Briefly R public n gu honor? t of , D vid Du e will ddre Lin- coln 0 y Celebr lion in Ark ponsored by the Republican Com­ mittee. Duke, a Republican legis­ lator, bernatorial candidate in Louisiana, and former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard . d to be more likely gu t of dishonor. The GOP chairman ays, "This doe not, in any way, reflect the Ark ns Republican Party, and I'm emb rassed that thi has to happen,". Rae afld th 0 alth P nalty , ric open rip i r for W hin ton ed in corner­ bac M rtin Mayhew recently returned from vi it to drought- tri en re of Senegal nd M lit with a new per pective of Africa. Mayhew, who erves a a volunteer in the Wa hington. DC headqu rter of Africare. a development org nization which specialize in Africa. tr veled to the continent to get "first-hand" look at orne of the organization' projec . "Before I went to Africa, I w Africans as needy," aid Mayhew. "Now I ee them as intelligent, hard-workin people. Like people in America, they sometime have trouble maki ng end meet. " May hew, a thi rd eye r pro from Florida State who led the Red kin with even intercep­ tions last season, recently made a ub tantial donation to Africare. , . In 1987, when Warren Mc- Clesky, a Black death row inmate in Geor' peti· Oiled e Supteme Court, he argued his capital sen­ tence hould be overturned be­ cause of the race of his white victim. He said this played an important role in his sentencing. His claim by CAROLYN WARFIELD wa rejected. The court did not _C_o_rn_sp_o_n_d_enl _ agree "he received the death sen- DETROIT - "This is not a tence because, and only because, world for children. Every day his victim was white." . 40,000 children die of diseases McClesky petitioned again last from hungar," said Dr. Ge.orge week to the Supreme Court. This Waldo a Harvard University time he sought to have his convic- Nobel Prize recepient. Speak- ing on the subject "Towards a tion reviewed on the ground that Better World for Children: Dis- his constitutional right to' counsel arm to End Third World Debt," had been violated when the police at the 17th Annual Third World used a jailhouse informer to obtain Conference held recently at the information. Westin Hotel. In the studies done it does not Wald' stressed that "every child should be in our care. The 100 like McCIesky wu the only chronically hungry are taken for one not' treated f*ly. In fact, of granted a the first world ex­ the 144 executions since the 1976 ploi ts global neighbors for hard r e inst tement of the death currency to initiate its policies penalty, not wone white person while 72 percent live near was executed for killing a poverty." Black person. Also, in those "The 6 to 1 kill ratio became. 144 killings, 86% of the victims another reali ty in the Persian were white, although roughly Oulf War," Wald said. half of all murder victims are RENAMO's destabilization BI ck. tactics in Zimbabwe, Angola and Mozambique have hit South -Africa, though it is propagated, as "Black on Black" violence," Wald noted. "Thi rd world debt increases ,$60 billion annually. Once in­ 'debted, developing nations 'are told they cannot participate in the world's re ources. So they are driven off the land and replaced by migrants or technol­ ogy." "America i ignoble," Wald said. "Since 1895, America has favored dictatorships while talk­ ing democracy. A new defini­ tion of Thi rd World development must become reality. " Mor POW r for Polle In Pur ult ,The Supreme Court strengthened the authority of police, ruling that law enforcement officers may chase suspects without reason to arrest them and may use items discarded during the pur uit as evidence of guilt. By a 7-2 vote, the justices decreed that the constitutional protection of unreasonable search and seizure does not begin until a person is subjected to physical force or submits to an officers "show of authority". Cop d mot d fter King bating A C Iifornia Highway Patrol lieutenant has been recommended for demotion and a captain and ser­ geant who 'work with him for uspension without pay for failing to investigate the March 3 beating of Rodney King quickly enough. - Comp/iled by Cllthetine Kelly ye L tar HE OW HOPE to mobi­ lize other members of the Red kin ,player from N tional Football Le gue team, well a other athlete nd enter­ t ine rs, to upport relietf and development activities in Africa. Afric re , which provides technical and materi I support to more than 300 project in rural Africa, i also working to educate people here about Africa and African development i ues. The trip, aid M yb w, changed hi life: "I have b forced to re-think some of own val ues and, in some w my perspective on life. "It's such a-rat race here-get this car, buy lhi hou e. Over there, you ee people working hard, not to get material things. but to improve 'their everyday lives." Conference e of lopsided world ON LEAVE from the Univer- ity of Michigan, Dr. Ali A. Muzuri, an Albert Schweitzer Profe or in the Humanities at State University in New York, keynoted the Conference speak­ ing on "The Co t Benefit Analysis of Third World Developm.ent ver us Eastern European Democracy." "Africa and Third World countrie are cau es of momen­ tum in the European world," he aid. "Freedom fighter caused poli tical tructures to change. These role models relea ed feuda'll m and empire for elf- sufficiency. " "Hist al crutiny bear wit­ ness to A. eria and France from 1954 to 1962. The use of Tunisian military bases by Mo - lem Algerian nationals strained France's relationship with Tunisia. The uprising drew the French Army into Algeria. Protest by French officer. against the war's po li ti cal leader hip lead to events. that put de Gaulle in power," Muzuti said. "Each freedom revolt caused European imperiali m to be un­ dermined. Angola's cry for freedom from colonial master ta in the 1950's and inten- sified b volt in'196l. The Portuguese government was overthrown in 1974, Muzuri said. "The past several years of un­ eq ua I de mocra tic exchange proves that eastern Europe is less willing to end Third World oppression, therefore, intolerant of liberation effort. Europe needs a fundamental change in its attitudes and values.' They have a debt to repay if-they want to build a better temple," the African scholar said, THE CONFERENCE drew dignitaries and academics from around the world: Africa, the 'Caribbean, Central and South America, the United Kingdom, Finland, Poland, India, the Orient and Soviet Uni n were represented. ' , Attendance' peaked near 1,000 during the three days which included .s cho lars hlp recipients from 20 high schools, An Inter-national Art and Cultural Fe tival showca e d regional and culturally diver e , talent. The City of Detroit, College of Life Long Learning at Wayne State Univer ity and The Third World Conference Foundation spon ored the Conference which toru ed on geopolitical i ue that challenge mankind a' it face the 21 t century .. The Third World Conference Found tion, based in Chicago, i the oldest independent, non­ profit re e rch and educational forum focu ing it, attention on per pecuves and olution for .cbange in in developing nations. .. fric re i Zim bw ·Y • Part one: The Land Probl m W bin ton ) I e on Afri a Special to Michigan Citizen Zimbabwe, one of Africa' newest nation , closeu its tenth year of independen e on April 18th. The co un try ha had a myriad of 'U e but to date h been unable to ati fy the most ba ic dem nd of the Zim­ babwean peopl : the demand for nd. A qui k review of tati tic ndicate cl e rl that one of the main oal f Zimbabwe' long and b lo o d war for inde- p e nd e n -lhe " hirnuran War" a It I P pularly known­ still ha n t been met. Of th 162,000 Black, Iarnilie in need of land at th war ' end in 1979, only 52,00 have been resettled. Zimbabwc s war, which began in 1 6 was �ought ai t a wl\i . ority r who had C ia Iistted an apart- heid-lik y t m. The war, fought largely throughout the Zimbabwean country ide wa charact rizcd by indi criminate bombing, brutal au ck on the civilian population, and collec­ tive puni hment of civili n through confi cation of land, property and good . The co t of the w r were hor­ rendou: an e timated 40,000 dad, . nd incalcul ble environ .. mental damage from bombing large areas of the fragile gra y countryside. But despite the ter­ rible costs to the people and the country, it may be a decade or more before land redistribution is successfully completed. THE PRINCIPAL con tr int to fair land distribution resulted from the Lancaster Hou e Agree­ ment-the cease-fire and peace . greement ending the war. The : arran ement impo cd ten year mor urn restrictin the my experience in" I r r government from eizing farm . or ot er property. Purch ea. only llowed on "illing , eller/willing buyer" basis. . . The Agreement ha expired: nd fter much deb te tbe Zim-: vernment p ed a' con titution I amendment that: How t em to "identify" land: and pya fair price for it. The: fi t priority ill be unutilized· I nd. The law ha raised con-: cern for ome white landholders: who fear confiscation or inade-· quate payment. According to a spokesperson: for the Emb ssy of Zimbabwe,: the mechanics of the law re still being worked out and no land bas: been purcha ed using it. But' perhaps thi new cbange repre-; sents the first real tep 'of hope, for the remaining 110,000 Black: families still waiting to realize' tbe ,drea� of land ownership-.\} I ., ,� ": , ) I ' .. They ay things are changing in South Africa. But 30 million black people are still denied the right to vote because of the color of their skin. Now President Bu h i talking about rewarding the Pretoria government by lifting anction. Nelon Mandela says we should maintain nctions until he and all South African have the right to vote. ------�-�-------�-------�--------- SANCTIONS o I vote for maintaining sanctions until there is democracy for all South Africans. SIGN YOUR BALLOT TODAY YOU CAN HELP' Your vote for auction again t South Africa will keep the pre ure on apartheid and help bring real change. Signature City State