L _ Mbanna Kantako and the Micro-Radio Movement ICHAEL TOWNSEND ion ir THECA EFOR ICRO-RADIO . • Mb nna Kantako i Black, blind, broke, and on the verge of creating media revolution in America. Kantako, who live ju t up the treet from Abe Lincoln' home in Springfield, D­ linoi ,i it 31-year-old un­ employed public housing resident who operates the nation's mo t notorious unlicensed radio ta­ tion. Known Black Liberation Radio, it operate on a. L-watt transmitter the ize of a toaster ith broadcast range of only one mile. Kantako' station i five years old and for the last year and a half h operated in flagrant violation of a federal court order to cease broad ting. No one i quite \U"C why the government, so far, l:Y.i;��;���'." court order. IUlJIJUUW vo he is wUlinI go to prison If need be,' and sup­ porters of the tation say they will ask Amnesty International to. declare him a political prisoner if he i jailed by the government. Kantako (an adopted African name which means "resisting warrior") started broadcasting five years ago as a result of his disgust with the mainstream media and their failure to cover • • Exelu Ion from m I I. undemocratic nd a form of .ocl J control • lero-Radlo empow r. Iow-Ineom WHEN THE FCC could not get Kantako off the air voluntari­ ly, they tined him $750. When he See MICRO-RADIO, A-10 AFL-CIO calls for national health care By NANCY DONNELLY Capt",1 News S.nic. LANSING -National health care is the only solution to what some call the country s health insurance crisis, says Frank Garrison, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO. Garrison says insurance companies cannot solve. the problem. The labor leader believes the U.S. should adopt a health care system similar to Canada's plan, with a single payer. "Chrysler builds a car $600 cheaper in Canada than they do here, strictly because of health care costs," be said. "That's after the added tax to support the (Canadian) national health plan." Garrison is a member of a panel led by Michigan Blue Cross and . Blue Shield that will meet at the end of this month to try -and come to an agreement on national health care. Garrison will be joined by Gov. John Engler and corporate heads like General Motors and Ford officials. REP. TRACEY YOKICH, D-St. Clair Shores, has already begun looking toward universal health care for Michigan. Yokich is a co-sponsor of' the "Michl care " health plan, a bill introduced in the House last week by Rep. Perry Bullard, D-Ann Arbor. or h I , to $8 per tudent depending on Ho the d· trict. According to n ide on the o e Ed tion Committee, th out-of-formul chool will be receiving an extra 23 pe "pupil. There will be two payment date for th ye , on in December and Ute other in April. "11 b haring l a public act th tenable chool di tric to hare one h If of the commercial and indu trial reven growth with in-formula ch I di tricts," said H Prince, a senior analyst for the -'GA swap or real hope? I Fi Agerx;y. . By JODI C KLEIN c.,tW N. 6 S.nic. 1.AN o-Educators throughout 'the state are anxiously wa ching to ee how the recently passed "Robin Hood Plan" will atfect their children and taxpayers. Their concern follows Michigan's recently announced tax . base sharing plan to help in-formul . chool districts (the school with'less money). The out-of-formula school district (tho e with more local i lance. Children hav the opportunity to learn at any chool in the Slate, but all chool don't have the funding to do it. CHOOLS CmG get mo t of their money form property taxes, providing their tudents with better education beca e of funding. School funding per tudent range from about $2,000 per tudent JOB BILL training and an education. A person also would be eligible for food stamps and allowances to pay for transportation, uniforms, tools and medical needs. Rep. Glenn Oxender, R-Sturgis, voted against the proposal. "IT'S JUST A different GA program. The bill doesn't get into the root of the issue of providing job training to eliminate dependency on the government, " Oxender said. The House passed the bill. The Senate sent the bill to its Appropriations Committee. Se SWAP, A·10 money that these trl are being gi en, they can ply it to anything that they fit. "They could use the money to m ke improvement in tbe educational program, to improve pupil chievement, improvement of the and 0 the schoo ,.. id Ron Miller of the yne County Intermedia School Di triet. "'We are ways happy to receive CHOOLS, A·10 ? Court offlc r kid By KHRISTINE FLORANTE Captllli News Senic. LANSING - A job training bill aimed at former General Assistance recipients is causing controversy in the capital. The issues are whether th plan truly would help promote job training or just substitute a catchier name for the old program and whether the state could pay for it anyway. Rep. David Hollister, D-Lansing, said the proposed State Work Advancement Program (SWAP) would give former GA recipients hope by providing counseling and $220 a month for seeking job By DANNY COOK 'We need ... universal access to health care' UL ndor WAP The Detroit Urban League heartily upports· the p ge of Ho Bill 460S-tbe State Work Advancement Program (SWAP) said N. Charles Anderson, President of the Detroit Urban League. The elimination of General Assi tance benefi ts leaves more than 40,000 people in the Detroit area without the most modest means of caring for themselves, Anderson aid. Thi move has the potential for S e UL-SWAP, A·10 The plan would provide such principles as comprehensive access, free choice of provider nd simple and equitable financing. . "At least half of the workers in the country do not have health care," she. said. "We need this type (of health insurance) for universal eligibili ty as well as universal access to health care." Garrison tie th nation's ability Sa AFL-CIO, A·5 . -The con­ people and the manner in hidl they think bout bat' going on today:" DOROTHY BAILEY: "It repro­ seats the African American heritage." • •