WORLD/NATION they It Bl He ing ge bl on ncar Mutate, an m to ozambique border. But Ziehl not t no Bl lived on the !aDd hen hi grandfather arrived. "And our aren't on be r land. It' imply bctter-developed, bener-managed," he d. coo my." W IT dubbed th Land Acquisition Bill th cc land grab ct. " But many BI argue that much of th present white f rml nd s seized by white in which II for chang dod ARDING TO Mr. petition filed at tim time be- 1bc . of all te�ion s tions in Florida are now being � fortenCW8l. A b t latioo is ptblic ms- tce,�onairwavcsbe�" AmericarB. "A broadcast station with only token Black and mioority repre­ . n aroo� i� employees canmt ibly sern: all of i� viewers or lis­ teIas, " Mr. Hayes said. he didn't belong in the building. Bernier said tbc receptionist ini­ tially ked the student to leave and later sought help from the resident, who pushed the tudent at one point. The Black student showed proper , identification and should have been left alone, Bernier said. "This has been a very serlo and disturbing event," Bernier d. "The Afro-American tudcnt was embarrassed and humiliated in front of his classmatcs •... Any part that racial bi played in these even is deplorable and any part !ada! bi played diminishes, all of us. " Clagctte, a member of the Stu­ dent National Medical As ociation, aid hi group wants Pitt to tart an educational program to increase cul­ tural awarcn and ensitivity of ad­ ministrators, faculty, taff and students. A white medical re ident and a receptionist at the cbool's Center for Emergency Medicine were reprimanded for trying to force the student to leave the center. Dr. George Bernier, dean of Pitt' medical school, said the medi­ cal student was heading to class when the white receptionist told him P URG (AI') • Blae medi- cal students at the University of Pit­ tsburgh are calling for change to combat racism at the school. lbcy say a erie of racist 'incidents climaxed recently when a black stu­ dent was nearly thrown out of a building while trying to attend class. "We demand the mutual respect that we de erve not only as human beings but future physicians who will be making outstanding contribu­ tions to this society," said Vaughn Clagette, 25, a third-year medical student. MICHIGAN CITIZE Publl heel ach Sunday by N w Day Ent rprl 12541 Second Str P.O. Box 035e0 Hlghl nd Park. 148203 (313) 889-0033 F�(313)� Minority scholarship PQlicy opposed • WASIIINGTO (AP) - The u.s. Commission on Civil Rights urged the Bush administration recently to reconsider its ban on race-specific scholarships, saying its policy sig­ nals a retreat from equal opportunity. advantaged individuals that the federal government will not work earnestly to meet their reasonable needs," the letter said. Commission Chairman Arthur A. Fletcher wrote the letter to the Education Department's assistant secretary for civil rights, Michael L Williams. He said the administration's draft policy "sends a message, intentional or not, that the federal government is retreating from the vigorous and aggressive pursuit of equal educational oppor­ tunity for minorities." The letter was dated Monday, the department's deadline for public comment on its proposed ban on scholarships awarded solely to mem­ bers of a particular. race. The letter 'was released Tuesday. The proposed rule sets three COD­ ditions under which colleges and . universities receiving federal funds may make race a consideration in awarding financial aid, including loans and graduate fellowships. They arc financial need, a need to create campus diversity and to remedy dis­ crimination. 1bc commission said the policy would narrowly restrict the lati,tude of colleges and univer­ sities to award scholarship to • achieve diversity. BENTON HARBOR BUREAU 175 aln Street Benton Harbor. MI49022 (818) 927-1527 F� (313) 927-2023 ' The commission said in a letter to Bush's Department of Education that the policy "is inconsistent with prior interpretations of the depart­ ment and runs counter to well-estab­ lished formulations for affirmative action." "The Department's policy may be seen as a distressing signal to stu­ dents, to minority groups, and to dis- Many Black Americans develop additional skills in their profession ,by serving as United States Peace Corps volunteers. Donnie Campbell taught in Rock Hill, South Carolina before going to Kenya to teach argiculture. Publisher: Char1es D. Kelly Editor: ' Theresa Kelly VIOLE APART E Man glng Editor: WandaF. Roquemore QUE TIO'N 4: Who are the victims of this apartheid violence? A campaJ.gn 1n1t1at.cd by The Africa. Fund, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS �s��: The image of mindless whole5alc tribal viol nc i a lie. The violence is very s�stematic. The minority regime has targeted people on the cutting edge 0: the freedo� struggle: labor, church, and civic leaders. There are also military style massacres of innocent people but there is a consistent patt rn at core activists being killed. Many of them were involved in township level negotiations to try and stop the violence. Contrlbutora: Bernice Brown Salama Gordon Mary Golliday, Allison Jones Flodean Riggs Leah Samuel Nathaniel Scott Ron Seigel Carolyn Warfield Vera White ��S1rI()l 1: How many people have died so far as a result of the political violence in south Africa? ANSW R: !iore than 11,000 people have been killed as a result of the violence in South Africa since 1984, over half this number since Nelson Mandela was release� from prison in 1990. Q�S1lI()N 5: How is the U.S. government involved in this violence? QUESTIO: T 2: Who is responsible f o r the violence? i\!J �Il: The Bush Administration has sent Inkatha more than two million U.S. dollars. We mU5t stop George Bush from using our tax dollars to fund Inkatha killers. A S VER: The regime of F. W. De Klerk is responsible for much of the violence. In the two years since Nelson Mandela walked out of prison the security �orces have directly killed at least 421 people an� injured over 4,000, according to statistics from the Human Rights Commission. Hit squads have killed many more. In January 1992, the Johannesburg Weekly tl2il produced army documents detailing the military's efforts to establish, finance and run covert hit squads that targeted local leaders and organizations sympathetic to the ANC. One report to the army General Staff set out how "cultural organizations" were used to "create conflict" between the ANC and other black groups. According to the Human Rights Commission, black vigilante gangs have accounted for an estimated 5,471 deaths since the middle of 1990. The CornMissio reports 53 assassinations of political organizers in 1991. The government has never fully investigated the hit squads and the department that ran these hit squads was still listed as receiving funds in the 1991 budget document. , r _-- __ �·A#II. What can I as an individual do to help stop the political violence in South Africa? Production Manager: Kascene Barks FirSt, demand that Pretoria end the violence by flooding the apartheid ambassador in Washington with calls, faxes and letters. Production: KaJ Andrich Anita Iroha Ambassador Harry Schwarz Embassy of South Africa 3051 Massachusetts Ave. N. W. Washington D.C. 20008 Tel. (202) 232-4400 Second, Write and demand the U.S. stop the funding of Inkatha killers. " President George B u h The White House Washington D. C. 20500 Third, during the week of March 28 to April 4, hold a candlelight vigil at your church, school, or a Federal Buildi�g, S.A. Consulate, and strike a ligbt for peaceful change m South Africa. Account Executlv Earlene Tolliver �UESTIO! T 3: Isn I t it true that Blacks are killing Blacks? rketlng executive: AMnClemons �S�It: For over 40 years the policy of 'apartheid has been to do everything to keep B,lack South Africans firmly oppressed. This has included assault, 'torture, and murder. The minority gov rnment has also worked to incite blacks to fight each other. It cr ated and continues to finance ten tribally based homelands, including the KwaZulu hom land operated by Gatsha Buth 1 zi. Buth lezi formed Inkatha, a movement he uses to run th KwaZulu hom land for the Pr toria regime. Inkatha and Pretoria's police are r sponsible for more deaths than anyon else. Because Inkatha is an organization of Black South Atric ns, the killings are dismissed as incidents of "Black on Black violence", but Inkatha in fact is a 001 of the Government . ADVERTISE ..... The Africa Fund, 198 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10038 (212) 962-1210