e people n convinc­ ingly challen e the f ct tb t the African American pre i peerle when it come to covering local or community events. We lso believe that the Aftican American P d an bove ver ge job of coverin national d inter- nation 1 even from an African perspective. By in 1 rge, the African American p' fill n in­ valuable void with regard to new coverage, however, too many of the rticles are pre rele e - econd nd some­ times even third hand. Neverthele , we present the following example of national and international ar­ ticle that we ad in numerous African American newspaper - from January thru July. Some of these ar­ ticle were also reported on in the non African press as well. Keep supporting the African press. WE BELIEVE that the African American pre will continue to lead the way throughout the year. JANUARY - Dr. King Holiday Celebrations, the Nation of Islam - Kemron for AIDS virus, the Azania Youth Organization threatens to use violence against Paul Simon and later Whoopi Goldberg, the Austrialian Olympic Basket­ ball team threatens to boycott if Magic Johnson plays. . FEBRUARY Dr. Leonard Jefferies vs. the City University of New York episode continues, Dr. Ben Hooks of the NAACP an­ nounces retirement, Mike Tyson convicted of rape, Alex Haley dies. MARCH - The late Rev. James Cleveland and AIDS, Harvard, Law Professor Der­ rick Bell pledges to stay away from Harvard, Katherine Dunham ends her fast in protest of Haitians mistreatment, Jamaican Prime Ministq Michael Manley announces retire­ ment. �RIL - Stanley S. Scott dies of cancer, P J. Pat­ terson chosen Jamaica Prime Minister, Arthur Ashe and AIDS, Virginia Union's bas­ ketball team crowned Div. II champions. MAY - Los Angeles erupts after Rodney King/Police officers verdict, Ramona African of MOVE freed, Rickey Henderson steals his 1000th base in baseball, Iman marrie David Bowie. . JUNE - Rev. Jesse Jack­ son to head NAACP?, A.O. Gaston chosen Entrepreneur of the Century, Bill Clin­ ton/Sister Souljah controver­ sy, Dr. Lenora Fulani defeats Ron Daniels on Peace .and Freedom Ticket in Califor­ nia. JULY - Coverage of Democratic Convention in New York, five African Americans receive Mac­ Arthur Fellowships, Abu Bakr released in Trinidad, African American ,gangs in LA maintain truce, Minister Farrakhan says "Beware of Malcolm X Movie," UNCF's Bill Gray proclaims that "Education is the Key." HILTON: HIGHER EDUCATION is duigtiU to dialogue with college and world reaMrs. Education is ongo�g and certainly not limited to classroom study. Let's talk: (714) 899-0650. VIEWS/OPINIONS ...... .Lo.&� W no other bu going to Wedowee that afternoon. My father wandered from the tation into the treet, feeling "really disgusted." Although he eventually obtained ride home by hi tchhiking , on the highway, my father never forgot the hatred in the driver's words. Nearly a half century later, he still keen! y feels his resentment and rage of that winter afternoon in Anniston. "When you go against the grain of raci m," he states today, "you pay for denied access to good paying jobs and participation in the economic process, while the UA W does noth­ ing. As the UA W' does not want to attack the Japanese people, neither do I want to nor do I attack the UA W members. It's important to me not to make UA W workers scapegoats for their leaders racist and anti-Black be­ havior. UAW WORKERS ARE be­ coming victims too, as Blacks have been. The UA W members must under­ stand that as Blacks watched manufacturing jobs leave the inner cities, it has negatively impacted our standard of living, The export of jobs from the uburbs to foreign countries will have the arne impact on their standard of living. ' , The negative economic forces that impact Blacks, although not im­ mediately, will eventually affect the white UA W members standard of living. An illustration is the an­ nounced clo ing of the Ypsilanti GM plant. While the UAW structure i af­ fected by plant clo ing and other structural changes in the American society, the Black leadership within the UA W is being decimated by the present white dominated structure. The UAW managed to decrease the number of Black regional direc­ tors with no intent of cultivating Blacks for present and future leader- it, one yor not er." Wh t m ny white Americ n h ve n ver fully und tood i that "r ci m" i not ju t the ocial di rimin lion, poli tic I di fr nchi ement nd ct 0 e traleg I violence which exi ted und r Jim Crow egregation. " ci m" i not imply the" ilent di crimination" felt by my generation of African-Am ricans, wore frequently denied acces to credit nd pital by unfair b nking practice, or who encounter the "gla ceiling" inside bu in es, limiting their job dvan ment. R cism is mo t painful in its mall t manifestations: tb white merchant who drop change on the al counter, rather than to tou h th hand of a Blac person; the white teach r who d liberately avoids the upraised hand of a Latino student in class, giving whi te pupil an unspo en advantage. THI SO T 0 racism generates a feeling of rage within the very soul of the oppre sed, an anger which was clearly seen in the streets of South-Centeral Los Angele this year. My children, Malaika, Sojouner and Joshua, have experienced thi same sort of rage by the petty di crimi tio of ily life. y complain that their textboo don't h ve enou h inform tion bout th ontributio of Afri -Ameri to our ociety. Wh n my on goe to the hoppin m 11, he ha been followed and h ed by ecurity guar . White children h ve moved items aw y from th re ch of my on, beca e they believe the tereotyp that "all Blac teal." My daughter Sojourner h d white te c e who were h tile and unsympathetic toward h r demic development. As Malika, my fifteen-year-old daughter explains: "White people often mi [udge you j t by the w y you look, without getting to know you. Thi make me feel angry inside." A new generation of African-Americans who never p rsonally marched for civil rights, and who never witn ed the crimes of. egregation, feel the same rage expre ed by my seventy-year-old father. They c1earlycomprehend the racial hypocrisy of the court system. ONE RECENT EXAMPLE from Southern California-in San Fernado, postman shot and killed a pesky German shepherd dog on his mail route. The postman wa Commission were filed against the UAW, AND AS OF this writing, the out­ come is still pending. Additional complaints have 'been filed against the UA W with various government agencies. At the ap­ propriate time, a lawsuit against the UAW regarding race, age and sex discrimination will be filed. Specifically, Mr. Stephen P. Yokich, Vice President and Director UA W General Motors Department was directly in charge of the Detroit Center Dislocated Worker Program. The approval to clo e the Detroit Center and abandon the Black UA W laid off workers came from Mr. Yokich, Without his permi ion and approval, the Detroit Center would have never closed-never. Additionally, Black employees wi th the UA W-GM Human Resource Center-Detroit were rep­ re ented by a weak union with a weaker leader, former Pre ident, Theresa Horner, Office and Profes- ional Employee International Union Local 42. WITHIN OPEIU repre ented bargaining unit, there were ap­ proximately 148 employees. Thi in­ cluded roughly 30 white male', 13 Black female, 103 white females, and exactly 2 Black males as of April' 1,1991. After the Detroit clo ing, only 1 Black male was left in the unit. Based on these statistic, the Michigan Civil Rights Department t, The ge whic boiled over into violence in Lo An ele i experienced by aIm t every pe on of color in America. Unle whit come to feel outra ed we ve alway been bout prejudice, more conflict and tra dy cro raci I line . inevi ble. Manning Marable' Professor of Political Science and Hi tory, University of Color do, Boulder. "Along the Color Line" ppears in over 250 public tion , and i broadcast by more than SO radio tatio intemationally. "'vJ� A'?£ PolSj;:{) FoR- AN �oM/c.. �V02..'1." -G.� READERS WRITE of UAW raci m Your February 5-11,1992 article by Ron Seigel entitled "UA W: Japan guilty of racial bias" was startling and a typical case of the pot calling the kettle Black. As Japan is guilty of racial dis­ crimination, the UA W is equally guil ty of the same act. The UA W points out racist prac­ tices against Blacks by the Japanese­ on American soil, While the UA W equally engages in racial discrimina­ tion on American soil against America's Black citizens. As good paying union jobs left the inner cities for the suburb, there was no protest from the UA W leadership. As the' inner cities lose their manufacturing base for racial reasons, the UA W leads no protests, demands no changes but remains silent. Only now does the UA W demand change, because the good paying manufacturing jobs are being lost from the suburbs to foreign countries. FROM BLACK Americans' perspective, the export of jobs from inner cities to the suburbs is the same the export of job from United States to Mexico and other foreign countries. Mr. Seigel would lead the readers to believe that the Japanese racism is" far more contemptuous than that of the UA W leadership. Whether that' true or not is be­ sides the point. The consequences are the arne: Blacks are being ship roles. I MET RECENTLY with the UAW Black Caucus at the Trade Union Leadership Council where Black members complained vehe­ mently and bitterly about being denied opportunities for committee assignments and appointee positions within the UAW. Many stated that they were asked to prepare resumes for internal posi­ tions within the UA Wand ubmit for review and evaluation. However, their white counterparts ere never requested to prepare resum or any other documents for available posi­ tions. And by the time Blacks ub­ mitted their resumes, the po itions had been filled, by whites. Moreover, a of April 1, 1991, The Detroit UAW-GM Human Resource Center wa clo ed by the UA W with the concurrence of GM management, which provided employment and training services to a predominately Blac population laid off from GM due .to plant clos­ ings. The Detroit Center, which served the largest population of dislocated workers, was the only Center closed by the UA W. The Center wa managed and staffed by Blacks. When the UA W clo ed the Detroit Center, like the Japanese, ,it aban­ doned Black GM laid off workers and Detroit. . In response to the clo ing of the Detroit Center, race, age and sex di - crimination complaints with the Michigan Civil Righ Department and Equal Opportunity Employment representatives encouraged those at­ feeted to investigate the prospects for a class action lawsuit against the UA W -OM Human Resource Center Headquarters, which comes under the direct jurisdiction of Mr. Yokich. ' A commi ttee of former Black OPEIU has been established to in­ vestigate and pursue the clas action issue further. All present and former employees-both white and Black-are ' welcome to join. The clo ing of the Detroit Center April 1, 1991 for racially motivated rea ons was offensive enough. The offensiveness was compounded when the UA W sent a letter dated March 14,1991 to various union of­ ficials announcing the closing while outsourcing professional' job per­ formed by Black Counselors, Job Developer, Employability Specialist and other supportive staff. IN OTHER WORDS, a the UA W leadership announced the closing of the Detroit Center, it was soliciting community agencies to provide the arne services Black workers provided at the Detroit Cen­ ter. Thi i known as OUTSOURC­ ING within the automotive industry and the UA W h trongly fought it. yet the jobs of Black workers were olicited for OUTSOURCING. As recent as two months ago, the taff from UAW-GM Human Resource Center-Pontiac, Detroit's My (ath r w caring hi army uniform, d proudly di playing his med Is. Quietly be pure d his tic et, and tood p tiently in line to enter the mallb WH Y E fin lly re ched the b driver, the whi te man w tarting intensely t him. With an ugly frown, the driver took tep b ck. "Nigger," he pat at my father, "you look Ii you're going to give omebody ome trouble. You d better wait here for the next bus." My father was confu ed and angry. "As a oldier, you alway felt ort of proud," my dad recalls. This bus driver's remar "bit me like a ton of bricks. Here I am, going home, and I' 'been way from the South for fOVl yeatS. I w n't being READER,A10 \