I . I' ( Opinion Page help for Tabitha I .• I Dear Editor, When I first heard about Tabitha For ter on the evening I ne my heart went out to her and I prayed for ber survival. . Tabitha Foster is the three- Regardless of the reasons, year�old Black girl wb der- Ta itha and her parents deserve ent an historic five orgaa . our concern and support. Only transplant last October. She bas SS2,OOO have been raised so far proven to be an amazing sur- and her medical bills have al- vivor and a medical miracle. ready topped $300,000. However. after seeing the in I am asking every Black iti report, I only w two fol- church to take up donations for low-up reports on her recovery, this brave family. I urge all or- . and wondered why Tabitha ganizations that claim to be wasn't major national news. On working for the good of Black Monday, Jan. 1, my suspicions 'people, 10 raise funds for were confirm d when I read an Tabitha. t article in the Detroit News en- According to the family titled, "Why Don't We Care lawyer, Mr. Joseph K. Williams, About Tabitha?" by Susan Ager. money can be sent to: Ta�tha It stated that the nation hasn't Foster Fund, Heritage National embraced Tabitha's plight in the Bank, 401 Smithfield Street, Pit- way it has other children such as tsb g, Penn, 15222. . . Jessica McClure, who was Cards and words ofen- trapped for 58 hours in a well. couragement may be sent The article suggests racism as' directly to the Pittsburg a possible reason. Also, the fact Children's Hospital. that her ordeal h s not been Tabitha is still in serious con- dramati�y marketed for the I' dition and her parents, who are mass media is another con- both OD leave from their jobs, sideration. remain t her bedside. Come on, I personally feel it is a com- Black America, we must take bination of the two. Ironically, care of our OWD. we are at atime when Black Kathleen X. Walker people are made to feel 1112 Ambrosia apologetic and defensive for the Muskegon, Mich. 49442 mere suggestion of racism. . BI.ac'ks (Editor: On Jan. 14, 1988 the ,Nationa/l Urban League delivered its annual State 01 (I Bl«k Amoica: For each of 10 . weeks, Q suinnuuy of one section of tIult �pon is �prinUd hue.) Thi eek: -Black EnroU� me . Higher Education: The Unfu1fi1Ied Promise of Equality: by Niere Suderkasa, Ph.D., President Lincoln UnNersity of Peamsylvania. \ A decade 0, in 1916, Black undergraduate enrollment reached high point of 10.5 per­ cent of the n tional total, up from six percent ill 1968. By - 19a1, it bad declined to 10.1 per­ ee d by 1�, the last year included in the American Coun­ cil of Education's "Report on Minoritie ill Higher Educe- tioD,- it down to 9�rcent. �etween 1980 and 1 , the decline in numbers from 932,254 to 897,185, re resenting (a net loss of 3.8 percent. Blacks ,y re the only major r cW or. ethnic group whose under- • In gr duate enrollments declined , between 1980 �d 1984; othe minoritie and whites ex­ perienced an maease. Black enrollment in graduate school also declined substantial­ ly over the decade. Only Black enrollment in profe ional schools increased, but not enough to offset the OYCraU loss in enrollment beyond the bachelor's le\d. In 1987, two years after the College Board published "Equality and Excellence: The Education I Status of Black Americans, - arning of the seriousness of the down ard trend in Black higher educatioo, the nation still DOt moved with sense of urgency to 'remedy this situation. The ar­ ticle on minorities in higher education in the b ck-to-school i sue of The Chronicle of Higher Education" is typical of those that have ppeared in the wake of the College Board report. highet . I can o SOURCE COM IT· MENT . The bottom line in an these plans aDd proposals calls for in- ., creases in pending and a major commitment of other resources. To date, neither the federal government, the states, nor the individual coUeges and univer­ sities have been willing to com­ mit the necessary resources on a 'Iona term and ustained basis to reverse this decline. Had such a commitment been made in the mid venties to safeguard the pins &om the siJti the Black emoUment pi�e would 100 very different today. . The downward trend in Black enrollment in higher education and the growing h - tility toward Blacks in predominantly white· colleges . and universities have served to undencore the vital role of the historicaDy B ck colleges and universitie (HBCU) in American higher education. Black colleg have borne, and still bear, the of America' \ BLAC TER A. recent. study by the Sociologist W er Allen . 986), comparing BI ck students at predominaDte Black colleges \ with those at predominantly bite c liege , provides et another' piece f evidence t Black colleges 0 a better job than their pred . tJy white coUnterparts of ucatiDg Black GBSDOBET- undergr duates, Allen sho a Jacqueline . I Fleming had earlier (1984), that Black colleges offer a more nur­ I turing cademic and en-, vironment, and grad ate proportionally larger num rs \ of Black students. They also provide students with the skills I and self-confidence necessary· to compete effectively in graduate and profes ional schools, as well as in the orld of work. The Michigan Citizen wclco let- ters from re der . Write: 16032 Woodwar , High­ land Par I 48203.