II C r A. H ,Sr. NNPA News Editor WASHINGTON, DC'­ Democratic Presidential can­ didate Jesse L 1 ackson declared "we need a new realism, not (merely) new faces in the White House". Addressing more than 1,100 mostly white-male audience at- . tending the American Soceity of Newspaper Editors meet in Washignton, D.C., Jackson declared his "1 ackson Doctrine" of economic justice at home and peace abroad is more ideally suited to the realities of a world . that has vastly changed since World War It ended nearly 43 years ago. OT WHITE, OR MALE "The next president must know this world," he asserted, "and this world is not just white nor male." At the end of the World War II, the Third World was just beginning its struggle for equality. The world, he said changed dramatically since that time. Third world countries are struggling grimly against pover-' ty, disease, despair. Com­ muni m holds no appeal to them. They seek help from whatever source is forthcoming. When leaders of America and Russia sit down at their chessboard they must remember that together they represent no more than one-eighth of the world's population. Grea ·La I . 8y Je irer W rei Capital News Service LANSI G - The hip's whistle blasts a long call. It's dusk, and you hUll'j down lh pier with several of your cruisemate . Your day w spent wander­ ing around the lively port-of­ . call, shopping, festing on local pecialities, and taking in the sights and sounds of a fascinat­ ing new place. On board, you slide into a deck chair and watch a full moon rise as the ship moves out onto open water. A night in the Caribbean? No, an evening on Lake Michigan. It may be just a dream, but the sceario is a not-so-impos­ sible dream for America's in­ land seas, say Great Lakes recreation experts. A large proportion of cruise ship passenger' is from Michigan and other Great Lakes states, the experts y. and their vacation dollars could just. as easily be spent OD ater closer to home. "They've been cruised out,lso mil needed in e, .Ja kson ays· RESPECT FOR LAW 1 ackson declared that as president he would reinstitute a respect for interaational law and, in an obvious dig at the much investigated U.S. Atty. General Edwin Meese, Ill, for laws at home. He said he would convene a meeting representatives of South African frontline states - Zambia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Angola, Mozambique - to bolster protection against the lawless and murderous raids across their borders by the il­ legal Botha regime forces. PALESTINIAN RIGHTS He reiterated that as presi­ dent he would call for a peace parley in the Middle East and "get people to talking" with each other. For there can be no peace in that troubled area, he said, unless Arab and Jew, and Pales­ tinian sit and talk of a peace plan that will guarantee an Israeli state within secure borders, and a recognition of Palestinian right to a homeland. America, he asserted, is not endangered by alien ideologies, but by mind-altering substances. If elected pre ident 1 cksoa said he would strengthen the Coast Guard and all our border areas whee the chec points are, invest in a massive rehabilitation program which is also directed at cutting the demand for drugs, and go after the drug lords in high places, The multi-billion es cruise to speas, and they're looking for something in their own back­ yard," said Stephen Thorp, transportation and develop­ ment specialist for the Great Lakes Commission. . The commission is a Michigan-based eight-st te compact which deals. with resource and economic issue of the Great Lakes states. Michigan Travel Bureau spokesman AI Sandner said that lake-related attractions are a major element in the state's tourism industry, d that the water has an Imost limitless potential a dra for visitors. "We promote ter vacations more than any other single ele­ ment in the tate." Sandner said". In the fir half of the century, tourists h d numerous oppor­ tunities for travel on the lakes. Million flocked to beaches, lakeside resorts and port cities in summer, and popular destina­ tions such as Mackinac Island, with its Grand Hotel, flourished But economic downturns, war and changing marine regulations - uch as the out­ IawiDg of wooden-hu1Jed vessels f dollar drug trade in this country .could not exist unless there is corrupt protection of the drug lords in high places, and be added that he would launch a $3 billion war against it. QUALIFIED On "his "qualifications" to be president, Jackson said, one has to be "old enough, American enou�h and have leadership ability," all possessed in his can­ didacy. On being Black, 1 ackson said President Reagan's remark that because of his color, little atten­ tion is being paid to what he is actually saying, is merely Reagan expressing "fright as I get closer to the White House". Fonner Rep. Geraldine Ferraro assailed Jackson's "radical" views and said if he "were not Black he would not be in the race". 1 ackson shrugged her off, declaring "millions of Americans have a point of view different from Ferraro's". "We campaigned across the south ... without a single catcall or boo. It was not until we go North to New 'York that vi began to hear this from (Mayo Edward) Koch, Preside t Reagan and then rs. Ferrar , I 1 ackson said "Some people are making hysteria while I ami making history." . In response to a query froml t he floor that he would not meet with Jewish leaders in New C D do 14 I . . Detroit to ehicago 8y Chn tiDe Hedstro a half hours, with the average Capital News Service speed 51 mph. �SIN