-------------�--------�--�---------------- .. --------� .......... ------ .... 1 This Week In Black History • ANSWERS TO - - QUESTIONS MA CH 25, 01 ck explorer J Dod·.., t out in e ch of the orth t P e. 1 2- o peVpop born. 1965 - Vlo DO w killed t H ynevillc, AL on Civil ight March to. elm ,AL. 1931 -' ot boro "ar- rested t Point Roc , Ala. Who is the author of "Man child in the Promised Landr MARCH 26, 1872 ,197 Tho • J. artla w awarded patent for fire extin­ guisher. 1911 - Will H. LewI became istant At­ torney General for U.S. 1962 AUIU t ava e. sculptres , died. 1934 - Donald Bailey, drummer, was born. J.Yhich religious group was rust to admit Blacks on an in- . tegrated basis and without restrictions? MARCH 27, a28 - Sarah Vaupaa, inger, was born. '1934 .- Arthur Mitchell, dancer, choreog­ rapher, was born. 1979 - Earvla "M e" Jo a on lead Michigan State to NCAA title, earning MVP honors. mao was the founder of the 1tl Life Insurance Com- I JHlnY'l t t,. . MAR� 1935 - Poet Couatee ,Cullea received honorary N.Y.U. Phi Beta Kappa Key. 1896 - Clarenee (Pia Top) SUb, blues singer, was born. What is the annual per capita income in the nation of Haiti? MARCH 29, 1918 - Pearl BaIley, entertainer, was born. 1982 - Freshman MldaaeI JordaD hit the win­ ning shot as UNC won the NCAA basketball cham­ pionship over Georgetown. Which Black inventor revotuntionized the NYC transportation system with his device? .. MARCH 30, 1870 - 15th Ameacimeat ratified by Con­ gress, giving Blacks the right to vote. 1941 - Natloaal Urbaa Leque urged equal participation for Blacks in national defense program. 1905 - �or (B" Maceo) Merriweather, blues singer, was born. 1886 - J. Ricks, . patented horseshoe. Con you name the Black all-star baseball player who was niclauuned "Bad Henryt" 24th - The late Bayard Rustin. 25th - Claude Brown of New York City. 26th - Quakers - the Society of Friends, in 1752 at Germantown, PA. Not without a hassle. 27th - C.C. Spaulding. 28th - About $100. 29th - Granville T. Woods with his "third rail" in­ vention. Early subway workers referred to it derisively as' "the nigger in- , venti�n." Many lost jobs as a result of the third rail. 30th - Henry Aaron of the · Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves. - Compiled by BERNICE BROWN · TH I I IAL "Agent Orange Compensation Bill" was first dr fted, introduced and co-sponsored by Michigan Congressman David Bonior (D) Mt. Clements, Thomas Da chle (D) South Dakota, and Bob Edgar (D) Pennsyl­ vania, in March 1983. Th t ver ion covered only three pecific disabilities, soft tissue cancers, porphyria cutanea larda, a liver disorder; active and residual chloracne, and chloracneform lesions, a skin disorder. The Veterans Administra­ tion, which received. more than 19,0 0 Agent Orange comnen- . �W � -oir' ll¥� . F.. q, m inlaiD th l, "there w S 'DO proof th t exposure to the defoliant was harmful." However, veterans groups and other organizations across the country vigorously and continiously maintained that, "expos ure to the herbicide Agent Orange, causes cancer, liver diseases, and skin ail­ ments, and birth defects in the children of servicemen ex­ posed to it." . Agent Orange got its name from being shipped to Vietnam in "orange crates." AGENT ORANGE is a plant killing chemical herbicide w ich e ten ively u ed in ietn m to ill jungle foli ge h r e n my troop could ide, nd coat in the con- t in nt Dio in, one of the mo t to i cont min nt no n to hum n indo According to June 1978 report, "Iowin h hi Ie on A ent Or nge," by Miob el Uhl, nd Todd Ensign:"M - ive defoli tion warn jor t ctic pursued by U.S. force in Vietn m." It h d two objective: to deny uerril s their jungle cover n d to de troy food crop so th t the peasantry popul tion vo uld be com­ pelled to t ke refuge in con­ trolled resettlement camps. The defoli nt was widely used in outhe st Asi be­ tween 1962-1971 to defoliate more than five-million acres of the Vietnamese countryside. Since th t spraying, over 7,000 Vietnam veterans h ve filed cl ims that they are suffering ailment caused by exposure to . the chemic I defoliant. Al 0, more th n 10,000 Vietnam veterans were joined in the "class action suit" which ac­ cused nine companies which made the herbicide, including the Dow Chemical Co., of Mid­ land. Michigan. There are many controver­ sial questions surrounding the Agent Orange dilemma, that many veterans feel are still un­ answered. Although many veterans welcome the long awaited passage of the bill, many are skeptical, and say the bill is full of loop holes. Lester Kooman, a Michigan Vietnam veteran who serves as the 'Veterans Service Officer (VVA)' for Vietnam Veterans of Americ Chapter #9 (V AO} in e it s-ay Viet­ Dam veterans should write' their uConsreumen and Senators urging them to push for faster ervice in cutting thru red tape." Kooman also believes, that many symptons of Agent Organ's effects on Vietnam vets do not show up for 20-30 years, and therefore, the VA Administration should not close out the claims of vets who have filed for compensa­ tion. Kooman wants the VA t keep the claims active, and also, "separate the Agent Orange claims from other pos­ sible chemical exposu e claims, as well expand present legislation to cover a wid r r nge for vet children. oom ny, "VA i till rejecting ome cl im of Viet­ n m vet nd their f milie , ho h ve pplied for di - bility... he U. government i dr g ing it feet in proce - ing the claim of vet who y th y believ th t they were e - po ed to gent Or nge and other di e ses cquired while rving in Vietn m, he sid. Kooman cit done c se involv­ ing a Michig n Vietn m veteran, who died ever 1 ye r go from c nc r , which the vet claimed was caused as result of hi expo ure to Agent Orange while erving in Vietn m. Kooman ys the vet's wife has had to file �ver I times, and still has not h d her late hu band's claim accepted, although her hu - band has been dead for almost five-years. in youths by helping them find things to do that requires them to accept responsibility. The program encourages teens to participate in community ser­ vice, and offers them the op­ portunity to make decisions and learn from these decisions. "This program is right on target. It is designed to give kids a boost, to show them they count, and that they have the power to make a diffe ce in their own lives and in the com- munity," says Kool Moe Dee. Last year, through Nestle's Very Best Awards program, more than 110,000 children throughout the U.S. were provided opportunities 0 achieve their personal best in the arts, athletics, fitness, and community service programs. THIS YEAR'S PROGRAM is a half million dollar effort for youths to p- rticipate in the program. "We were committed to developing a program that would offer support to a sig­ nificant number of young people, not Just the high-level achievers who traditionally win top prizes," said Frank Ar­ thofer, president of Nestle's. "Our approach· focuses on rewarding programs and or­ ganizations, rather than in­ dividuals. The key difference here is that kids, not executive boards or government agen­ cies.will decide how the money will be spent," he said. The program will support projects in the areas of educa- W Umi • I pro r by H MU developin the fir t program prim rily directed t i tin minority medic 1 tudent. The progr m, developed by Whitt n, include year-long tudy 0 biology nd chemi try, n introduction to me i I chool tudy, academic and tutori I s ill training, and per on I 4ju t- ent coun eling. Fourteen tudent re mitted to the program e ch year, wi th guaranteed dmi­ ion to the WSU medical chool if high grade-point verage are mint ined. In the pa t 17 year, 107 t u­ dent admittcd have graduated from WSU's School of Medicine. Simmons aid that 1 new program will be added thi fall. B rdo commented that a national shortage of qualified minority phy ician demand greater a c c e s to medical training "Without these types of program, the tate of heal hcare w�uld e ch worJse '0 f rflan I cUrren y is., We need to find the re ources to train and educate pro pee- t i v e minorit tudent, be- cause a o( w they are underrcpre ente in the field. A the situation land cur­ rently, it i aby mal." Corre pondtnl COLUMBU • Ohio - Wayne Stale Univer ity' medical DAVE T EVI 0, a Marine school i viewed a a model veteran-who served in Vietnam for u c c e Fu l minority from 1966-1969, and is also a recruitment and educ lion, member of VVA#9 says, according to Dr. Ch a r l ct "America creat d it. America Whitt n , a ociate dean for used it. And now 'we' do not curricular affair at the WSU want to acknowledge it." School of Medi inc. Trevino says, "the present Whitten wa the keynote Agent Orange legislation speaker at the recent National merely took vets off of one Po t-Bacca laureate Programs bridge, and put them on . Conference ... Thi year' another waiting bridge ... this meeting focu ed on the need (new) Agent Orange legisla- of minority tudent who are tion is just another way to academically and financially prolong and delay paying com- ill-prepared for college or pensation to the Vietnam vets po t-graduate education in who were exposed. the medical field. Both veteran, Kooman and "The conference got Trevino agree however, that profe lonat from acros the although the recent passage of co u n t ry to d i c u S the the Act, is major step in the prospect of po t-bac- right direction, they still c a l a u r e a t c pro rams," aid wonder how the compensation Julia Simmon, director of money will be distributed. minority recruitment at WSU. "Who will decide which vets "What we are about i in- will got w at mou t ad fo c�e l,in dt,he e j �ir rfOdO� �f howIong will the benefi be qua I i e m I n or i y me I a paid." One dilemma that "has chool candidate ." explained consistently clogged the Agent: Dr. Harold Bardo, a ociate a . d k • f pro f e s o r 0 f me d i c a led u c a- rangeJ-lssue an ept It rom t ion at Sou the r n I II i no i progressing, has been the problem of: Who will even- School of Meicine. tually pay the millions of Agent Orange compensation dollars? The companies who made the herbicide, or the U.S. government, who used it. Veterans in need of Agent Orange assistance or informa­ tion should call the Agent Orange Hotline at 1-800-252- 4712 pr I-S00-MIC- Viet. i' 'I, I i I. Ne tie program puts kids in charge by DERRICK C. LEWIS Staff Writer Museum of African American Hlstor), Executive Director Dr. M rian Moore and Wayne State Univer Ity Presideat Ada Adamany. (Photo by D. Lewl ) , The Urb n League dinner w s gathering o� Detroit'. leader. hlp, as Detroit City Council Pre Ident Maryann Ma arrey and ew Detroit Pre ident P ul Hubbard exchange comments. (Photo by D. Lewi ). The Nestle Chocolate Co. has introduced a program into the me.tro-Detroit area designed to boost the self-es­ teem of area youth. It will be providing $10,000' for youth to design their own program to help their com­ munity. The Nestle Chocolate Very Best in Youth Program jumped off on Feb. 28 in· Washington D.C., with rap art- . ist Kool Moe Dee acting as honorary chairperson of the program. He explained his role, "Rap­ pers are effective at reaching the kids because the kids are listening, It's up to us to be role models and give some­ thing back to them, and to the community." Here in Detroit', about 10 youth service organizations gathered at the 4H Building March 11, to set criteria for the program. The program will be a joint effort by the organiza­ tions to present the criteria to their youth, where the youth will come together and decide how they will spend the money. SOME OF THE criteria dis­ cussed at the meeting was that the program should impact large numbers of youth, that it promotes interaction of city and suburban youth, that it will make a lasting impact, and that it will build upon an existing program or create something new. Nestle believe that the program will build self-esteem Kool Moe Dee tion, fitness, and public ser­ vice. The grant can be used for single or multiple projects. the only stipulation being that any child, regardless of ability, be allowed to participate. Children who participate in the program will receive a T­ s�i.rt 3:nd certificate of par­ trcipation. Also, this fan the kids will have their names up in 'lights in New York City'S Times Square this fall. THe city which excels the most in the program will receive an ad­ ditional $5,000 toward upport for its youngsters' activities. THE "DI TI GUISHED WARRIOR ," I-r, civil ri ht proponent Edw rd Cu hm n, community leader GI dys Wood rd, nd Judg H rold Bled oe, not pictured I retired ep. eor e rockett, and the late Dr. DeWitt Burton. Over 2000 p ople wer In ttend nee t obo H II to P y tribute to the e h (Photo by D. Lewl )