\u. 2 Portland Observer, November 11, 1987 James Cash Jr. is the first and only Black tenured full professor at the Harvard University Business School. James Cash: Harvard University's Computer Whiz Professor James I. Cash Jr., the first and only Black tenured full professor at the Harvard University Graduate School of Business, is profiled in the Octo­ ber Ebony. Cash joined Harvard in 1976 as an assistant professor and became a full professor by 1985 which he says "was the fastest you can do it if you come in at the bottom ." The professor, with a Ph.D. in management infor­ mation systems, has recent college grads and executives from top corpora­ tions as students; oversees a multi-million dollar project to electronically access the school's information "banks"; and travels the world doing com­ puter research. He has introduced four computer courses for the MBA program, written three computer-related books and organized the com­ puter club, one of the school's most popular student organizations. Cash got hooked on computers when he was an honor student at all- Black I.M. Terrell High School in Texas. Thrilled by the "surge of power you can get only when you feel like you have command of the machine," he knew he wanted to work with computers. Cash even has three com­ puters at home. In school, he also excelled in sports, which led the Pittsburg Pirates to draft him for baseball in his senior year in high school. The Seattle Super- sonics drafted him for basketball when he attended Texas Christian Univer­ sity, where he made sports history as the first Black to play college basket­ ball in the Southwest Conference in 1965. ,‘r « ô •' i • • • ■ ■ • Black Press Honor Roll Stanley S. Scott, Vice President, Philip Morris Companies, Inc., second from right, greets descendants of heroes of the Black media during the recent Black Press Hall of Fame Induction Ceremonies sponsored by the Afro-American Newspapers. With Scott are, from left: Christopher Perry IV, great grand son of Christopher Perry, the founder of "The Phila­ delphia Tribune"; Nettie Douglass Morris, great grand-daughter of Frede­ rick Douglass, abolitionist and founder of "The North Star," and Alfreda Farrell, grand daughter of Ida B. Wells-Barnett, co-founder of "The Mem­ phis Free Speech" and a co-founder in 1909 of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Scott, who was the guest speaker for the Black Press Hall of Fame's induction ceremony, began his career as a journalist for America's first Black-owned, daily newspaper, "The Atlanta Daily W orld," a publication founded by his father Lewis A. Scott. Dorothye H. Boswell, Executive Director of the National Associa­ tion for Sickle Cell Disease, Inc., received contributions totaling $15,000 at the NASCD annual conference held recently in Balti­ more, M D. The donations were made in matching checks of $7500 each by (L) Cornell McBride, President of M & M Products Company, and (R) Edward H. King, Director of Governmental and Public Affairs of The Walgreen Corporation. The donations resulted from a National Black History Month campaign conducted earlier this year by M & M Products. M & M Products pledged .50 cents to NASCD for every purchase of several of its products during the two month effort. Walgreens committed to match the M & M Products contribution. The first newspaper printed on a train was the Weekly Herald, a single sheet, printed on both sides. It was issued by Thomas Alva Edison and the first known issue was dated Port Huron, Michigan, February 3,1862. 19«? R J REYNO LDS TOBACCO CO SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quilting Smoking Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health. 17 mg. "tar". 1.3 mg. nicotine av. pet cigarette by FTC method. S.* - \ . V .: - . ‘ *. * : ♦« *»• LUTHER Ç; *« • • ' ' / • ¿ X V . - fo H «a ria I mm A b Sw« fciag. ’ and frarntw rtw*** »***« pkutncm*« «** <•*****' < •*v -O ’ ►v- ■»Í': l ’ X (•'.! The new WORDS OF MARTIN LUTHER KIND, JR. CALENDAR 1988 features a cover photograph of King with his eldest daughter, Yolanda Denise, plus twelve other historic photos and quotations. ($7.95; Newm arket Press, 18 East 48th Street, New York, NY 10017; 212 832 3575) »*•*■ *• . X »;♦ 1 School's Open —Drive Carefully School is open, and Oregon AAA cautions motorists to drive very care­ fully. AAA also asks that parents make sure their children know the safest route to school and how to interpret traffic signals. • T-X What's Hot - What's New? The All New « ‘7 : L eisure t u ri is very new and featured . at Tiffany II Leisure Curl gives you the versatility of a curl and the look of a relaxer. ** Jr 00 $65 / "Tiffany's II H A S IT 3133 N.E. Prescott THE REFRESHES! 287-6557 Mondays — 12-5 • Tues.-Sat. - 9-5 Will accept late appts. SB Sfc , V.- 1