II "If you're ed to takin va- cations h year, and your po com from amity that didn't travel much, ome ne tiating needs to take pl By talkin a ut what i impor­ tant to h of you, a cornpro­ mi e can b r hed." One may come to njo)' takin va­ catio and th other can learn to b ati fied taking few r of them. UPL P th ir goal to ea h other, , yet understand that th e goal can chan e. Each h the op­ portunity to change th ir mind they grow and focus on dif­ ferent priorities. You will both have different priorities as indi­ vidual and a couple. For exam pI . he may be into lothe . but he may want money to own a ports car. It' al important to learn to hare and make pending de­ cisions in a way that's fair. De­ cide togeth r h much money you're going to p nd on a new television, for example, or who will pay wh n you go out to dinner, movies and leisure ac­ tivities AI 0 decide how to b t set up your financial accounts at th beginning of your mar­ riage. For example, you may choose to have a joint avings and checking ount to pay the bill , and each maintain an individual unt for discre- , tionary needs. DI RETIONARY ac­ counts usually include money for Clothing, gifts personal grooming, etc. ' U e direct depo it at your finan ial institution to distrib-­ ute money' to your joint and individual accounts. Because you each have different needs agree which expenses to cover with di cretionary accounts. Then it doesn't become an i - ueofher king hi permi ion or hi asking her permis ion for every pur hase made. Denny's names Black VP NORMAN J. HILL PARTANBUR;, ' '-, TW Serv­ ice, ner of Denny's H rdee' , Ouincy ' Family teakhousc and EI Poll 0 taurants, has changed thecompany' nam to F1agstarC m­ paru , and h 'named Norman 1. Hill as vice prcsldent of fi Id human re- uurc r Flag: tar' nearly 2 company-op 'rated r tauran ,a new pG_ ition. Hill. 1, Will have ovemll pon- ibility for th em pI ym nt and em­ ployee r lallon. initiative for Fla tar' more than fi Id em­ ploy A native [Akron. Ohio, Hill re­ ived ill b' 1!(·1 r'� de ·r in b,' :- ne admi'nistration from the . Univ l'Slty of Akr n in 1972. African American entrepreneurship is rooted in slave occupations and had been impeded by discrimination, denial of education and capital y I Y T. fol/o ing artie! is taken from ajor tudies of Minority Business: A Bibliographic Review by Dr. Ba . The book was r cently published by the Joint Center. Artl ans of Antebellum America Prior to the Civil War, free Bla ks were prominent in lines of business that ed the kills they had cquired as laves. Th ir uccess in barbershop and beauty parlor operations, cooking and catering cleaning and pres in , and hoe rune and repair has been eenas shrewd capitalization of ial proscription. Since whit entrepreneurs tended to avoid busin of ervi e stat , BI ks in many cornrnuruti had lit­ tle competition in th e fields. An af­ fluent white cliental-naturally inclined to be erved by Blacks-pro­ vided the patronage for many of the uccessful Black-owned busin during the 19th century. REQUIRI G larg amounts' of capital and educe­ tion or accounting kills were the least common lines of enterpri e operated by free Bla . Even if the technical and economic ob tacle . could be ove�me, the ho tility of the white community would de troy Blac firms that they thought were socially inappropriate. By the mid-19th century, most southern stat h d P ed law for­ bidding Bla ks from engaging in any line of busin that required the abil­ ity to read and write. ' In th North, Blacks were denied the right to sue, and Black merchants were generally unable to obtain trade credit. Bla ks endured only in th e fields that were consi tent with the sub ervient tatus of th [reed lave. Regional dive ity in the busin ' a tiviti of Black entrepreneurs re­ flected a complex array of cial atti­ tude and inti tutional racial cons trai nt . In Loui iana freed Blacks participated in a wide array of busin activities. A pattern of race relations reflecting Carib ean influ­ ences persi ted in that tate until well beyond 1803. min d nd di t rted BI ck en­ trepre u hip. Blac at on time dominated many killed trad in th South. Rath r than, depend on whit labor, lave m t typically trained th ir own lav in carpentry, bl mith- in , and other killed t . Slave m nics we often allowed to hire out on th ir own in return for a fixed urn of money or a percentag of their eamin . WIll workers ap- Emancipation Brings Business Decline However, eman ipation and the po t-Reconstru ti n era handicapped th B la k rti an cla .No I nger pro­ t ted by the lav owners, BI k ar­ ti ans had to compete in a free, unsheltered market. whereas whit were often prot ted b craft unions and Jim Crow instituti ns. For xarnple, a ter 1 5, South Caroli na required that Blacks pur­ ch e licers for a fee of 10 annu­ ally before working a artisans, mechani . and bopkeepers. Whites were n t required to pay license fees. 'RAFTU 10 I M, with its ap­ prentice hip y tern, W' particularly effective in diminishing the ran f Black arti ans in the NOl1h, The abolition f 'lavery brought about a decline in the number of Black-owned busin ' for everal reas ns. The p stwar uth was in the grip of a evere depre ion, and it offered few opportuniti Ior accumu­ lating the capital necessary to reate busin The Blacks who .. tabli hed tirms in retail Gelds were further handi­ capped by the economic tru ture of the region. Mo t Blacks were then living in the rural South, and they reli d on th ir landlord or the com­ pany tore f r their retail needs. If landlord. did n t run their own commi . aries, they made arrange­ men with local white merchants to upply their tenant farm rs' needs. Thi y tern ef ectively i olated Black mer han from m t of their poten­ tial clientele. The trongholdr 0 Bla k busin in the lat 1 h c ntury dil ered little from, the tron hold' f Black busi- n efore the Civil War. IN ADOrn .. failing to cs- tabli h themselves 10 new lin of usin , Bla k entrepreneurs were undercut in their traditi nal Geld by the fk )0 of immigruti n 10 the late 19th century. Th Immigrants were willing to camp te with Blacks in per- nal ervicc ind tri ,and they were quick to exploit bu in ppor­ tuniti in em ry nic urn n Black cornrnuniti s. Th number of I ck- Post World War I-Buy Black tially du gina! po ition 0 egro b i .It i 0 partly due to prej udicial opinio amon whit concerning b in bihty and per- onal reliability of egro . In either VlCIO circle i in operation pin egro b i down. Di rimination played many rol in haping Bl b in enter- pris . Di riminationin the labor mar­ ket m de it difficult for BI to ccumulat th initial 'equity inv t­ ment that i required to create firms. Th lack of Bla k-owned con- truction compani in unionized ur­ b n ar w ca ed partially by the traditional pr ctice of barring Blacks from entering apprentice programs in th building traces. "THE HAITIAN migration of skilled and educated Cr I ' in the mid-1790s and again in the early 1 , before the Loui lana Purch e {rom France sured the entr nch­ ment of. free men of· color in both skilled-arid white-collar occupa­ tions" according to an article Juliet Walker, "Raci m, lavery and Fr Enterpri ie: Black Entrepreneurship in the United Stat B for th ivil War," that appeared in the Business Hi tory Review in 1 86. Whitc tam­ ily connecti ns orneurncs c( ntnb­ uted to the u la .k-ow ned f .... 1 patt 'rns of to high con- cio n . BI in urban cente came together for mutual and protection and quickly ped the notion of building and upporting their own b i enterprises, The financial co trai that had tricted Black entrepreneurs for 0 long were ed for many of them during the prosperous war years. TH GR T D 10 wiped out many of the gains of the previo decade. Bl c retailers, who had often relied on the loyalty of Black consumers to remain viable lost their clients in drov . Black mer­ chants cried that they were being abandoned by th ir ra ; Bl k con- urn rs responded that they were be­ ing exploited b} th ra ial appeal of Bla k merchan . "BUY BLACK" entiment prevailed, and many Black b i were financed by churches and frater­ nal lodges, whose members would be- The regional pattems of Black busines' development in the antebellum period were a reflection of societal contrains of varying intensity. I ADDITIO, limited educa­ tional opportunities have alway handicapped the Bl ck busin com­ munity. Th Blacks who were lured into the world of business in the 1920s were typically not th on who were highly educated. Between 1912 and 1938, for example, 73 percent of Black college graduates became preachers or teachers. Tho e who attended college were r tricted by ocial attitudes about which occupations were appropriate for Blacks. Medicine, denti try, and law were open to a fortunate few, but Black college graduates were rarely found in fields uch as engineering, accounti ng, and general bus i ness. These and other constraints produced a Blaok business community that con- isted largely of very small firms con­ centrated in a few lines of service oriented ines -SpeciaJ to th Michigan Citizen come loyal patrons of the newly formed firms, A conspicuous exam­ p Ie of the increasing racial conscious­ nes was the development of Black new papers. A Black-owned printing industry arose as' Black publications multiplied. In the 192 ,Black busines were increasingly commonplace in all areas of th United States. An csti mated 70, Bla k establi hment were operating by 1930, a 700 percent increase over 1 Progres was particularly evident in the life insurance industry, where in 1928, 32 firms employed over 6,()(X) a en and controlled over 1 mil- Acce to financial capital and trade credit w limited, further con­ straining the development of Black enterprise. Whi te ghetto merchants have alway enjoyed greater access to credit than Black merchants, and this advantage 0 ten proved to be decisive during th dep ed 1930s. In his 1944 tudy of di crimination in the United States, The American Dilemma, Swedish ocial cientist y rdal ob erved that: T busin man en- counters grea r -dif teuHi than' whit in ecuring credit. Thi i par- First Home? First Home Mortgage? First ederal [i!l Loan tart Pre-Qualifie' You For Moitgag Financing Before You B\lY A Home, , . The firvt step toward hu ing that home i.., \\ hen vou step into an FiN Federal offi c and appl; for a frce [:::J Loanxrart "Pre-Qualification Certificate." Once �()1I have it, it tell the cllcr vou'rc a serious buvcr, That' abig edge. And the [:::J Rate Protection Pl.in "lock -in" your mortgage interest , t a \C� c mpetitiv rare. That's pea .c of mind, Sec the fri 'ndl� people , at Fir 't Federal for detail" They make financing your fir,t home the la: t thing �()1I have to \HH� ahout. ' � Lo n tart Pr - ualifi ation.Anoth r Bi Id a from Fi t fI d ral of Michi an. n of i higan' Bigg t ving In titutio in 1934. ain : I 1 W ward Av nu .0 tr it. Mi higan 4 22 Ph n : (313) >5-1400 rul In ured