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January 05, 1992 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Citizen, 1992-01-05

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

-10 IC I A CITIZ
I
ro
1
"I
wrong
as
"T 0 WHO roam our streets
and n ighborhood selling drug,
beating, hooting and illing
innocent bystanders have no respect
for human rights.
Tho e young people who prey on
the young and elderly are a di grace
to the memory of th e brave young
men and women who attempted to
march from Selma to Montgomery
of 'Bloody Sunday' for the right to
vote," the congressman aid.
BATTLE
PANTHERS
Continued from Page 1
portionment commi ion oted t
hrink the ize of th county board,
eliminating its only Bla k m mb r.
Pack houldn't b consid red an
underdog in a runoff again t Quain,
Deaver aid.
"I wouldn't want to et on who
would win that:' Deaver aid. '"
don't think (the rcapp rti nment)
force h r off at all."
Querry claim the apportionment
committee' Republicans are trying
to block him (rom having a ay in
redi tricti ng.
"I think we are because we're
Republicans and he' a Democrat, so
what's wrong with that," Deaver
said. "I di agree with him on almo t
every issue you could imagine, in­
cluding this one."
Querry ubmitted two plans
Thursday, Jan 2. Both were rejected
Friday., Jan. 1
The apportionment cornmis ion
will send-the new plan to the appeal
court Monday.
Continued from Page 1
"There w a plit in the party
with orne party members banned
from peaking to each other,"
Cleaver aid.' 'There w n. com-
Church, h wever, marked the first
time the five former leader p­
peared together to recount their
torie in th group' demi in
the 197 .
Gathered together were David
Hilliard, the party' chief of taff,
Emory Dougla • the former mini ter
of culture, and Kathleen Cleaver,
John Seale and Harvey McClendon,
all former members of the central
committee.
Cleaver wa the on! y one of the
five to testify at Pratt's 1972 trial that
they were in Oakland attending the
meeting at Hilliard's house when
Carolyn Olson, 27, was hot to death
and her husband, Kenneth, wa
wounded at a Santa Monica tennis
court. Pratt was the party' deputy
defense minister.
The others aid they were ilent
because of an FBI plan that pitted
party factions against each other.
rnunication.' ,
"They had believe he (pratt)
wa an FBI agent," aid Hilliard,
tandin under a "Free Geronimo"
ign.
Cleaver, like Prall, was expelled
from the party.
Prall h alway maintained hi
innocence, claiming he wa a victim
of an FBI etup de igned to hatter
the growing Black power move­
ment. He ha been denied parole 11
time.
FBI spoke woman Barbara Mad­
den, in San Francis co, denied the
accu ations. "The FBI doesn't
frame people," she aid.
In 1984, during a hearing on a
reque t for 8 n w trial, three FBI
agents acknowledged that Pratt wa
the subject of special interest and that
plans were made to "render him in­
effective.' ,
"If the que tion i would I par­
ticipate in something that framed
him for murder, the answer is no,"
testified Agent Richard Held.
1
HP honor chool trus ee
At le t once a month, 4,200 men
and worn n erving on board of
education aero Michigan me t to
make deci ions that affect th live
nd th future of 1.7 million chool
children, over 165,000 chool
employees, and the citizens of every
community in the tate.
Highland Park nd 559 other
Michigan communi tie re honoring
the dedicated ervice of the e public
chool trustee during the ob er­
vance of School Board Member
Recognition Month in January ..
The observance offers com­
munities a chance to pay tribute to
the men and women elected by fel­
low citizens to set direction and
policy for their chools. It also offers
all citizens th chance to learn more
about Michigan' long tradition of
local control chools.
The idea of school boards grew
out of territorial law, predating
statehood and the Michigan constitu­
tion. Public Act 63 of 1837 defined
a procedure for creating primary
school districts and a district "school
board" to oversee the schools.
UNDER MICHIGAN'S School
Code (Sec. 380.1282), a local board
of education "sha11 establish and
carryon the grades, schools and
departments it deems necessary or
desirable for the maintenance and
improvement of the schools, deter­
mine the courses of study to be pur­
sued, and cause the pupils attending
school in the district to be taught in
the chool or departmen th bo
d ms expedient."
School board m rnber gove
chool in a cordance with t te,
federal nd judi i I guideline. .
Th y face th ch lIeng of ervin
tudent and community edu tion
needs amid limited re our an
rising quality requiremen and e •
pectations. •
Now erving on the Board 0
Education of the Highland P r
School Di trict are: :
John H. HOlloway, Pre ident
Titu McClary, Vice President
Winona O. Humphrey, Secretaryj
Arneta Waterhu e, Trea urerl­
Mamie L. Coop r, Member; An :
Jones, Member; Leonard W. Robin :
on, Member. .
The e even Highland Park re i­
dents also erve as the Highland Park
Community College Board of Trus­
tee.
BOARD MEMB RS normally
serve four-year terms. an annual
public Highland Park Board of
Education election is held in June, '
with usually one or two members'
term expiring each year. New terms
begin July 1, which marks th offi­
cial beginning of each school year.
Board members elect their officers at
an annual, State-required organiza­
tional meeting in early July.
The first Highland Park school
board meeting was on July 27,1891.
If all your children deserved to 'go to college,
but you could only send one; how would you choose?
This is a tough problem even for bright kids.
It' s n t math or � .icn that's ke 'ping 1 right
kid. ( ut ollcge. It's h xn . c 'om mi .s. That'.
why givin t( the l 'nitcd egro .ollege Fund
is s ) irn] ( rtant. .
As the most xp .rlen ' "d s( ur .c in providing
generalop rating surf) rt for historically bla 'k
'011 ·gc�. we'v enabled th usands of d . ervin
students to g °t a quality edu 'ali in.
But Y ur h .lp i: still urg .ntlv ne «J xL ith-
( ut you this probl m has no solutk n. Send
\'( ur d mati m to: l :t� ';00 ". 12nd Stre rt,
, ew York, Y I002!.
U ITED NEGRO COLLEGE FU D
A Mind I A .. Terrible Thing To Wa teo
UNITED EGRO COLLEGE FUND
A Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Waste.

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