I Z c "Nelon Mandela' VI It to Detroit produced a profound outp uring of upport for him and for the truggle which continue iD South Africa:' Young aid in a tatement. Detroit accounted for one quarter of the total $4.5 mil­ lion raised in Mandcla' even-city U.S. tour la t year. Mandela money on its way-one 'year later DETROIT (AP) _ One year after Dctroiters rai ed $1 mil­ lion to benefit the anti-apart­ heid cause rallied by Nelson Mande.la during hi U.S. Freedom Tour, the money will be ent to South Africa. Detroit i the only O.S. city on Mandela' tour more than one year ago that failed to end money rai cd at a rally in Tiger Stadium. Local organizers have been criticized f r holding on to the money. They said they wanted, to make ure the money would be spent on humanitarian. not political. causes. Mayor Coleman Young recently an­ noun ed that the $1 million, plus $100,000 in interest, will be ent to a tax-exempt group e tabli hed by Mandela's political arm, the African Na­ tional Congre , That group will transfer the money to an educational and charitable group Mandela cho e to receive the money, Young said. WORLD AND NATION fun non t i to b abl to mplo many of th tat I unem­ ploy d by r training or training th m in employable kills. TIll PROG eiv nior all. Th JTP A trains its tuden in lerical and m hanical kill . It al 0 t h th m everything about fun tioningin th care rworld. Wayn Stat University in De­ troit i a contra tor of th ITP A. "What we do here is train th city of Detroit r idents to do clerical . wor ," aid Mildred Burch, co-prin­ cipal investigator at Wayne State University, in th College of Educa­ tion, for the ITPA. Wayne State' program consis of two emesters each 16 weeks. The tudcnts receive a weekly tipend of Four women charge King Institute with discrimination ALBANY, N,Y. (AP) - Four former workers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute for Nonviolence accuse agency leaders of sexual harassment and racial and exual discriminat on, a new paper reported. The four accuse upervisors at the tate agency of a range of behav­ iors-from underpaying female em­ ployees to ki ing unwilling female workers. "Under the gui e of nonviolence, we were treated very violently," said one of the women, Brenda Motley of Albany. The complaints were made with th tate Divi ion of Human Right I t February, according to the Sun­ day Gazette of SChenectady, which reviewed the complaints through the tate Freedom of Information Law. The division plans a hearing on the charges. . The women told the Gazette that candals over mismanagement and misuse of funds at the institute over­ hadowed the�r allegations of abuse against women. THEWO N-Molley,Linda Champagne Van Dy ke of Niskayuna, 'Lichu Wu Sloan of Clifton Park and Susan Gaskin of Queens -said they were fired because they cooperated with state investigators examining charges of cronyism and spending abuses at the institute. Motley and Van Dyke were com­ munity research specialists, Sloan was 'director of administration and Gaskin was a secretary. David Wukitsch, the attorney representing the state, said the insti- tute denies the allegations. The complaints claim former in­ stitute director Thomas Cooper and Les Carter, the institute'S education and training director, harassed women by yelling at them and repri­ manding them in front of co-work­ ers. The women said Cooper and Carter did not treat male employees that way. IN ONE COMPLAINT, Carter was accused of sexually harassing a female employee. Another complaint charges male employees were paid thousands of dollars more than fe­ male workers for the arne job. When cutting staff, Cooper laid off women before men, the women aid. Cooper 0 ce described women employees as ggage:' according to one complaint. Cooper, who resigned in April, and Carter would not comment on . the allegations. "It won't do any good to di cuss it in the news media any more than !t did Anita Hill or Clarence Thomas any good to have all that stuff come out in the news media," Cooper told the Gazette. Sloan, a Taiwan native, aid Coo­ per called her" Madame Wu." made comments about putting her in charge of ordering Chinese food and mocked her accent. She was fired last May. IN GASKIN'S complaint, she charged her boss, Adeyerni Bandele Marson, often kissed her and asked her for hugs and massages. Marson is gram. "It m I good to g t 'om body wor 'ng,"Burch id. or . ng, th y ar not. My whot goal' to g t th m working." Wayn Stat Universityi notthe only contra tor in Detroit. Wayn Community College, Fo­ cus Hop and oth rs i t in th training efforts. H 0 RA is e - p cted to put a certain number of tudents in the wor force or else th busines will be financially penal­ ized. "Twenty-live percent of their mon y i held bac until they find job for th m," Shearer aid. Job can be obtained at K-mart, law firm', banks, hospital and many director of the institute'S New York City office. When he complained to Cooper, some of her duties were taken away and 'he was fired in October 1990, Ga kin aid. MOTLEY, ALSO fired in Octo- . ber 1990, said she had been put under the upervision of two less-experi­ enced men who were- paid up to $15,000a year more than she earned. Van Dyke, fired in October 1990, aid she found it ironic to preach nonviolence from an agency so filled with strife. While working for the institute, she spent several months trying to restore peace at the Akwesasne In­ dian Reservation, where two Indians died in a tribal gambling war. Human, Rights, Racism and the Enviro'nment: A Struggle for Justice featuring the film . YOU GOT TO MOVE an Inspiring documentary about struggles for ciyil ri,ghts and envIronmental JustIce Tu selay, December 10, 1991 Human Rights Day 7:00 p.m. UAW David Iller Building 8731 E. Jefferson Cn1ne (next to McDonald's) Ughted. guarded partOOg Tickets $5 In 8dvence, $8 at door Ttekats avaiable from Michiaan Codtion for Hunan Rights 4800 Woodward Avenue Detroit. Mt 4820 1. For mont Information. cal MCHR 831-0258 01833-4407 ou grammar, p IHn and taught comput "I w offered many job a' r ult 0 th program," M i r aid. "I got a job wb r I h d t us com­ pletely dif erent hardware and oft­ war. I was abl to teach my elf becaus of the program I took." To participate in th ITP A, appli­ cationsar taken, interview are held and certai n cri tria 'h v to be m t. Loworl Michigan b - ing trained to handle mo t any job, but in th' economic ree ion, .th lack of need for tho e tudents i what concerns the contractors the mo t. "If th n my i in pretty and you can find job for .tudents," Shearer "Who better to address the critical is ue of poverty than tho 'e who confront th i 'u every day their lives? " asks National Center of Neighborhood ... nterprise Pre id nt Bob Woodson. Above, Wo d on di play a " () Whining" tee- birt, aying" It' time to stop moaning about being rebuked and scorned ... Let' be ahout tbe busin s of nurturing our own empowerment." WASHINGTON. D.C, Dr. Lenora B. Fulani, who is seeking the nomination of five indepen­ dent political parties, has become the first 1992 presidential candi­ date to be declared eligible-by the Federal Election Commission to receive federal matching campaign funds, the FEC announced this week. Fulani, whose campaign com­ mittee is based in New York City, has declaied she is seeking the nomination of the New Alliance Party, the Peace and Freedom Party of Vermont and the United Citi­ zens Party in South Carolina, During her 1988 campaign for President, she received primary matching fund totalli ng $922,106.34, fEC officials said. While Dr. Fulani i getting a headstart on Demo rat and Re­ publicans, two other African­ American presidential aspirants are till being considered in the nation' two major political parti . Although R v. Je e Jac on has decided not t en ter the 1 2 White House sweep take, Vir- ginia Gov. L. Dougl Wilder i among the Democrati front-run­ ners and national new paper tele­ vision commentator Tony Brown became the first journalist candi­ date to Challenge the Grand Old Party with his plan to rganize the New Republicans. "Fularii leads with matching funds in presidental race By LARRY A. STILL Special to Michigan Citizen t---- -- --- ---- Dr. Lenora B. Fulanf and a presentation . CAN THERE BE A CLEAN ENVIRONMENT WITHOUT JUSTICE? by MARY HoLLENS. delegate to the First National PeooIe of Color Environmental Leadership Summit. October 24-27. 1991, and Outreach Coordinator for Labor Notes. a Detroit-based publication for labor activists. The First National People of Color Environmental Leadersh4> Summit was a response to the recognition among those of us concerned wilh social, racial and economic ju tice. that NatiVe AmeftcMj, African Americans, Latilo Americans, and AsIan PacifiC Ameri­ cana we faced wtIh • dspropof1ionately high exposure to poisonouI chemicall and toxic envIronmentI. Over 300 delegates att8nd8d this . oric conference which brought together nUf.nM::iaI grassroots � tor the first time k) build a unified natiOnal vOice n IgII1da lot chaIenging environmental injustice. • ,I(_ I In announcing his 12-point New Republican platform recently, Brown urged the GOP to drop its " outhern strategy" of apparently sacrificing increasing Black vot­ er for declining con ervative white voters. WIDL ,ar h-e nser­ vative 'colurnni t- Whi te Hou e advi or Patri k Bu hanan . ud­ denly di I e plans to b' orne a pre idcntial candidate to rally right-wing v ter to block Presi­ dent Ge rge Bush' efforts to shift to liberal policies. Ja n till plans to mobi- lized the eight million voters-plus he attracted in the 1984 and 1988 See Fulani, Page A·10