. Audio-visual equipment like classroom TV. Language labs. Instructional records, tapes, films,, self-directing textbooks and computer-assisted instructional systems. Dick says, “We prescribe individual educational programs so each child has the opportunity to learn as much as he can, as fast as he can. “We also do our thing with adults to provide programs necessary for job-related training and job advancement “This is what I do, this is what we do. We are people-oriented; therefore our focus is the total community. “We believe in education!”
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I TN0ianap0lT§ rec0Rdfr x ' MARCUS C. STEWART
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ItCJI
Circuietlpn, 0 National pubhsiv 1 Richard L Dickenon, Manager. RCA Educational Project Development
Wa.faGcc^tion. i
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