winne let. Jac on id he visited Hamlet iden to" inspire them so they can get better and not bitte !' In the evening, hundred of people jammed into the St. Stephen AM.E. Zion church to hear Jackson. He told them that Hamlet may come to symbolize workers' righ in much the same way that Birmingham, Al ., stands for civil rights. "God has a way of doing big things in mall towns," he said. Harold Miller, pastor of First Baptist Church, said most Hamlet residents welcomed Jackson's visit. "He came at a good time," Miller said. "We've got to get through this thing, and he is a great inspiration.' Relatives of those killed in the fire agreed. . "WE WANT TO get organized, not only for Black but also for whites," said Martin Quick, husband of Mary Alice Quick. "These people have been working in fear and they died in fear.' Ratliff, 19, whose 20- . tar ��thia died in tbe be didn't want the plant to "I· e victims should get all they can frOm the company because they deserve it," he said. "It's not , like we're glad this happened so that . we can get money. I hope they close the thing down." Earlier Tuesday, Jackson met in Charlotte with families of some of those injured in the fire. "My con­ cern is that there are many other plants with workers who are just as exposed as these workers were in Hamlet," Jackson told families of victims being treated at Carolinas Medical Center. "They could be killed because of government neglect" Jackson said "a kind of conspiracy" contributed to the deaths and injuries. "Now is the time to draw a line in the sand so that this will never hap­ pen again," he said. "These people upstairs are sick and injured through no faulJ of their own. They were left unprotected," he said. JACKSON VISITED SIX of the eight workers being treated at the Charlotte hospital Tuesday moming. 1\v_Q patients were released later in the day. Reporters were not allowed in the rooms. Hospital spokesman Alan Taylor said Jackson gave each patient a red rose and chatted with them for a few minutes. "Even the most seriously ill of the patients could acknowledge that he was there," Taylor said. Albert Hatcher, 23, of Rockin­ gham, whose mother is in critical condition with smoke inhalation and second-degree bums, said Jackson's visit could help change conditions. "He could put on the pressure fOJ people like the man who owns this plant to see that things like this don't happen again," said Hatcher, whose mother was not visited by Jackson. Hi mother worked in the . processing area of the plant, where the fire started, he said. "People y he's lucky to be alive," he said. "It wasn't luck; it was a miracle." Workers in the South are paid the lowest wages,.bave the worst health insurance coverage and have the lowest level of job safety, Jackson said. Their working conditions are "beneath the dignity of human beings," he said. nnu I o U E PLOY ENT Unemployment rat for both Bl c and whit averaged at higher levels in Michigan than in the n lion a whole from 1971 to 1989 (year 0 th recent vailable data). But for Blac , it . grimmer picture till. Th finding: - Blac male unemployment in Michigan grew at a rate bout triple that for white males. - The gap in BI c -white male unemployment grew twi fast in Michigan in the nation a whole. -Th youthBI ck-white unemployment gap grew bout eight time faster in Michigan than in the United State . - Back female unemployment rose at 1.7 percent a year on average in Michigan, while white female unemployment declined by .7 percent - Whito female unemployment declined at a slower rate in Michigan than the nation as a whole. -Th female Black-white unemployment gap grew about one and one-half times more rapidly in Michigan than in the United States. BLACK-OWNED BUSINESS In the area of Black-owned businesses, "The State ofBlac� MiChigan: 1991" shows continued underrepresentation of Black-owned businesses in Michigan and the nation as a whole. When compared with the percentage of Blacks in the population. Data cover 1982 to 1987 (year of the most recent available information). Among the 16 states with more than 2,000 Black-owned firms with paid employees, Michigan ranks 15th, after Califo� New Yor iDeis, Ohio and 10 outhem tate . In 1987, the United States had a total of 140 firms with l ck Michigan r. port· tion ly per 10, 17 per 10 0 the B c popul tion in Ml'( �Ur.llln Cl ified by ind try, bout 53 percent of 'chi Bl c -owned firms in 1987 ere in rvi ,17 percent in retai! and 6.5 percent ere in finance, insurance real t teo Others were in wholesale de, manufacturing and constru tion. Other findi� on Bl c -0 cd b in - In 1990, Blac were 13.9 percent of Michigan' popul tion and 11.1 percent of the popul tion nationwide, but they owned 2.1 percent of th Michigan firms with paid employees compared with 2.0 percent in the nation (1987 ownership data). - The countie with the largest number of Black-owned firms with paid employees in 1987 were WaYne, Oakland, Gene ee, Washtenaw, Kent and Ingham. - Oakland and Ingham counties led the growth in the number of Black-owned firms from 1982 to 1987. Oakland led counties in average receipts per firm ($536,000), more than three times the receipts in Wayne County. - Southfield and Lansing led Michigan cities in the growth of the number of Black-owned firms between 1982- 87. Southfield's growth rate was 140 percent, Lansing' w 118 percent . - Black-owned firms have scarcely begun to enter the U.S. mainstream. In 1987, the entire "Top 100" listed in "Black Enterprise" had sale of $4.1 billion, approximately the same sales recorded by a single firm, Scott Paper Co., as listed iri the "Fortune 500." LARGE BLACK-OWNED FIRMS For Michigan' large Black-owned. businesse , there' so�e good new . The firms listed in "Bl ck Enterprise" in 1982 that con­ tinued to be listed in 1989 increased their sales in the seven­ year period by almost 20 percent annually, a respectable growth rate in current dollars, as well in inflation-adjusted dollars, The "Top 31" Bl c -owned firms in Michigan in 1989, listed in "Blae Enterprise" or in "Crain's 'Detroit B iness," bad combi of $831 million, a substantial increase from 1987. . PAST CO DATJO The 1991 edition of "The State of BI c Michigan" revie the range of topi ddressed in previo Y analyzes are 0 continuing concern. Since 1984, 28 utho from Michigan State Unive ity, University of Michigan, Oakland University and )'DC Sta University have presented anal of the 1 t t da on a range of pressing societal problems. Their tudi have co . tcully revealed deteriorating condition among Michigan' Bl ck citize compared with whites, resulting in a widening ocioeconomic p on b i of race. Yet little or no legislative action ulted. Recommendations presented in the earlier repo are analyzed in thi year's "The State of Bl c Michigan" by members of a think-tank assembled in 1990. Resul of their wolk include upda recommendations, by category, to "help dvance the State of Michigan on the road to justice and equality." Categories include: civil rights, crime, economic' ues, education, employment, family is­ sues, bealth and bousing .. AUTHORS Contributing authors for "The Slate of Black Micbipn: 1991 are: - N. Charle Anderson, president and chief executive officer of the Detroit Urban League, and cba.irperson of the Michigan Council of Urban League Executives: - Joe T. Darden, professor of geography and dean of Urban AffiliIS Programs, Michigan State University; - Augustin K.. Fosu, associate professor of economics, Oakland University; and - Karl D. Gregory, professor of economics aDd manage­ ment, Oakland UnivcIlity. Editor is Frances S. Tbom, tam profclsor, Urban Affairs Programs, Michigan State University. Facing the challenge to make Black males productive: Male Acadel11ie By Carolyn Warfield COlftspond.", where heads tart through second . grade are taught. Housed in Woodward School, Clifford Watson runs the Malcolm X Academy where Kindegarten through 5th grade are offered. The Garvey Academy, in the annex of Marxhausen School teaches grades 3 through 5. One grade will be added annually until the program expands to include 8th grade. THERE A�E approximately 600 boys in the three facilities with class offerings for youngsters of all . The plan is to rellnk the children with their .. ancestral pa t through empha Izlng world study. Multiculturl m I the means by which students can cultivate bllllnguallsm and geogr!lphy.. "Young man you are a member of the Marcus Mosiah Garvey Academy. This is the last day you will chew gum in this building. Nor are earrings and tails (a fad hairstyle) allowed in this academic environ­ ment." With those words, Harvey L. Hambrick, headmaster of the Garvey Academy, on Detroit'S eastside, ad­ dressed the young students enrolled in one of Detroit's controversial all­ male academies. An amicable but firm man, he decried how Black masculin oppres- sion has made boys and adult males vulnerable by discrimination and pover- ty. r A trong, Black Mis­ sis ipi·.n patriarchy taught .um how to accept respo' asiblity for himself \ and others. "The men in 11' I family and neighbor­ , .ood taught me who I was and what was expected of me." A CIVIL RIGHTS aclivi tome 30 years past in Laurel. Mississip- pi. Hambrick recounts how he under- tands clearly the motivations and frustrations African-Americans face from daily assaults on their psyches. Especially how Eurocentric males minimize Black males' personal and mental construct through chastize­ ment and fear. Hambrick taught in Missi ippi a hort while before moving to Detroit in the early 60' where he h dedi­ cated 25 years to the Detroit public chools. Selected amid '248 state­ men of intere t, he was chosen to implement one of Detroit's male academies. Ray Johnson is the principal of Paul Robe on Academy located in the b ment of Cooper Elementary On September 9, 29 girls trans­ ferred to the academies. "Marcu Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association and his work during the Harlem Reni nee were mastermind plans to get Blacks to become more bUlI­ nes minded. Garvey's name, cleared of unjust charges in 1987, should be a fundamental re on to address the national urban crisis that �as Black males endangered; in commitment to helping them ac­ complish imProved scool tic per­ formance, to engender economic renumeration and empowerment," Hambrick continued, "AFTER STUDYIN G various academic perfor- mance models rela­ tive to mascuUne academic achieve­ ment, the task forte is certain its approach is sound. Once we if this educational design work. in Detroit over the next three years, we will take the flndinp to replicate it throughout the dis­ trict. There is no , doubt that Detroit can become a model chool district with team effort from parents, students and teachers," Hambric said. "The plan is to reUnk the children with their alKUtral past ugh em­ p izing world tudy. Multicu1� turism is the means by whicb tuden can cultivate bilingualism and geography. World geography will demonstrate where the Blae race has fit into the political pectrum during p t centuries and recent decades. Study of the world will integrate and reOect a true hi.­ tory of all peopl enablihng today's student to co-exist in an environmen where all can work and live.": WINNERS- Arthur Johnson � eated left), Vonnlta Johnson (standing) and Tracy Mann (seated right), shown with Michael T. Monahan, president of Manufacturers Nation Bank of Detroit, are the 199) recipients of the Manufacturers Bank Minority Scholarships. The tbrve Wayne State University tudents each received a one-year, $1,500 hoi rshlp to the University' School of Bu lne Admin tration and recently completed their internship with the Bank. Thoma' ex-wife hie from reporter BOSTON (AP) Kathy Grace Ambush, former wife of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas will not comment on her former husband' nomina­ tion. The two met while stu­ dents at Holy Cross Col­ lege in Worcester, and were married there on June 5, 1971. They had a son, Jamal. in 1973. The couple separated in 1981. Their divorce was finalized on July 16, 1984. Thomas was granted cus­ tody of their son and later remarried. Mrs. Thomas, a Newton resident, works at the pres­ tigious Milton Academy as head of the M ssachusetts Advanced Study Program. achievement levels. "Everybody was' thoroughly screened: the teachers, tudents and parents. Sixty days lapsed in gather­ ing my 16 member staff. After­ ward the teeners received 40 hours normative culture training from the Glen Mills Corporation plus 40 hours of African centered training. They're all computer literate, multi­ talented and have chieved personal growth and development." A co-educational mandate im­ posed August 15 by the Federal Dis­ trict Court following a lawsuit filed by a Detroit mother and her daug­ thers declared the all-male enroll­ ment unconstitutional. so the Bo8J'd approved 136 for ferna! .