ci m 'run d p \'IE\\ S & ()PI'J(f� airport, the zone round ldenc:e of P dent d the central po ce num 0 rpl ere a by UNlTAin coordi e ttempt to impo "coup d'e 01 Once aiD. ho ever, th people of Angol re ponded and m lnly through civlli n "people' re ponse" the ttac' nUT troo ere expelled from th pita! city ofLuan . Ironically, I received an wer from the Whi Ho to my let r bout An 01 j t prior to UNIT ' failed military offe ve on Luanda. In a letter dated October 16, 1992, on "The White ouse" tionary, Willa Hall Smith, 0 ce of Public Liaison writing on beh If of P idcnt B h, tated, "Your let r identl many of the ob t cle which threaten the ting uccess of Angol ' DC democracy. "We have made clear to all parti our determination to have the resul of the elcctio respected. We have con i tentIy and repeatedly underlined the re ponsibili ty of President dOl Santo and Dr. Savimbl to eusUlC their supporters do 'nothing to endanger the establishment of a government that reflects the choice of Angolan voters. , "Our role in Angola has been to help the Angolan people transform their society from a one-party state to a multiparty democracy in which basic human rights will be observed." THE TRUTH IS THAT the communications equipment, the weapons and ammunition, and the OneDoesNot FollowA Sna keln to Its Hole Line u EMPLOYME here , I ' READERS WRITE • I Voter want ue .to When Highland Par city official voted last wee to give away 15 ere to non-re ident developer , they voted according to long tradition in America: racism. La t Spring when Sear announced it was moving out of Highland P r , the Mayor bravely 100 ed the tax 10 in the eye and t unchly decl red, "We (African American) have to help our elves. We have to invest in our future, build our own neighborhoods." W 11 cheered and thought a new era of promise for the inner cities was dawning. • And while many stood around moaning and groan­ ing the 10 of Sears, one successful city bu ine sman­ an African American - stepped up and said he wanted to develop a shopping center on the vacant Woodward . and Manche ter site. Now we find out he met with city officials. But that was the end of it. Enter DEVCO. This staff works for the city. The taff is well compensated. It gets paid from the mil­ lions Chrysler paid to the city in exchange for the city o ay for the car maker to leave for Auburn Hills. DEVCO is charged with creating tax base to help offset the loss of the Chrysler move. The DEVCO staff, responsible for business and tax .base inside the city, took hundreds of thousands of dollars and paid consultants - not to help city busi­ nesses present qr future- but to help DEVCO find an outside developer. So, with the consultants helping the consultants, the d: up land, giv up "t t! .make a t ui d Sout field ri e ignoring its own taxpayers. All the old artificial banters went up. DEVCO's boss, Hamiet S�IStein, ignored tbe taxpaying African American because, "I was looking for experience. " And, Black was once again invisible, not worthy even of consideration, automat­ ically overlooked, dismissed. Thus, while Africans may control institutions, whole cities even, the mindset and motions are the same as 50 years ago. • African American leaders are guilty of following in , lock step the patterns laid down before they arrived on the scene. And it's not just Highland Park. From Detroit to Benton Harbor city dollars and energy follow the old worn paths to the same old folk. That's why the inner cities get only worse, instead of better. All the dollars pumped in to solve the "prob­ lem" are simply channeled right through the cities to established, non-African companies making a killing off of inner city misery. . Mayor Linsey Porter was on the right track mentally when he said it is time for inner city dwellers to develop the inner city. Communities can't leave the task of finding the way up to the politicians. It is up to the communities to force the leadership to put their money where their mouth is. In pi te of centurie of violence to intimidate the olan colonizationandopp ion,in pite democr tiz tion proce nd odd of difficult truggle for electio • liberation, in pite of tragic 17 year "Inst door for civil ar eled by the Unit Sta democracy in this can andSouth 'ca,in piteofexternal i 0 obvio thatUNlTA pre to ccelerate p of to re tart the tragic c vil democratiz tion and multip rty Angol ifUNITA' not fulin election, nd in pite 0 rene ed the ming I' The terrori t violence, the people and the co e ecnons, people of Angol have right to ch their government of the Republic of future without armed intimidation. Angola remained victorio in their "The United State hould . long nd valiant truggle for immediately terminate all upport to freedom, overeignty and peace. UNITA and How the people of Angola' victory' a victory not Angola to ezpre their political will ju t for democr tic forces freely and democratically. The throughout the world, but tbis l a current foreign policy of your victory for all of tho e who are dmini tration towards Angola I haclded in po t-modem oppres ion. immoral and in contempt of any Is it really po ible to ert a tandard of hum� decency." notion of "victory" in the Angolan ituationwhichis tillevolvingwith THE U ITED ATIO S renewed violence and uncertainty? monitored the Angolan elections and We ay, "Ye , there are many facets certified that they were "fair and ofthecurrentdevelopIlftntsinsideof n:eely held." The fact that nearly Angola that are cause for celebration mnety percent of Angolans eligible in spite of recurrent difficulties." to vote actually voted in the n tion' Victory, of course, is to be first multiparty elections in plte of claimed by the overwhelming UNITA's armed intimidation and majority of the people of Angola violence prior to and during the who have and continue to exercise elections is itself cau e for their fundamental right of celebrating a victory for democracy. self-determination and freedom. Yet, tragically our prediction and I HAD THE privilege to visit waniing to President Bush bout Angola prior to their nationa1 Savambi and UNlTA proved to be elections held on September 29-30, accurate. 1992. Upon returning to the United As soon as it became clear that States, I sent a letter to President President Jose Eduardo do Santos Bush about what I had witnessed in and the MPLA party had won the Angola. national election in Angola, In my letter to President Bush Savimbi threatened to restart the dated September 11, 1992, I stated, civil war. "While in Angola I found detailed' Savimbi has not exhibited the evidence substantiating the fact that capacity to respect the will 'of the the group known as UNIT A, led by people of Angola and as a result over Jonas Savimbi and supported by the 1,500 more Angolans have died government of the United States, has during the last month due to the recently committed numerous acts of escalation of renewed civil war. EDITOR: The rumors can now end. Former Micliigan Supreme Court Justice Denni Archer is officially a mayoral candidate. And although Mayor Coleman Young refuse · to say whether or not he'll run for an un­ precendented sixth term as Detroit' chief, mo t people believe he will until he says he won't. The political temperature in Detroit is beginning to simmer. I haven't endorsed anyone yet but, I'm happy to see Dennis Archer in the race. He's intelligent, and has the name recognition it takes to take on Mayor Young. For the la t several elections the mayor hasn't faced a formidable challenger. In fact the candidacies of Perry Ko - lowski (1977), Erne t Browne (1981), and Tom Barrow (1985 and 1989) would make for great mayoral trivia questions. Coleman Young's accomplish­ ment are numerous and he' probably the greatest mayor Detroit has every had. No one has faced the type of economic problems that he's faced in the la t 18 years. The Detroit Lions left Tiger Stadium for the Pontiac Silverdome in 1975, and the Pistons broke out a couple years later. . The city faced near bankruptcy in 1981. Hudson's closed shop in 1983 and left their massive building be­ hind. Detroit has taken several hi teer mayoral race but continues to come back. BUT THE 1989 mayoral cam­ paign (my first as a voter) left me salty. Mayor Young didn't talk about the future. He ran on his past achievements: Virginia Park development, affirmative action on the police force, and the Cobo Hall expansion. Giant billboards boa ting the mayor' political record hung over Detroit' treets and freeways. The election was a referendum on the past Furthermore. I didn't know whether TQm Barrow was running on a platform or a pace hip. When the media focused on his campaign, he was usually too busy defendin allegation like New Center Hospital's financial books, and imply uttoring the now cIa lc cliche '" Time for a change." Mayor Young refused to debated Barrow. He wouldn't even mention Barrow' name during the cam­ paign. But what he didn"t say pecifically, h certainly implied: Tom Barrow is a Black man, who if . elected, will give our city back to the white boys. But I'm not only blaming the mayor and Tom Barrow for a ence of is ue disc ion during the 1989 campaign. Detroit's electorate d erves some of the blame too .• VOTERAa