get .: cuts must arge children MalrIaD Wi t EdtDuUl When it's budget-cutting time, politicians too often take aim America's children. Since children don't vote, lobby, or make campaign contributions they are the safest target. Children re the easy target in 1981, when more than $10 bil­ lion c from essential ser­ vices for children and families in the name of deficit reduction. Now it' budget-cutting time again. And children are in greater danger than ever. To comply with the Gramm­ Rudman law, which sets ',early tar for reducing the nation­ al debt, the Budget Summit must red the deficit by much 100 billion - bout the ame UHtarelS and the administration quickly came up . to finance the, saviDp and ��e, a JDljority said they were willing to ee their own taxes raised to expand services for needy children. WE AMERICANS must in­ sift that our elected officials hammer out a responsible agreement based not on politi­ cal expediency but on the truth that nothing is more vital to the nation's futute than giving children a good start in life. A good start includes high-qualitY affordable child care. Co� and the president must not use the deficit as an excuse for fail­ ing to enact and sign the child care legislation held up in Con­ gress for almost a year a result of petty jurisdictional disputes intheHo Another danger to cbildrcnis that the B Summit wiD not "A co IItry, " p�o,'e,,, "'O"�"'�lIt lIuI, 40�s 1101 ""/". ils YOll'" does flol tI�se",� ils future" -Oliv�r R. T"",.o ANC Pnsid�II' loan bailout off-budget ext fis­ cal year. With politically tough decisions before them, the president and Congress will be tempted to make crippling cuts in programs for children and families inste d of working out a fair b relecting the nation's true needs. TH UNITED STATES sim aneo Iy is facing grave ceo . c and social problems at home, tough economic chal­ lenge from abroad, and a shrinking YOUDg work forces. Yet are sacrificing more than o e-fifth of our future work � ce to tbe unti effects of poverty,. dequate health care . care, d poor cd ca- tioa. To meet the challe of the ccJltury, we will need all children to grow up to be. y q ·fled, productive � aDd that means every one of them m receive a good . tart in life and a strong educa- tion. The majority of Americans � d this. In Minnesota, a stalt.eWl·lC!,e poll in JUDe owed t 65 percent of YO en f vored ina-eased spending for educa­ tion nd 61 percent anted greatet pending on services for low-income children. What' produce any timely agreement on howto meet the Gramm- . Rudman target. If that happens and Congress doe not change the law, across-the-board federal spending cuts will go into effect automatically on Oc­ tober 15. These would blindly chop 38 percent out of federal programs for children and families, with disastrous results. For example, . - More than 200,000 children would have to be dropped from Head Start CYen though the highly successful preschool program is D able �o serve only about 20 percent of elegible childre - One million childrea fewer children would be immUDized api prew:atable childhood diseases � tho. a me"'� epidemic is sweeping the country and the U.s. fuDy. - munizes a smaller proportion of i one-year-olds . polio than 14 other nations. - About 2 children ould lose the beaefits of the Chapter 1 Compensatory Education program even though American children know Ie geography than children· Iran, Ie cieDce than children in Spain,. and less math than children in Ja� - Assistance to the homeless would be cut by more than one­ third even though 100,000 children are homele every night. Whether it's through automatic Gramm-Rudman cuts or short-sighted decisions by our political leaders, this country C8DD afford to take aim at children during budget­ cut� Write to President Bush and your senators and repre­ sentatives. Tell them to r . the easy targets. No ore than ever, cbiIdren's programs m , be strengthened, DOt weakened, if our natiOll is to prosper. MtuiIut Wright Edelmtlll if prelid,nt 0/ the Children's Def".. Fund, II 1IIIIiotIpl voice' lor cItiItlmJ. . .' . II Igher education egins early y Kei o. Hilt . .According to Edgar Epps, 1 the foreword of Dr. eginald Clark' boo, " arni l y Life and School chievem nt: Why Poor lack Children Succeed or �il.." "!h'e family is the ba ic inSlJfulOn through w ich children learn who they are here they fit into ocicty. �a d what kind of future h y a�e Ii kcl t cxp rience. It "One's ethnic roup mcm­ b rship determines much of t e content and Ilavor of inter­ a lion. wi thi n the family. If one i BI ck (African American). Puerto Rican, or C icano, he or she wiJl be ex­ p . ed to parental values and p iorities that differ in impor­ tant ways from tho e ex­ p rienced by white (European A crican) children. • A family' ability to pro­ vi e a home environment that Black children mire live with 'grandpa en cen u bur au report Some ).2 miJl ion Black children, J3 percent of all Black children under the age .) 8, lived in the home of their grandparent in 198. according to a report released by the Commerce Department's Census Bureau. This compares with 3 percen� for white and 5 percent for Hispanics, who may be of any race. About one-half of Black children living. in their grandparent • home bad onl y their mother pre ent, 38 percent had neither parent present, 4 percent had both parents living with them, and 3 percent had only their father present, (There was no significant difference in the percent living with both parents and their and with their father.) . About one-half of white children Jiving in the home of tbelr grandparent bad only tbeir mother present, wbile one-fourth were cared for by tbe grandparent only. The percentages for Hispanic were 51 percent nd 26 percent. About 38 percent of the Support Our Ad • , hows. na ion's 9.8 miJlion Black . cb ldren under age 18 Ii ed w rh both parents In J9H9 compared with 80 percent of w itc children and 67 perc nt of Hi panic children. For Black children, the . de line in two percent Jiving w s greatest in the 1970s w en the prop rtion dropped fr m 59 pcrccn to 42 percent; . i ce ) 980 the roportion has de, Jined by on y 4 percentage POlOt . Since J 970, the number of . Bl ck childre living with on y one paren ha. i ncrea. cd fr m 3.0 mi lion to 5.4 miJlion. S'milarly, the nu b r for w ite children ro c from 5.1 iIlion to 9.6 mi lio�. . in aJl su ey, tbe data ar subject 0 sampling va iabiJity and other source of rror. MICHIGAN CITIZEN PAGE 7 Keith O. Hilton HIGHER EDUCATION �repare it children for future cce ,including succcs in hool, develop out of pa t experiences with cultural task and social rewards." Jf as parents andlor rela­ tive of younger people, we also r member th t we are still ) arning a' well, then young, p oplc wiIJ also learn.' It i n vcr too late to be n active lc der of the family, s many m thers and father re dis- CI...AR , w om I know and respect trcrnc ndousl y, . �irectJy f uses on children, mucb of w at he write bo�t may se l' a� guides for adults w·11. Clark xu 'gesls ' wide • rrc t of spccific parental pr ctrccv that may sc ewell . in cqu'PllIng school-children w th the comprchcnsi e writ­ in '. read: ng. verbal, nd 0- cial �k,lb and personal q alitic« needed for caring d' ssroorn lessons and coping With adult-, and peers. For mvtan 'C, hc sta cs that pa cnts .lcarly need 10 define an fully accept their �e P n­ si iliucs for "parenting." Thi. m ans bc rng a provider, te chcr, nuturer, coach, and so rce 01 hop' for the hild. Family members should he _ wr res. help (children) e tab­ lis rclauonships wit other ac ievement oriented per- o . 'ontrary 10 w at we re d and hear daily about a la k of U.S. African role m cls, I continue to ay that therc i. n overabundance of po itive Afro-centric local oriented per- UlDE - 19.95 nd, COfIIb neg tv. In- • .. or.) owe, b uty , 6th Fl., Suil� B-457, I