�. "SER VING THE STATE'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN CO MARCH 22' 28, 1987 NEWS BRIEFS CP co FEDER TE FL GS RE OYED Greenvill .. - The A P h pa dare luti n calling f r the removal of Confederate fl flying above the tate capital buildin in outh C rolina and I barna. The re luti n al called on Georgia and issis ippi to remove onfederate ymbol fr m their tate flags. The civil rights rganizati n uthea t Regional Direct r Earl Shinhoster declared • e don't need the Confederate flag as a reminder of days that should have been buried.' He labeled the flag "a symbol of racial animosity and an in ult to Bla k pe pie." The onfederate flag w d pted a a symbol of th 11 outhern t te hich attempted to bre a ay from the re t f he c unt durin the ivil ar in a id t maint in slavery. hinh ter threatened legal acti n if the fla were n t rem ved. DOCTORSF tlant G. - ju t relea d tudy ha f und that Black d ctors re lOt imes more likely than hite d ctors to uffer a he rt att ck. The study compared the incidence of heart m n men who h d gr du ted from predominantly eharry edical College in ashville with men who h d gradu ted from predominantly white John Hopkins School of edicine. The findings ere released t the recent econd lnterdi iplinary onference on Hypertension in Blac s, The conference too pl ce in Atlanta. eanwhile the tudy al found that 4 % of Black doctors had developed high blood pre re compared to 17% of hites. B CUE PLOY C GED shin ton D. . - ccording to 'the Labor Department the unemployment rate among American Blacks held teady I t month at 14.3%. ean hile j ble ne arn n hite declined from 5. % to 5.7%. Thu the percentage of Blac s ithout job nearly � time that for white in the mon h of Febru ry. LA DE DIES 0 IDS o benef.its for 2 0 W ASHI GTO - The per- centa e of jobles Americans receiving unemployment bene­ fits in 1986 dropped to the lowe t level recorded in the program's history, with fewer than one out of every three unemployed workers collecting benefits in an vera e month, the Center on Bud et and Policy Priorities rep rted today. Only 32,9 percent of the unemployed received benefits in an average month in 19 6 leaving 5.5 million jobless work­ ers without ch a sistance in an average month, according to the enter'a analysi of .S. 0- partment of Labor data. Thi record 10 cover ge mar ed the third con cutive year th t the level fell bel w 35 percent, in pite of a con­ tinuing ec n mi recovery. the tudy st te Pri r t 19 4 the percent e of un mpl yed rker receivin n fit h d only fallen I nee in 1 to 39 percent. p rcentage receivin rood at 50 p rcent. , Although e h ve free from re e . n f r ye rs, the unempl yment tern i pr vidin f le e than during previ u mic rec veri, id Re arch Director J hn man. • The afet 3 lob es unempl yed families - e pecial­ ly those out of r for long peri ds of time - has eroded substantially. ' The 5.5 million unemployed workers without benefits last year is more than 1.5 million greater than in any year in the 1970's and nearly a high a in 1982 during the depth f the recession hen the unem­ ployment rate averaged 9.7 percent. The rep rt states that 19 6 marked the fifth con- cutive year that the numb r of jo le s worker without bene­ fit equaled r exceeded 5.5 milli n. Prior to 19 0 this number never e e ded 4 mil- li n. The rep rt al f und that the total arn unt of unemploy­ ment in urance benefit provid­ ed in 19 6 a 59 percent le after adiustin for in­ flati n than it h d b en a dec de earlier in 1 76, de pite the fa t that 00.000 m re per n ere unemployed in an vera e m nth in 19 6 than in 1976. . In 47 state fewer than half of all joble or ers received benefits in an aver e month in 19 6 and in 6 tates fewer than one-third received benefits. In Michigan unempl yment rates ranged fr m to 10 percent while the p rcenta e of j ble s wor er getting enefit as only 3 t .. 9 p rcent. pp t I ID BUL RATE U,S, Po • PAID M149022 "'rmlt 0,50 --- Addr' •• Co . "'q t , -