r o ilitary analy ts are arning that, fter a decade of im­ provement in minority recruitment, there m y n be drop in the number of Bl c entering the armed rvice offi rs, The re n i that th in their recruit in ith engineering or ientific skill to m t the demands of an inere singly technology-on nted milit ry. Thi h cud probJem the an - Iy t Y be u di prop rtion te num- b r of 81 tudent in college - the .. ngle urce of offi er ndi- d te re continuin to m jor in nd lib ral rt. uthority on ADDrrIO AL difficulty IS in­ ere d comp tition from pri te in­ du try, ys Air Force Col. Frederic Pang, director of officer and enli ted per nnel manag ment t the Pentagon. "Our recruiting peopl y there are limited number of Bl ck who gradu e from college and have the technical qualification ttl ys Pang "and they're the same people the private • ctor i goin fter." Until th end of or d ar II, Blac ere virtually excluded from- the officer corp. But Defense Dep rtrnent figur o dramati progress ha been made . e then, e iaDy in the p decade. In fiscal 1972, Black counted for only I.S percent of th becoming om en in the four rvice. By fi 1982 the number of Blac in- to 7.1 percent of tho enteri om er corp . A of September 1982, B c com- pri d 8.4 percent of all Army officer fi e percent of all ir orce offi er . four percent of the officers in the arine and 2.9 percent of tho in th avy. Bl cks now make up about 22 p r .ent of all enli ted per nne) in the ilit ry rvice including nearly 33 percent in the rmy, 21 percent in the tines, 17 percent in the Air Force and 1 .4 per ent in the avy . While all the bran he hav made d� nces the Air orce and avy are expected to continue to have the most diffi ulty in recruitin dequate number of 81 c offie r. The rea n, the an- I aly Y, is that the t 0 branche ith their increa ingly phisticated ea- ponry . and m chinery ill have the gre te ne d for tho ith high level of technical and ientific ill 00 OTES th t Re rve Officer T r inin orp program at Blac col- leges d universitie have produo d rou hly half the Blac officer no on ti e duty. One way to en ure the hool continue to prod ce B ck officer is to increa the number of ROTC scholar­ ship . But Dorn note number of white college and uni rsiti that dropped ROTC becau of prote s durin the Vietnam era have recently rein ituted the program, meaning there will be more competition for holarships. At the same time, h y, the Penta­ gon 'hasn't re nded to requ . from 8 ROTC colleges for scholarship incre in the. numbers that would significantly help the situation." But the larger problem appears to be simply th t there are too fe BI c s gr duating from college with degrees in . ence or technology . Doro, a Blac Univer ·ty of Texa ROTC � duate who serv d Army captain in the early 1970 notes that of the 60,000 B c ho received under­ graduate degree in 1981, fe er than ,000 earned degrees in mathematics engineer in or the phy . cal sci nces. f - - , JUNE 15 - 21. 1983 THE CITIZEN PAGE 3 . eed es o or exe a ge H ve YQU ever thought hat it ould be like to have. a tudent from another country Ii with you for year learn about their culture, teenager hoot go emrnent, religion, their food, nd televi . n while they are learnin about our? Youth For Under anding is 100 ing for home in St. Joseph, C , and Berrien counties for exchance tudents for the 1983-84 school year. St. Joseph Ca and Berrien counti . enjoyed 36 students on the Youth For Under t ndin program for the 1982- 83 school year. The YFU program placed over 50 students in . higan from ex�n . If interested in 0 contact Robert and Jacq phon 616/429-4574, or "�I.&_� der phone 616/279-9083. will a er your que io in placing a student in your a A LA TA - About 70 prominent Saudi Arabian busine en and top government offici I jetted into At­ lant recently for two days of m etings. The S udis too part in a conference to ek agreement for joint busine partners and to trade with about 350 repre ntati e fiom American com­ panies from 27 states. AI represented ere 11 companie from other countrie . The Saudis were invited by Atlant ayor Andrew Young. On that trip, Youn invited the S u­ dis to come to the United States to see bu in opportunitie in tlant. Their ttendan e t the conference a their c ept n of th t invitation. "Our 0 n ec nomic urvi J de­ pend on intern ti nal tr de, ith th Third rld in parti ul r.' Youn id. 'They on r very ttractive market. • It v ry important for American bu in t et inv Ived with the Third orld, the Saudi in p rti ular. The end re ult is more jobs.' Th meeting had thre b si objec­ tives: -Direct sale of goods and rvice to the Saudi -Joint busine ventures -Inve ment by the udis in U.s. projects During th meeting tternpt ere m de to li the American firm ith S udi lth similar intere t . The conference the U.s. Chamber n­ m- Young lat r dec ed: "I ccu d of b in m yor ith forei n policy. I pi d guilty. If y n 't 'The leadership belong. not to th loudest, not to tho· who beat th drums or blow the trumpets, but to tho ho da in and da out, in all amin to To persist and to remain deer t b l n th l 'Od up.