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December 01, 1991 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Citizen, 1991-12-01

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

CIT
continu d from
1
rul d that : Ion lh t nt ite was
clean, th prot tors had a right to.
erect the tent .
a
}'I u I monthly pay-
y u nly y £ th ar
it. But at th ' nd
D T D"
Community Lead rship onferen
w held with city' United Black
Clergy and Blac Media Coalition.
local and
natorial
ampai n i over, Tuc r ha
tabli h d h r own campaign office
to run for th U.S. Congre from the
ci ty' econd Congre ional Di trict
to u eed r tired Rep. William H.
Gray (D-PA) in the April, 1992,
primary for the next full term
ele tion in November 1 2. Local
oun ilman Lucien Bla Jewell was
elected to fill Gray's unexpired term.
contlnu d from P 9 1
to th pli ht of the
pro ram
g 1
Send all your
upcoming church
events to:
Michigan Citizen
P,O. Box 03560
Highland Park. MI
48203
He maintains that wh t the city is
prop ing to do wa for ed upon
th m after "we (rno tly the
hom le ) tarted demonstrating."
Collins aid they want "people to
erect tent cities allover th tate."
On Tuesday of last wee, the
coalition held a "revival of
Englerville" and one paragraph of
their flyer said: "Since Engler'
tim
unt f tim y u want the
}'I u nly pay £ r th
ar
DOOCE Dy\:\snj:U L v.e E\ ,I\E/ l TO\iHIC
TR.\\s\t1s.·IO\/ IR-CO\DITIO\I\C/PO ER DOOR
Loc�s/A\1/ F.1 C\SSETIE, STEREO
SCISSORS
continued from P ge 1
to the board," . d La Toya Pearson.
pre ident of the Michigan Black Hair
De igner Association. "After a
certain amount of years, you are
qualifie to go into your fellow
salons and know what is up to par."
While alternative measures are
being looked at, these students will
be out of job and waiting for their
turn to take the exam.
• "THERE I a back-up," Carter
said. "I may be looking at three
month to a year before I can tart
work."
Dixon referred to thi a the
domino effect. The state cuts its
budget, government workers, who
provide services to the public, are out
of jobs and then the public suffers
from lack of employees.
"This is an industry that serves a
lot of people," Dixon said. "It is a
good way to gain employment and
this is eeping these people from
their employment opportunities."
Fulani·
'.
Continued from Page A-2
presidential elections in a New Ma­
jority campaign as the leader of the
National Rainbow Coalition and the
ymbolic U.S. Senator from the Dis­
trict of Columbia with no pay, no
staff support and no vote. However,
he has already ecured pledges of
support for full statehood for D.C.
from the six Democratic presidential
candidates and hundreds of legisla­
tors, despite Bush's opposition. •
To become eligible for federal
matching campaign funds pre iden­
tial candidates must rai ea threshold
amount of $100, ()() by collecting
$5,000 in 20 different tares in
amounts of no more than $250 from
any individual.
Other requirement or eligibil­
ity include agreeing to an overall
pending limit in the campaign, abid­
ing by spending limits in each state,
using public funds only for legiti­
mate campaign-related expenses,
keeJ?ing financial records and per­
mitting an extensive campaign au­
dit. .
Based upon documents filed by
the Fulani campaign in October, FEC
, auditors verified qualifying match­
able amounts in 20 states: Califor­
nia, Connecticut, the District of Co­
lumbia, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,
Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan,
Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
Texas, Virginia, Vermont, Washing­
ton and Wisconsin.
Once declare eligible, cam­
paigners may ubmi t additional re­
quests for matching funds based upon
increased contributions. The United
States Treasury Department will pay
in January, 1992. Th maximum
amount a candidate could receive is
currently calculated to be $13.8 mil­
lion, the FEC announced.
. '
L
lik a I - with I
But unlik a I
y PI
v hi 1 t th d al r and alk away. Pay it ff din
th r maining ,
Comentional Finance
Gold Key Plu
60 Months
.35 Months
c-
$409 P R Mot
$299 PER MO·
-
in. � u r in ntrol. And that t big PL
J r- & Eagi and hry I r-Plymouth
In
CIIh
Down
F1IId
Amon
Price
AIcIwMce
--
FNad
o-m w/2f£ PlIo
$16,715
$1.950
$1.700
$6,352
$12.229
$29.9��
LE ..... u....w/28l�
$17.641
$1.650
sr.eoo
$6,704
$13,110
c..... w/26K PlIo
1.950
$2,200
$10.340
$16,7049
D.
T
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'HRYSLER LEBARO\ \DAl,/RO L v- "\GI\"E/
l TO\lmC TR \S�1"'SI )�/ R- O\DmO\l ,/POU..R
'I\OO'S ,\\0 U)C�s/ .\1/F\1 C<\:SETIE TF..RE

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