The mailing consists of a cover letter by George M. Houser and alert by Jennifer Davis about a proposed $10 million investment by Joseph E. Seagram and Sons in KwaZulu, one of South Africa's Bantustans. The cover letter says Seagram must have spent many thousands of dollars in contracting for the study of the possible project in KwaZulu. The mailing says many months have been given to the project by Clark, Phipps, Clark and Harris, Inc.; and four researchers, including Dr. Kenneth Clark, went to South Africa or an on-the-spot study. The alert says apparently anticipating opposition to this venture from those concerned about African liberation in the U.S. and Canada (Seagram is a Canadian...
The mailing consists of a cover letter by George M. Houser and alert by Jennifer Davis about a proposed $10 million investment by Joseph E. Seagram and Sons in KwaZulu, one of South Africa's Bantustans. The cover letter says Seagram must have spent many thousands of dollars in contracting for the study of the possible project in KwaZulu. The mailing says many months have been given to the project by Clark, Phipps, Clark and Harris, Inc.; and four researchers, including Dr. Kenneth Clark, went to South Africa or an on-the-spot study. The alert says apparently anticipating opposition to this venture from those concerned about African liberation in the U.S. and Canada (Seagram is a Canadian Corporation with a U.S. subsidiary), Seagram has tried hard to project an image of social concern. The alert includes a qute by Minister of Bantu Administration and Development M.C. Botha. The alert discusses cites the Canadian Taskforce on the Churches and Corporate Responsibility, apartheid, Black Psychologist Kenneth Clark, foreign investment, the Rev. Beyers Naudé, the Christian Institute, Chief Gatsha Buthelezi, homelands, Transkei, Polaroid, black dispossession, and white supremacy.