t \ . al 0 be n reported that tw worn n were killed in the Iraqi S cud a tt a c I a' t wee n din Dhahran, Saudi r bia. And n Sunday. Mar h 3rd, the U. military confirmed the death I 32-year-old female pilot MaJ r Marie Ro i , who died in a helicopter ra h in north rn Saudi Arabia. ment rywh reo ow. Pre ident Bu h hould urute our P ople and become the mm nder-i n-Chie in a war a a in t Job dl crimination at home. The Pre ident hould use the unity and popularity that he w rId ommit .. applied EDITORIAL • President George Bush is in a forgiving mood. To lure the Egyptians into the "coalition" force to fight the Per ian Gulf War, George forgave Egyptian debts to the tune of billion. When the President of Poland. Lech Wale a, arrived in the U.S. last week, he too, heard the words of forgivene . Bu h announced that the U.S. wa forgiving 70% of all debts owed this country by Poland. Wale a beamed. George said the Pole needed the money Cor economic development for their emerging capi talist system. Well, there are a lot of Americans who also need their earnings for their own economic development. The Reagan­ Bush social agenda has cut deeply into the available funds for college. The funds for COllege education have dried up at the very time in history when a COllege education i deemed essential to urvial in a technological world. Too many students have turned to the military to find the necessary money for a college education. Too many other have simply fallen by the wayside when faced with the overwhelming prospect of funding a higher education. Then. the re rare the millions of poor souls who have mortgaged their future in the pursuit of what in this day and age is the basic education for the world of ork: a COllege degree . . College loan repayments are dogging the heels of too many young would-be entrepreneurs. These are young people with the magic letters, B.A., B.S. behind their name, but young people saddled with monthly payments on that college education up to 10 to 15 years after the books are closed. The monthly payments on the college degree keep our young people enslaved, eyes focused on job. Job to pay the college bill. Don't we as a nation owe ourselves what Bush wants Poland to have? Let's forgive the college debt . Let the new wage earners keep their money for thei r own economic deveoloprnent. Then, let's take one logical step further. Make COllege education the right of any American who i willing to inve t the time and effort to earn it. A a SOciety we say education is important. We say a college degree Or advanced training is neces ary in this day and age of high tech and foreign competition. Then as a nation we must provide ourselves with the skill and train- , ing the times require without regard to have and have-not, ability to payor repay, rich or poor. Extend the mandate for education past the age of 16. Make higher education and advanced training the right of every citizen at any age. The money is there to do it if we reorganize our national priorities. Can we afford to make the education of our young less than our top priorify? qeorge, let' . forgive the student loans , ) THE MICHIGAN CITIZE I . Published each Sunday by NEW DAY PUBLISHING ENTERPRISE 12541 Second St P.O. Box 03560 Highland Park. MI 48203 Phone: (313) 869-0033/ Fax II: (313) 869-0430 Western Michigan Bureau: 175 W. Main St P.O. Box 216. S nton Harbor, MI 49022 (616) 927-1527 Publisher: Charle O. Kelly . Editor: Ter a Kelly Office Manager: B rniee Brown Correspondents: Bernie .. Brown - Mary Golliday - '0 rrlck Lewis Calvin Lowry - Flodean S. Rigg Leah Samu Is - Nathaniel Scott - Vera White Production Manager: Dewayne Such n. Production Staff: Ka, cene Bark - Idelle Carter Advertising Representatives: T rry Broyl " h n wortd ora r hould nd th 0 track y t m." v ter n return home, orne of h m wi l l v b dl Jed, they h v th right to e p t i o n I I d r hlp meric n peopl to b on their id . When orkrng la troop return, they have the right to e - p ct that the Pre id nt will not under ut th ir job with cab. The Pr id nt mu t support tri e r plac ment legL lation. When cthni minori tie return, they mu t b a ured that Bu h � will be a tough on ra e and ex di crimination a he wa on Sad­ dam Hu sein. How can he look women in mendment, comp r ble nd p rent 1 leave? o 0 D Iter- tiv Civil ights Bill of 91 legitimize r ci m and di crimination in three y. First, Bu h ys com ny' di crimin tory policie are legal if it" ig­ nific ntly erves" one of the company' "legitimate employ­ ment goal ." Furthermore, com­ panie can require workers to ign way their right to u gain t di crimination. Under the Bush admini tration' bill, women would be able to collect ex­ panded damages, but only for exual harassment, not for other forms of di crimination. Tho e d mage would be limit to $150,000 and would have be warded by a judge, not a ry. Does Bush believe somehow that sexual di crimination is less of­ fensive than racism? My friends, all instances of racial and exual di crimination are of- fen ive, un-American, and h ve no pi ce in our democracy. Thirdly, Bu h's Itern tive Civil Right Bill w nt to deter­ mine how often white, male worker could go ask judge to reopen ca es that had been set­ tled on behalf of women or minorities that allegedly cause "reverse di crimination." The Civil Rights Bill of 1991 is really a bill to protect the civil rights of workers. It is not a minority rights bill. It i an economic rights bill. Wbite order, male workers, long with women, the physically disabled, and minority workers, will benefit from legislation that provides equal protection under the law for ALL Americans. Under thi bill, white males, along with women, the pbysical­ ly disabled, and minorities will not be discriminated against and denied job by employers who use arbi trary criteria (i.e., not job related cri teria) for determin­ ing their hiring and promotional practices. We must love the troops when they are not troops. Last week at a Black History Month _rogram at the White House, the Presi­ dent said .the reason so many blacks are in the military is that the military is an equal oppor­ tuni ty employer. He is right. But that principle must apply to civilian life as well. It must apply to the President's appoint­ ments. IT MUST APPLY to ,cor- TneBrowninq of America increases def'ine the various racial and 'e th n ic ca tegories of the na­ tional population. Whoever h as 'the power to define a group ultimately has the power to impose limitations on that group. . For example. since 1980 the population of the United States, has grown ap­ proximately 9.8 percent over­ all. This figure is according to the latest count by tbe U.S. Censu Bureau. This figure does not. however, take into account the gross undercount in many urban areas where African Americans. Latino American, and Asian Americans are concentrated. According to the NEW YORK TIMES, "The new totals may give' ammunition to some urban, official who charge that many blacks were missed in the Census. While the 1990 count found more Hi panics, As ians and Native Americans than what population expert had ex­ pected, the numbers for blacks lag behind the e - timates." USA TODAY has disclosed that the" 199{) Cen­ su may have missed up to 2.4 million black people - or 7.4 percent of all b l a c k r r e s i­ dent. " Given the fa t that the in­ fan t m 0 r t a I i 1 Y r at e in the Afri an American community o nt i nucs to e .ca latc in add i- t i o n to the u n p r c c c d c nt c d d e e+i ne in the life expectancy of African American, another reason for the lower than projected number for the' African American population may well be the "fatal" social' condition that many African • 0 M E TIM � AG O. we' Americans arc consigned to called attention 1'0 a dis:' live under. crepancy in the method that· Another problem that we the U.S. Cen u Bureau have identified i th t the By Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. During the last ten .ye ars , there has been a dramatic in­ crease in the percentage of ra­ cial and ethnic persons as part of the population of the United States of America. Demographer had predicted tha t the re wo uld be a gradual incline in the racial and e th­ nic percentage during the next thirty years. Yet" to the shock of orne and to the joy of 0 thers, the percentage Change of the ra­ cial makeup of this nation in-. creased at a faster rate during the 1980's t han previously projected. Felici ty Barringer of the NEW YORK TIMES stated, "In the field of po pula­ tion statistics, the s p ce d at which the country's racial and ethnic mix was altered in the 1980'. wa b rcat hta king." The finding and s u b- sequent analysis of the 1990 Census are now being made public. The new data reveal that in the United States, there are 30 million African Americans. an increa e of 13.2 percent since 1980. ,There are 22.4 million Hispanic American. an in­ crease of 53 percent ince 1980. There are 7.3 million Asian and Pacific Islander American, an i n c r e as e of. 107.8 percent dur i ng the la. t ten year. And there arc 2 million Na­ tive American. an increase of 37.9 percent. There arc ap­ proximately 186 million White of European or Middle Ea tern Background, which account for a 6 percent in­ crease .ince 1980. U.S. Census Bureau has counted the majority of the Hispanic populations as part of the white American popula-' tion. At present, the five ra­ cial categories, that the U.S. Census Bureau uses are White, Black. Asian and Paci fic Islande r, Indian. and Other. MILLIONS OF Latino Americans arc not considered to be a racial grouping. The Census Bureau maintains that persons of Hispanic origin "can be of any race." This is true but, the Census Bureau does not give the breakdown of the different racial group­ ings within the Hispanic category. This 'is part of the problem. Member of Congress as well as state legislators will be using the latest Censu figures to redraw Congres­ sional districts and design vital programs that are based porate Americ. For too long, we've h d two trac y tem.' Pre ideot Trum n igned the Civil Right Bill for the mili t ry in 1948. Congres pa ed Civil Rights Bill for civilian in 1964. The new world order hould end the two trac sy tern. If Americans who have been hi - torically locked out are a protected in civilian life they are in military life. America will refelct and epitomize the new world order. Fitlall y, we know this is an economic and worker's bill, and not a minority rights bill, by looking at its chief opponents. If it were a minority rights bill the chief opponent would be Republicans like David D ke and Jesse Helms. In fact, the major opposition to the bill is coming from the National As­ sociation of Manufacturers and the United States Chamber of Commerce. The President spent six months uniting, educating, and preparing the country-to fight a war in the Persian Gulf. Now, devoid of divisive and emotion a II y charged code word • .pt. should -ral y and educate the country of the need to move for­ ward in tbe area of civil and economic rights. He hould not UNITE the American people in the cause of w ,and then DIVIDE those same Americans when it comes to the cause of ju tice. Tie a yellow ribbon around the Civil Rights Bi 11 of 1991. Benjamin Chavis on social 'demographic data. We celebrate the increase in the browning of America and we do not fear the future multiracial and multicultural, character of thi nation. Our c cern is that the gove n­ men of the United Sta s h d not' 'use .acia ca egories that are ei therout­ dated or not truly reflective of the increasing multiracial reality. Racial ju lice demands accuracy in defini­ tions as well as in number. Mit hell/The Au trah n/Sydney