ler prote tin 0 c:u. n, currently publi h d by the Le ue 1 t month, the group w rned that if General As i - ue f r t nee were co mp le tet y eliminated, recipient could no Ion er et' oney for sh�lter or h t nd ould be forced to turn (the human 7,000 c e limin tetl, not only Involve f rni lies, 0 the number 0 Individual ff ted .. succe . mind but he ives' me a Thou h much of the - up- feren W8 o! looking at port availed to 4- P tudents ' . "Dr. Herman ha hown ha been predominantly . m 'option th I hould on- cad em" the men tor i n g ide r I" e I a i n 0 g Ie, "h e program take retention one doe n ' t try to ch a n ae mv step further," explains Si ter things. Whatever we di cus , M. Martinez Rozek, OMA i feels Iike a conver arion, director, "Not only will thi not an in erview.' interaction provide Thi app ro a 'h. through knowledge· and confidence, ugge tion and overall inter- but po sibly future ernplo - e t, is what Ogle by like th ment ccntact after gr dua- mo t about the pr gr m a non.? well a having a relation hip with a profes ional person who i n01 a' parent. peer or assigned adviser. Dr. Katie O'Dowd, Com­ munication Arts, who will be acting as mentor for two stu­ dents this yeaT,.liked the idea of the Mentoring program when he ir t beard about it. "I think It's important f r • the e. students tc know, right fr.omthe beginning, that someone is in their corner," . ay O'Dowd.··' I hope to be A P rt 0 commitment to campu - ide retention t Madonna l le e , Livonia. tudc nts enrolled under th Select Stud nt upport er­ vice Pro ram (4- P) now have th benefit of a profe - ional co idante, c demic che e r le der and friend all rolled into one - a mentor. Created an� funded by me Off ice ·0 f Min 0 r it Y E qui t y nr o ug h Michigan Dep arr-" ment of Educ tion, the 4-SP ad d r e s th oal of in­ creased cce . retention and. uccess of tudent from-un­ de rre pre e nte c gr ups uch a Black,' Hispanics nc1 Na- , tive Americans . . The newly created mentor­ ing program, implemented through Mad nna's 0 ice of Mul ticul tural Affairs, (OMA) aim to further sist 4-SP' tudent , primarily freshmen an sophomores, in achiev­ i ng pe rso na l and academic OMO 0 LE nv, of Detroit a fr . hman inter­ ested in a career in law, en­ joys discussing education aths with omeone who now the in and ou be the academic world. His mentor, Dr. William Herman, of th . E , .. "Bush cares about oil," Smith said. "He said he is the education president when he' ha done more again t education than Ronald R gan. H� will defend oil right and will not help declining education, the hungry and the & homeless in the U. S." " . .. ----� __ �--��.--------------���---r-����������--�� .. militar.YI. ere ti. g.", ., .pO\V vacuum. He .a Iso aid a war will alie nate Middle Eastern people against the U.S. 4 ful and d isre pects the sancti ry of King' legacy . Not only do both Hines and mi th oppose the date for th onset of a war-- they object to . the war itself. 1a.��m ... lIy 0 pe the U.S. Gwf - for e are Black, nd nearly 30 percent of Army force are �m- po ed of Black males: Pront lirre unit which will bear the brunt of casualties in a . war are 50 percent Black, sa,. . coali tion spokespeople. . Michael Hawkins, 18, Michigan Youth Coordinator for. the coalition, says .be h .. a' brother in the Gulf and he docsn't want for his parent . to go to Washington and see his name on a wall. Simba Jahi of· the Malcolm X Center ays the U.S. should not go to war when there is a war bore . in the cine . He cited the use·of drug " hooting. and the prevalent poverty in U.S. cities. Charles Gehe of the .AlI People Congress said, "Wc'nee-d to cle !l up at horne before we go to omeone else house to c1ea'l . up. ' , The coalition '1oVants the' government to u e the projected .30 billion for the Gulf deploy­ ment f r ocial problems iR the lJ .S.· . A oalition news relea e read. "Th y; can fe�d 500,000 troo.,. around the other' ide of tbe TH PREVALENT questfon wOl1d; why can't they feed was the role of African, hungry children right here I. American in the Gulf., t l�he' . Detroit? i' • mllitary will move to an offen- · sive stance and force the troop, out Of the deser, aid Bush origi nall yin a December 1990 . pres's conference. Members of several anti-war groups think the threat of war is no way .of celebrating the slain civil rights leader' birthday. VINCENT AnA YOM I AZlKIWE of the Y 1'1 doe n t Pan African tudent Union says ove r 300 -buse s have be n chartered for - t he march, Aziki�e a' 'lh coalition is outraged that th deadline is on Rev. Mar in Luther King, Jr's .. birthdate. The coalition calls it A OALITION OF anti-war groups will participate in. demonstrations ranging' from a town meeting at Little Rock Bap­ tist Church 01) Saturday Jan. :12 . from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. to Tue day Jan. 15, King'sbirthday, when a noon march from Detroit's CHy County Building to the .old� Federal Building is .scheduled, Smith said. ines said he oppose the Uni ted States going to. war be­ ause 'Of the massive num ers of African Americans 'on the front Ii nes. :'1 opposed t!le war and refuse to fight in the name of the Un.ited tate of America," be aid. "I do not appr veot (he drastic over:' representation �f Black oldiers and this m sive military .buil- want to keep things the way the} are .i n the Gulf, put emphasized using a diplomatic. otution. He does not think Saudi Arabia ha to be concerned a out an Iraqi inva ion, ayi ng it ould have done that after it' too over Kuwait before U.S. roops ar­ rived, but instead took a defen­ sive po ilion in Kuwai 1. . He also sa . there would be no threat if I raq develop' a nuclear. capacity. sayin countrie which have developed nuclear weapon usually become more conserva­ tive in its foreign policy: "incent say 'comparing Hu seiri's expl it. with th like of Adolf Hitler is rni leading; apd that the conflict between Iraq and Kuwait dated back to 1918 when Kuwai t wa "carved out of Iraq," denying it a P rsian Gul f port. The is ue of Kuwait ver­ producing od and ero -drillin i n to IT a q i i J fie Ids was a I 0 . pointed out. DERRICK HINES OF Power · Base, an African American group taking a stand against the war. said, he believes .Bu h i dctiberare lv ending the message that Jan. J 5 i just another day. "We as member. of Power Base ta . the Jan. 15--deadline as an insult to the. memory of Dr. Martin . ther King Jr.. a man who dedicated his life to the . dream of peace-and ha piness for race's of all people." Leigh Smi th o.f th Ad Ho African American Comm4ttee for' Peace and the Student Call' Against the War aid the president's actions are disgrace- an insult to hi .memory. . Vj nce n pok on a SUbject which ha not been thoroughly articulated during the cri is, and that i the consequences of a war with Iraq. Beside the realities of death, maiming. and a dis ruprio n of live on both sides of 'the bat­ tlefield. Vincent spoke of long­ term in tability 'in the region, , , with the clirlijnation 0 Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's L-_ A�I�war, .1.tQrt' .. :.'?::::::::}:::::;:.:,\ mount ': .... :> : .:'. '::':'::?:: ':-. • . p.' ,.I'n G'utf .. town::' :: 'Meetihg, Janua.ry·12.:.·: .: 'at Llttl ·Rock:8ap.t�.t:: � . Church . . . :.::. :.:, • . 'O'8tro1t Peace,:'march"":':::':::' .' January 15' :,c�. 6�',,:_::::;:::::�:� t()·fMlera' �QJI�In.g� .. �_.:':.::::':' • National Mi'rch' on.:'::·:�\ .. W •• hlngton, 'D; .. �,. ::.'.) January. 19. Leagu�.·, Co� tin ued from �age 1 --'- -:- ;-- --'- __ Jacob urged Congress to pa s our workforce," Jacob said. economic social welfare, and the proposed 1991 Ci�il �ights Ht aid America mu t inve t African American literature.I'- Act, and said it wa immoral to in the Urban Marshall Plan. "not Dr. Lenneal Henderson, who :.a k �lack and Hispanic military merely oU,t of mooral imperative, ,prepared "BUdgets, Ta�es, and : personel to risk their lives in the bout for its own economic self-in- Poli tics: Qptions {or the African- : Gulf while at the same time refus- terest." American Communi ty, n said : ing to upport a Civil Right Act iaC[·b also called for the Ad- African Americans are being � that prQtect their. ri hts when mini ati�o work more close- placed Curtllor behihd in hne f' : they re-enter civilian life. I wit th� Black co�mu.nity and other priorities. calling 1a t · Jacob also urged the Ad- omm nI ty orgamzatloDs to V,ea r budget cu ts "fiscal ministration to implement a "make government a more effe - raci m." hecau e the problems of domestic agenda that closes the tive force for progre s i·n the the Black community were not �lass and racial gaps. "that are truggle agaiAst .poverty, dis- addre sed by the budget. tearing our soc!ety ap�rt." crimina ion, and hop Ie sne . He al 0 indi ated 'regres ive i(lXCS are di proportionately tar­ r. ed against the poor. • Prisons -;:--- '---"- -'-- _ R o. e 'r) t Morna', "Managing Employe DI I r It . An e­ ment;" P�ofe or Donald Mc­ Henry, "A Changing World Order: Implicati n f.or Black America;" Dr. Dianne Pinder­ hughes, "The Case of African erican In the Persian Gulf: The Inters",�tion ot American Foreign and Military Policy with Dome tic Employment Policy in the UIlited State�;" and Dr. Terr William. "A Portrait of Youth: Coming'f gr in Harlem Public H)U, in '." . JUlin ple� stat m n1. al- lTH <1 t h� <1 hor. 'pl' d theil �. ,'1'( J )'s call for an Urban Mar hall Plan. The UL publi. he The Slall! of BLack Am ,;�a annually. D tr i I Jroar, I_ '11 ue Pr ident Charle derson aid copie of the report are n t yet available. l.mpri onment and crime." The Sentenci ng Projec� report call for ongre to establish a : national commission on Clime to xplore why American incarcera- . ,tion rate are so high and to re ommend program to reduce th number of prisoner without affecting public safety. The tudyal 0 propo e : -:-Redirecting resources in the "war on drugs" to emphasize that drug abu e is primarily public heal th proQlem, nQt a criminal ju tic problem; -Repealing mandatory en­ encing law; -E tablishing nationwid community and crime prevention program, with special efforts focu ed on Black male, and; -Expandi g the development and upport of proven alterna­ tive to incarcer lion. ontinue.d from Page 1 p pulation. accor ing to the AFSC .. CON ,R • JOH Conyers aid. "Thi. report il­ lu trates the Ion erm effect of the drac nian criminal ju lice policies the nited States ha been 'mplementin ver the pa t decad, nd I i ndi ea ti ve o'f policie hat have aIled our people." A . i. Ifln Dir ctor of the n- tencin p,. jecl � Id author of he roport Mall Mauer, ill'd, "De, r'te co I h� aim, the s' me policie that h' \ e helped make u a world leader in incarcera1ion have clearl y fa' 1 d to make u� a /,.. 'lced fun'- D IF th ,olu WH A T NUL I GAIN calling for a yearly $50 billion Urban Marshall Plan u alion and training programs to fost r economic gro\Y,ith, and create a �'world-cla workforce." "The long term survival of America depends on its abiiity to compete in a world where thers are outproducing and out elling us. We're falling behind because we've disinve ted in the o'Onda­ tions of our econom. , a d espe­ ciall y in the ed uca i nand training of the disadv ntaged minorities who will be the core of tions in the report will be impl - men ted, Dr. Derric Bell. who contribu'ted "The Que t for Ra­ cial Ju tice: The Chronicle of t he Cons titutional Cont rad i - tion" to the'report. said a reality and history points to il n being implemented. Jacobs tated the NUL cann implement policy, but it can in­ f�rm and e'ducate on the condi­ tion of Blac in t e country. The tate of Bla k merica 1 presents ten pap lS prepared by e perts in the fields of housing, law. education, _ HENDERSO AL 0 called for an Urban Marshall Plan, and aid the re ources to finance it are available. The ther authors who con­ tri uted to the report were Dr. FI retta Dukes, "Education Stl tegie for the '90 ;" Dr. ar­ ren Miller. Jr., "Developing UI1'­ tapped Talent: A ational Call for African-American Tech­ no ogi ts;" Dr. Gayle Perberton, "1' lh Thing that Count ,.Or Reflection on the Le acy of W .. B. DuB i;" Dr. R. .'