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May 19, 1991 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Citizen, 1991-05-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

contlnu d from Pag 1
ated unemployment r te
o BI c s to 22.6 percent
in, t e fourth quarter.
T i percenta e i ore
tb double the hite HUI,
ich i 9.9 percent. The offi­
ci I r te of unemployment
amon hite durin the
fourth qu rter wa 4.9 percent.
ALTHOUGH 0 n r-
rowin of r ci I disp rities oc­
curred over the last year,
BI ck till experienced 2.4
times the unemployment of
hires.
Teen ger continued to be
it e ceptionally h rd by un­
employment. According to the
HUI me ures, 0 r h If (56.5
percent) of all Black teenager
looking for employment were
jobless. White teen ex­
perienced 25.5 percent un-
alcolm
continued from Page 1
verted.
He wa converted from a
agent of oppre sion to an agent
for the liberation of Black
people. It the teachings of
the Honorable Elijah Muham­
mad and the values nd dis­
ciphne of the National of Islam
whic p�vide4 the ri t atmos­
phere ucI environment for Mal­
colm to grow and flourish.
MALCOLM X BECAME the
driving force behind Mllhammad
SpeQks, the officiai newspaper of
the Nation of Islam, a tireless
organizer and propagator of tbe
faith and a champion of Black
people and Third World people
in the u.s. and the world.,
The man child in the promised
land ro e to become the articu-
.Iate and dynamiC National
Spokesman for the Honorable
J;Ujab Muhammad and tbe Na­
tion of Islam.
.Stadium
· continued from Page 3
"Right now, I don't have any
comment on the tadlum what­
soever," he aid.
employment ccordin to HUI
.measures.
Bl c m le experienced
20.1 percent unemployment,
comp red to 8.8 percent for
hite male, hile Blac
female ere t 24.9 percent
and hite fem le at 11.2 per­
cent. These figures were from
the HUI.
The raci I di p rity ap not
only extend to ard employ­
ment but to wee ly income
also. Medi n eekly income
figure for BI ck males a
$370, for white m le $502, for
Blac fem le $313, nd for
white fem les $363.
A policy discu ion in the
report s id the U.S. has filed
to invest in the development of
it human re ources on which
increased productivity
depends.
'IT STATED BLACKS are a
growing hare of the total num-
SEL -RESPECT, self-help,
self-reliance, self-defense nd
self-determinaUn and nation­
hood were amon the principles
tMt this magnificent convert to
the movement put forth as a
master teacher nd leader.
Up from the deva tating
depths of oppre sive ghetto life,
Malcolm calQ 0 sJ bolize
resistance to racism and oppre -
sion. He embodied our hope for
what we can become a a free
and self-determining people. He
illustrated, without a doubt, that
all of us can rise above the
limitations imposed on us by an
oppressive system to strike
blows for our own freedom and
liber tion.
Malcolm is every endangered
Black man in tbis society today.
And his life is a living example
of tbe victim rising up to tum the
tables on the victimizer.
The lesson of Malcolm' life
is tbat transformation is possible
and our liberation is inevitable if
we figbt to free ourselve and
our people. Malcolm X is wortby
of emulation and praise.
As Ossie Davis put it "Mal­
colm was our manbood ... and
in honoring him we honor our­
selves" .
ber of wor in e A rica s
a d that e ide ce of thi
failure to provide prop r trai -
in , and educ tional oppor­
tunities' fou d in the severe
labor mar et di dvanta es
th t ch r cterize BI c a.
Although t e report stated
Bl c jobles ne i influenced
by ever I factor , it pointed
out that deficient ed cation,
training, nd a ill are
prominent mon them.
The rece ion nd the Gulf
conflict were also labeled as
being connected with the con­
dition Black re ( cing.
The report stated the
economic recovery of the
1980's occurred on a tenuous
foundation, I r ely driven by
deficit spending and pecula­
tive financi I markets.
Economic productivity as
minimal nd the reces ion is
having adver e di propor­
tionate con e quence on
Blacks.
The Gulf conflict as said to
have come at an inau picious
time bee use with the ending
of the Cold War BI ck ere
optimistic that the nations
prioritie would focus on
dome tic needs.

Form Today To Ree Ive Your Next I ue L
o Ve. I want to aubacrlbe to the Michigan Cltlz n.
Pie •••• nd me th w Idy edition to th Mlchlg n Citizen'
for one full y ar t the peclallntroductory Rate. .
DOn. V r 1.� • 0 S nlor Cltlz n or Fixed lneorne 18.00
••• Sav.. .00 Off'the Newatand Price. • .. Sav 10.00 Off the New tand Price.



'I'
I
I
I

I

I ST AD, TH conflict.·
focused priorities in nether
direction, further dampening
aspiration .
Add_�r __
Clty St •• __ ·_ Zlp Pnone _
. : BOB BERG, preas secretary
·tor Detroit Mayor Coleman In urance
Young, said Engler's position . ,
· was nota setback for the plan to ,continued from Page 1
#build a new tadium. He aid Detroit, stated in a letter to
",at most of the public funding state Attorney General Frank
· proposals being studied by the Kelley th t "The appearance of
c,lty involved using the city'S a conflict of interest i trou-
· authority to sell bonds. bling," and asked for an inves-
"There is nothing on the table tigation of Cruce aad the MIF.
right now," Berg said with Saunders said the MIF had a
· r,egard to using state flnanclng. direct and very significant in-
Even so, state Sen. Jackie terest in the outcome of legi -
· Vaughn, D-Detroit, a upporter lative actions relative to auto
• of a new stadium, expres ed dis- in urance.
· may at the news.
· "Per onally, I'm disap-' SAUNDERS HAD warned
pointed," he said. 'th t placing the issue in a
Vaughn aid he i in favor of closed committee would limit
· �uilding a new, year-round, all- debate and open the way for
· purpose stadium within the city special interests to exert their
· Qf Detroit. He said such a influence on the committee.
facility would pur economic Cruce denies that he con-
, regener tion within the city and tributed anything to the report,
• be an asset to the state as a saying if he had done that, he
· whole. would not have put in a
John Davids, a member Of. the , provision which requires all in-
> boar� of directors of the Tiger sur ance companie to role
StadIum Fan Club and architect back their rates by 20 percent.
of the Cochra�e, Plan for He said the provision is
renovating the ext lin, tad��m, dangerous and that it w s un­
regarded the governor pcstuon con titutional to have a.
IS food new,' " . specific rollback acres tlie
"I !hink it s gre�t, he ald. board, aying this would affect
RIght now we re in a po .1- in urance companie in dif­
lion of shutting doors on public ferent way because all are not
funding (tor a new stadium), the same.
Dlvid .aid. "Thll is one more Cruce said of hi ccu er ,
door. " "All they are trying to do is dis-
. If you have any que tion., credit me, the Republican
plea.e feel free to call Kirk P rty, nd the insur nee in-
Haver amp It 517-351-0457. du try."
f

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