AUGUST 30 - SEPTEMBER 5,1987 THE MICHIGAN CITIZEN 3 ining company to U · strike dead oc n 0 • ( IS -. Church, labor and antiapartheid activists here are urging a U.S. mining corpora­ tion with major shares in ami­ bia to help break the potentially explo ive de dlock between triking Black wor ers and a South African mining conglo­ merate. court injunction was pend­ ing at press time late last wee that could determine whether some 4,600 amibian worker member of the Mineworkers Union of amibia UN), will edical shortage is critical IS) - Black amibians pl gued by a measles epidemic and other life-threatening di ases, face dire health needs that are compounded by the disproportionate shortage of medical per nnel. ccording to recent reports uth Africa' Admin' rator General Loui Pienaar tated that amlbia claim 293 medi­ cal practitioner. That figure does not include army per- nnel, which averages 4,095 p ople per doctor. In the frican-inh bited northern region of Owambo there are 15 653 people per doctor. •• • C igan jo Ca i 0 Former ichigan journalist Lee Ivory has been named editor and publisher of the W tts St r-Review, one of the oldest newspapers in Southern California. Ivory who worked s a linotype operator in the pro­ duction department and w feature writer for the Chicago Defender, has been training young journalist since he moved ot California in 1968. A former bass violinist with Jack Teagarden and Errol Gar­ ner, Ivory began his newspaper career as production manager with the Detroit Tribune Pub­ lishing Company in his Michi­ gan hometown, where he super­ vised printing of the Tribune, the Flint Bronze Reporter, the Saginaw Valley Gazette, the West ide Community Block Club newspaper and helped to found the Jackson Blazer. He began writing an enter­ tainment column in 1960 and, later his nationally-syndicated column led to his being named as flrst director of public re- 1 tions for Motown Record Cor- . poration. He bec .... le inrcrested in )'uu\h motivation w:�.il\! at otown and continued his work In Chic go with his partner, i!�rr) Dale. From office s in the Playboy Building in ' 966, Lee Dale and Associates .rved uch clients as arvin Gaye, Minnie Riperton, Johnny ash, be ejected from their ho tels, A large police pre nee ha reportedly built up aro d the workers' living compound. The r e began July 27 ain th T meb Co oration Limited T L. Gold Field of uth Africa the m reh lder, has dimi d of the workers and refu d to recognize the union. U issued veral demands including increased wages above the ba 50 cents per hour, improved working conditions and an end to apartheid racial policies. The United Mille Workers of America recently joined other organizations to pres the ew York-based ewmont Mjning Corporation, which holds 32 6 p rcent of TCL shares 0 push tor negotiations between M and the company. ewmont spokesman James Hill maintained that his company is in the proce of divesting its TCL holdings. "We have removed .ourself from management responsibilities, We have no control over the daily operations,' Hill commented. Bill Johnston of the Episco­ pal Churchpeople for a Free Southern Africa in isted that ewmont formerly the manager at the T meb min scan exert the nece ry pre ure. ewmont's direc or include Robin Plumbrid e b ard hair­ man of Gold F' I f uth Africa and Rud lph I. J. go board chairman of on r d ted Gold Fields ndon-ba d firm that is al L shareholder. Activists support Jackson candidacy Chicago, Ill. - W:len t) ver ! ,200 Democratic party left­ wu.ger; met in Chicago recently �ilC listened to six of their p.�nJ·� presidential contenders, they gave their applauds ad •. -ost full-hearted upport to the Rev. Jes Jackson. MeetlJ�g in Chicago were community organizers. peace activists, feminists enviromentalist , and leaders of consumer group. Jackson told those preser.' not to allow themselves to be labeled "special interest groups." But he added, if you are the special interest, "I would rather run to the special interest as a Democrat than run from the special prosecutor as a Republican." rnalist named head W IT'S HAPPE ING - Former Michigan joumali t Lee Ivory (c.) h been n med editor nd publisher of th Watt Star-Review. Shown honoring Ivory for community rvice to the City of Lo ngele i, Charlotte sherry, aide to ayor Tom Bradley. (K S photo Amanda Ambrose, Aretha Franklin, Little Milton Camp­ bell, the Dells, Raynard Miner, the Spinners and Muhammad Ali. He served as public relations counsel and press secretary to comedian/social activist Dick Gregory while in Chicago and was a public relations con- ultcnt to Lou �;w.'!c: before bei, g named city editor ot the Los Angeles Sentinel. The Watts tar-Review will erve as a trainin vehicle f r y ung Bla k j urnalists in the' . . uthern alifornia area. Ivory is married to the former Gwen Collins, a native of Riviera Beach, Florida. He has two sons - Knell and Darryl - ho live in Detroit. His daughter, Karen, is married to Earnest M illhou and they reside in South Holland, Illinois. d 0 s COO boycott by HUGH • SEMPLE The AFL-CIO has called for an end to the long boycott of Coors Beverage products that started in 1m when members of Local 366 walked off their jobs in a dispute over management's desire to con­ duct lie-detector testing of employees. 70 pet cent of the 1,500 members returned to their outh Atrica detains leaders s jobs in 1978 along with a num­ ber of minorities, according to Union and Coors managemant officials.The Local Union was decertified following a vote of 71 percent of the employees under the auspices of the ational Labor Relation Board. The vote was 71 to 29 percent in favor of the decertification. The end of the Boycott has special significance to minorities across the country because Coors opened the doors to greater opportunity for Blacks, Latino's and Women. When Coors Beer was in­ troduced to the Michigan market, Michigan unions, claiming Coors to be anti­ union, succeeded in stopping the sale of Coors Beer in many bars and hotels, al­ though some including the UA W, hired non-union musicians. . Coors signed an agreement with minority communities across the nation worth $350 million over a five year period. The convenant guaranteed the return of a generous percent: age of Coors earnings to the minority communities. Representatives from the NAACP, PUSH, THE URBAN LEAGUE and other minority groups participated in drawing up the agreement. Glen Howard, Community Relations Field Manager for Coors, said, "It will now give us opportunity to market and sell in a competetive fashion without a stigma. It is a posi­ tive step and Coors is glad the end has come which will now allow more emphasis on help­ ing the disadvantaged." Continued from Plge 1 tions slated to be held before the end of the year. South Africa occupies Namibia in defiance of international law and the apartheid-appointed interim government" has failed to achieve either inter­ nal or international recogni­ tion. South Africa is hoping that its elections will lend legitimacy to the "interim" rulers but SW APO secretary of foreign affairs Hidipo Humatenya says " ... its simply an attempt to get new puppets and to delay the implementa­ tion of resolution 435 which calls for free and independent elections as a first step towards amibian inde­ pendence." Recent polls show SW APO commands the overwhelming support of the electorate and the massive strike of some 6000 workers is only strengthening resistance to apartheid rule. The South African police are now conducting surprise raids throughout the country. Commissioner of Police Major General Koos Myburgh stated that the raids and ar­ rests are in connection with ... possible assistance and in­ stigation of the committing of deeds of terrorism." Damu Smith of the ecumenical organization Washington Office on Africa condemned the arrests and called for people to " ... fight for comprehensive sanctions against South Africa and pres­ sure congress to pass the Del­ lums-Cranston sanctions bill HR 158O/SR556. Smith also asked for sup­ port to HR13l, a bill by Con­ gressman Mervyn Dymally, chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus which calls for the US to "take effective ac­ tion to implement resolution 435.' Blac newspaper bombed MIAMI The recent firebombing of the Miami Weekly may have resulted from an article carried by the newspaper on a Blac religious sect known as the Yahwehs. The group had been a source of controversy in Miami's Blac community in recent months and managing editor David Clarke believes his paper's generally positive article about the Yahwehs may have angered some others in the African American com­ munity. The Yahwehs believe Blacks are the true Jews. Their recent purchase of rent­ al and commercial property in the Miami area bas placed them in conflict with some Blacks who feel they are being displaced.