Dono , alcolm Spi e Lee announced Tue day that group of prominent Blac had don ted an undisclo ed amount of money to h lp complete work on hi forthcoming film, "Mal­ colm X." He aid the donors were Bill Co by, Oprah infrey, Michael Jordan, Earvin (Magic) Johnson, Janet Jack­ son, Prince, and Peggy Cooper Cafritz, founder of the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Washington. At a press conference in Harlem, Lee aid the Comple­ tion Bond Company, which assumed financial control in January, refu ed to approve any more expenditures. At the time, costs on the film had climbed to nearly $33 million. Lee has said final costs for the movie may run over $40 million. "This is not a loan," said Lee, who declined to disclosed the specific amount donated. "They are not investing in the film. These are Black folks with some money who came to the rescue of the movie. As a result, this film will be my ver­ sion. Not the bond company's version, not Warner Brothers.' I will do the film the way it ought to be, and it will be over three hours." . NAACp blasts judge I' The president of the Detroi t Branch NAACP, Dr. Arthur Johnson, today strongly criticized remarks by Judge William Hathaway of the 36th District Court made Monday. During the trial of Terry Gaines Sr., Judge Hathaway said, "Mr. Gaines is in the! same position we are all in. He has got to have a gun to protect himself in this ci ty. " "This is a shocking and ir­ responsible statement from the bench," Johnson said, "that is not supported by the facts. No, were are not all in that position and I would remind Judge Hathaway that the majority of the citizens in this community, like myself". do not own guns, and perhaps do not desire to own guns. Further, to give the impression that life is violent in Detroi t that every ci tizen should own a gun amounts to gross defamation of this city's character, and recklessly feeds the fear that already exists. We think that Judge Hathaway owes the good ci tizens of Detroit an apology." King asks settlement LOS ANGELES - Lawyers for Black motorist Rodney King and the city of Los An­ geles told ajudge recently they were seeking an out-of-court ettlement in King's $83-mil­ lion civil law uit against the city. King's videotaped beating by white Los Angeles police officers shocked the world. Four officers were acquitted in the case last month, sparking several day of rioting. 'II Some ·3,000 National Guard soldiers, called in to quell the violence, contin�ed their pullout from the city, leaving fewer than 1,000 military police and infantry. And incoming police Chief Willie Williams toured the city, pledging to put more of­ ficers on the streets to help re­ store confidence in police. LAN o-A colle e edu tion might be the rthe t thing rom th minds of junior high choole in high minority re . ot nece rily nymore. Young ters from Benton H rbor re among minori ty tuden t tewide who have th opportunity to vi it a colleg c mp , become oriented with higher education, b in pired by what th y ee and turn wh t eemed like an impo ibility into reality. The Martin Luther King, Jr. - Ce ar Chavez-Rosa Par Colleg Day program ha Howed mor than 93,000 t dents since'1987, most of them from the 35 high­ minority schools districts, to tour the campu es of Michigan' 15 tate universities. They thus get ac­ quainted with the demand of at­ tending any higher educational institution, be it university, college, junior college or community col­ lege. The proposed budget for the pro­ gram in fiscal year 1992-93 exceed $1.1 million. B TON HARBOR School District ranks ixth in the number of minoritie , according to 1990-91 Department of Education data, at 83.91 percent. The program ha enabled more than 200 area stu­ dents from Fair Plain Junior High School to, visit Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo. Program coordinators feel their efforts have been successful. WMU FOCU D on junior high tudents, not high chool as some other universitie do. First, repre entative at each of the 17 districts that visit WMU work with the tudent at the junior high chool and help to get them riented and prepared for their visit. When tudents come to a univer­ sity, they Jour the campus and then have activitie at a pecific college within th university, uch a the Engli h or education department. There they will learn the pertinent information 'which many had no idea about. Seal told the story of a student gaining a whole new focus and attitude after learning what o BOUT K- C-P nd i purpo e: It i a motivation 1 program that im to in pire targeted pupil - namely Blac ,Hispanics and na­ tive American -to pursue an education, aid Joyce Seals, coor­ dinator of the program that is ad­ ministered through the Michigan Office of Minority Equity. K-C-P i necessary because uch a small percentage of the college population re minoritie , and even fewer are college graduate . How­ ever, the program is not limited to minorities. Anyone of any race can participate, but minorities greatly outnumber others because more are from the targeted districts. Although the program i only five years old and long-term effects are difficult to gauge, Seals said it i working. She pointed to in­ creased numbers of minority Schola tic Apti tude Test (SAT) takers and more students taking col- • -VI a By JENNIFER FOSS C.plt.1 NfIW. S.rvlc. LANSING-Will the residents of Michigan ever approve of the death peanalty as punishment for vicious criminals? Some lawmakers say forget it, but others feel that it may not be such a far-fetched notion. In Michigan, the state con­ stitution prohibits the Legislature from enacting death penalty laws. Howerver, if the issue were puton a ballot, state residents could vote, to legalize capital punishment. Efforts to initate a petition to have the death penality put on a ballot have not been successful in mnay years. THE MOST recent attempt wa: led in 1989 by Sen. Gil Di­ Nello, D-East Detroit. In 1986, former Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson also tried to being the death penal­ ty to a vote. Rep. David Jaye, D-Shelby Township, said that both �ere off to a good start, but neither man was abl to get the 256,457 valid si s needed in time. I "It's tough to collect enough (signatures) because you only, have six months," Jaye said. "In fact, it' enormou ly difficult." De pite the failures of the petiton initiative , Jaye, who favors the death penalty, feels that the people of Michigan want to see the capital puni hment Iagal­ ized. "In poll after poll," he aid, "well over 80 percent of the people statewide are in favor." JAY BlAM the failed in- itiatives in part on the influence of Rep. Perry Bullard, chairman of he aid. "It cost S 0,000 to the House Judiciary Committee. $90,000 a year to keep someone Jaye aid that Bullard, a liberal on death row." Democrat, ha uccessfully en- McGinnis compared this fig- couragcd lawmakers to oppose ure to the $25,000 it co ts annual- the death penalty. ly to house a prisoner who is not "In fact," he aid, "he has on death row. ' single-handedly quashed any How do orne residents of chance to get it on a petition." south Oakland County react to the Jaye said that when Bullard issue? leaves office this year, the Legis- . Drayke Dondero, a Royal Oak lature will probably support the resident, said that he favors the death penalty more and be able to death penalty and would be will- convince their constitituents to ing to pay additional tax dollars to support petition initatives. bring it to Michigan. Kenneth McGinnis. director of "Everyone should be willing to pay to make their state safer," he .said. "EverY()I1C should he \V ill i 11 11 t o � pay to make their f " state sa cr. , I, �, l . �, � . the Michigan Department of Cor­ rections, however, doe not agree with Jaye's logic or predictions. McGinni aid that the people of Michigan do not favor the death peanalty and, therefore, he does not forsee it becoming legalized. McGinnis added that those who do favor the death penalty need to be educated on how co tly it would be to tate taxpayers. . "WE NEED PEOPLE to see what the consequence of it are," DONDERO AID, however, that he thinks the system needs to be reformed in order to make the death penalty more co t effective. Jason Hill, an Oak Park resi­ dent, disagrees. . Although Hill does not think that putting violent criminals to death i a bad idea, he said that he would not be willing to pay extra taxes. "If it's going to cost us more in the long run," be aid, "then it's not worth it." Currently, no state lawmakers have petition intiative in the works supporting the death penal­ ty. However, Rep. Wilfred Webb, D-Hazel Park, aid. that one could very well arise in the future. WHAT WILL happen then? Webb, who oppo es 'the death penalty, aid that's tough ques­ tion. "One thing's for sure," he said. "There are no easy answers." .. · " . . . HE ID the program is more motiv tion 1 nd inspiration I, and doe n't pecifically te ch kill development. Students tour the chool neare t th m, and are not recruited for a specific chool. "We don't care where they go, as long a they go," Nelon said. "I feel the program ha a direct impact on kids," McKee said. "When the day is done, they ask a lot of que tions. They want to come back." On being a role model from Ben­ ton Harbor, McKee aid that offers them extra encouragement. "They think, 'If he' doing it, I can do too, It, she said. McKEE WILL BE a student facilitator for the ummer program, which begins in June. Hernandez said the summer p 0- gram is more extensive and lasts one week. Students live in dor­ mitories, have a schedule of dif­ ferent eta se , attend a multicultural workshop and con- centr te not jut on demic : now led e, but Ie m the impor-: nee of oci 1 nd cultural pee • ell. : While 11 involved in pro- : gram t Ik of i po itive influen e : on minoritie nd their increased: opportunitie , one legi I tor em­ phati lly oppo th program in uch difficult economic times which include Michigan' ne rly 800 million de icit, "Why hould we pend $1.2 mil­ lion to motivate high chool kids to go college?," Rep. D vid Jaye, R­ Shelby Tow hip, ed."I think (the program) i raci t. It' ab- olutely wrong to target for certain race ." Jaye que tioned why Italians, Ukrainians, Poli h, Chine e and. American Indians weren't included: and aid uch a program hould cen- • ter on the tudent' economic back- • ground, not on race or ethncity. : • • JA YE AID high chool : educators are to motivate students • to attend college anyway. He said: K-C-P waste the government' : money and would rather see it used: for student loans. "I would like to cut the entire : (K-C-P) program," Jaye said, as one: of his 13 attempts to trip the deficit. : McKee, on the other hand, hope : it tay and wi he the program had. tarted even earlier. : "A lot more of my classmates : would be in college right now (had: we had K-C-P then)." . GRADUATION EXERCISE. - Doctor Arthur M. Carter III, interim deputy superintendent of DMslon of Community Con­ fiendence with Detroit Public Schools, told graduating class number 80 of the Job Training Partenership Act's School of Practical Nursing Friday, March 13 at Murray-Wright High School, ·You are going to become a part of an $80 billion Industry.· The one year nursing program began March 11, 1991 and 47 graduated. Jackson pushes schools over prison GRAND RAPIDS, Micb. (AP) - America needs to reverse the trend that sends more Blacks to pri on than to college, said Jesse Jackson Jr., son and namesake to the well­ known civil rights leader. I I It co ts less than $10,000 for a single year to go to Michigan State on a full academic scholarship, while it costs slightly more than $100,000 for a single year to go to Michigan state penitentiary on a full penitentiary cholarship, " Jackson told about 1,000 Black tu­ dents on Thursday. ' Meanwhile, he aid, President Bush plans to budget more money to build pri on than to build chools. Jack on encouraged the teen-agers to register to vote. Jackson, president of the Keep Hope Alive political action corn-] mittee and the younge t member of: the Democratic National Commit-· tee at 27, spoke for an hour at the � West Michigan African-American ' Male Conference 'at Orand Rapids: Community College. • "THIS CONFERENCE is so: well-timed," he aid. lilt fall at a: time when the media, because of the : ROdney King verdict, i mo t inter­ e ted in what' on the minds of young Black male. "It falls at a time when, with clear evidence before a trial, we can convict Marion B rry on video, but an a11- white jury cannot find that beating: Rodney King was not exce Ive : punishment," Jackson aid. Lawmaker wdeah co t cu