ow for Dlschoteque e 2 merchants ho will popul "the mall are a gallery of upp Black busin p0- tential. R idents of Lawaai- m p, ome have built mall busin empires in a commu­ nity that w in constant danger of being bull-doaed ' to the ground. Mr. B e, for example, tarted in 1984 with a rough- hewn speakeasy called he- been. Two later he ted for opening Ii tiny unli- oe house, but he bided his time and aved the profit Th -Inform I conomy· of South Africa I. e.tlm ted to mploy 3.5 million 81 ck • a q ... rt r of the work forc . In Lawaalkamp, a. tt me of abo 4,000 81 c • n r orge, o�h Africa, local .hop owner. will mov In October Into COny rt d hipping co a r to make th M sakh n Mall. Location, Too With owne hip nd th in­ troduction of electricity and flush toilets, Lawaaikamp i an up ardly mobile hantytoWD, with neat shacks, no violence, and pirations. And location. The ttlement A Cat Iy t for Revlv I The id of the MasakhaM Man, th sponsors of the project ay, is to how that by removing the stifling constrain of apart. heid and applying only mod as i tance, thi improvi ed ety where capitali m is a white fraternity. "The present Government has made sure that Black people do not have the capital to start businesses," said Zolile Hugo, an official of the Masakhanei Pro­ ject. And so La waaikamp aimed low. . earned from many bottles of Lion Lager. Without ever taking out a loan, he gradually added a tool­ shed-sized shop, grandly named the Las Vegas Spaza Shop and Take always, a hairdressing sa­ lon and a video-game shack. Re­ cently he won the city contract to replace Lawaaikamp's bucket latrines with 54 public flush toi­ lets. And he is building a disco­ theque out of salvaged lumber. With the shopping mall, Mr. Bosakwe will make the leap from selling to producing. He plans to open a bakery, drawing on his 16 y rs as a ho cook before he opened his easy. Black entrepreneurial talent foothold in the more formal busi­ n orld, reclaiming Black consumer dollars that go to white merchan and convincing Blacks that their townships and ttlements have a future. Already the entrepreneurs of Lawaaikamp are hatching fu- _ . ture schemes. In December, Advice From a Chain Ben Nombeke, a painting con­ tractor, expects to open his $3-a­ night motel alongside the mall, housing construction workers, visiting relatives and - who knows? -even tourists, in a bat­ tery_of aluminum trailer hom With help from a few white business leaders, the Masak­ hane Project persuaded a ship­ ping line to sell its used containers cheap and induced a life insurance com� -to pay. for advertising space on the mall's wall. The giant Pick 'n Pay supermarket chain guaranteed a loan for Mr. Pettie's store a d offered free advice." A Donkey Cart Business Too poor to afford trucks, Lawaaikamp is starting a don­ key cart business for delivering goods and removing fr8rbage. A brick-making machine is al­ ready churning out clay blocks for a new nursery school and will then become a commercial en­ terprise. Residents talk of a . chicken farm, a slaughterhouse, and a feedlot for local livestock. Donkey carts' and shipping containers may not long satisfy the expectations of Blacks who see how the whites of George live, Mr. Hugo conceded, but they are a start. -All ofus would like to drive a Mercedes-Benz, - h said. 'Friend of All Shop' "In his carefully calculated dreams, he said, chuckling in an­ ticipation of a bread war. "Tbeysupplyall thespazas. If a bakery is open in the township, they will have a lot of hassle. " Vuyasile Pottie, another of the mall's new tenants, has built his "Friend of All Shop" into Lawaaikamp's most impressive spaza. Inside a shed of scrap wood and tin, he has groceries precisely arrayed on spotless shelves, a deep frying machine for fish and chips, and, five video games. In the back, his wife Eunice, oversees a pool parlor with three tables. At the mall his little three­ container supermarket will offer customers a free ride home with their purchases. "That's a starter point," he said. "Ifbusiness is good, I'll take my profit and build with bricks." On their way up, the mer­ chants of'Lewaaikamp have out­ lived the legal barriers intended to force Blacks to buy from white inerchants, only to encounter the economic barriers of a soei- Waymon F. Smith III ( econd, right), vice president of corporate affair , and Henry H. Brown (left), enior vice pre ident, mark t development for Anheuser-Bu ch, join NAACP executive director Rev. Benjamin Chavi (second, left), and NAACP Board Chairman, Dr. William Gibson, to pr ent corporate contribution to the civil right group at its recent national convention in • Indian poli . brc a d p ivate po a b cto Advertise Here ·Call 869-0033. "You don't have to throw lots of money at the problem" Mr. Webster said "Actually, if you throw a couple of people at the problem, you can do a lot." Mr. Webster said the mall was a pilot project that could be replicated elsewhere, giving • In Southeast Michigan "one­ stop shopping" has finally come to small business people who are in need of technical support services. The Center for Urban Studies at Wayne State University and Commercial Bank, together with the Michigan Small Busi­ ness Development Centers and others, recently announced the formation of the Southeast Michigan Business Assistance Consortium (SEMBAC). SEMBAC's primary is to pro­ vi understandable and coordi­ nated assi tance-in one location-to companies and en­ trepreneurs in outhw t Michi­ gan. The service area for this new plan will be the counties of Wayne and Monroe, with a spe­ cial emphasis on the city of De­ troit. The comprehensive servi which are available to mall busin include: Consulting on manage­ ment, marketing, financing and export issu Providing access to data state research and development funds. tact SEMBAC Director Gary Shields at (313)963-9408. . JIM BERNACKI, Comerica first vice president, community development group, calls SEM­ BAC "an important new re­ source for small business people that will help create and retain jo and strengthen the overall business climate in our commu­ nity." SEMBAC consist of a dozen affiliated organizations that wiil provide mall busin assis­ tance in partnership under the new umbrella group. The affili­ ates presently include: Comerica's Small Business De­ velopment Center, Detroit Eco­ nomic Growth Corporation, MERRA, Metropolitan Center for High Technology, Michigan Busin Development Corpora­ tion, Minority Technology Coun­ cil of Michigan, National Association of Women Busin Owners/EXCEL! I NlLAC .Eco­ nomic Development Center, and Wayne State University's Divi­ sion of Engin ring Technology, Procur ment, Technical Assis- tant Center, malJ Busin D- velopment Center and Southeast Cluster Lead Bu i­ ness Development Center. For more information, con- Wh th r your buSiness is a sma I shop or a Iorg company In the mokmg, our tOfHlOtch buSlnm bon ng serw:e5 can proVJde JUst the boost you � to t groWIng We have Small BUSiness AdmlmstratJon (SBA) certJ(ied nders who wi I work wrth you to enerate capitol for your speofic buSIness � Plus our WId rang of effioent sel'VlCes are geared to help your buSIness succeed Including lines of cred accounts recelVObIe �nanong and Yen pen5lOl1 programs You'U find our sma 1 buSIness expertJs our s rvices and our flex are second to non. And we're just a phone ca away 010/ I -IOo..cALL-MNS any tJm of the day or night Peopk ore the heart of It bu in Providing hnical evalu- ations of new ideas and products Identifying federal and