I
'S DELEGAT
IC P OC S
A J C G
By Jo·
DETROIT - "Jesse', been
hung out to dry." That is how one
Jesse Jackson supporter
analyzed the results of the May
7 Democr tic caucuses in which
the Party made its choi ces for
delegates to the tional C9n
vention.
From another viewpoiilt, the
people come the rcallose .
'We ha\le squandered the op
portunity for an iodepe den
political oveme " 15 politi:
lacalOll
coordiDator Sam Riddle.
At i the de
were lected.
"There are a good maay true
J � upporters 0 wiD be
going: Riddle ide -But in
Detroit there as a com
pro . . Deals re cut . h
I bor and the Mayor (Co eman
Yo g) d J ckson forces will
not 0 (to the convention
delegates). "
Youn h for years publical
Iy expressed his dislike (or Jesse
J c : Young upports Gov.
Mich I DUk .. although the
o Co II' . aJ districts in
Detroit voted ove elmingly
for Jac&lSOD.
Riddle
Albuquerque, N.M. - The
Rev. Jesse 'J acksOn angrily t
tacked the Democr tic party'
delegate selection process I
week charging that the number
of delegates he has won does not
reflect his popular vote.
14
Jack on cited Puerto Rico
ere he defeated fro -�r
Mich el Dukakis in the popular
vote, but the Ma achusetts
governor got all S2 dele tes be
cause he had support from the
i land's goveraor and party
. leaders.
. Overall, there is a 8-point gap
between Dukakis and J cUon
in terms of popular vote but the
de egate gap. much . der -
Dukakis h 1,496 compared 0
J ckson' 9TI.
While in W hington, DC
earlier la t week -J ackson
warned some party le der that
his . upporters "might become
di couraged" and not vote in
No mber if they feel he i being
tre led unfairly by th party._
vel
Van Buren·
By KrI t1 L Hay
COVERT - Chicago Sun
Times columnist, Vern Jar
rett, told some 200 people Satur
day, AprilJO, gathered for tbe
Van Buren AACP Bducation
al Awareness Conference that
Blacks will lose the gains they
have made in the I t three
decades if theydon't save their
children from drugs, illiteracy
and immorality.
"We are producing a gener -
tion of illiterate and immoral
children," J rr ett t old
educators, parents and studen
gathered at Covert High School.
Conference participants at
tended workshops on educa
tional goals, roles and respon
sibilities of Black educators,
parents and students.
Parents must take some of
the blame for the rampant il
litera y and immorality so
-preval nt today, Jarrett said.
they h e allowed their children
to usurp their authority. In the
South where he grew up, if a
child used foul language, any
adult within ear hot would
Udrent c I rnni
AACP confere
I . I
I
tel s
e
chastise him.
He attributes his becoming' a
writer to an old man who heard
him inventing vulgar rhymes one
day. The man . d that anybody
who could make up verse like
that should be a writer. After I
that, people in his church began
to sponsor him in poetry and
essay contests.
:J arrett recounted the story of
how his grandmother, a slave,
learned to read by eavesdrop
ping when the teacher came to
in truct the master's daughter.
Continued 0 20
"and I
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May 15, 1988 - Image 1
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- Michigan Citizen, 1988-05-15
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