BD BO DSGO EGG G
yor Joel attenon blamed the 10 interest rate
of 8 percent to hy there ere no buyers for the
450,000 of tax antidp tion bond offered by th city
o e its fmancial crunch. Others, including Finance
Dir ctor Bryce s cited the bad publicity follot -
ing Commissi r Char Yarbrough' rel of ho
d eply in debt tb city . Yarbrough' call for the
city 0 be put in receivership grabbed headlines aero
th tate. City commissionen oted 0 d y, Feb. 25
to up the intere t rate to 10 percent and hoped th
Mic:l\i2:111 Finance Co . 'on would pprove.
H S ILLAGE ELECI10
Tbe Ben ton Harbor Co n t ay 20
th d te for te on three parate mill q tion.
ballot will include: reque t to rene 6 operating
mills fOT 10 years' dditional oper ting rate of 4
mills f 11 years; and 2 mills for the Public library.
The additional milla . needed ccording to com-
. ion r 0 help the city overcome it financial
FO CITY
r .... �l1 ...... .J"'I"1[:oft 'I:�C,'IT SOUGHt
biD before the 'cb.ipn Hou ould require
dlords to pay interest on tenant's curlty
dep . So By a vote of 7-4 with one ab tention, a
House committee recommended the bill for p
If , landlord renting five or more building units
ould be required to p y annual interest of 5 percent
tenan curity or dam depo its. nDarnage
post are not rent payments," 'd Rep. Perry
Bullard, D-Ann Arbor, sponso of the bill. "They
remain I th property of the tenant, and the value of
this property, including intere t, ould be returned
to th tenant en the tenant mo e ." Under the
bill, en tenant moved out, he or . e auld be
paid by the landl d the difference between the
amount of the urity depo'to d the damage
claimed, and also the intere teamed by the deposit.
o STILL E LESS
Alt40ugh omen have m e gain in getting bet
ter job and f ter pro ti ,th y still begin their
first job eaniing an a rage $1,000 Ie than men,
according to -y of ichipn St te Uni nity
graduate. The y by SU' p cement office
id that fltuling hold. true for m graduates
reg of their degree I I. ith a BA, a man
expect a tarting pay of 12,355; A is orth
$15,346 to start; and, a PhD, $17,040 the survey
d.
Bla man with
re - shot mulit-million
do r ide will be lucky to
bo ro enough b capital
to open a oeshine d
in 1980. And thing are
going to get even tougher,
A Bla Los eles manu
facturer, Henri O'Bryant
ys.
"Capital for B cit
busine deve opemnt
expansion wiD
ha e to come in form
o long hours of hard rk,
superiority in rvice,
quality products and .
reinve tment of the littl
capital e no ha e",
O'Bryant id.
Speaking on the �-
'on of . eleva 'on to the
board of director of
Grambling University
Scholarship Founation,
O'Bryant told a con ocati on
of economic tudents and
busine majors that:
"Dollars once earmar -
captial for Bla
de lopemnt are
going to immigrant
ho ethinic background i
y origin but Bla . "
"This condition can b
re ersed by bridling and
riding our Bla public
offici 0 m to dis
miss rapport with their
B oonstituen the mo
ment they are om into
office".
, Other- ckyard
for captial could rome from
unorthodox source such
Fr mal group,
local investment club , our
ell heeled Bla
churche ," O'Bryant said.
But the gre test source
of capital, O'Bryant pointed
out, could and must flo
from ise, un.selfi
of our 125 billion dollar
Bla Gro tional In
com .
L . C trustees meet ,
explore possibility
for campus ho el
Lake 'chigan College
trustees Tuesday night ap
proved men's intercollegiate
baseball for C, the
promotion of t 0 faculty
members, and the acq
tion of tone college
vehicles.
In ddition, Bo d
member ·ere dvised by
Dr. alter F. Bro , colle
pre . dent, of the advance
ment Dr. Tony Sw -
binsky from cting dean to
dean of Student Service.
Ste e Small, colle
legal counsel, as directed
to explore the po ibility
of utilizing college property
for commercial purpose,
notably on a I b
for the construction of
a motel and restaurant near
the Conununity Center.
Dr. ancy Taylor
promoted from e
prof to profe r of
Jerome
HEADLEE 0 0 GU ES LOCAL
.. little known tion in the Headlee amend-
ment' going to ve a tremendous impact on fman-
cing local programs, n ted Ervin Appelget C1f the
egi IV Area Agency Advisory Council.
Sec ion 30 of Headlee arne ment mandate that •
te must maintain the sam percentage of doll
nt on te d local program spent in ft.scil
year 78-79. That percents as 59% tate and 41%
cal, ppe t quoted a state official ying. In
an ttempt to meet the 41% local funding requirement,
the Go emor has reoommended $40 million be put
Di Commu iti Pr
Kuli from instructor to
. tant profe r of m th
matic.
The recommend ti on
to dd men's b ball ould
dra additional high chool
athlete to the college ac
cording to liz iller, athl -
. c director.
"This area an e -
cellent source of fine b
baD talent:' rs. Mill r
'd, "but C not
ho ding that talent. It is
moving a y to other
community colle "
The trustee al c-
eepted an audit : by Coo-
pen Lybrand, certified'
public accountant , of the
5,000 000 federal grant
received by and spent
for the con truction of the
De Community Center.
The audit report indi ted
that there ere no ques
tioned ct.
r
Referring to job of
th future, O'Bryant to d
the Gramblingite that e
mu t d emphasize job
arching and begin job
making for our I . You
need not orry bout
hite man taking your
job in the future beca
robot called technologhy
alre y qualifted for
your po·ti 11
t t of your white neigh-
bor. .
So oing
to do? e your n
job!
"Just your c
mate finish Grambling U
and become out tanding
football players, can you
a this campu and be-
come bu . e and industry
. And you don't
d better
to do that!
. to understand
bich make th
riet
th country.
c En-
held in
B
�1
illu trate